Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1969: Dirty Bulk Vs. Clean Bulk for Building Muscle, Ways to Build Size When You Have a High Cardio Job, How to Combine Bodybuilding & Powerlifting & More (Listener Live Coaching)
Episode Date: December 17, 2022In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin coach four Pump Heads via Zoom. Mind Pump Fit Tip: Here is a great workout for gains and the pump! Use half the weight/half the intensity you norma...lly use but double the volume of your workout. (2:04) Mind Pump’s bodybuilding playlist. (6:30) The guy’s new obsession with the cold plunge. (12:33) Dad life updates: Max’s speech progress, another Di Stefano with big calves, and getting attention from the opposite sex. (20:32) The reviews are in, Peak Power from Organifi is a hit! (27:00) Do we all have a materialism set point? (28:10) Why you must add wearing blue-light-blocking glasses to your sleep routine. (46:53) Shout out to @barbellfilms! (49:55) #ListenerLive question #1 - Any tips on how to do heavy cardio, bulk, and build size at the same time? (52:25) #ListenerLive question #2 - Do you gain muscle mass faster on a dirty bulk versus a clean bulk? (59:39) #ListenerLive question #3 - Any advice on meal timing for morning workouts? (1:15:33) #ListenerLive question #4 - Is there a way to incorporate a bodybuilding and powerlifting workout? (1:26:03) Related Links/Products Mentioned Ask a question to Mind Pump, live! Email: live@mindpumpmedia.com Visit Organifi for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code MINDPUMP at checkout** Visit Felix Gray for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! December Promotion: At-Home Holiday Bundle (MAPS Anywhere, MAPS Suspension, MAPS PRIME, and The No BS 6-Pack Formula all for the low price of $99.99!) The Science & Use of Cold Exposure for Health & Performance Mind Pump #1825: Man Cheats Death & Builds Cold Plunge Business Modern Wisdom Podcast | Chris Williamson The Secrets Of A $100m Business - Alex & Leila Hormozi | Modern Wisdom Podcast 490 Mind Pump #1792: The Secrets Of Happy People With Arthur C. Brooks Amber lenses to block blue light and improve sleep: a randomized trial Visit Joy Mode for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code MINDPUMP at checkout for 20% off your first order** MAPS Fitness Anabolic Mind Pump #1845: How To Do Cardio & Not Lose Muscle Mind Pump #1427: Don’t Make These 6 Bulking Mistakes MAPS Fitness Prime Pro Visit Kreatures of Habit: Meal One for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code MP25 at checkout** MAPS Powerlift  Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Andrew Huberman, Ph.D. (@hubermanlab) Instagram Kyle Kingsbury (@livingwiththekingsburys) Instagram Chris Williamson (@chriswillx) Instagram Alex Hormozi (@hormozi) Instagram Arthur Brooks (@arthurcbrooks) Instagram Barbell Films (@barbellfilms) Instagram Mike O’Hearn (@mikeohearn) Instagram
Transcript
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the world's number one fitness health and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump, right?
In today's episode, we answered live-colors questions, but this was after an introductory portion.
This was 54 minutes long, where we talk about things like fitness,
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All right, here comes the show.
Check this out, this is a great workout for
gains, especially if it's different from what you're doing now. So check this out.
Use half the weight you normally use. Use half the intensity you normally use, but double
the volume of your workout. In other words, if you do three sets for a body part, do six
sets. If it's ten sets, do 20 sets. But with halfway, half intensity,
focus on the volume, the pump, the technique in the form, it's very different. And always
produces great results when it's novel. GVT.
Ooh, they're higher intensity.
Oh, I so I think that's the mistake that you make when you do when you do.
I guess you're right towards the end. It gets higher.
Yeah, I mean, so every time I, so I do it similar, right?
So, and I'll interrupt my training.
And I'm like, you know, when's the last time I just did,
you know, 10 sets of bench, or, you know, like,
I'll, and I'll do that.
And every time I do that, I base the way off of like my standard,
you know, sets of four or five, my strength,
and think, well, if I take about 25 or 30% off of that,
I should be good.
And the first three sets is easy breezy,
but by sets four, five, six,
I'm cutting away this calculation.
Oh, I'm always off.
I remember the last time I did that for Bench,
I had 35 on by the end of the,
Wow.
So depressing.
That's embarrassing.
Yeah. Yeah.
And you feel so resolutely.
But you know, I so I like that you're presenting it this way for the audience because that's
a better approach.
Like you just, okay, I benched 225 when I work out, let's say in my five by five to
routine.
Okay, I'm going to go in there and put, you know, 135 or less.
Yeah, so I call this the half, the half, half double routine, right? And so I did it today,
right? I went to the gym. I had a good amount of time. I was able to get up early. Everything
was fine this morning, baby, state and bed, whatever. So I went to the gym and I cut all the
weight and half. I cut my intensity way down. So the focus is just on the muscle and the
movement. And then I doubled the volume.
I did twice as much volume as I normally do.
And it was different because that's not how I've been training.
So I got a crazy pump.
I felt really good.
It's a lot of fun to change it up.
Swole up like a balloon.
Yeah, totally.
And you do this occasionally.
By the way, you could go in the opposite, right?
You could take your workout, double the, you know, or go heavy, double the intensity
and cut the volume in half.
This formula works in the opposite direction as well.
And when it's novel, that's the important thing here, by the way,
when it's something that you're not currently doing,
this is when you really start to reap the benefits.
And lately I've been training with low volume,
heavy weight, you know, longer rest periods, that's how to deal. So I went in today, did this, heavy weight, longer rest periods, type of deal.
So I went in today, did this, totally different,
and I could feel it.
I've been working out long enough to know that I could feel
that this was gonna cause some changes,
some positive changes.
Oh, yeah, that one's for me.
It's like the ultimate kind of,
what do you call it, where it just shakes everything up.
It destroys you.
Plateau Buster?
Yeah, because it's, for me, it's such a dynamic shift
from what I always tend to do, which is just one to five
rep range and focus on heavy lifting and to get that
kind of like rep count up and then the weight drop
and all that, dude.
When's the last time you did it all?
When's the last time you did a bodybuilding workout,
like full bodybuilding.
Not like I did one set of curls.
Like I said more, is probably the last challenge
like we had, you know, the four of us.
I never does.
I don't do it, dude.
Like, I mean, unless it's just that I want to get
I get you doing some stuff in there.
Yeah, but those are like trigger sessions.
It's not like you know, you don't want. I can't claim I've stuff in there. Yeah, but those are like trigger sessions. It's not like you don't want.
I can't claim I've been doing like a burger beef.
It goes against his like core bro.
Like to train for aesthetics.
You know what I mean?
He hates himself after that.
Because then I start looking at the mirror.
I'm like, who am I?
You know, like, it's away from you real quick.
It's away from you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He's like, he's like, look at my head.
Ah, stop it. I'm so hot. Oh, yeah, happen again. Exactly. Oh, but, God, dude. He's like, look at him. Oh, stop it.
I'm so hot.
Oh, yeah, happy to get it.
Exactly.
But really, it's been that long, huh?
It has.
Yeah, I know.
I'm due for it.
So this is something I've spent on my mind.
You bringing that up, it's funny, because I've been like,
teasing with the idea of like going more hypertrophy for a while
and doing a phase at least for a couple months or so.
Yeah.
Do you have to change the music if you do something like that?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Otherwise, if I go like my normal metal and heavy and I will just get to aggressive.
And again, I'll miscalculate the hell out of the weight load and then destroy myself.
But you have to calm down.
What your bodybuilding play with.
This is not like, let's see.
We know it's houses.
Yeah.
Because then you lean a little more to hip hop or something, right?
Yeah.
If I'm not trying to, if I had to scale intensity back, it's hip hop.
Because rock, rock, I'm like, we're all the same when it comes to like, this is where
I like heavy metal.
Like if I'm going after it, it's heavy dead lifting or I'm pushing limits, for sure,
heavy metal rock.
And I would say, yeah, but the heaviest you go with, not weight, but with the music.
Rage, tool. Yeah, that's about as deep as you go
Yeah, maybe a little bit of Pantera every once in a while
Maybe some
Metallica
Dev tones I'll go Dev tones
But I you got you guys like she fell I love yeah, those are all those are all my playlist right but
Yeah, I don't go too crypt,
but I even listen to that too.
Like, so like, tool for me is a nice kind of cruise train hard,
but I don't like it.
I'm not, like Rage is like angry.
I got, I want to get after Pantera's angry.
I want to get after it.
Hip hop is like, I don't, I'm trying to avoid any level
of intensity.
Yeah. I'm just kind of going through the groove. It's, I'm pumping. Yeah, I'm pumping, I'm trying to avoid any level of intensity. Yeah.
I'm just kind of going through the moves.
I'm moving.
Yeah, I'm pumping.
I'm doing mobility.
Yeah.
I'm not a big hip hop guide.
I listen to hip hop mainly for, if we're presenting or we're doing anything that like
on the front of people because I don't know, it's like this ego pump.
It makes you feel cool.
Yeah, usually.
Yeah, yeah.
No, it does.
I mean, that's why I played it in here the other day when we had the live event.
That puts me in the mood like that too.
If I go, if I'm going heavy-ish,
then it's your playlist, same thing.
Raging and some machine, tool, chevelle,
rock zombie, rock zombie.
That's your whole life for you.
When I'm going, now when I go and I wanna go,
as heavy as I can, and I wanna try and hit PRs
and go nuts and throw caution to the wind,
then it's fast, it's evil, it's crazy shit.
It's sepultera and the light.
It's dealing.
Yeah, it's stuff like that where you almost can't make out
what's going on in the song.
You just hear yelling and shit and it just makes me angry.
I love it though.
But when I'm doing like bodybuilding workout, it's EDM.
Oh, EDM? That's your move.. EDM? It's like great music.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, I'm still a little bit more in the rock genre.
Like I'll go more like royal blood or, you know, I guess I'm trying to think of the other
name of some of these like kind of newer bands, but like like Led Zeppelin and like I'll
do some classic rock I guess, in that vein.
But like, dude, yeah, I can't go like two soft.
I had to work out to like top 40 the other day,
because I had my headphones and I put them on
and then it makes that sound.
Do, do, do, do.
I'm like, oh, it's gonna die.
My headphones are gonna die.
Top 40, what's that?
What do you think?
That's what the gym plays.
Oh, because you're in the gym.
It was in the gym, dude. So I was like, it was a long time since I had worked out. What worked out there. Like, little gnocin' that is trash. Whatever top 40, you know, shit is, like Taylor Swift.
Like a commercial gyms trash.
The only way you get good music in a dungeon type gym,
you might get some good, good music.
See, when I use, so back in the day.
Which is understandable, right?
You're in a commercial gym, you have to appeal to like,
the general audience, like, you don't want like, you know,
the 60 year old grandma walks in and is like, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom I use, so back in the day, which is understandable, right? You're in a commercial gym, you have to appeal to like the general audience,
like you don't want like, you know,
the six-year-old grandma walks in and is like,
do do do do do do do do do.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, come on over here.
Let's check out this elliptical.
Oh, did I ever tell you guys,
did I ever tell you guys one time?
Dude, this is great for your knees.
You just reminded me of a hilarious memory.
Well, I was a loud murderer.
I went like for everybody.
When I had my wellness studio,
I used to work out in the middle of the day sometimes,
and it would be no one else in there,
be just me, sometimes a trainer, but no clients.
And I would kind of turn the lights down
because I liked it kind of dark.
And if I was gonna go heavy,
I would do crazy metal or whatever.
And I remember this was towards the end of my workout,
and I was at this point,
I was trying to build my neck up.
I was trying to, I was like, for fun.
I was like, let's see if I can get my neck strong.
So I had this neck, I had this neck harness on
with chains coming on down the sides.
We're so similar yet so different.
So we would, I don't know.
I'm totally different.
You had one of those head chains.
You know you were at the same time.
I've done neck training for the first time.
But it wasn't like a goal.
No, he's all, he's just built it on accident,
so I have some of these.
Well, he has a little more application
when he's playing football. Yeah, he's playing football. Yeah, he's better. Well, he has a little more application. We have football stuff.
Yeah, football stuff.
Yeah, he's better.
Actually, wearing a helmet will build a shit out of your neck.
You're asking for a football helmet for, you know, an hour?
I mean, they'll mess you up.
Anyway, so I had the head harness on.
So remember, it's like leather straps, right?
What are you wearing at home for an outfit?
Chains, huh?
When would you be wearing it?
I'd play football for us just like you.
I tried it out.
Oh, you have?
And I fucking hated it.
I don't think you've ever told me that.
I did tell you guys.
No, you haven't.
Bro, I signed up because I, I, this,
I did not know this.
I swear.
I thought he's never said this.
Has he said this?
What?
No.
No, he's to me.
Did you know he's, he's got the thumbs up.
Yeah, he's definitely battered up.
You knew?
I did.
I did.
Really?
Uh huh.
I did.
So I tried out, or not tried out. I would, I see, it's just didn't tell the same. I did. So I tried out, I'm not trying out, I, I, I, I, I,
it's just pop Warner, right?
So I signed up, I was probably 13, maybe 12, 13, and I'm like, oh,
this is gonna be awesome.
And they beat the shit out of us so bad.
And the coaches were yelling and I was like, ready to throw up.
Yep.
And I remember being like, I don't know if I'm gonna do the same
experiences I did.
We've had a lot of real simmer things. Very similar. But anyway, this, I don't know if I'm gonna do this anymore. I'm gonna do this the same experiences I did.
We've had a lot of real simmer things.
Very similar.
But anyway, I had the head harness on leather straps,
chains coming down.
I had like three 25 pound plates on,
just hanging in between my legs.
Crazy ass heavy metal music.
And I'm, and then I kind of pulled my neck,
so I stand up and I had this metal hook looking thing
with the ball at the end,
that I would use to press on my traps.
So I'm holding this metal hook with the ball at the end that I would use to press on my traps. So I'm holding this metal hook with the ball at the end with the chains off my head
all the way and this old lady walks in.
She opens the door and the metal and it's like, I got chains and I got this metal hook
and I'm looking at her.
She just so she did.
She went like this, she went, oh, and she did.
I was like, no, I love training old people.
Never came back to you.
Never come back to you.
Never lost a client like that.
That's fuck good.
No.
I see, no, I was gonna bring up.
I see the coal plunge is starting to get used now.
Nobody was using that.
Has now early.
Huh, so you didn't?
You dipped, huh?
I did it.
I did a minute. That was it. I know you two minutes. I don't know what's wrong
No, I did five I five yesterday five. Yeah, so I'm up to over over four
Because actually I don't think when you first started what you start with to wow you and two routes
You need is you need to go to like I don't like you're not getting shit at one bro. Yeah, yeah
I'm not getting any benefits. I've been maybe it's you b see, you know, you got you need a little more than that.
I think, okay, so.
Like splash.
I heard, I heard Andrew.
I gotta start a little by little, you know.
I heard Andrew Huberman talk about what the,
what the study show as far as getting,
reaping the most benefits for the least amount of time.
It's quite a week, right?
It's 15 minutes total in the,
oh, excuse me,
12 minutes total for the week. 12 to 15.
So I didn't do shit.
Yeah, so this, so my, my thought is I get at least three sessions in of four minutes is
my, is my minimum goal.
I try and do every day, but I know I want to get in there at least three.
So here's what's weird.
I've noticed this about people is that you either tolerate hot, very well, or you tolerate
cold very well.
I'm okay.
You and I are like each other here.
I'm more of the steam sauna guy.
The cold thing is fucking miserable.
Yeah.
No, it's been a, it's been a hot forever.
I can sit in a steam room or sauna and I could just, and I tell you, I'm, I've been consistently
doing this now and it's still a motherfucker.
It's every time I get in it, it's like, oh, it's not here.
I mean, what gets easier, what gets easier is,
I have the ability to calm myself down really quick now
and I know what I need to do to get in that space.
And so that part gets easier, but the feeling it gives me
is just as, you know, early every time.
Well, so when I did it, I only did it for a minute,
but you get a very distinct dopamine boost afterwards.
And now the problem is to get the dopamine,
you gotta go through the shit,
but that's also a feature.
So they show that when you have to do hard work
to get dopamine, you don't get the negative feedback loop
that you might get with like drugs and shit like that.
So if your dopamine comes from something that was hard,
it's a good thing.
If your dopamine comes from something that's easy,
like taking a pill, then it can become a problem.
Always, that's true.
That is true.
That's interesting.
So it's like, you climb to mountain
or you do this crazy ass hike
and you're super exhilarated, right?
Very different than getting exhilarated
from taking a pill.
You're gonna open it.
Correct.
Interesting.
So it's the hard before the reward that makes it different.
What is it that, what is it, is it like,
is there a mechanism that's different?
I'm sure there is.
Yeah, this is, yeah, I gotta read a little bit more about it.
But so cold dipping, by the way,
do you know the cold dips?
Some people get addicted to them, you guys know that?
Yeah.
I mean, of course it's another, you get in this huge dopamine rush.
I guess.
I mean, there's, it's the, the, the part that I really enjoy is the after fact.
I mean, it, to me, it, it, it shits on any pre workout caffeine drink I could ever
take.
Oh, you're energized for like five hours.
Yeah, it's a, you know what I noticed yesterday because yesterday was the long five minutes
Is the longest I've stayed in there now?
I
It took me like hours later to warm up
So I I can I can imagine right now the calorie burn
Benefits that my body probably get of trying to re-acclimate my body converts wife fat to brown fat
Dude I I was driving I was driving home yesterday.
It was a moderately warm day yesterday
and I had a flannel on it and stuff like that.
And normally by the time we get this fucking sauna out of here,
sorry, I've been swearing a lot today, I just caught that.
I feel I'm like ready to get down to a t-shirt,
but after doing that, I was cold all the way home.
The train had the fire, I was standing for the fire.
I was like, oh wow, that actually took a while
to heat my temperature back up.
And you can only imagine when you're running that cold,
the body working to get its temperature back up,
I'm sure it will.
No, that's the thing.
So you didn't go sauna after that.
No, I like sauna first.
So I haven't been doing, so I was on,
before we had the cold plung,
I was pretty consistent with the sauna.
So I've trained hot for quite some time now. I'm not consistent with the cold plunge, so that's more of a priority for me.
And I've been doing, and that what I like about the cold plunge, it's a, it's a quick in and out.
The sauna, our sauna takes freaking 30, 30, 40 minutes to warm up and then, you know, and then you got to sit in there for 20 minutes.
Yeah, so the cold plunge is like, I just got to sit in there for 20 minutes. Yeah, so the cold plunges like,
I just got to make that commit bit real quick.
So brown fat is thermogenic body fat.
So this is body fat on your body that burns calories
and it warms you up.
And when you do cold therapy, the white fat,
by the way, white fat's harder to burn.
It's not thermogenic, it sticks to your body more.
In other words, if you have body fat,
you want it to be the brown fat.
That's the kind that's thermogenically active.
Doing the cold dips converts the white fat to brown fat.
So actually, because your body's adapting
to be able to warm up better.
So you're actually making your body,
that's your speculation, you're actually teaching your body
to burn more calories on its own.
It has been speeding up your metabolism through
converting fat,
which is pretty wild.
Yeah, I know.
I'm crazy.
I'm super.
Did you guys know it?
Super about it now.
I've noticed, I mean, the fact that I made it this far into winter
with the amount of people we've had around a sick,
and even another thing I always get sick, traveling,
like we've been doing flights to Utah and stuff like that and being in the airplane
Airport like touching stuff like almost always get sick up and good tonight. So so you guys know Jessica's she learned Russian and then her when she's Russian
Yeah, I remember you said
But not the food. Tell these stories
Like on the podcast
You didn't know that.
Yeah, she's learned a couple of languages, right?
He's been forgetting a lot lately.
Is it I'm forgetting a lot?
I think I just learned it.
I think I just learned it.
We've got a hurry up and retire for Adam's brain
to go completely.
Don't smoke weed kids.
No, no, no.
So she, yeah, she's a, I mean, she's a very intelligent person
at one point.
So her ex-husband was Ukrainian and she traveled
with Cirque du Soleil, a lot of Russian acrobat.
Her ex-husband's family spoke Russian.
So she decided I'm gonna learn Russian.
So she speaks it fluently.
She's been to Russia, she's been to Ukraine.
She said that it is a common practice
in some of those places where when they bathe a child,
that at the very end, they do a cold,
they do like a cold rinse.
Freezing cold rinse.
Well you guys remember Kingsbury, right?
Yeah.
Kyle's kids never had warm water.
Yeah, it's always cold.
Yeah, they from out the gates.
I remember them saying that.
Yeah.
So I started doing this with Ralias.
So he'll take a shower with me sometimes and then I make it a game afterwards.
I make it cold and I go, all right, you ready?
And then we go in there and I'm going to start doing this a little bit more regularly.
But there's videos, you can watch videos of Russian school children
where it's snowing outside and they'll take like a 15 minute recess break
and they go out in their bathing suit and play in the sun.
Okay, so this is gonna be interesting how this plays out for you
because so I tried to introduce Max to cold water early on like this
and I did it through the swimming pool. And it like totally turned him off
to getting in the pool for like a year because of that.
And I could only get him into like a heated pool
or jacuzzi after that.
Like I could not get, if it was even just like,
it's like, it's bougie like you.
Dude, he was, and I blame myself that I, you know,
I tried to get him to acclimate
to really cold pool water and he was just not having it.
So I figured that too.
I thought, okay, well he's with the Rayleigh,
so I'm like, if I make him hate this,
he'll never want to do it again.
Yeah.
So I made it a game.
So I said, oh, I'm gonna make it cold.
You're in, I made it cold a bit.
Oh my God, it's so cold and I'll pretend to go in
and then I'll, I give him a little cup
that he splashes water on me.
So I was like, oh my God, don't get me wet.
And then of course he splashes me.
Then I splash him and then I go, you ready?
And then I go in and we stay in there for like,
just like 15 seconds.
And then he laughs and then we're done.
You know what happened yesterday, my, our teachers,
Max's teachers suggested to Katrina
or implied that, you know,
to consider putting them in a speech therapy again.
And I thought that was interesting,
because she was saying that, right now,
they have issues sometimes where the kids are playing.
And like he's moved to the next level up of age.
So his kids are all his age and older.
He was, his speech was a little delayed
as far as his ability to communicate.
And I was actually talking to you know,
I'm the one who's like more paranoid with that.
I'm the one that kind of pushed the speech therapist early
and I was like, you know, he should be starting to say more things
and then of course I told you guys that we went through it
and they were like, oh, he totally understands,
it'll come and it happened.
So the kids will get into it or something
and then the other kids can articulate what happened
and you can tell he gets frustrated
when he gets lost for words.
But I told her I was like, you know,
I said, I'm never opposed to having a professional,
you know, see him and then give their advice.
I said, but I'm less worried this time.
And she's like, really?
And she's like, you're the one that was so, you know,
pushing that.
I said, well, he's progressing.
I see it every month right now.
If he was stagnant, I would be concerned.
That's a very good point.
I was like, I would be more concerned.
I said, what you're, what the teacher's experiencing is that they're all those kids
have are ahead of them.
He's just, he's playing, he's catching up.
Yeah, I said, they went to that too, it was just a year ago for them.
You know, they went to the like, where they can kind of communicate.
And so he's, he's behind on that.
And so then I said, the teacher is just saying that to you because it's hard for her.
It's hard for her because he's the only one of those kids in that group that can like
articulate his point, right?
And so I'm like, I mean, do it.
I said, have the speech therapist talk to him.
I said, I'm totally open to hearing their opinion.
But I mean, the kid is like every week says
a new sentence of something that he couldn't say before.
But...
But around those other kids is really gonna help,
you know, elevate the audience.
Oh yeah, I mean, I told you guys just the other day,
like how cuted it is, we put them on the FaceTime
with this friend before who could like,
totally talk, like, and you hear them,
they're communicating back and forth.
And so I see him progressing like every week.
So I'm like, yeah, you know.
But, you know, if he, if he,
because with that kind of stuff,
if he enjoys it, it doesn't hurt, right?
So, yeah.
That's what I said.
I don't care.
I think if you ever watch them work with kids, the good ones, they make it fun, the kid enjoys it. So it't hurt, right? So, you know what I'm saying? I don't care. I mean, if you ever watch them work with kids,
the good ones, they make it fun, the kid enjoys it.
So it's like, okay, well, you know,
won't hurt or whatever.
But he understands everything.
Yeah, everything.
You talk to him.
Yeah, you just see he's, he gets,
like sometimes he's lost for the word.
And you can see him searching,
and then he gets a little frustrated like that
when he's with kids that are,
and they're moving fast and doing something.
I'm like, yeah, but every kid goes through that.
He just, he's going through it later because he was delayed.
You know, so I mean, as long as I see progression and that what I didn't see a year and a half
ago, that was what was kind of making me worry.
We're now I'm like, nah, he's picking up.
Dude, I was holding my infant daughter at Dahlia.
So now she's like, what, two and a half weeks.
And I was changing her diaper,
and I'm looking at her little, little legs. I love baby legs. So I was like squeezing them and
whatever. I just love them. But she's not chunky yet. She's only two and a half weeks old, but
I look at her legs and I'm like, hell yeah, dude, she inherited Jessica's muscle bellies. That's
two for two now. Like, yes, I got two kids, you know, because Jessica's got these really long muscle bellies, long calves and quads and ham and all this.
So I'm looking at her and I'm like, babe, look at her calves.
She's gonna have nice calves.
I'm like, yeah.
Justin, you were gonna say something, were you gonna say?
Yeah, no, I had a funny story actually with Everett and Ethan too.
They're both kind of in this phase right now where they're trying to get attention
from the other opposite sex and trying to figure
all this stuff out.
They both are.
You know that?
Yeah, I think too, the older brother kind of
in flames having a bit of a girlfriend now,
quote unquote, has kind of spawned his interest
a little bit more to see what he can do.
But anyways, it's just like it's so insanely typical.
Like the pulling hair, the lighting on fire, the throwing stuff at
girl to get attention stuff.
But like, so his, this is what happened with him.
And he was telling me about this, I was dying laughing because this
girl that he kind of likes, like, so she, she grabbed his friends hat
and goes and puts it on and is like, you know,
trying to be like, uh, uh, flirty, I guess, some, some bit with them, right? Like, and just have
a phone with him. And so he's like, oh, oh, no, you put the hat on. He's like, Jameson has lice.
She's like, she's like, oh, it takes an hour.
Did you really have last year's New York?
No, no, he's just messing with her.
You know, and like, dude, you gotta like say,
I'm just kidding, you know?
Like, let her just keep thinking, like,
now she's got life.
Oh my God, she's your son.
You know, oh, it's dying, dude.
And yeah, there's a bunch of other funny things
like he was telling me about, one of them was a dweeb.
So he has this kind of term that he just came up with
for kids that are really an anime
because he just doesn't get it.
And it was fun.
The first time I heard him swear to me,
he doesn't do it or anything,
but he's just like, there's just one name for,
I'm trying to look at the name of it.
Oh, Naruto. Naruto, he's like, who the hell is Naruto for, I'm trying to look at the name of it. Oh, Naruto.
Naruto, he's like, who the hell is Naruto?
You know who that is?
Of course I do.
I'm like, I don't know who the hell Naruto is.
Like, where they come up with these names,
you know, and he's like going off about like,
I don't understand it.
He like calls them dweebs or, or a,
weebs.
I remember you saying this yesterday.
Weebs, weebs, dweebs.
You're not even a, you're not even normal dweebs. Weebs. Yeah. I was this week we do you're not even a normal do weebs. Yeah, I was like I'm gonna use that
Where to go Justin you're building yourself a little bully
It's just jokes
No, he's got a great sense of humor. Yeah, he delivers it all cheeky, so it's not like it is true boys are
Well, God, what kind of doofus is for a long time
with flirting with girls, aren't we?
Because my daughter has,
there's this boys in her class at mess with her all the time.
And I know it's because they're trying to flirt with her.
But they're just, you know, how boys are.
It's a transition.
It takes a while to really figure that out,
like how to like be funny,
but not hurt feelings and be able to get attention,
but like the right attention.
So I'll do one of the commercials right now
because then I wanna transition us into a conversation
I wanna ask you guys about that I heard.
Okay, well we're supposed to talk about
organify and Felix Gray.
Actually I have a study on Felix Gray.
We'll get to that later, which is kind of cool,
but organify, we're still getting great feedback
on peak power.
So a lot of people are saying that they like it
more than their pre-workout
because they need less caffeine with it.
That's what they're saying.
Have you heard what the average scoop is?
Because I know you made it to where it's designed
to where you can kind of...
One scoop is 100 milligrams of caffeine.
Oh, it's 150 for some reason.
No, 100.
So two is 200.
And three, obviously 300.
You're gonna have to have that.
There you go.
So you wanna guess what for us?
Anybody have a guess?
So I do 300 milligrams of caffeine normally before a workout, but with peak power, 200
is where I go.
I feel just as good, actually better, because I don't get the, you know, the jitters.
No, no.
That's the feedback I'm hearing the most from it,
is the people of the school.
That was 100% like the smooth caffeine high
that you get from it without the jitters
and the tingles that you get with a lot of pre-workouts,
which I'm glad you didn't do that,
because that's my least favorite part.
It is.
It's my face itch and I don't like a lot.
No, you have somebody like email you
that they PR using it.
I did it.
Someone's using it for commercial later.
Oh yeah, okay, I'm not bad. I don't wanna expose. I did. Some were using it for commercial later.
Oh, yeah.
Okay.
I'm on these clothes.
I'm like, I PR too.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
So listen, so yesterday I was, so we have Chris Williamson, who does, he's got the modern
wisdom podcast, really like this guy.
I've watched quite a bit of his interviews.
He's a great interviewer.
He said huge names on there.
He said, Jocco, Jordan Peterson.
I mean, you name it.
He said, our friends Max, Luke of VR and stuff.
Just Max had great things to say about him.
So we have him coming in studio, I think, next month.
If you know Doug, I think it's the next month.
I don't know.
It's okay.
I think it's the next month we have him coming in
and then right after that, we were out to a Z and we'll see Alex
Hermozzi. And so there's actually an interview a few months ago that Chris did of Alex and I was listening to him. It was a really good conversation. So check it out if you like either one of those guys.
But Chris brought something up that I've never heard someone say before and I thought it was a really interesting point, I guess.
He says that he's been kind of toying around with this idea
that we all have a different materialism set point.
And I thought, oh, that's a really interesting.
Like how much material stuff we want,
what we feel comfortable with.
Right, right.
Before it's start down, right?
Well, before the, like, we've talked,
and we know this, like the studies to support that,
if you're poor and you have no money,
like you get happier.
Yeah, you get happier, right?
So a material set point is at one point,
everybody has a point where they reach peak happiness,
and then it's either plateaues are actually
dips down afterwards.
So he's like, I think that there's this,
there's this, and I think that it's unique to the individual.
I mean, we've, everyone's met that friend who's like,
I could live in a trailer, and as long as they have
their basic needs met there, as happy as they can get,
and they have no desire for things.
Think of other people that feel like they need this, you know, 10,000 square foot house to feel like they're comfortable or whatever.
So I thought that was a really interesting conversation.
And do you guys think that you have figured out what your materialism set point is in your life?
And have you noticed that because everyone's at a place,
I think financially where they've probably reached that
or maybe beyond that you don't get any happier
and do you remember how you came about figuring that out?
Like, oh, like, he, like, Hermosi talked about how they
ended up buying like this massive house at one point
and then realized like, you know, it was so big
that they needed someone to take care of the cleaning and they needed someone to take care of the upkeep
of the pool and he's like, you know, landscape, or he's like, before you know, it was like,
we had another business that we had to manage and they realized like, man, I don't feel any
happier having all this extra space. I would rather get rid of all these people we have to manage
now and live in something more modest.
And then if we need big stuff,
we'll travel to it for vacations or things like that.
I thought that was really interesting.
And so, do you feel like you guys are still
figuring that out for yourself
or do you feel like you've already kind of figured that out?
And then if you have already figured that out,
what were were those key signs or indicators
that made you feel that way?
That's a good question.
You know what's interesting too about that
is if you have any insecurities around feeling secure,
I guess, then that's probably gonna skew
what's gonna make you feel comfortable, you know?
So I can see that as well.
What do you mean by that?
Like, well, if you grew up and money was an issue
or a challenge or you know what it's like
to not be able to pay bills, stuff like that, or when you're a kid, it was unstable. You may feel more comfortable,
you know, with more and more because it's an insecurity, right? So I can see how that can
make an impact, or maybe even the reverse. I would think it'd be the reverse. I would think you
think, you need, that was my experience. My experience was, that's how I grew up.
I assumed that I needed so much more in order to feel good.
And I, once you reach that, surpass that, surpass that,
it kind of clicks, you go, oh shit, no I don't.
Like, that's my own insecurity that's telling me
that I think I need all this.
And so, I mean, I-
I'm such a self-aware person.
You're not the typical person, you know what I mean?
The typical person is not nearly a self-aware,
and so, but anyway, my point is,
boy, so many things play a role in that.
I mean, for me, I don't need much at all,
and I identified this for me a long time ago.
I like to have, I wanna have enough space
to where, you know, my kids have a bedroom.
I, that's it.
I like to not have to worry about money.
So as far, now what does that mean for me?
I like to eat out here and there.
I like to go on vacations a couple of times a year.
I don't need a whole lot.
I know that about myself.
So if I were to spend more money,
it would be on experiences.
Now did you, did you find yourself over time
coming to that conclusion or have you felt like
you've always been aware that even when you were young and super young and ambitious ambitious you were like, yeah, I only need to get to about this point.
My ambition was never, wasn't really ever motivated by the money. It was more motivated by the success
and accolades and then look, I could accomplish. But the money was like a nice side effect of it.
So I was never like, oh, I want to hit this dollar amount and I hit that dollar amount.
It was more like, I want to be able to be the top person
in this category or I want to be able to build my business
to this.
So that's kind of always more like winning
more than you actually like money.
Yeah, now, I've never been in a position where money
was super challenging for me.
So I don't know what that would look like, right?
Maybe once, one time there was one period where I had to live paycheck
to paycheck for, but it wasn't very long,
it was like a few months.
But I just don't need much.
I don't need much to feel happy.
I like to not worry about it.
In other words, if something were to happen
and I were to make no money, I like to have at least six months
to a year's worth of savings, uh, where I would
be okay. That's kind of where, but I, but again, what does that mean for, for personal
person? No. Okay. So it doesn't sound like you had like this epiphany or this time in
your life where this really came, came, came for sure. Justin, did you have a time where
you're like, you realize this? Um, yeah. So for me, it was really the intensity of, of
paycheck to paycheck and kind of digging myself out of a massive hole was when Courtney was pregnant with Ethan.
And we were living with my in-laws for a bit, for a couple months, and I was like stacking as many it to the very end as a nurse and then trying to build up as much for
maternity leave after that. And it was like, we were just on the pure hustle. I didn't, I didn't
sleep much. Like I was just kind of in and out. I didn't even want to stay at my in-laws. And so it was like,
to me, it's kind of a blur because it was just like, it was so much
Intensity around of like me getting out of that situation. And I was very thankful that they allowed me to do that to save around here in California
was huge and and then we finally were able to
Kind of go and I considered about like renting and we were renting before, but we really wanted
to have that kind of security and stability.
So we were able to kind of put our money towards this real
sort of house that was like just modest
and had potential for me to be able to build
and grow the family with.
And so that was like, okay, I got to now put all of my skills into this and then try to build
a comfortable
environment for for my family in this situation and so it was just I think it was a lot of
just out just running and not
Necessarily considering that it things could get easier until I got to a point where
considering that things could get easier until I got to a point where, you know, the paychecks were getting better and bigger and I was able to kind of keep her forever it off longer,
but then it set us back again.
It was kind of like went all the way back because I did a full year for off work and it
was all dependent on whatever income I was bringing in.
So honestly, it wasn't until like our stuff really started to take off here at Mind Pump
to where I felt like, oh wow, like the intensity of the basic necessities and being able to
cover all this stuff was sort of lifted.
And I'm like, wow, this is a totally different feeling for me.
I always felt like I was like, just this hamster on a wheel, just trying to grind like the
whole button for me was just grind.
I'm going to work my way through whatever is presented to me.
So just having that kind of lift and being able to now consider like, I don't have to go through the punishing kind of,
I have to do all these things
and put all my shoulders anymore,
was enormous.
Honestly, I feel like the size of my house now,
the access for them to be able to walk to school,
like just the overall flexibility of our business,
what we're doing with growth in this business.
I honestly, I'm already there.
So I feel like I'm super content.
What do I, you done?
Yeah, so when I was younger, I thought,
I had these massive visions of great wealth,
big house, all the amenities that go along with being very wealthy.
And, but the reality was that I struggled for a lot of years.
I had debt, I didn't make a lot of money.
And so, all during that time,
I held this vision of, you know, making all this money,
but now that I don't have any debt and bills are paid, I have a lot more contentment in my life.
So I hit a point where it's like, okay, I don't need to live in a massive place,
even though I still have goals about, say, building a bigger house and things like that.
I feel like, you know, anything extra as far as that is concerned
is not really going to add to the quality of my life a whole lot.
As Sal mentioned, I think think experiences are really probably the thing that's going to add
the most to the quality of your life traveling for me is very important.
So yeah, I mean, I'm not, I still have a lot of goals, okay.
But I don't feel like those goals are going to change my life in a substantial way.
Yeah.
Yeah. And to add, like add, in terms of being content,
I still look at anything now as a reflection of our own success
and where we're going.
I'm very much attached to the trophy just because of sports
and everything else, being able to elevate
and achieve new things.
I'm driven by that still.
That's the big driver for me is the like,
where can I go that I've never been?
I always want to go to the next level where I've never been.
Yeah, yeah.
I actually think that we're all really actually
similar in this area.
I think that our materialism set points
are just a little bit different.
But as far as our philosophy around what we're looking
for what we want, I think it's all,
it's actually more, I think it's more similar than it's not.
It's just, there's different stuff.
Yeah, like would you wanna live in a 10,000 square foot?
No, no, no, I know that already.
I mean, I'm in 4,000 square feet
for just Katrina and I and Max.
I mean, that's it, that's plenty.
Oh yeah, it's more than enough.
I mean, even this next move that we're doing,
we're gonna downgrade slightly in space, not a lot,
but enough that I'm like, there was a whole room
that like never got used.
It's like, yeah, it's a little wasteful.
Like there's no need for that.
I would rather have land than a big house.
You know what I'm saying?
Like space where I could do things on there,
like I've always wanted to build a gym, you know,
and maybe build like a guest house,
but I wouldn't necessarily want like a massive.
You know why? Because then your kids, you don't even see your kids. They're in the room over here over there. you know, and maybe build like a guest house, but I wouldn't necessarily want like a massive,
you know why?
Because then your kids, you don't even see your kids.
They're in the room over here over there.
You got a text on the phone to come,
haven't come downstairs, you know?
It's just,
Yeah, no, there's definitely drawbacks to, you know,
bigger and more.
I mean, the, the, you get that much space
and that to maintain it becomes like another job
or more work and it's like, oh, you know, that's,
so there, I do think there's a happy medium there. I mean, I learned my it's like, oh, you know, that's, so I do think there's a happy medium there.
I mean, I learned my lesson before actually mind pump, you know,
so I kind of reached that financial place
that I was chasing when I got into cannabis.
So this time around for me,
when, you know, going through this whole process,
I had such a better relationship with money
and materialistic things and like that.
And I like nice stuff.
There's no doubt, like I don't try and deny or hide that.
But my relationship with it is so different.
I think I'm like, I align a lot with dogs
kind of attitude and philosophy is I love nice things,
but I can also not, you know, it's not.
It's not.
Yeah, I already recognize that more of those nice things
aren't gonna make me any happier as a person.
So, but I like the option.
I like the idea that, you know, if I wanna do that,
or if I want that, I can, you know,
and I, but I choose many times not to.
I don't know, I mean, I just did it two nights ago,
where I'll, you know, if that feel like I think I really want
something, I'd shop it all in the shopping cart, you know,
and it's not even crazy amount of money for me to say yes
and send it and then I go, you know,
do you need it?
Do I really need it?
I've already got enough of those things like that.
Tomorrow, if I still feel that passionate about it,
you know, I didn't buy it.
You know, Arthur Brooks says that part of the,
one of the keys to happiness is not getting,
it's not having more, it's wanting less.
He said, for a lot of people, for most people, that's the key.
It's not, it's just wanting less.
It's not getting more.
And that makes, to me, that makes a whole lot of sense.
It's like, there was, I can't, you know, there was this one article I read years ago,
and then I remember I was talking to my dad about it because my dad grew up very differently than I did.
He was very poor when he grew up.
And I read this article and it said that there's the myth that it's more expensive today than
it was 60 years ago.
And they said, the reason why people think it's more expensive is we don't compare apples
to apples.
We have more bills for more stuff that we don't necessarily need.
He goes, but if you lived the way someone did 60 years ago where you don't have three
cars in car payments, you don't have all these streaming services.
I grew up, my first computer that I had was when I was 20 something years old.
I mean, now in our house, we've got four laptops,
a computer, we all have a computer in our phone.
You know what I'm saying?
That was a luxury to have something like that.
Well, that's what this article said.
It said that.
Literally said, actually, if you compare Apple's to Apple's,
it's far less expensive today than it was back then.
The difference is we've changed our wants.
We want more, more, more,
we think we need more, more, more when in reality, and that's why I mean, I would say that's one of
the factors that's playing into the depression and anxiety. 100% I think you brought it up a long
time ago, and I guess I never really thought about that until you had brought it up on one show. There's a long time ago.
When you talked about somebody who would be considered in poverty today, if you just took
what was in their place where they live and you compared it to somebody 150 years ago
or whatever, like they would be wealthy compared to that.
When you look at, they would have, they probably have a little TV,
they have a microwave, they have,
they have these things that would be like,
and that's not, I'm saying 150, probably not even 100.
No, no, you go, listen,
a person today who's, let's say, lower middle class
or even in poverty today has access to things
that didn't exist a thousand years ago
when kings existed.
So they have more than a king did a thousand years ago, right?
So that just goes to show you, the problem is the comparison.
It's the other guy has more than I do,
and then it's the wants.
I think I want that, that's what I need.
That's what I need.
And so that's never ending in it results
and just feeling like shit.
I told Jessica this, I said, I would rather,
I would prefer to, if I had a choice of retiring with a big old house, I said, I would rather, I would prefer to,
if I had a choice of retiring with a big old house,
manch whatever, or her and I live for six months in the year
in a townhouse in different parts of the country,
one time in Hawaii, one time over here,
I'm like, I would be way, I would way enjoy that,
living in an apartment or something
for three to six months of the year
and other parts of the world versus having this massive.
For me, I feel like that would be so much more fulfilling than have this huge like, you
know, crazy house or whatever.
Yeah, I like the, I like this.
I mean, obviously I probably have more space than the necessary out of everybody.
My favorite part about that is that it's, it's solved a lot of issues with, you know,
our relationship of I'm, I'm a bit of a neat freak.
And if there's clutter, that sorts of clutter
on the counters and things like that.
That really, so the fact that I have so much extra space,
there's a place for me to put things all of each other
and I gotta do that.
I value, do you purge annually?
Do you like throws you in?
I do, I do.
I just did it in my closet the other day,
especially with us having an apparel business,
we have so many different things.
Just because brutal with that.
Brutal with purging.
Show throw, shit.
I am too, but Katrina's hard.
Katrina's really hard to, she holds on to her stuff,
she holds on to maxes stuff, and I'm just like,
and this is like, you, you haven't wore it any,
my rule is this, if it's in my closet and I purge it
annually and I didn't wear it for the year,
it's gotta go.
Yeah, unless it has some sentimental value to it,
like, oh, this was my first jersey I ever bought.
I mean, that's different, like that's something
that I'll probably save and then turn it
into a fucking quilt.
Every time I was from now.
I was able to do what my dad did
because he proved a point to my mom once.
So obviously four kids and growing up.
Probably hid something in the middle of the go.
Well, it was so hilarious.
So growing up, my two sister shared a room
so that we could have what was called a play room.
And this is where we had our TV and toys and shit like that.
And my dad was always like, there's too much crap in here.
The kids don't need it.
I'm gonna throw it all the way.
What am I?
No, don't throw it away.
These are the kids stuff.
So my dad did is without anybody knowing,
he went in there with garbage bags,
took like 70% of the shit out of there,
didn't throw the garbage bag away.
Just hid in the garage.
Hit it, waited for like a month, nobody noticed.
And he goes, do you even notice that took 70% of stuff out there?
That's the first time I caught the garbage.
The first time I cleared Max's stuff, that's how I did it.
Because that was kind of an argument back forth. and I'm like, you know what I'm just
going to do it.
I'm not going to say nothing, and I put in the garage.
And like, nobody knew.
I'm not doing that funny.
Yeah, so, yeah, I know I'm good about Persian.
All right, so let me talk about Felix Gray, because that's our next sponsor.
But I have a study on blue blockers here that I thought was pretty phenomenal.
So this was a randomized trial where they had people where blue blockers,
three hours before sleep versus just regular glasses. Significant improvement in sleep quality,
significant, like a big difference. And this is cool because it's easy. It's so easy to just put
on. You don't have to change your electronic habits. You don't have to change your electronic habits you don't have to change your lights you have to do anything all you have to do
It's three hours before bed. Like what they did here in the study is you put on your you know whatever your blue block or your Felix grade glasses
Go about your day Felix rate doesn't change the color of everything so they're not red or orange so you could just enjoy your your normal day
And then go to bed and you'll get better sleep
How were they in the study?
How are they measuring quality of sleep or to show,
like what was the marker that was improved by so much?
Was it how long they slept?
How quick they fell asleep?
Was it all the above?
Yeah, so sleep diaries.
So people reported, so you know what's interesting
about this by the way, is that you can have measures
of better sleep if they hook things up to you
and you might not necessarily perceive them. You don't measures of better sleep if they hook things up to you and you might not necessarily perceive them.
You don't necessarily perceive better sleep unless it's significant.
So you can have better like, you know, REM for sleep and you know, you went to sleep, you know, 15% faster than before.
And the person might be like, I think I'm feeling better.
But when people report like, oh my God, I feel way more rested, it's pretty significant.
So these are the kind of studies I like on this
because okay, great, Rem, you know,
whatever went up 15%, like did the person perceive that?
Is that like a big deal?
And on this one, with the sleep diaries,
it was significant.
You've got like big difference.
How consistent are you guys all personally?
I'm really, Vix Gray is one of the things I do
like religiously, so I'm really good about.
I'm consistent if we don't do the lights down thing,
but we're really good with that.
Jessica's like, sun goes down, it's candles or dim-ass lights,
no TV, no nothing, and we're good.
Now if I put TV on, I might put them on.
Yeah, I go in spurred, so I always notice the difference.
Even today, just memory recall for me
and what I'm trying to bring up,
if I haven't had good sleep, totally affects the way that I communicate. So it's like it's, it's frustrating. It, it,
it promotes me to incorporate like this ritual, like really get back on track. Yeah. It does.
You, you, you, because you're up late a lot of times looking at work.
Well, lately I've been up till midnight the last three nights. Yeah.
Um, and I have been wearing the glasses. Yeah.
There was a while there though I wasn't. I was getting the bed. There was a while there, though, I wasn't.
I was getting the bed earlier, but I decided I better get back at it.
I mean, I always, I always take little breaks off that where I'm inconsistent with it,
but it's a short one for me, because I notice it.
You notice it. I notice it right away. It's your consistent. You notice it when you stop.
That's a big time. That's what I tell because sometimes someone, like, I've had people buy them,
and they'll do them, and then they'll be like, yeah, I don't know. I don't really know. It's different.
I was like be consistent for a while. Stay consistent with it and then remove it and then
tell me how you feel. Like that's how I really connected it. Like, oh, wow, this is making
a bigger difference than I realized.
All right. So I want to give a shout out to a social media page and we're doing this.
Oh, yeah. You got some great idea. Adam, when you came up with it. So the page is called, let's see, at Barbell Films, Barbell
with one L films on Instagram. I like, so you guys know the kind of stuff I'm into. It's
old school old time. Yeah, it's old school old time. You know, you know, is there any
space? Is there any space on the at Barbell films? Or is it just at barbell films?
Let me see, maybe it's two.
No, no, it's two Ls, I'm an idiot.
It's two Ls.
At barbell with two Ls films, I misspelled it.
So if you go there, you see like old time strong man,
strong women.
For example, there's a picture here of Katie Sandwina
in 1910 and she's literally holding three men in her arms like babies.
So she's got one guy on one arm and two guys in the other arm and this is a woman in 1910.
This is back when I mean gosh if a woman did anything that involved strength.
Oh, I'm a dummy. I was putting AT in front of barbell films.
Oh, instead of the at-sign.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. why can't I find it, dude?
So it's cool because they have in here men, women, it's all like another one, there's
a female again.
Leverie, Vela, Ne, Ne, Ne Cooper.
Her stage name was Charmone.
This is in 1905.
This was a early bodybuilder and Vodville trapeze artist
and they show we're flexing their biceps in their back.
Remember, this is before supplements, steroids,
before anything.
It's pretty remarkable stuff
and they'll show like, you know, strength feats
and stuff like that.
So I like this again because this is before Photoshop,
this is before, you know, they're doing crazy things
with lighting.
There's no debates on these bodies natural or not.
They are natural. They didn't even have that shit.
It's as natural as they could get in the air.
I don't even think they had protein powder in them.
That's what I mean. It's as natural as you could get right here.
Pretty amazing stuff. That's cool.
Hey, check this out. There's a company called Joy Mode.
And this company was created because the products on the market are terrible.
And they knew they could do better.
Prescriptions, first of all, come with all sorts of side effects,
but Joy Mode makes natural and science-based
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Go check them out. Go to usejoymod.com-flour-slash-mind-pump
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All right, here comes the rest of the show.
Our first caller is Will from Georgia. out for 20% off your order. All right, here comes the rest of the show.
Our first caller is Will from Georgia.
Will, what's happening, man?
How can we help you?
Hey guys, doing.
Appreciate you having me on.
Yeah, man, thanks for calling.
So basically, I'm in a predicament kind of,
currently on a bulk, sitting at about 170,
trying to get to 180, 190. However, I'm starting law enforcement
training here pretty soon, which is heavy heavy cardio intense cardio. So I was just curious
on how I could balance like building muscle and gaining weight, but at the same time having
to do tons of cardio. Yeah, it's a tough one because there's kind of competing signals going on, but really your best strategy, first off,
would be appropriate strength training.
So if you're doing like a lot of cardiovascular type training,
then maybe one day a week of strength training
would be what you'd want to stick to, because too much
strength training on top of lots of cardio
will really burn your body out.
And then the second piece, and this is the most important,
stay fed.
Yeah, you got to eat more.
Yeah. You just got to really feed yourself. And if you then the second piece, and this is the most important. Stay fed. Yeah, you got to eat more. Yeah.
You just got to really feed yourself.
And if you're not gaining weight, that means you're not eating enough.
And there are strategies to help yourself with something like this.
For example, you could add, I don't know if you can have dairy, but like glass of whole
milk with each meal will add like six, seven-hundred calories right there.
But you got to lift weights appropriately, meaning in the context of what you're currently
doing. And then really feed yourself,
and it's, you know, especially when you're doing
lots, lots of cardio,
defeating yourself is gonna be like an all-day,
you know, consistent, everyday thing,
otherwise it's gonna be hard to put on any size.
This is gonna sound like, kind of,
contradicting advice that we normally give to people
as far as like health, right?
That I think helped me a lot, because I remember playing basketball and trying to do this at the same time and the first kind of hack that I had was
Loading up with a sugar drink before I played and then having another one afterwards
So I'd have like something and by the way, I'm not there's better healthy choices
But I just can tell you what I did just be just being honest. I had a sugar loaded rock star,
like 380 calorie rock star,
before I went and played basketball.
And then afterwards, I'd have like a thousand calorie
jambajus.
And that right there,
like as long as I had it before,
and after I did this intense hour to two hours of cardio,
seemed to like mitigate the muscle loss
and keep my calorie intake high.
And it was easy for me because it was liquid
to get in there in addition.
So I ate like I normally would,
all my meat and rice type of meals.
And then if I knew I was gonna do intense cardio
for an hour or more,
I'd hit a sugar drink before and after,
and that really helped.
Are you able to pick the type of cardio you're doing
or is this just like mandatory?
Like you have it all prescribed already.
For the training, it's mandatory,
which is mostly just running.
But then there's also like some,
I guess body weight things like burpees
and like calisthenics type of things.
Currently I'm just riding the bike
and like walking up hills with a heavy pack on,
but pretty here soon, it's gonna be just strictly
like long runs.
Yeah, how many days a week are they making to do all this?
I don't know exactly yet, but if I had to gauge
probably three or four.
Okay, I'm gonna send you, do you have a map
sent a ballac wheel?
I do not know.
Okay, let me send you a map sent a ballac,
and I would suggest that you follow one foundational workout
a week, if the cardio that they're doing with you
is let's say two days a week,
then you can do two days of foundational workouts.
But if you're doing three,
if it's three hard cardio days, then just do one, okay?
Now, there's another program that I think would also benefit you,
which would be Maps 15.
This is 15 minutes a day of some strength training or 20 minutes if you do the advanced
version today.
That's going to be a great routine to carry you through when you do become a law enforcement
officer because it's every single day, it's easy to stay consistent.
It's not a ton of stress on the body and you still see strength gains.
I was able to hit a PR in deadlift training
this particular way.
So, but maps and a ball, it's the one I'll send you.
Cause I think one of those foundational workouts
a week will work well with what you're currently doing.
Awesome.
Appreciate that.
No problem.
And you got it.
And then you taking these supplements?
Creatine and then pre-workout sometimes.
Yeah, your set.
Creatine was the one I was gonna recommend. your set, aside from things that can add extra
calories like protein shakes or you know, gainer shakes.
I know I just recommended gainer shakes, but I'm thinking of this case that may actually
help.
Yeah, I've been, I've been bulking for I guess two months now and a lot of protein shakes,
Crateen like I said, rice, chicken, beef, the whole essentials basically.
Good deal. All right, man. Yeah, as much fast, which cardioes you can do, I know they'll probably
have you do long endurance runs, but if you can change and structure it in a way that you have
control over, I would do, you know, focus a little bit more on head or like, sprints to, to try and preserve muscle.
Yeah, it's more muscle-sparing for sure.
Right, right.
All right, man, well thanks for calling in.
Awesome, appreciate you guys.
You guys really, thank you.
You know, at the end of the day, weight gain or weight loss,
now I'm not saying necessarily muscle or fat, okay,
because that's then it gets more complicated,
but just weight, you know, you eat more, you eat less. And if it gets more complicated, but just wait.
You know, you eat more, you eat less, and if you're not gaining, you've got to eat more.
And you can definitely gain weight while doing tons and tons of cardio.
Now, the muscle aspect, that can make it real tricky, because you can gain body fat and do
lots of cardio.
If you're not sending the right muscle building signal or if you're overdoing the cardio,
nonetheless, the calorie piece of this equation
is I think where people miss because they're like,
oh, I can't get you away, I can't get you away.
And it's like, well, you know,
jump your calories up 500 to 1000.
And then watch what happens.
And it's true.
It's an energy, you know,
in versus energy out thing.
And it works every single time.
You just might not be eating as much as you think.
It's really interesting how,
whether you're trying to increase calories
or reduce calories,
how our body has this like homeostasis, anything outside of that is hard.
I don't care what you're trying to do.
And I think in a case like this, which is why I gave crazy advice of like sugar drinks
and jambajus because I understand when you go from somebody who like is almost probably
force feeding or really focused on eating ton of calories
Just to get yourself in a normal bulk and then I'll say and you start running every day for an hour
What about that?
Total drastic change. It's huge and and it was already hard for you to hit that calorie and take as it is and then now your body is
Demanding an extra three to five hundred more every single day
And maybe you have one or two days where you're good and you hit it, but then you go back down
to normal, especially if you're not tracking and paying attention.
Along those lines, when it comes to gaining, if it's challenging for you to get enough calories
for whatever reason, this right here, what I'm about to say, makes a massive difference.
Start your day off with a high calorie breakfast.
We don't want to do is end up around noon or 1 p.m.
Try to keep it ketchup.
And yeah, and you're behind the eight ball,
because then it sucks.
It really does suck.
If you start with like a big breakfast
and you know, choose foods that are easy to digest, right?
You don't want to be bloated all day,
but eat a big breakfast.
That makes a huge difference.
Our next caller is Landon from North Carolina.
Landon, what's happening?
How can we help you?
Bella's how we doing this morning?
Doing good, man.
Good.
Right on.
Appreciate you guys taking the time to talk with me.
I got a question for you all, but before I dive into that,
I just want to say the obligatory thank you.
You know, after years of hammering myself in the gym,
and, you know, not really knowing why I was plateauing,
finally feeling like I can get some concrete truth
and real information from you guys.
So truly appreciate what you do.
Thank you.
I've also introduced you to some of my family.
Shout out my brother, Mollonil Wagstaff.
He's running anabolic right now and loving it.
Awesome.
He's got my wife running starter too.
So she's a big fan of that, trying to convince her
if the reverse died but
struggling a little bit there but we'll get her soon. Excellent. So just some quick background.
I'll try to make it quick. I know you guys are busy. Play basketball on college. Did a lot of
explosive movements, cleans, squats, that type of thing. Never really booked to try to put on size.
Once I finally graduated, I did try to go on
kind of a bros split, bulked a lot, put on muscle pretty rapidly. Within the first eight
weeks or so, I gained probably 30 pounds on my bench press, got some stretch marks on
my chest, harder stretch marks there. G know, gained way too much weight though.
I did a dirty, dirty bulk.
You know, eating McDonald's,
watching it down with a Pop Tart smoothie,
I mean, I was getting after it.
So put on way too much fat,
but also gained muscle incredibly fast.
Start working out about a year after that
for the next five years, got back into it during COVID
and did, you know, bulks and cuts on and off from there.
Most recently did a cut down to about seven and a half percent body fat
and it worked my way up to about 10 percent.
Now, running anabolic, loving it, amazing program,
got some more of your programs as well, a plan on starting.
When my question is, I'm doing a clean bulk right now, and my muscle gain, while it's happening,
I'm gaining strength, gaining muscle, I can see it.
It's still not as fast as that initial dirty bulk I did five or six years ago.
And I'm wondering if there's any science around, I know a long-term dirty bulk sort of
a poor strategy,
but in eight weeks or so, scientifically,
do you put on more muscle mass doing a dirty bulk?
Or was that just a one-off thing
where all the factors might have been right
in my life where I can't muscle that quickly?
All right, this is a cool question.
Yeah, so, okay, there's a couple of things
we wanna consider with this.
One is you were a collegiate athlete.
And at that level of sports, you're on the,
on the, I don't know, the better end of genetics
when it comes to muscle building.
So your body is going to build more muscle probably faster
than most average people.
So that, you've got that going for you.
Okay, so let's consider that.
Number two, eating a, eating a dirty bulk,
especially initially, probably will put on a little bit more
muscle.
The challenge though is when you measure lean body mass,
that's also measuring water.
And you tend to hold more glycogen, more water,
with more calories.
That's considered lean body mass, is not body fat.
So sometimes it's hard to separate.
And I know there's body fat tests and stuff, but they're not
super necessarily accurate with that. And then the other thing to consider is, okay, let's say you could gain 10 pounds
with a cleaner bulk and let's say 8 pounds of that is muscle or you could gain 15 pounds,
but you know, 9 or 10 pounds of it is muscle. Is that really a worthy tradeoff?
I mean, if you're starting off a 6% body fat maybe,
because you don't really care about
adding extra body fat at that point,
but for a lot of people, it's not worth it
because then when they go and they try to back out,
they end up losing that extra pound or two
that they gained eating all that stuff.
And then of course, there's the health implications.
It's just not healthy for your body.
Now you're young
so you're probably not gonna see a lot in that way, but as you get older you may notice that eating that way
it's just not gonna start, it's not gonna work for your body, you're gonna notice issues with your health.
Maybe long-term digestive issues can start to become an issue. I know I suffered from those
because of the way I would you know quote-unquote bulk was younger. And then lastly, you will see more strength
oftentimes with more body fat gain.
And that has to do with energy, it has to do with leverage,
CNS output might be better.
So my power lifters tend to carry more body fat
and find that they're stronger in doing so.
And so that can mess with you a little bit.
Like I've done this where I've gained more weight, maybe not as much more muscle, but a lot more body fat, but my strength was
a lot higher. Like what's the value of that? I don't know. You know, it depends if I was
competing, I guess, in an open weight class, I might be okay. Or if I like to, you know,
have certain PR numbers just for my own ego, that might be okay. But as I've gotten older
and trained more people, I just see they're just, they're just more value in trying to minimize fat gain
than there is in just trying to gain as much as possible,
unless I'm dealing with someone who's super shredded,
in which case gaining some body fat is a good idea.
You also have to consider that when you dirty bulk, right,
we tend to be way more calories
than we necessarily need to in order to bulk.
And what you potentially do when you do that is actually add fat cells to the body, which
makes it increasingly more difficult when you go back to cutting.
So this was like really common in the bodybuilding world I'd end with my peers.
So with my peers, I would see like some of my buddies would, they'd be in the bulk
part of getting ready for a show,
and they would just eat everything in sight.
And I'd see him put on 30, 50 pounds,
all to try and cut that back.
And what I'd see what happened is
every time they go to back to a cut,
for the next show,
it was increasingly more difficult for them to get
as lean as they had did before, doing the same stuff,
doing just as much cardio,
dieting the same way, and they would much cardio, dieting the same way,
and they would be confused, and it'd be like,
man, what's happening is every time you go back to this bulk,
you bulk so aggressively, your body's gotta be adding fat cells,
and so you're making it that much more difficult
for you to lean out.
Also, back to kind of what Sal was saying,
there is a little bit of deception there
on how much muscle you're putting on,
because when you're dirty, bulking your end of the cow,
you're filled up with extra water,
you're filled up with extra glycogen.
So the muscle bellies look filler.
So you look like you're putting on more,
and I know coming from being a skinny kid
who was trying to build how that psychologically
can fuck with you a little bit,
oh man, this is working. I feel better.
But then it's, it's just that much more difficult when you cut.
And then when you cut, what ends up happening, you have to cut so hard to get off
that, and create that extra body fat you put on, you end up with the same
amount of muscle or sometimes even a little bit less when you get back to the
desired body fat percentage that you want.
And so what I have found works really well is, okay, I want a clean bulk,
but then when I'm a leaner guy, if I carry myself,
it's six to 10% type of body fat.
Hey, when I go out on Friday night with my wife
and we eat, like I'm not gonna trip out
if I have some dessert or so I'm gonna enjoy.
So in that sense, I wouldn't call it like-
There's some flexibility.
Yeah, exactly.
I wouldn't call it like a dirty bulk,
but then I'm also not really worried too much.
I keep myself relatively lean.
I eat most of my calories through good choices of food,
but hey, it's Friday night with my wife,
and I'm in a bulk anyways.
So tonight I'm gonna have that pizuki
after I have that steak and rice or whatever like that.
So to me, that's how I would allow
some of that flexibility of allowing some of those, quote unquote, dirty foods
into the diet, but not giving that as an excuse of like,
oh, now I mean, pop tart smoothies,
and I'm eating, you know, Sourc Patch Candy Kids,
all the like, that type of shit,
that's only gonna make it more difficult for you
when you go back to lean out.
I wouldn't do things like that,
but I would give yourself some flexibility
in your normal eating diet.
And, and, and, and let me rephrase your question, because what, what we're kind of presenting
right now is a, is a bit of a false binary or dichotomy, which is, you know, eat clean
bulk, not as many calories or eat a dirty bulk with more calories.
Here's the real comparison that we want to look at.
Same amount of calories, okay?
So both in a bulk, even if it's an excessive bulk,
but one of them is made up of foods that are more whole, natural, not fast food, not candy,
not what would be considered garbage. The other one includes fast food, candy, garbage. Now,
I'm going to tell you from that standpoint, because I've done both and I've trained people who've
done both. The whole natural, quote unquote, healthier version, even though the calories are the same,
builds more muscle. It just builds more muscle. The other one tends to gain more body fat.
So even if your goal is to just gain as much muscle as possible and you're like, I'm
going to just eat way more calories. You're still better off doing it with calories that
come from foods that don't mess with your, your palate sensitivity that don't mess with
your dopamine that don't mess with your insulin foods, don't mess with your dopamine, that don't mess with your insulin,
foods that are on the healthier side.
Now, you can do this with, you know,
calorically dense, healthier foods,
like you can get ground beef, 80%, 80% ground beef.
Mix it with some rice, make your rice with bone broth.
You got yourself a high calorie bowl of rice
and bone broth and, you yourself a high calorie bowl of rice and bone broth and you know
fatty ground beef. Throw in some vegetables if you want some fiber, right? You can, if
you can have dairy, whole milk, have a glass of whole milk with every meal, there's some
good, you know, dense calories that you're going to get. It's not soda, it's not garbage,
it's not, you know, crap, right? So those are just a couple examples of ways you can add
calories with foods that
are better for your body. And like I said, when you go apples to apples, 3,500 calories,
3,500 calories or 4,000 calories, 4,000 calories, but one of them is, you know, more, what
we would consider healthier or better options, you gain more muscle that way. That's my experience.
That's been my experience across the board. And people just feel better too. Like dirty
bolts with crappy food just feel like shit.
That's another trade off.
I don't think it's worth it.
Right.
I guess just a quick follow up on that.
I appreciate the information.
That makes a lot of sense.
Just in terms of, and again, I know this can vary so widely, depending on the person and
all kinds of factors.
But just to try to tamper my expectations for muscle growth and when to expect to see
size increase, I mean a rough estimation does that take three months?
Does it take six to nine months or is it hard to really tell?
Yeah, it's hard to tell.
I would guess, like I said, because of your level of, because you were an athlete at a
pretty high level, you're probably gonna build muscle faster
than the average person.
How tall are you and what's your body weight?
You said you're 10% body fat right now?
I'm 652.5 and about 10%.
All right, so 205 at 65, you know, boy,
I think you could probably get up to 220, 225
with right around the body fat you're at now,
with probably a year and a half of good consistent training.
I would, I'm gonna give you a guess.
Now here's the deal, I could be totally off
because genetics make a big difference.
But you know, you're hitting all cylinders,
getting good sleep, you're eating good,
you're hitting a surplus with your calories,
you're getting stronger, you're not losing sleep
because you just had a baby or whatever.
I know you said you're married.
So everything going great,
I mean, you could probably gain a good 15 pounds
of lean body mass within a year and a half,
two years of consistent, you know, doing it that way.
How old are you right now?
I'm 31.
Okay.
A good years.
Yeah, yeah, those are good building years.
Yeah, for sure.
Awesome.
Yeah, awesome.
Well, really appreciated guys.
That's very encouraging to know and excited about it.
I've got Annabelle now.
Gonna hopefully run through performance aesthetic. And then I've got anabolic now. Gonna hopefully run through performance aesthetic,
and then I've got parallel to strong.
So that's gonna be my year to work the program.
Are you doing prime or prime pro
to help with the mobility issues?
Because when you're packing on muscle like that,
you wanna make sure you maintain mobility.
Yeah, but I've got prime,
so I'm using that every Every single workout definitely can immediately feel
the difference, especially my ankles and hips when I squat.
So good deal.
That's been a game, Dander.
Especially when you're tall like you are.
So I'm going to send you prime pro just because it gets a
little deeper.
So I'll send you that for free.
And then a good program to follow up with some of these
would be symmetry, especially with someone tall like you.
The unilateral stuff tends to work really, really well
with somebody that got long limbs.
Awesome, man, thank you so much.
I didn't expect that, so I really appreciate it
and look forward to putting that in the routine.
You got it, man. Thanks for calling in.
All right, take care.
No problem.
Yeah, you guys remember, I don't think Justin
ever had to deal with this, but...
I don't know. What are you gonna say?
Jason's gaining muscle right now, just us talking about it.
Yes, true. I know Adam and I, we've gone through this process.
Do you remember when you piece together,
like, oh, if I eat a lot of calories,
it'd make it like whole natural food,
I'd just build more muscle.
Yeah. I mean, it just blew me away.
Yeah, I wanted to add to that,
like in terms of building more muscle through whole food.
So there has to be a factor to that
if you have gastrointestinal issues.
Yeah, this is something I did go through, right?
Just pounding a bunch of shakes and just eating whatever I possibly could just for the
calorie sake, but really not being able to assimilate a lot of it.
A lot of it just went through me with diarrhea, with gas, everything else.
So it's like, you got to consider that's a factor.
Yeah, no, there's that.
You feel like crap.
You're probably not going to work out as well. You're probably not gonna work out as well.
You're probably not gonna sleep as well.
There's also the behaviors around your food choice too.
So like, one of the things that I remember
when I was allowing myself to quote unquote dirty bulk
and just kind of eat whatever, right?
Just to get extra calories.
When I did an assessment on what I was consuming,
it was like, okay, sure,
I was hitting 4,000, 5,000 calories,
but most of it came from carbohydrates or saturated fat,
and I was still not hitting my protein intake.
That's true.
Because I would gravitate towards these,
snacky type foods and desserts and candies,
and just heavy carbs.
Yeah, they're all heavy carbs,
and I'm not getting quality protein from there,
and then I look at my thing, and I'll be like,
oh shit, I had 120 grams of protein today,
but I had 4,000 calories.
Because it was all in like carbs and sugar and shit like that.
So, you know, that's the other thing that I don't like
about the process of dirty bulking is that
it kind of gives people this past of like,
oh, I just eat everything inside.
And then, and then hopefully I hit my, you know,
targets, my macro targets.
But then when you go back and you actually track it all,
you're like, oh, wow, I tend to gravitate towards it.
Because honestly, eating, especially for a guy like this,
six, five, eating enough calories to put on size for a guy,
that tall and lanky and a lot of his chore.
Oh, man, probably four or five thousand calories.
And you're doing that through steak and potatoes and chicken.
I mean, that's hard.
So you tend to throw in these calories to try and get it,
get up over that number and then you realize like,
oh shit, I'm eating just a bunch of pop tarts and stuff.
Just hit that calories.
You know, it's interesting.
The athletes, the traditional athletes of the world
who have really figured out how to gain lots of weight, sumo wrestlers.
And if you look at, and sumo has been around for a long time, there's a traditional dish
that sumo wrestlers would eat to gain weight.
I don't remember the name of it, maybe Doug can find it, but it's a type of a soup and
it's a high calorie soup.
And the sumo wrestlers, and remember, these guys don't mind gaining body fat.
Obviously, they want to be huge, but they also have to be mobile. They have to move.
If you've ever watched sumo wrestlers, you know, fight, they're
actually incredibly mobile for guys their size.
Super explosive.
Very, for guys that, you know, 500 pound, 400 pound, like they can
move. And this suit with the soup called Doug,
chunk onabe, chunk onabe. And they will say, these are,
these are guys that just want to put on size. They will say,
avoid junk food. And they've been, this is something that's been around for a long time.
Eating whole natural foods and gaining weight makes you feel better.
That's just the bottom line.
Our next color is Drew from Nebraska.
Drew, it's happening.
How can we help you?
Awesome.
Hey guys, thanks for having me on, taking the time to answer my questions.
A obligatory thank you for everything you do.
The last thing about a year and where I'm at right now compared to that, it's very different.
So thank you very much. You got it. Just going to go ahead and jump in. I have a couple of questions
about nutrition. My life has changed a little bit. I had a little bit more flexible of a schedule.
I was used to working out more after work,
early afternoon, and now I am working out first thing in the morning.
So 6 a.m. I'm in the gym going out and I'm
kind of having trouble with my morning nutrition.
Even now, when I occasionally worked out in the afternoon I'm
more well fed. I have a chance to eat a couple meals. I don't know if this is a
thing or I'm just kind of chasing my tail and the convenience of working out in
the morning. I just have to kind of deal with not being as well fed and not being quite ready to go,
but I didn't know if he had any advice for where I should be
kind of putting my meals if I should be really eating
anything beforehand.
Do you guys have anything for me there?
Yeah, well, that's a little carbs at night.
Well, yeah, he wrote that actually too.
He says he eats a pretty good meal before bed.
What time do you wake up? You work out at six? What time do you wake up?
5 a.m. I try to
Get up a little bit and move around before I head out that way
But you know if I'm meeting anything significant. I'm not gonna really have time to digest it. No. Yeah
So pluses with morning workouts
It's the people tend to be more consistent. It tends to set the tone for the day
Minuses your performance isn't going to be as good.
And studies are going to show this across the board.
Look, I've been working out first thing in the morning for years.
So my body's acclimated to an extent.
But even now, even after years and years of training in the morning, if I wanted to just
max out my strength and look at my best performance,
I'd do better off in the afternoon.
This is just how it is.
So you gotta kind of deal with that
and be okay with it.
But as far as meals are concerned,
you just eat right after you're done,
and bring your breakfast with you.
This will make it a lot easier.
That's what I do.
But I eat every morning to everybody's demise and complaints
is I have eight hard boiled eggs. So right after my workout, I have eight hard boiled eggs.
So right after my workout, I eat eight hard boiled eggs
and there's my first meal and I get my proteins,
my fats and everything feels great.
So fumes everywhere.
Yeah, so I would say, I would say,
bring your breakfast with you.
So that right after you're done, you can just see,
what time are you finished with your workout?
Usually by 7, 30 or so,
usually it's hour and a half.
This is where the creatures have it, sick, bro.
Oh, yeah, well that's super convenient.
You could either throw that in cold water
and shake it up and actually drink it like a shake.
I've actually had it's bomb like that
where you have like a thing where you can boil it
throw hot water on it, it's good.
But so I would experiment too,
I don't know how much you've tracked
like what the calories and carbohydrates
that you have for dinner,
but I would experiment with that,
like actually like really loading up at nighttime.
If I really load up at nighttime, come morning time,
I've still got enough fuel in the tank
to actually feel a decent workout,
although I hate morning workouts,
so I'm not a fan of them for the reasons
that you're explaining right now.
It's just not my thing.
I don't like to feel as weak as Sal is
and I just think that training is weak
as I was training in the afternoon keeps Justin
and I much stronger than him.
So for us, we prefer that.
But, you know, as far videos as far as possible.
He is more consistent though,
you know, he is more consistent than we are.
So I mean, he's got that going for him.
So, no, try that, try loading more consistent than we are. So I mean, he's got that going for him. So, no, try that.
Try loading some carbohydrates, I think.
Trying to get something before that's not gonna happen.
And then Sal's point, eat right after.
I love creatures I have it for some of that.
It's easy to digest.
It's got 30-something grams of protein in it.
It tastes good.
That's a great post workout type of meal that you can have.
But really, try playing around with like,
having like a high, high carb dinner
and see what that does.
As long as it doesn't disrupt sleep,
I would play around with that.
You know what I realized too,
is that, cause you're just lifting, right?
That's all you're doing in the morning.
It's not like you're doing a crazy long term cardio workout
or anything like that.
Okay.
So, cause I was gonna say,
if you're doing like real high intensity long,
you know, kind of steady state type cardio type workout, you might want to have a carbohydrate drink
with you while you're training, but for weight training, not necessary.
Here's what I figured out a long time ago, is that I would have like this really crappy
performance in the morning workout, and then about halfway through my workout, I would
start to feel better, and I started to realize it's because I was didn't drink water. So as soon as you wake up drink like two glasses of water
And and that makes a big difference because what I would do is I'd wake up early
I'd get ready brush my teeth the whole thing and then start my workout and then start drinking water while I was working out in
20 30 minutes in I started to feel better and so now what I do is as soon as I wake up I go and I have two big glasses
of water about an hour
before, 45 minutes before I work out, and that made a huge difference.
So try that out too.
Got it.
I haven't got feeling you were going to bring up creatures I have.
I'm intolerant to oats.
Oh.
A little rough there, but I've been mainly my card meals or first thing postworked out,
and then I've been trying to card meals or first thing postworked out and then I've been trying
to do more before bed.
Should I just put everything before bed, go just hard on that or just post workout really?
You said experiment.
I think what Adam said is ideal.
Yeah, experiment.
Yeah, play with it.
I don't know where you're at if you've actually counted carbohydrates and seen like,
oh, you know, because people will say, oh, I have a big dinner.
I said, okay, well, what's a big dinner?
Oh, I track it for me.
And then you go, oh, I eat 40 grams of protein
and I have 100 grams of carbs.
And then I go, okay, let's try 200 grams of carbs for dinner
and see what happens.
So that's what I mean.
Figure out kind of where you're at currently right now,
increase it by 50% or more,
and see how that affects your workout in the morning
if you notice a difference.
And so long as you digest that amount of carbohydrates fine,
you sleep okay, if it improves performance,
that may be an answer for you is to start to
backload carbohydrates like that.
Perfect.
And then if we saw time, I had one other part
to kind of the nutrition side.
I was in an extended deficit for a better
part of two years. I lost about 120 pounds from 2020 to more recently. In that time,
I don't think I was probably in a surplus for more than maybe a month of that whole time.
Right now I'm in a bulk, I've been in a bulk since October
and I was planning on just going until about February
and then around summertime kind of coming back to you.
And I've heard you guys talk about being in an extended
deficit like that, maybe living in a bulk a little bit longer.
And so I feel pretty good, but I just didn't know
if you had any more input on that, on how long I should really be saying.
I would interrupt it with many one week cuts. Yeah. And then you can bulk for a long time
that way. Yeah. So I mean, you know, you know, your plan is to bulk all the way till like
February, whatever. Okay. So just, you know, every, every fourth week, and it doesn't
have to be a full week to be honest with you. Every fourth week run three to four days of really low calorie, and then go back.
So just interrupt it like that every, every three to four weeks with a three to four days of,
of a low, low cow, and then go back the other direction. I think you'll, you'll feel a lot better,
and you'll, you'll see a better response. Now, to add to that, in my experience, one of the best
ways to do that is to go three to four days of very low carbohydrates.
It's an easy way to cut calories during that period of time
and you end up, you know,
you're maintaining the essential fats and proteins.
Perfect.
All right, man.
Well, hey, good job on the 120 pound weight loss.
Yeah, it's phenomenal.
Yeah, and the fact that you're able psychologically
to go in a bulk, that's actually really, really difficult.
It's tough. Yeah. It's actually really difficult. It's tough.
It's actually putting the carbs back on.
Seeing the scale go up and I mean,
my muscles are fuller, but just everything else
is a little rough here there.
Yeah, good for you, bro.
That takes a lot of discipline to do that.
That's probably one of the most difficult things
I had with clients that lost that kind of weight was to.
They're so afraid of you.
Yes, right. To be able to do what They're so afraid of you. Yes, right.
To be able to do what you're doing.
So you're doing the right thing.
So keep it up.
Awesome.
Thank you.
You got them, man.
Right on.
Yeah, that's, you know, as far as the morning workouts are concerned, there's going to
be trade-offs and I think this is where people have the challenge.
But look, my argument is always going to be with it, is it does make the day better.
You tend to have more energy throughout the day.
You start your day off on the right foot
because you're motivated, you push yourself,
you have a great workout.
So it tends to help with work,
tends to help with the rest of the day.
You tend to be more consistent.
And I think for a lot of people,
it's not everybody, for a lot of people,
when you weigh that out and you add in the, okay, yes,
my performance is 5% worse than my workouts,
it's still worth it.
It's a net positive.
You know, I'll add one more thing that it does too,
even though I hate morning workouts,
and I wish I would be better about it,
is you get better sleep.
Yeah, because you start,
you start having your caffeine so late.
You start so early, you have your caffeine earlier,
you have a longer day, so then when the sun naturally goes down, you have your caffeine earlier, you have a longer day.
So then when the sun naturally goes down, you're already kind of exhausted.
One of the drawbacks of being a late riser and a late workout person as I am is 9, 10 o'clock
at night.
I'm still wired sometimes and when I want to stay up where when I do and have discipline
myself to get up and train at like six in the morning, shit.
Sun goes down and I'm already yawning
and I'm ready to go to bed
and then I tend to get really good sleep.
So there are definitely those benefits,
but I drag ass in the workout.
It's tough to power through it.
And so I'm always straight off.
Yeah, you gotta look at the whole picture
is what I tend to tell people.
But if I could work out at the best time for performance,
for me would be like noon.
It's just I'd lift that noon,
but I mean, there's no way I'll be able to make that happen.
I'm not gonna be as consistent.
And, you know, before noon,
we tend to record two podcasts,
and I like to come in here after my workout and record.
I'm just sharper, I feel better,
so just works out better for me.
And I know a lot of people like that, so.
Our next caller is Colton from Utah.
Colton, what's happening?
How can we help you?
Hey, how are you guys?
Good, man.
So I have two questions.
My first question is, I'm trying to find a balance between like
a body building and a powerlifting workout. I tend to find myself leaning naturally more towards
some of the powerlifting type stuff, the heavy compound lifts,
but I want to also get the benefit of building muscles
like in a bodybuilding type workout.
So is there a way that you can incorporate both of those
into the same training session,
or would it be more efficient to like cycle in a powerlifting phase
and then a bodybuilding phase?
It's a common question.
Well, first off, I want to correct what you said.
They both build muscle, okay?
So whether you're trained in...
They both build a lot of muscle too, but...
Yeah, so there's a myth that one builds more than the other.
I mean, if you cycle them properly,
you're going to get better results, and if you just stick builds more than the other. I mean, if you cycle them properly, you're gonna get better results
and if you just stick to one all the time.
So this is a question we get often.
Now, in terms of like results in studies,
when people are monitored and told what to do,
it doesn't matter.
If you do, have you work out on Monday,
a lighter hire rep, work out on Wednesday, and so on.
But in our experience, it's better to do a cycle
of a specific type of training for a few weeks
and then move into another cycle of a specific type of training.
Mainly because there's a different mindset with the training.
And you know this, right?
When you do three reps of a squat versus,
12 reps of a squat.
It's a different focus, right?
On one of them, it's all about the movement,
keeping tight, you hold your breath when you do your left.
The other one, it's like smooth,
focused on the muscles, the contraction,
the stretch, the squeeze, the pump.
And that's a hard mindset to get in and out of, okay?
It's hard for me to do.
It's hard for me to do
and I've been training for a long time.
So I prefer being in the mindset of
I'm trying to train for strength for the next three weeks
and then I'm trying to train in more, have a hypertrophy,
you know, style for the next three to four weeks.
What is happening is I pick too much weight
for my bodybuilding style workouts
or I end up focusing too much on the squeeze
in the pump or the lack of the pump when I'm doing the power lifting workouts.
But if I'm in that mindset, then that's where I'm at, and it's all good.
So it's more of a psychological thing than anything.
Yeah, it's a lot easier to acknowledge the intent going in and to be able to refine
and fine tune what you're doing in terms of your overall technique, especially if you
can place the kind of emphasis on technique, especially while you're powerlifting because it requires so much dedicated focus, I would highly suggest
kind of staying in that for a bit. Plus, it's more measurable. So that's the thing is when
you start like combining different methods, it's really hard to kind of tease out what
really is working the best and what isn't. So just in terms of those two points,
I would try to cycle them both at different times.
The main point I would have brought up
was what Justin just said.
I think that that's the most important thing
is that I was notorious for this.
Like I trained like all the modalities in one,
I was like every, I used to, in fact, my philosophy was
as a trainer, I've never repeated the same workout.
Every workout was unique and different
because to Salis Point, that's what the studies show.
The studies show that if you're continuously moving
and changing rep ranges and exercises and modalities,
the body's gonna keep adapting and responding,
and it's just as good as somebody who's cycling and phasing.
But here's the drawback of that is,
it's really hard to Justin's point drawback of that is it's really
hard to Justin's point to measure, well what's really working for my body? Like, oh when I train
these exercises in this manner, wow, I really notice X, Y, and Z. And you can see that because
you're sticking to this something very consistently for three to four weeks and you're not sprinkling
other things. Otherwise, you look back after two months of kind of sprinkling
a little bit on your like, oh shit.
Yeah, I definitely put on some good size.
Oh, what was that from?
Was that from my powerlifting training that I was doing?
Or was that more from the bodybuilding stuff I was doing?
And so it's harder to tease out.
What is your body really responding to?
And so we tend to lean and push people more.
And by the way, there's, I think it's Michael Herne
who's the core building.
Yeah, who's coined the power building program
where he combines power lifting with bodybuilding
and really that's a marketing tool
to appeal to someone just like you who goes like,
oh, I like power lifting and I want to look
like a bodybuilder like this is the perfect program for me.
Like, okay, sure.
But it really is, in our opinion, better
and more beneficial for
YouTube, focus on a phase, a way of training, run, run a program like Power Lift for a
while, then run a program like Split, like we have. In fact, do you have any of our programs?
I actually don't know. Okay. So I mean, are you more into the power lifting or the body
building? Which one do you enjoy the most right now? Myself, I enjoy the powerlifting or the bodybuilding, which one do you enjoy the most right now? Myself, I enjoy the powerlifting more,
and I think that's just because, like you guys said,
it's measurable and you can see the increase,
you can see the results a lot faster.
So I'm gonna have Doug send you over powerlift,
and then I would follow that up with MAPSPLIT.
I think those, the incombination of running one
and then running the next program,
you'll get the benefits that you're looking for.
Yeah, one more thing I'd like to add here is that I think that I don't want to discount
the self awareness and knowing your body or learning your body as you go through this
journey of exercise. And I think you learn better and faster when you can stay in a focused modality for a few weeks versus mixing it all up.
You also can experience one of my favorite things. And I don't like I said, if you looked at this over the course of a year, I don't think the results necessarily would be better.
However, there's something to be said about the psychological benefit of going for three, four weeks in a modality, then switching and seeing
like these really rapid changes in that first week or two.
Like when I switch from 12 to 15 reps to three to five reps,
in that first two to three weeks, it's like,
boom, I see great, but then it slows down
and then I switch to something else
versus kind of this real slow, consistent,
I like that, like I like the way that feels.
I also like knowing how my body feels
and how it feels different when I train differently
and I can notice signs and signals in my body.
For example, when I power lift for too long,
I feel it in my joints.
When I body build for too long, I just feel burnt out.
And it's a different feeling,
both of them are different feelings.
So it would be hard for me to pinpoint what's going on
if I did it all at the same time.
So you'll see when you look at our programs,
how they're phased.
We don't mix everything up at once.
We tend to phase them that way.
So you get in power lift and then after that,
I think split would be a good follow up for you, for sure.
No, that's awesome.
I'm excited to try those.
You got it.
My second question, I kind of went down
to intermittent fasting rabbit hole pretty far. I did it pretty
religiously for about two years, lost a bunch of weight, it was great. And now that I have started
lifting more, I'm about 12 weeks into lifting pretty consistently now, I've been trying to incorporate
some more meals, some more calories, kind of break out of that intermittent fasting cycle.
But it's been a really, really big challenge for me mentally. And it's hard because I really liked the way that I felt when I was intermittent fasting.
It seemed like my body really agreed with that.
agreed with that. So do you think there's any room for intermittent fasting in like a muscle building, powerlifting space? I mean, there is. It's just going to be harder. You
know, if you're trying to eat, you know, I don't know how many calories you're trying to
eat here, but if you're trying to eat, you know, 3,500 calories and you're eating window
is noon to six. Okay, you're going to be stuffing know, 3,500 calories and you're eating window is noon to six. Okay,
you're going to be stuffing yourself and it's not going to feel very good. So I don't think it's a
great way to do it. I would use it as an interrupter, right? So I wouldn't use it as like what you're
referring to, like every day having this eating window and trying to do it, like good luck with that.
I think that is kind of counterproductive. But if you're like consistently eating four to six meals a day
all day long and you've been doing that for a week or two
and you're like, hey, you know what, this weekend,
I'm gonna intermittent fast
because I just feel like I'm feeling a little withhargic
or maybe I over did it on Friday night or what I would do.
So hey, tomorrow I'm gonna intermittent fast.
Like that's how I would do it.
I would interrupt my kind of normal eating routine
with the intermittent fast based off of how I feel
because you've already said,
I feel good on it, it agrees with my body.
So when you notice that you've been pushing the food
quite a bit and you want to take a break from that,
I think that's a great tool.
But using intermittent fasting on a daily basis
while also trying to gain strength inside.
That's tough. And that is kind of is kind of counter what are your benefits that you
notice from fasting you like so much. My mental clarity is 150% better I would
say my digestive system really agrees with it less bloated, more consistent energy, just a general,
in general, I feel a lot better when I enter.
Try this.
Try this.
Try eating a lower carb bulking diet
and then put your carbs around your workout.
So this is like a slick, you know,
kind of targeted carbohydrate type of diet.
So maybe your carbs are 150 for the day
or 100 for the day, which is kind of low for
a bulk, especially, you know, I don't know how big you are, but, you know, if you're, you know,
over 180 pounds is real low, I would go carbs before and after my workout. And then the rest of the
day, it's keto. That was, I mean, I was going to interject that. That was the biggest thing I found
was like, it's carbs calories, like, like, how I was going to manage that. Because I was skipping
a lot of breakfast and also, you and also a heavy meal at the end.
I would skip that too.
I had the bulk of what I would eat
was like during that window.
And that took a long time for me to kind of bust through
in terms of like, I didn't feel that same kind of strength
and energy in my workouts and didn't realize it
until I actually started to put work in.
And I had to start with like a lot
lower calorie intake for breakfast because my bi just didn't want to include that and so it just
took some effort but definitely like the the timing of it did play quite a bit of a factor where
I would add a bit more carbs right before the workout and then after. So, you know, that's something to play around with.
Yeah.
Would you say there's like a certain range of carbs that I need to be in before a workout
or kind of just whatever I feel the best?
It depends.
I mean, yeah, I guess that's the right answer.
But I would start with like, you know, start with this, right?
If you feel really good on low carb, I would go 50 to 60 grams of carbohydrates
about an hour or two before your workout. And then after your workout, your post workout
meal would have about 50 grams of carbohydrates. So there you go, 120 grams of carbs. And
that's it for the day. So it's still low carb. And you might even, depending on how much activity
you do and how hard you work out, you still might even be able to get an ketosis with
that. I know I can get an ketosis with about 100 grams.
A carbohydrates if I'm working out, you know, really hard.
But look, I don't, I, I even like you.
I feel way better eating that way.
So, so what I, if I want to maximize my performance
and mental acuity, that's how I do it.
I eat my carbs or on my workout.
That's perfect.
Well, I'm gonna try that and see how that works for me.
You guys are home.
Yeah, thanks for calling in, brother.
Yeah, thank you guys.
I appreciate it.
Appreciate it.
You got it.
You know, it's great about, you know, follow, I guess,
you know, kind of doing like a fitness journey
and learning about yourself or whatever.
You can kind of start to figure this out.
And then, you know, as I've said many times on the show,
you can use your diet and your workout in ways to improve your life.
So like, when I know I'm gonna go,
sometimes I'll go down to LA
and I'll do these big podcasts, right?
And I'll try to represent the team
and I wanna be sharp.
I don't care about how much I could squat or deadlift
or if I have extra three pounds of muscle.
I wanna be sharp on the show.
So what do I do?
I make sure I go into ketosis because I want to be sharp on the show. So what do I do? I make sure I go into
ketosis because I just feel my sharpest doing that. And I'll utilize fasting and I'll eat no carbohydrates.
Now if I want to like hit a new PR on my lift or I know we're going to do a crazy workout or maybe
I'm going to be filmed working out which rarely ever happens, but let's say I am. Well then I'll
introduce some carbohydrates into my diet and you can do this. You can do this and mess around with
it to maximize the quality of your life. You not only can do this, you and you can do this. You can do this and mess around with it to maximize the quality of your life.
You not only can do this, you should learn to do this.
This instead of becoming a zealot about a single way, right?
Yeah, one way of eating because you've now attached.
Oh, keto is for me.
Well, okay, for you for what reasons.
Oh, you like the mental sharpness.
Oh, you like how there's less, you're less bloated.
Okay,
those are all positive things. But what about when you decide you want to go after a squat PR? Do you
think keto is going to be the best thing for you? I'll tell you it's not going to be or what if
I said you decide you want to sign up for a Spartan race with your friends? You think training for
that on keto is going to be ideal for you? Probably not. Like so learning about your body and how it
responds to all the different ways of eating and then
learning how to ebb and flow in that and for what reasons that you change the diet, I
just think that everybody, I mean, this is later in my career, this is how I used to train
all clients is that when they would, at one point when they would, they would hire me,
I would take them through like all the diets, everything.
I would take them through all the popular, right?
Whether it be a ketogenic or an intermittent fasting type
of deal or a vegan diet.
And I'd let, and I'd explain to them as we are,
I'm inquiring, how do you feel?
What do you notice?
Like, okay, cool, you notice that this,
you feel this way, in these times in your life,
this is a great opportunity to shift to eating like this.
I'm not getting good sleep.
I have a protocol for that.
I'm feeling some kind of indigestion constantly.
I got a protocol for that.
I want more performance in the gym.
So you just start to figure out what foods pair best of that
or what calorie amounts or what timing with the whole thing.
And that's very important.
Yeah, and it's all fun.
It's all super fun.
You know, one thing I did notice on keto,
which is really, I need know,
obviously the mental acuity or whatever,
and it's probably a 5, 10% improvement,
so it's not huge, but it's enough to where I can tell.
Here's the other weird stuff.
I notice my skin becomes resilient to sunburns,
very strange, so I'll fall on keto and I go on the sun.
I don't sunburn as easily.
I don't get soreres much in my workouts.
And those are the two big things that I noticed
were really, really strange on a diet like that.
So if I'm gonna go out and be on the sun a lot,
then I tend to do Keto diet.
Look, if you like the show,
head over to mindpumpfree.com and check out our guides.
We have guides that can help you
with almost any health or fitness goal.
You can also find us all on social media.
So Justin is on Instagram at my pump Justin.
Adam is on Instagram at my pump Adam,
and you can find me on Twitter at my pump cell.
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