Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1988: Dumbbells Vs. Cables, How the Central Nervous System Influences Performance & Recovery, the Difference Between Intermittent Fasting & Calorie Restriction & More
Episode Date: January 13, 2023In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer four Pump Head questions drawn from last Sunday’s Quah post on the @mindpumpmedia Instagram page. Mind Pump Fit Tip: If you're going to do... some sets to failure, make them HIGH rep sets. (2:43) Nitrous is scary. (9:53) Fast cars with Mind Pump. (11:05) Why isn’t Justin in the studio? (14:40) What did we do before the internet? (16:22) Stress and relationships. (18:44) Why obesity hasn’t been labeled a disease. (23:49) Another brilliant way to use Kreatures of Habit. (31:38) The desire to go viral. (32:12) Solein is potentially one of the most disruptive things for the food market. (35:35) So, do you want to be a little bit taller? (39:31) Caldera Lab is exploding! (41:56) Larry Wheels body transformation. (44:44) An update on Sal and Justin’s MP Hormones cognitive protocol. (49:51) Shout out to Paul J. Fabritz! (54:11) #Quah question # 1- What is the benefit of cable movements when compared to their dumbbell counterparts? (57:00) #Quah question #2 - Can or should women take the week off lifting during their period? And if so, what should they do in place of lifting? (1:03:11) #Quah question #3 - Is intermittent fasting the same as calorie restriction? (1:07:05) #Quah question #4 - Could you explain more about the central nervous system and how it influences performance and recovery? (1:10:22) Related Links/Products Mentioned Visit Kreatures of Habit: Meal One for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code MP25 at checkout** Visit Caldera Lab for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code MINDPUMP at checkout** January Promotion: NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTIONS SPECIAL OFFERS! (New to Weightlifting Bundle, Body Transformation Bundle, and New Year Extreme Intensity Bundle) You get massive savings with each offer. Ford GT LM Edition: A Final Sendoff For Dearborn’s Le Mans-Winning Supercar Mind Pump #1912: The Science Of Successful Marriages & Relationships With Drs. John And Julie Gottman New guidance: Use drugs and surgery early for obesity in kids Solein - Protein out of thin air. The TALLER Limb Lengthening Procedure Larry Wheels Shows Off Downsized 114-kg (251-lb) Physique Using TRT MP Hormones Visit SleepMe for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Mind Pump #1782: When Machines Are Better Than Free Weights What Is a Fast-Mimicking Diet, and How Does It Work? Is Fasting Effective? – Mind Pump Blog Intermittent Fasting Guide Fire up your Central Nervous System to maximize Muscular Adaptation – Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Larry Wheels (@larrywheels) Instagram Paul J. Fabritz (@pjfperformance) Instagram Joe Bennett (@hypertrophycoach) Instagram
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the world's number one fitness health and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump, right in today's episode.
We answered listeners questions after a 53-minute introductory conversation.
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Training to failure can definitely have some benefits you've got to be smart about.
Here's one tip.
If you're going to do some sets to failure, make them high rep sets.
One of the things that makes up failure training is low volume, right?
The intensity is super high.
So you're doing less sets.
But low rep failure training doesn't seem to produce enough muscle stress to give you
the results you're looking for.
So if you're going to train to failure, obviously the volume's low, but try to pick a weight
where you fail at 12 to 15 reps or maybe even as high as 20 reps, you'll find that you
get better results that way.
Now, is your opinion to do that more often than you would do heavy weight failure?
Is that what you're, or always or risk factor down a bit, right?
That's another one.
Yeah, so there's a few benefits to this.
So there is this kind of cumulative stress that you get
when you do multiple sets, right?
This is why volume has been closely connected to muscle growth.
Well, failure training is really low volume by nature.
The idea is to do a set to failure, to muscular
failure, so super high intensity, but then because it's so intense, you have to do less volume.
And so that's like the selling point, right? And when it's novel, it does seem to produce
some gains in a lot of people, especially if you're advanced, but the challenge is if you're
doing a set to failure with like five reps, it's not enough muscular fatigue
to produce the desired result. But if you do a set to failure at 15, now you're still
getting some of that cumulative effect plus the intensity. And then what Justice said
I think is a real important. Going to failure at five reps, the risk is high for injury,
right? Your form can go out the window, whatever. When it's a set to 15, you can really make sure
that your form is perfect.
And I would say it's probably the most important factor
to consider when you train to failure's technique
because your technique has to be perfect.
Otherwise, it's a very risky form of training.
I would say this is very body builder-esque.
That's totally.
Very much so, I think they're floss.
In fact, almost to a fault.
I'd say most of my bodybuilder friends rarely train to failure,
especially in singles, doubles, triples, or even five by five, they rarely run a five
by five routine.
And so the bodybuilding community tends to really lean hard into this tip.
There's some truth there, right?
Because if you look at like the strength athletes, like power lifters who do train the low reps,
they rarely train the failure.
They don't train the failure unless they're really testing out
what their PR is or their max is.
But they rarely ever like max out as part of their training
protocol.
Now bodybuilders obviously use failure much more often,
but they do the higher reps.
Yeah.
Now I've played with this quite a bit, and it's a big difference.
Like, if I do a set of failure to seven reps, it's not the same as 15 reps.
It's almost like I get the CNS fatigue, but I don't get the muscle stimulating effects.
Now, it's cool to you as studies that compare higher reps to lower reps.
If the sets are taking a failure, the higher reps build just as much or if not
more muscle. So it's just one of those things. If you want to try utilizing failure training,
by the way, there's more that goes to this because there's a lot of factors you want to consider,
and you want to be really smart. I think training to failure requires more precise programming
than other methodologies because it's so high intense. But this is one thing to consider.
If you do it, keep the reps high,
and then you'll see more benefit
than if you go, you know, really low.
I don't know, if you guys experimented
with this yourselves.
Well, yeah, I definitely think the fatigue factor
is way different when you go in the high-res
versus like the low reps.
So even so, like you get that muscular fatigue,
like the endurance fatigue,
but when you go to failure in the low rep range, I
mean, it's almost like your whole body shuts down.
It's really hard to control that point.
So that's why I think that the risk factor is definitely higher in that direction.
I think it really matters on who we're talking to.
I feel like failure training is abused or overused in the fitness fanatic.
It's underutilized in the casual,
yeah, the casual lifter, novice,
someone who's just getting started in the gym,
they tend not to train to failure
or push themselves as often.
And probably need to hear the advice that,
hey, you got more, we could probably put more in the bar
or we could try harder or whatever, but with your clients
or with your people that are training consistently
for years and years, I mean, at least I fell in this trap.
Yeah, they just hit that button too often.
Yeah, I mean, I used to train to almost every exercise
I did in the gym consistently, I would end up training
at least one set, if not every set to failure.
And I think that was a big mistake and probably stalled a lot of my progress had I not understood.
A lot of young authors make that mistake.
I mean, me included it in that.
And it's just like, you just want to test yourself constantly.
And I do think that it's important to test yourself and your abilities and your strength and your technique
and kind of put it on display,
but very less frequent than most people would think.
So, well, you burn out easily.
The volume required, oh, not just required,
the volume of failure training
to make it effective has got to be low.
So if I'm gonna do normally 12 sets for a body part,
and if I go to failure training,
I'm doing like two or three failure sets.
So it's like way less volume.
I'm gonna use an analogy, I hope this works.
So if you guys, if it sucks, you guys let me know.
But you know what this reminds me of?
It's like a car performance and nitrous, right?
Nitrous is a real fast, easy way to get like 20, 30 horsepower.
But you gotta be-
Off-solo below your engine. Yeah, exactly. But you gotta be- Off the boat below your engine.
Yeah, exactly.
You have to be so precise with how you use it.
Our crew.
That if you use it wrong, you're done.
Your engine is done.
Failure training can be super effective,
but your programming has to be much more precise.
You get away with way less when you train to failure.
So if you're gonna use it,
like you gotta be really smart, really precise with it. Otherwise, I think that analogy is really good because one
of the problems with failure training is the temptation to want to do it because you definitely
feel or see a difference, right? You do your first, you know, a few times of failure training
and you're like, Oh, wow, the next time you get back to that next size, I feel stronger
or while I, you know, back when you used to measure your success of your workout by your
soreness, you'd be like, oh my god, I'm so sore.
And so you become addicted to this, the speed that you get, you know, from the nitrous.
And so I think it's a great analogy.
And anybody who's ever been in a car or you used nitrous before, you got to be very careful
on how much you use that because the, the engine isn't built to handle that much
all the time.
And so the temptation to want to use it all the time
is there because you definitely feel a difference
when you blast it.
But I think that's a great analogy.
Or as tires, the undercarriage, everything else,
supporting it.
So it's like you want to go full blast
as it affects the entire chain.
Yeah, no, I'm glad
I'm glad that analogy worked. I was thinking of a fortuneologist. MC for if I go with
the car for four minutes to make one. Have you guys ever used nitrous by the way for wheels in a car?
I've been in a car with a I haven't personally. I wanted to, but I've been in a car. Yeah.
Well, so I've never done it. Oh, no, it throws you it throws you back in your seat for sure. I
mean, it feels like, and there's probably somebody
who has the formula to this on how much horse power
and injects, but it's like 100 horse power, like instantaneously.
So, if you've ever, I don't know if you've ever been
in a car, well, you have, your car has the ability to go
from like regular to sport mode.
I mean, I would say it's for what you're driving
and I'm driving, it's like double that feeling of that
throw you back in your seat.
You're getting your seat like crazy.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, actually, no, I take that back.
I was in the car.
I had a buddy who had a Supra.
Remember the older Toyota Supra
is that people used to look like.
I do remember him hitting nitrous.
But one time he took me 185 miles an hour
on the freeway, he didn't hit nitrous,
but that was the most terrifying car ride
that had ever been in my entire life,
because I was a teenager.
And you know, when you're a teenage boy,
like the last thing on earth you'll ever do
is tell your buddy you're scared.
So I'm just sitting in the car while he's getting up to,
you know, 150, 160, 170.
And I like,
Knuckles, dude.
Yeah, and I like, please God, like just slow down.
You know what I'm not saying anything?
Mr. Terrible, you know what I'm saying? to speak in a car. Since you brought it up, have you guys seen the new the 2023
Ford GT? No, Doug pulled up this thing is bad by the way
Everybody's probably wondering like their race car. No, it's there. I mean you could it's a it's a street legal car
And you've seen the Ford GT before. Remember the, the, what's the, um, the GT 40, the, the Ford GT.
Yeah, Ford GT GT 40.
It is.
Now, let's pull it out.
I don't know if it is GT.
By the way, I want to, the reason why Justin's not here and he's on camera is, uh, he's
on house arrest.
He, uh, he broke some law.
No, that's not what happened.
To start all these rumors that uh... dron is a show us your ankles no on
his way here he uh...
that he has to drive over the hill
and it's all shut down right like the storm or gets crazy storm here in the
bay area here in california
and he sent us a picture will post it on the youtube
it's like a swing pool and the freeway. He can't come over here.
You're stuck.
It was my last possible road to get through.
And I like, I drove my truck specifically
because I was like, maybe there's a puddle
I can just blast through and they just wouldn't let me go
and try it.
So I'm stuck here.
That's stuck.
There it is.
There it is.
It's crazy.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, it's supposed to be up there
in the Bugatti class now, bro.
Wow. Yeah, it's like a million dollars.
Oh, they're gonna charge a million for them.
Yes, dude.
Yeah, I was watching, uh, what's that?
What's that?
What's that?
Is it car and driver?
I forget the two.
That's the top fuel.
One of those ones on on YouTube and watch some drag against a zero six Corvette.
And about the same horsepower as the, uh, the zero six Corvette, but then like half the weight.
It's like way lighter.
It looks bad though.
You know what's funny?
I've thought about this, right?
It's just because the way I grew up,
I'm sure if I grew up super wealthy would be different,
but if I could have like a billion dollars,
so a million dollar car to a billionaire is like nothing.
That's like, you know, whatever, it's like a chum change.
But no matter what, I don't think I could ever own a car like that
because I wouldn't be able to drive it or park it anywhere.
Like one year as well.
Oh my God, one chip, one ding, one like whatever,
and I'd be like, ah!
No, I mean, that's it.
Okay, first of all, absolute you would,
if you were a billionaire.
You'd probably even consider it if you were a centa millionaire.
So I think that you would have.
Wait, I never heard that before, a centa millionaire?
Yeah, like a hundred million.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. So it's not like a centa or that's a millionaire. I never heard that before, a centimillionaire. Yeah, like a hundred millionaire. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So it's not like a centaur, that's a millionaire.
No, no, no.
I mean, you would, because it's your exact point when you,
when people see stuff like that, sometimes they,
oh my God, that's such a waste of money.
This, then I'll say, okay, well, then do you think
your Toyota Prius is a waste of money?
Because when you do the ratio of you make a 150 grand a year
and you drive a Prius, it's the same as a hundred millionaire
driving something like that around, right?
So it's like, he's just a...
Yeah, if you're financially responsible as you are, it goes...
Well, a billion to a million.
That'd be like making a hundred grand to a thousand, right?
I'd be like, you're driving a thousand dollar car.
Yeah, that's why I said, even if you were in a billionaire, I think if you were just a
centa millionaire, I think you would still do that.
You'd have it in garage.
On Saturdays, we'd meet up and when you drive yours with mine and we'd go down the coast,
and then we'd drive right back.
You know, so you'd run the coast for fun and then come back, right?
Just do those, uh, gumball runs, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Is that a real thing or is that just movies?
No, that's a real thing.
No, that's a real thing.
I don't know if there's no accessories.
Yeah, there, I think there is.
Like the groups that get together and then they go, okay, we're going to go from here
to here.
Let's get to the first.
I believe so.
How do we, how do we do that? I think we should do that.
I, I think we shouldn't.
Let's focus on being a centimony in our first.
Yeah, let's not, let's not go to jail or die.
Let's try not to do that.
Are you in classes?
Hey, hey, you're just gonna appeal to my ego,
which is even worse.
Hey, how is it for real though, over at your place right now,
is it like, like is your house actually flooded right around there?
Is it down the road?
Like, how close is it?
Is the flooding to you?
Yeah, no, down the road,
the way it is flooded, yes, but we're up above in mountain.
So there's one store have access to and we got plenty of food, water, and whatever.
So if we got a bunker out here, we're going to be fine.
But yeah, it's all the rivers that go through
and have elevated so high that they just like made their way
through these houses and it's a real mess out there, dude.
It's gonna be a lot of clean up for everybody around here.
It sucks.
Yeah, my aunt, her like whole fence came down.
So she's sent some pictures.
I'm up against the foothills.
So I'm up in the foothills, but then I'm against the foothills,
so it's higher than I am.
So I'm kind of somewhat nestled,
which totally blunts the wind.
So it's like super windy,
but I think because where I'm located,
the wind doesn't hit us that hard.
But then when I go down the hill,
I see like branches and something like,
holy cow, what happened?
Well, Doug and I are down with the puzzle
so we can get started.
How grateful I am.
I'm not my old hell, what happened? Well, Doug and I are down with the presents so we can get flooded. How grateful I am, I'm not my old house.
Oh, right.
So you guys have picture of like,
basically one of these branches that was a widow maker,
just like skewered my ceiling of the house.
Like, there's, thankfully this house has no trees
that are like in close proximity.
So I'm, well, your old house was,
I mean, you had like a,
just a mudslide hill waiting
to happen right there, too. You're like in the worst scenario where you're down, like
down almost in like in a little valley. That would have been horrible right now.
That place is all flooded right now. Totally. Yeah. So you time that. I'm sitting
pretty out here. That's great. I'm Wi-Fi. Addams without internet for next two weeks.
Yeah, bro. That's weird. Yeah, because I'm 90. Katrina and Yeah, I'm not gonna lie. Adam's without internet for next two weeks. Yeah, bro, that's weird.
Yeah, because I'm not gonna be doing 90s.
Katrina and I, Katrina, she's a savage, man.
So we had, so this is so funny, right?
We got a quote to move the house,
and it was just, it was ridiculous, dude.
I was like, that's so much.
I'm like, I don't wanna spend that much.
Let's see how much we can do this ourselves,
and then if we tap out, and even if I can just save half the money,
it would be happy.
So we were going to pay my brother-in-law to come down
and basically, he used to work for a moving company,
so he's really good with the speed of him,
the rap, all the furniture and do it all professional.
So I was going to pay him $1,000 to basically prep the house
and then I was going to help him $1,000 to basically prep the house and then I was going to help
the guys that dropped the pod off to load it all up.
Well, pod gets dropped off.
Next day, brother and the last supposed to come get a phone call.
He threw his back out.
And this thing's already scheduled to be picked up already.
So we basically have 48 hours to load this thing and it's just Katrina and I.
So we, and then I was catching a cold too.
So I'm like, her and I both catching a cold and loading.
That's good bonding time.
Yeah, so it's amazing.
Actually, she made that comment at one point.
She's like, you know, I love you, honey,
the fact that we, we powered through this
and we didn't kill each other.
She goes, I can't believe it.
So, so we made it.
We got over the other place,
but no internet for two weeks.
So that was weird.
You know, it's one thing to not have like,
you know, you're streaming services,
but to not have any sort of internet connection at all,
it really brought me back, you know,
and was like, what do we do when we didn't have that?
It almost feels so, I mean, we are busy right,
doing the house, so I'm exhausted
and I had plenty of work to do.
But even when we finally had that moment at night, we're like, okay, we're done, we were busy right doing the house, so I'm exhausted and I had plenty of work to do. But even when we finally had that moment at night,
we're like, okay, we're done.
We're tapping out today.
Let's take a break.
We're both exhausted.
You know, sit down on the couch
and like watch a mindless show,
and it's like, you can't do anything.
It's like, so we...
Tell stories.
Yeah, that's what it was like when we did talk about
like old high school stories and stuff.
That's probably a blessing in disguise.
No, I mean, I think we both agreed that it's very illuminating,
to see that, wow, we're so used to being able to just
kind of distract ourselves when we're exhausted,
tired, and don't feel like talking.
And then also, you do that.
And it's like, you don't have it, it's interesting.
Oh, yeah, no, I'm glad you guys did that well.
It's like, when you have a lot of stress on you,
because I've got a lot of stress going on right now
with the babies and all that stuff.
And it brings out the worst, man.
So it's good that you guys did okay, you know?
Yeah, yeah, no.
Well, that guy's killing each other.
We had a moment like that in Scotland when I was driving,
manual stick shift and it starts snowing
and the roads got really bad.
And I'm on the opposite side of the road.
And it just was like, we were at each other
trying to like get directions and everything
and like get it right.
And we're like, if we were early in our marriage,
like that would have been a real problem for you.
We were like, it's close dude.
It was absolutely losing it.
You know, you gotta remind yourself,
that's so important to know. You have to remind yourself, that's so important to know.
You have to remind,
because it's so hard to recognize when you're in it.
Yeah.
When you're in the shit, meaning like, life stress,
it's hard to realize that the reason why your spouse,
your partner, yourself, whatever your kids,
that they're acting a particular way,
or maybe the way that you're perceiving them,
a lot of it has to do with just the overall stress because it will bring out, it makes the the bad of you worse and
it makes the good of you not as great.
So you're just dealing with the worst of each other and it's hard when you're in it because
you think, oh, it's hell of a hard.
I don't care how long or how good you are, you're whatever it like, it's always challenging
to, to be able to remove yourself from the moment.
You know, Katrina and I have this thing that we do that.
And I think I'm lucky.
I'm blessed that I have a partner who was hardcore into sports like I was.
And so we have this ability to look at each other, be like, listen, who at one person
normally can remove the other one and be like, we're on the same team.
We're trying to win the same fucking game.
What you're doing right now, okay?
Think about that and right away I can think of like playing
on a game and thinking like, you'd be so pissed
if like your teammate was talking down to you
or not, you're just standing there with their hands
on their hips, I'm not gonna do it.
You would flip a lid, right?
You'd be like, get the fuck off the team, like no.
And so getting the other partner just to agree, like, hey, this whole thing life, right? We've agreed we're doing it lid, right? You'd be like, get the fuck off the team. Like, no. And so getting the other partner just to agree,
like, hey, this whole thing life, right?
We've agreed we're doing it together, right?
We're on the same team.
Okay, well then, you tell me as a team player,
are we playing as a team?
And like that kind of reframing for us
always kind of helps pull it back in, like you're right.
We go,
Oh, it's hard.
It's hard.
There's never both people do.
It's like one person has the sense to be able
to say able to,
to, to say it to the other person so we can kind of,
and then because we have that in common,
I feel like it relates really well for both of us.
Like, yes.
Well, I mean, you look at like divorce rates,
like they explode when people have a baby
or lose a job or somebody dies,
and it's, it's because,
what is, what is Sal, along that note?
What is the, what causes divorce the, causes divorce the highest on things like that?
I know we talked to Gottman and he talked about contempt, right?
But what about things that happen to you like,
like losing a job, having a baby,
like what are, you know.
So things that are not direct insults on the relationship, right?
Cause then we could say, oh, you know,
infidelity or abuse, like eliminating that kind of stuff.
Believe it or not, having babies are one of the highest threats for divorce because of the
challenge of it.
First off, if you know, if you don't have kids, it's hard to understand what it's like
to have a relentless, you know, a human that just, you care about them so much, it's relentless.
There's nothing you can do, you can't take a break,
you got no sleep, your whole life is completely different,
and then you're trying to do this with another person,
you've never done it with this person before.
So divorce rates go through the roof
and the first I think two years of having a kid,
or it'll strengthen, right?
Which is interesting, because yeah,
as I was gonna say, you would think that, you know, having
this child together would bond you more together.
It tests you as what it does.
Right.
And the test can bond you or you can fold.
Now do you think some of that skewed too though because I've actually, this is a common
thing that happens in relationships that are challenged.
Many times couples will actually have a child
thinking that that is going to bring them together.
What a terrible...
I know, of course, of course.
Strangely, every year.
I mean, as parents, we understand.
That's like, you're literally like, you're on fire.
It's like trying to pour gasoline on the floor.
No, it's even worse.
It's like, you're on fire and then someone throws you a baby.
Oh, yeah, that's a great idea. I was're on fire. This is a little bit. And then someone throws you a baby. Yeah.
Oh yeah, that's a great idea.
I was already on fire to have a baby too.
No, but I mean, it's like you have to,
I think you have to, when you get the opportunity,
because like I said, when you're in the moment you can't,
but when you're outside of it,
and you get a little break, you'd be like, okay,
this is a season, we're gonna get time to spend time together,
we're gonna get time to get the together, we're gonna get time to get the rest
and connect a little bit or whatever.
So it could be hard, especially when kids are close and age.
My Aralius is, he turned two a couple months ago and there was that period, it takes like
a year and a half or so, like a year-ish.
We're like, oh, you're getting out of the clouds.
You're like, everything's going great.
Boom, she gets pregnant again.
It's like, oh man.
All right, here we go. Let's do this again. the clouds. You're like, everything's going great. Boom, she gets pregnant again. It's like, oh, man.
All right, here we go.
Let's do this again.
So, yeah, that's a good time.
Hey, I wanted to bring up, so in a recent episode,
I talked about how obesity is not a disease.
And I brought up this documentary that was on TV
about how medical professionals are trying to label it a disease.
Well, there was a nurse practitioner
who works with obesity in our forum who tried to make
the argument that it's good that they're going to try and label it a disease because her
point essentially is that it'll motivate people to get in shape somehow.
And I said, well, first off, people get heart attacks and decide still not to get in
shape.
So I don't think that's going to help at all.
But just to hammer home the point and really, really kind of just, you know, boil it down. Obesity right now, if it
doesn't have any other medically treatable factors, in other words, if you don't have diabetes,
hypertension, or anything else, let's just say you're obese. Obesity itself is not, unless
it's extreme, is not covered by insurance. In other words, if you go to the doctors, your 30 pounds overweight, and everything else
kinda looks okay, the insurance company's not gonna cover
a medication to solve your obesity
because it has yet to be labeled as a disease.
Now, the minute the medical establishment
comes together and says, yes, it's a disease,
the next step is for insurance companies
to cover obesity disease, quote unquote it's a disease. The next step is for insurance companies to cover obesity,
disease, quote unquote, solving pharmaceuticals.
It's interesting.
So that's why that's the main, that is 100%
of the information.
100% of the pharmaceutical reasons.
Yes.
It's interesting to me that somebody who works in the industry
actually wouldn't see that.
I mean, I feel like it's so obvious that it's,
it's, this is, I know we always wrap things like this
in this like we care.
You know how we care?
We were trying to help others out,
but there's, you know,
nine times at a 10,
it's money motivated.
And the fact that they can now prescribe drugs
and insurance companies to cover it,
there's gonna be a fuck ton of money being made.
By the way,
what's hitting,
training in the news right now
is all these obesity fat lost type of something that's right now
So all that stuff is trending right now these companies are popping up that are if you're a pharma company
They do this with cholesterol-loan drugs at one point if your cholesterol was above I think it was 220
Then you could get prescribed a statin and then they lowered the number to 200 your cholesterol at 200
Which immediately added
tens of millions of new potential customers. Okay. Because going from 220 to 200,
like it opened up the market, if you could label something that a majority of Americans,
quote unquote, have a disease, it will literally become one of the most prof,
if not the most profitable segment of the pharmaceutical industry. Now, I know what happens when people at work in medicine
is there's a lot of good people that work in medicine.
I've trained a lot of people at work in medicine.
They were all very good people,
very smart, hard working, caring people.
I'm not talking about that.
What I'm saying is that the system itself
is fueled by the pharmaceutical industry,
which is the largest profit-earning portion of the medical industry. And what they do is they by the pharmaceutical industry, which is the high, it's the largest profit earning
portion of the medical industry. And what they do is they set the narrative. And then when you work
in that space, you work within the confines of this market that they've created. So it's hard to see.
So if you're a nurse practitioner like the person or forum, they say, well, I help people. I'm
really trying to solve this. I recommend strength training. This is a shot at you. Mission to treat the symptoms.
Right, this is awkward.
Yeah, Western medicine practices.
That's like their thought process.
And if there's a way to do that pharmaceutically,
then they feel like maybe eventually this person's gonna come
around, but what we've found, you know,
from training people like this,
and I'm sure you guys have as well,
have had surgery
and have invasive ways of dealing with obesity, is it just re-balance?
The behaviors don't change at all.
Listen, this is not a direct shot at the nurse practitioner and stuff like that.
I think that's what I think.
For the doctors, right?
For the doctors, there's tons of amazing people that are in it.
It's not that at all. It's the doctors, right? The doctors, there's tons of amazing people that are in it.
It's not that at all.
It's the machine, man.
I mean, it's like somebody taking a shot at trainers
and saying that like, all trainers do
is make money off of pedaling supplements.
Like, yeah, I don't disagree.
Yeah, someone did.
Yeah, I mean, that's a large part of how the industry,
I mean, I remember when we were talking about starting this
years ago, and one of the easiest ways to make money,
or the formulas, is to gain some sort of traction,
and attention, gain an audience,
whether that through fame, magazines, whatever,
podcasting, and then to create a supplement line
and pedal supplements.
It's one of the fastest easiest ways
to build a legitimate business in our space.
It's the product in the market.
And the product in the medical market is pharmaceuticals.
That by far, by the way, it's one of the most profitable markets period.
Not just, we're not just talking about, this is what's profitable in medicine.
Yeah, so they fund the research, they fund the studies, they fund the narrative.
So you have to ask yourself, why label obesity a disease anyway? What's
that going to do? Like, okay, whether we label it, the disease or not, for the average person,
how's that changing? Here's how. Once it is officially a disease, now drugs that simply target
obesity, not diabetes, not hypertension, not blood lipid issues, not blood strokes and
clots and all the other issues that can become associated with obesity. Just being obese now is going to be covered by insurance, which opens the floodgates for companies.
And what do you think? Do you think it's going to make it better or worse?
No. It's going to make it worse because the unintended consequence of that is removing the
responsibility from the average person. And that just, I don't mean this in a negative way,
like people are just lazy.
But what'll happen is you're going to disempower them
because they're going to view it as this thing
that they have, like I can't do anything about,
when in fact the only thing you can do about it now
and probably for the foreseeable future
is change your lifestyle.
And you're going to disempower people through this process.
So it's damaging across the board.
It's totally a money grab and it's complete bullshit.
You don't have to label a disease except to get insurance companies be able to cover pharmaceuticals.
That is coming in the pipeline.
They're already preparing it.
The narrative in the propaganda machine is going.
So just remember, you know, we said it here because-
Do you think it'll be as big or bigger than the ADD market.
Bigger.
Bigger.
Way bigger.
That's just saying it's bigger.
Way bigger.
Think about how many people that's crazy.
What is that right now?
That's in the trillions now, right?
It's huge.
It's huge.
It's crazy.
But think about it this way.
Here's what will happen.
I'm going to make some predictions just so people think I'm not I'm not I'm not.
But I'm not very clear here.
They're gonna label it a disease
because right now they're starting to propaganda,
so they're gonna label it a disease.
Then they're gonna lower the threshold
for what obesity is considered.
So right now obesity is, I don't remember what the BMI is,
like over 22, or so I don't remember what it was.
First they're gonna start, it's a disease.
Then they're gonna lower the threshold
thus making the market even larger.
Yeah, but okay, I'm going to challenge that.
The timeline of that is going to be,
there's going to be a good solid year plus between that,
because that's how you boost your numbers.
That's right.
They're going to start out with it's a disease.
Yeah.
And then they're going to say,
oh, obesity now has considered this.
And then, oh, by the way,
this is how we can increase profits by 30% next year.
Right.
We're going to open it up for 30% more people.
And then the way that they're going to sell it is they're going to say because obesity
is strongly connected to, you know, hypertension, blood, cloth, stroke, you know, dementia,
whatever, everything, right. They're going to say, but this is good. This is a good thing. We
are solving problems. And what will happen is within a decade, you'll probably see a majority
of people on obesity
prescriptions covered by insurance companies. So that's the game that's the game
that's happening right now. It is not to help people don't do it for yourself. It's not to help people. It's all about selling more drugs.
Anyway, makes everybody crap out.
Mention we have we have two partners in mention today, which one we know what let's talk about creatures. I have it. So my oldest
God has wisdom teeth pulled out, which is hilarious because he's like slurping food. Yeah, so I'm like,
dude, we got some, I got some oatmeal, bro. So I'm making him, you know, protein shakes and I'm making him oatmeal and scrambled eggs. And he's
pretty much living off that right now.
After that, I remember going out for that. He was, yeah, dude, they put him under General anesthesia for that. You believe that? Fun. I know. Yeah. What? I said, fun. You don't
wake up. You're all loopy afterwards. You don't remember. I saw those kids that wake
up from that. And then they mess with them. Dude, I saw one video where this woman was at
the dentist and she was coming out and her boyfriend was there and she was talking about how sexy his friend was.
Oh, I saw that video.
Did you watch that?
Yeah, I saw that video.
Yeah, I saw that video.
The dude's like, what the fuck?
Yeah, she kept going on and on and on.
Yeah, those people video that.
Yeah, but you know what's,
you know what's so, I totally saw that video was cracking up
and I still made me laugh, but in like,
what do you guys think?
Like, do you take your personal? No, no, no. But in like, what do you guys think? Do you take it personal?
No, no, no, no, no.
What do you guys think as far as how many people,
because the desire to want to go viral,
how many of these videos that we share and we see and go,
oh my god, look at this.
Oh, I know you're going.
Do you think are like staged?
And then how many of these do you think?
Wow.
90% are staged. Do you really think I hide? Do you think it like staged and then how many of these do you think? Wow. 90% are staged.
Do you really think I hide?
Do you think it's a high?
Yeah.
Because to have everything, to have your phone on, video on, and be able to capture something
that happens in a matter of seconds, damn near impossible.
I am with Justin.
Wow.
I just read an article on reality TV.
So remember reality was like all the rage. Wow. I just read an article on reality TV. So remember reality was like all the rage.
Yeah. Yeah. And the article went through all these reality shows and interviewed the people
who are on the shows. And they're all completely fake. Yeah. They're all completely staged.
Like you'll have an argument with someone and the producers will be like, hey, can you redo
that again? But this time try to make this point and try and do that. Or hey, your parents are
coming. So I want you to act irritated with this, whatever.
All totally fake, totally staged.
So I agree with you, Justin.
I bet you a lot of this stuff that's called.
I mean, I'll tell you what,
I wouldn't bet against you guys, that's for sure.
I mean, I definitely think it's,
I do think it's greater than 50.
I definitely think it more than half of them.
How, you know what's more weird is this, okay?
We all agree and we know that yet we still watch it,
share it and talk about it.
We like to be fooled.
Isn't that unbelievable?
You know, you kind of want to believe it.
Yeah, I mean, I don't know.
I find that a very interesting.
Actually, to take it even a step further,
if that is a real video and your girlfriend's talking
about how hot your friend is,
you don't want to air that shit on the internet.
Right, yeah.
Yeah, so you're probably right, dude.
You're right.
It's all fake.
Totally, no, did you see it?
Have you seen that there's another viral one right now
of the guy who calls his buddy,
and she's leaning over his shoulder
and she's got the engagement ring on,
and he's like, he's like, guess what?
Sherry is no longer my girlfriend,
and he's like, oh good, you dumped that bitch.
He's like, no, no, she's not my girlfriend because she's my fiance now.
Yeah, but I can't help a girl like, oh, come on, that's gotta be probably.
This reminds me, this reminds me of that joke. I don't know, I've ever told a son of podcast.
This girl, this guy makes a bet with his girlfriend
and she goes, I bet you I can make you
simultaneously super happy.
Oh, I know.
And super mad at the same time.
Is that dick?
And he goes, no way.
And she goes, yeah, I can't.
You'll be super happy and super pissed off
at the same time.
He goes, all right, go for it.
She goes, out of all your friends, you have the biggest dick.
I can't.
I can't.
I can't.
Doug, over there, not to say that.
Yes, that one.
That one.
That one.
It's a great joke, Doug.
Come on.
Hey, so I want to bring something up like a 10,000 times, but I still funny.
I want to bring something up that's going to blow your guys his mind.
Have you guys heard of, let me see if I got the name here, right?
It's called, I think, Solene.
Have you heard of Soline, this new company
that's making food?
Why have I heard of this?
Okay, tell me, tell me.
Okay, this is a concept developed by NASA.
It's a source of protein.
It's a food that they create.
You ready for this?
Made out of CO2, water, and electricity.
And it has protein in it?
It's a food.
It's little you can't open the sky. Okay, so it's it has protein in it. It's a food. It's little you can get off from the sky. Okay. So it's 50% protein,
five to 10% fat, 20 to 25% carbs, 50% protein, also.
How it reportedly looks and tastes like wheat flour. And essentially,
what they do is they take CO2, they combine it with water, nutrients,
and vitamins, they use solar energy or whatever, that's fine.
And then they use a fermentation process.
So the yeast and bacteria,
vitamins, they skipped all that part.
So it's not just molecules.
What are the vitamins in minerals?
It was a macro, what's a macro break?
It just has some kind of substance.
Yeah, it just says here what the protein's fats and carbs are.
But they call it protein out of thin air.
So it's literally taking CO2 out of the air
and they through a fermentation process,
the yeast and bacteria turn it into a food.
This company is it related to the soy-lint company, is it?
I don't know, no, I don't think so.
I don't think so.
What? But how wild is this? Is it related to the Soilant company? I don't know. No, I don't think so. I don't think so.
But how wild is this?
Because not only does it get CO2 out of the air,
but it's creating super cheap source of calories and energy.
So you want to talk about a potential innovation
that could be groundbreaking.
Is it just me or does it feel like we've had
some like crazy breakthroughs in like the last just year?
Oh, if that, when you talk about,
you talk about this, you talk about fusion, you talk about open AI.
Like, dude, it's like crazy.
What the leap that we have made just this in this last year,
it feels like a lot of this stuff.
All of these. So I was watching a show that's like one of those like of made just this in this last year it feels like. Yeah. A lot of this stuff, all of the stuff.
So I was watching a show that's like one of those
like speculation things about ancient technology
and all that stuff.
And they were talking about the arc of the covenant
and like, you know, well, what if it was actually a machine
and like one guy actually speculated that it was a machine
like this that could literally create
mana, you know, from thin air, basically convert it from CO2 and all that.
And they actually described the whole thing just like you're saying.
Oh, weird.
Yeah.
Weird.
Yeah.
So Doug brought up the website and it basically, it's, it's used like flour.
So you can make foods, breads, whatever.
Because it's like flour, I'm assuming the shelf life on this
is probably phenomenal.
So I'm also assuming you have to pair it with other things
into, right?
Yeah, you can turn it into things.
That's what it's showing.
Beverage is snacks, breads.
But because it's got, it's probably has a really long shelf life. It's probably really cheap to produce and it takes CO2 out of the air.
Now, whether it's healthy or not because I don't know what this is, I don't know how to
fix the body.
Well, for somebody who's dying of starvation, it's amazing.
Well, yes, that too.
But besides all of that, this could be one of the most disruptive things to the food market
that I could possibly think of.
This could be crazy. Food market disruptive things to the food market that I could possibly think of. This could be crazy. I've heard like an energy market and internet, like literally the like three huge markets are
being disrupted in this last year.
It's so wild.
What?
We need to do a whole podcast where we have like an inventory of all of these new breakthroughs
that are coming out just to keep tabs.
You know, like so what else?
I mean, we have like the open AI stuff.
We have like all of that happening simultaneously.
There's, you know, other breakthroughs,
like medically that they've figured out,
like who knows, can we grow limbs now?
Is that a thing?
Well, no, but we can make ourselves two to four inches taller.
Oh, I know.
Well, so far, that's a big surgery.
Yeah.
There's a lot of people doing it.
I can't believe that.
That's, it's good.
You know what they do?
Yes, they like, they basically break your femur
and then cut it.
They cut it and then they separate the two pieces
and connect metal rods and allow the bones to grow together.
So little by little you go in and they separate it
a little, like a few centimeters of time.
They keep stretching it out, keep stretching out,
allowing the bone to kind of start to grow. Oh, I thought they keep stretching it out, keep stretching out, allowing the bone
to kind of start to grow.
Oh, I thought they actually cut it.
And then, you know, like the,
we almost have fusion.
Yeah.
Like, yeah.
No, no, no, no,
maybe Doug can look it up.
They literally, they'll take your bone,
separate it just a little bit,
and then you go in and there's a,
they go, there's a, they crank it,
and they slowly stretch out.
I thought they cut it and then insert like a,
no, like a two inch pump
and then you got yourself.
No, the bone actually grows that way.
So they actually make your femur.
Now the only funny thing about this is,
you get two inches or three inches taller,
but it's all your femur.
So it's like, you just got longer, longer,
longer legs.
Well, I mean, there's people that have like longer legs
and torsos, right?
And I don't know, is one or two inches enough
to make it look a little odd? It would be weird if it looked really odd. Maybe on, like, yeah and torsos, right? And I don't know, is one or two inches enough to make it look odd?
It would be weird if it looked really odd.
Maybe on, yeah, I guess you're right.
Like a two inch lift isn't a big deal,
you're saying, but what does it say there, Doug?
Who's it, Kevin Durant?
That has those really long skinny legs.
Well, athletes tend to running, you know,
people who run a lot.
So they add a magnetic lengthening rod
and pins into the bone, which allows a leg
to be controlled, have controlled lengthening rod and pins into the bone, which allows the leg to be controlled,
have controlled lengthening over a period of time.
Yeah, so you go in and they crank it, crank it, crank it.
Oh, that's not what I thought.
Whoa.
It's fucked up.
That's way fucked.
There's only a torture.
Yes, that's, oh my god.
So if I come in one day and I'm looking a little taller
and you'll know.
I can't imagine what that feels.
Well, look at the before and after.
Yeah, that's a big difference.
Yeah, it's a huge difference.
How much taller is it? It's a huge difference. It's a huge. How much taller is it?
It's a huge difference right there.
Oh my. Three inches.
It's a three inch.
It's a three inch.
Yeah, three inch K.
Wow, wow, dude, that looks so crazy.
Now, you, you, did you have braces or no?
No.
Oh, okay, Doug, did you have braces?
I, yeah, I didn't visit line.
I mean, so, well, you know, when you get your new,
your new retainer or what,
how much you're fucking teeth hurt the whole day,
like I'm next to your femur.
Oh, ache.
That's weird.
Well, you know, I'm in some market for it.
Wild.
Yeah, it's super.
So who's our next mention today is a Caldera dog?
Are we talking about Caldera?
Yeah, it is Caldera, yeah.
Yes.
You know that they are from the social media that I see seem to be completely exploding.
Yeah.
Like everywhere.
This is a product that I admittedly,
I'm gonna be honest, didn't, not because I hadn't used it
or because I hadn't used it,
but we got approached by them, my skin care,
well, whatever, you know, what's gonna happen with this.
Exple, I mean, they obviously sold out.
Do you think that's part of why, though, is you know, like when you go watch a movie
that you heard was not good, and then you watch it, it ends up being good,
or you have expectations, it's not going to be good, and then you go and you watch it,
and then it's great.
Do you think that's part of why one, you like it, and a lot of people, like,
especially in the men in the, I think that's the men.
Yeah, because men, because I'm like,
the nations, and it wags, he did it.
That's how I feel.
I feel like, you're not gonna give me some,
I honestly, up until Caldera,
you've never been somebody who's,
I'm the guy who does the bar soap,
and then he washes his face like that.
You know what I'm saying?
This is how I've always,
you have to literally do that shit like that.
You know what I'm saying?
Whatever. And thinking like, oh, I'm gonna buy some oil How I've always, you have to literally do that shit like that. You don't say like whatever.
And thinking like, oh, I'm gonna buy some oil or cream
that makes this huge difference.
I always thought it was just a hard course,
but it's one of those things that you will instantly
see the difference.
And I think that's what gets you is that it's like,
ah, let me see if I notice a difference
and you put it on, you rub it and you go like,
okay, shit, I do see.
No, I don't know how much they've grown since over the last couple of years, but it's
got to be massive because I see them all over the place now.
But my favorite thing is, is now Adam's like commercial comes up all the time and then
also like Mario Lopez follows it right after.
That guy, man, I swear, he's got to be 50 something, right?
No, he's not 50 yet.
Is Mario Lopez?
Is he?
He's at least 10 years older than we are.
Is he in his 50s?
Bro, saved by the bell, we were kids, right?
He's 49.
Yeah, see?
Wow.
He's almost 50.
Yeah.
He looks like a baby.
He does look young.
His skin does look amazing.
It's, it's, it's so great.
It's so great.
What's wrong with us right now?
Are you a fan of him?
Are you like, he's got so many like TV shows.
He's kind of cringey to me.
I never liked him, bro.
I was not a fan.
I was not a shater fan on Save By The Bell.
I liked what's his name.
What's the other character's name?
I liked him better.
I had a curly mole it.
Yeah.
Do you remember, do you remember in Save By The Bell?
So what's Zach?
I like Zach.
Remember to save By The bell every once in a while
Slater would bust out and dance.
But he didn't like dance like cool kids dance.
He danced like like he did like a like modern dance or ballet or something like that.
Remember that?
He'd like to kick this stuff.
We didn't want that like that wrestling onesie.
Yeah.
Oh my god.
Yeah.
What do you do, bro?
Hey, did you guys, are you guys seeing what's, what, what Larry Wheels has been up to?
I saw his post where he is fat, his face looked all fat and he looks like extra chin's up
a little bit.
Okay.
So Larry Wheels is, I mean, it's like a, you know, whatever.
He's a strength athlete on social media, like incredibly strong, like insanely strong.
Freak his strength.
Freak his strength as young as a young age,
you're in his 20s or whatever.
Anyway, he went off bodybuilder doses of anabolic steroids
and went on pure TRT.
And he's like labeling exactly what he's doing.
So he's like, I'm only on hormone replacement
because I've taken steroids since I was 17.
Now I need hormone replacement.
But I'm off all anabolic steroids.
I'm off high doses of testosterone.
I think he's using like 170 milligrams a week
of testosterone to replace,
which is a reasonable, normal dose of testosterone.
And what he's doing is he's documenting
the changes in his body and his strength levels.
So he just did a mock powerlifting event.
I'm gonna pull it up for you.
And this is over the course of,
I wanna say he's been off everything for a year
and only been on TRT for a year.
I wanna say, I think that's-
Has it been already a year?
Cause I remember when he did the before and after
of him switching over.
Yeah, I think it's been almost a year, if I wanna say.
But anyway, here's the numbers for his powerlifting, okay?
Yeah, yeah. He did a squat. His squat went down 5.8% from his previous record. So it
went from 771, 771 pounds to 727 pounds. So that's a 12% drop.
His deadlift went down by 54 pounds.
So 6.8%.
So his deadlift came in at 771 pounds,
which was 50 pounds lighter than normal.
So this is what he's saying,
or this is what he's reporting.
By the way, if you look at his face and his body,
you could definitely tell he's not on the same stuff anymore.
But what do you think about that?
Do you think a year, you think it's time?
No, no, definitely not.
Yeah, that's right.
Definitely not.
I mean, especially the amounts that he was taking.
And how long he's been training.
Yeah, yeah, I remember feeling the residuals of my stack
after bodybuilding for feeling, feeling it six months
later, probably still there for almost a year. So I will be, I'd be more interested to just,
I hope there's five years from now, even another year, like just so we could see, is it
continue on that percentage, right? So if you lost 5%, 5.8% this year, and then he loses another
5.8% like, if he keeps staying on that trajectory,
then you could probably guesstimate that,
oh, maybe in five years, he's back to like more of a reality.
But also, I mean, you've, you've, you've referenced studies
before though that talk about, you know, once you do it,
you have some, you keep some for life.
I mean, I definitely know that every time
that I had used anabolic,
it leveled me up as far as a size and strength level
that even though I came back down coming off,
I still was higher than what my previous natural.
I used to think that if you went on anabolic
and then you went off,
that your body would just go back to
what its capabilities were when you were off them.
But I don't agree with that anymore because I know how powerful muscle memory is.
If you build 10 pounds of muscle and it takes you a year to do so and then you lose it all,
you'll gain it back within a month.
That's how powerful muscle memory is.
If you gain 30 pounds of muscle by taking anabolic steroids for three years or whatever and it's solid muscle and then you go off
And you lose some you still have that muscle memory that's left over from before. So you're adding advantage the technique your
C and S your body's ability just to
Your bones. I mean your your your body is now adapted to at least that's how I felt from it right? I felt like
You know that took me to this whole new level my body and then I was there long enough that
my body got adapted that so even though I'm off and I'm nowhere near quite as
strong as I was when I was on my big stacks but I'm still way stronger than I
was at my strongest in or stronger than you would have gotten right how do you not
don't you right right right right I know and that's it I it's a controversial thing to say because there may be some kid listening right now that's like,
oh, then it's worth it. It's worth it to do, you know, all these antibiotics because I'll keep
some of it or whatever, to which I say you are definitely risking having to take, you know,
hormones for the rest of your life. So, but I mean, I don't know if that'll convince anybody.
Wouldn't it convince me? Yeah, it wouldn't have convinced me either,
but I still would, I would still say that,
because there are some people that I think are on the fence,
and if you told Mike, listen, if you go down this path,
there's a very high potential you may be doing it
for the rest of your life.
So take that into consideration.
I do think there's enough people that, hopefully,
that message goes like, oh, yeah, I kind of want to try it,
but not at the rate of the potential of me having to take
this stuff forever, I don't think I want to be.
Speaking of which, you know, MPHormons.com,
I went on this new protocol where they've introduced
these kind of cognitive boosting compounds and peptides.
Oh, yeah, do you know the names of all of them?
So, just to get to mind soon.
So I'm curious how it's working for you.
Did you do the same stack?
You did.
Yeah, look at you guys.
That's some peptide stack.
Yeah, we're gonna check it out and compare and contrast.
So, by the way, this is part of a larger thing.
And it's, so don't go out and do this on your own.
I'm working with doctors and they're monitoring things
because these are really active compounds,
not like I'm taking vitamins and mushroom supplement
or whatever.
So you gotta make sure you're monitored or whatever.
But anyway, one of them's dihexia,
the other one's called CMax.
And it's now almost a week and it's pretty wild.
It's actually pretty remarkably wild.
I am sleep deprived.
We have an infinite home.
We got a toddler.
It's just been very stressful at home.
If that family members die, you don't have to kind of stuff.
Yeah, I just, yeah, I just a lot of stressful things,
a lot of people don't know about,
but a lot of stuff going on.
For all intents and purposes,
I literally should be,
I should feel way worse than I do.
Way worse.
And yet I feel sharp.
So it's really strange.
But this is one weekend.
So you know what'd be interesting to me is that I wonder if like in your state is where
you feel something like that the most, right?
Oh, like if you like if you like if you, like I was optimized, right?
You're already a healthy optimized person, right? Like if you, like if you, because your self is optimized, right? You're already a healthy optimized person, right?
And so if you took something like this and you're pretty well balanced and you, you are
a very healthy person, would you notice very much or maybe it's really a monopult because
you're under all that and you know how you should feel and because you're taking that,
I would venture to say that it's kind of like taking testosterone supplements, right?
Like if you're already optimized and you take some testosterone supplements, they're gonna do shifter.
But if it's in the floor and you take some of these testosterone supplements, yeah, it's a good point.
Yeah, the doctors actually told me that is like a lot of people like expects some kind of stimulus kind of response or something.
Like you feel right away from it, but that's not the case. Like it's one of those that sort of increases cognition, all that happens over time.
Yeah.
Well, I'm noticing that I feel, it's not stimulatory, so it doesn't feel like it's stimulant.
It just feels calm and like memory recall and word recall is easier.
So like words come to me faster.
Yeah.
And I feel, I just feel smoother,
but that's a great point, Adam.
We'll see how it feels when things level out.
I mean, either way, that's cool,
because let's say that is the reason why,
then you have something like that,
that you can keep on hand for those moments
when you know that's like,
oh man, I'm gonna be going through it this next week
because I gotta be doing whatever, you know,
late nights or whatever got going on, right?
Then you could utilize something like that.
Well, I'll be the one lagging behind you guys.
So we'll see if you guys grow a tail or anything
and if you don't, then maybe all Doug and I will try it.
You full stop if I got skills or my eyes
start twitching or something.
Just an aisle beyond here.
Are you, are you on any, right now Doug?
Do they have you on anything right now?
Not yet, no.
No, no. El Natural guy. He's the healthiest one. Yeah, no, they look at Doug stuff. They're like,
the range shit we could do with you.
I Doug, I tell you what I ran into someone who I hadn't seen since Ornisteria a while back.
And she was talking about she, I didn't know she had been following the show.
Like I met her when he first got into Ornisteria. She was a trainer and
was talking about all of us and made a comment about you and I.
About how much older we look?
How much older we look?
I'm like, I know, when I look back at some of these photos,
I mean, the English.
It's what she, yeah.
Now Doug slowly sucks that he's slick so youth out of you.
I know.
He's a, what do you call it?
Energy vampire maybe?
Yes, yes. I'm joking.
I think that would make sense.
Yeah, I'm just I'm just taking so lean from the air.
Just got just and got more buff and more handsome.
Doug looks younger and you know,
so I think we they literally sucked it all out of us.
Yeah, yeah, that's the plan.
Yeah, yeah, they're in the back quiet.
Hey, those guys that talk a lot.
We're worried.
We'll say yeah, we'll get it. We'll get it. Well, they're talking we'll be taking something. Yeah, yeah, They're in the back quiet. Hey, those guys that talk a lot. We'll get them. They're talking we'll be taking something. Yeah, yeah,
we'll get them a little bit. Exactly.
Today for the shout out, I wanted to shout out somebody who I've
shouted out before, but the reason why I'm going to bring them up again since
we're like formally doing this every episode now. I've got a couple
DMs where people, and by the way, I appreciate when people share people like this,
like, oh, check this coach out or check this person out, because sometimes I've found some really neat people that way.
And somebody had shared this coach, and guy was actually presenting pretty good information.
But I still have yet to find anybody who I think is putting out better sports performance content than
Paul Fabrett's.
I think that, I mean, I've been tracking him for seven years plus now and not always he
put good content out, but I mean, his whole ecosystem, like he's got all kinds of great
programs and stuff like that.
He communicates it very, very well.
Yeah, and that's what I love.
So, funny you say that because you didn't know what I was going to talk about, but this
guy, I liked this guy.
His content was really good.
But he also, and I don't know what this is,
why people love, people love when you use technical terms,
and you get all wordy with stuff,
to some like, you have this,
you have this breakthrough bit of information
about something, and it's just like,
you know, all textbook.
Yeah, and it's like, well, you know,
all he's really saying is this.
You know, saying like in a really complex way
to sound really, really smart.
One of the things I love about Paul Faberitz
and his handle is PJF performance,
is that he has that level of knowledge
because you can go extremely deep, he's very intelligent,
but then he does a great way,
he does a great, great job of
communicating that to the average person that is just looking for the average teenage guy or boy
that's like, I just want to add four inches to my vertical. I want to get this much faster or
what about that? Like he communicates that so well. And so if you are in the sports performance world,
he specializes in basketball, but a lot of the stuff that he does
for basketball is transferable in almost any other sport. So if you haven't followed Paul,
you got to fall, Paul. I love his content. Hey, check it out. Go to this company called Sleep Me.
In fact, the link is sleep.me forward slash pump 30. This company makes products that dramatically
improve your sleep. So like one of the devices,
you put this pad on your mattress under your sheets and you control it with an app and it cools
or warms your bed. It monitors the temperature, maintains the temperature. It could slowly warm up
to wake you up in the morning, cool down at night to maximize things like growth hormone and
melatonin production. It helps you fall asleep faster, stay asleep,
it makes a tremendous difference in your sleep quality.
Go check this company out.
Again, it's sleep.me forward slash pump 30,
and that'll offer you a discount on their products.
All right, here comes the rest of the show.
First question is from and zero NBR.
What is the benefit of cable movements
when compared to their dumbbell counterparts?
Oh boy, cables versus dumbbells.
Cables are my favorite machine form of exercise
because they're more like free weights
than I would say like machines
because they allow freedom of movement.
You're not limited to a track
like you might be on a plate loaded machine
or a selectorized piece of equipment.
And they're super, super versatile.
What's the benefit of cables?
I'm not-
Unintentioned, I would say.
Yeah, that's the big one,
and I'm not restricted by gravity.
So with dumbbells, I'm just working against gravity.
So I can't take a dumbbell and create resistance going down
like I would with like a cable crossover
So cables allow me a lot of versatility and the constant tension. There's no there's no like
Weight curve like what I mean by that is if I do a curl with the dumbbell the heaviest point of the curl is gonna be at the midpoint when I'm fighting
Gravity directly when I'm up here at the top or at the bottom
It's actually not truly the stress isn't the same because I'm not fighting gravity directly. When I'm up here at the top or at the bottom, it's actually not truly, the stress isn't the same because I'm not fighting gravity directly, whereas with cables,
if it's 30 pounds, it's 30 pounds all the way through. Now, this doesn't mean cables
are better. It just means that they're a lot different than dumbbells. A lot more different.
So when you put them together, you've got great variety.
I'm glad you said it like that because I think this is coming up. This person probably follows,
I forget his name. His handle is like the hypertrophy coach or something. He just did like a whole
video on the whole, you know, cable versus free weight type of argument. And you know,
the true and I don't like feeling like we're being forced into one camp or the other. I think
you heard the message around free weights from us so much because we think that so many people
neglected free weights, right?
Like if they fell out of favor.
Yeah, they fell out of favor, right?
Obviously early, you know, in the, you know, 70s, 80s and 90s,
they were more popular.
I'd say 90s was when the cables really started,
cables and machines started to really take over
in the 90s, 2000s and so forth.
So I think that the reason why you probably hear us advocating
for freeway and barbell exercises so much
is because we think that people neglect that more.
Now, in a perfect world, you have both.
I mean, both are amazing.
And I just think that the only reason why you hear more
about the freeway argument is the point that I'm making.
But you know, taking an exercise like a rear fly,
like so a bent over rear delt fly,
an incredible exercise for building your delts,
I love that and prefer that on a cable machine
because when you come down, right,
and you're at the bottom with the dumbbells,
there's like no resistance.
There's no resistance, no tension on the delt at all.
Whereas when I'm on a cable and I'm pulled and it's stretched,
I mean that stretched position and some of the highest
tension is on it, which is completely opposite
of what's going on with cables.
I mean, excuse me with free weights.
And so the benefits of that,
when if all I ever did was dumbbell rear flies,
I wouldn't get any of that because I have no tension there
whatsoever.
So yeah, I don't neglect either one, and I guess the real benefit of each of them individually
comes from which one do you tend to do more of?
If you find yourself using machines at cable the time, you are missing out on all the
great benefits of free weights.
If all you ever do is free weights and you're like, oh, I'm an anti-machine cable guy,
well, then you're missing out on a lot of benefits from cables, put both in your program.
Totally.
I love cables for just increasing overall volume for specific body parts or, you know,
following up on areas that I'm really trying to build and develop more exclusively.
But yeah, in terms of that versus something else, like it's, it's in combination.
There's so many benefits from dumbbells and from barbells
and in terms of overall muscle stimulation growth.
To avoid that would be a mistake.
I mean, I do think that this provides a lot of value
to complement and pair with that,
but exclusively, I think it's pretty limited.
Yeah, and I wanna add one thing,
because what we try to do,
we're limited with our knowledge of
different types of resistance
and how they affect the body.
Like, it can be hard to explain
why a free weight squat,
let's say, would build more muscle effectively
in the lower body than, let's say, a hack squat, for example.
And we could talk about tension on the muscle and leverage.
And, but at the end of the day, there's still some mystery.
Like, why is it that free weights tend to,
I mean, I think it's dumb to pick one or the other.
I think it's smart to utilize all of them, okay?
But if you absolutely have to pick one,
I think free weights edge machines out.
And the best argument I could use, which isn't a great argument still, is that our bodies evolved lifting resistance or working against resistance that more is more like free weights than it is like machines or cables. lifting a boulder or a log or swinging something or throwing something
Gravity has for most of human history operated in one way and we didn't have bands cables and machines
And so our bodies evolved in a particular way. That's the best argument. I have. I know it's not a good one
But I definitely think that the reason why we tend to promote free weights so much besides the fact that people neglect them
is that they just tend to promote free weights so much besides the fact that people neglect them is that they just tend to be generally more effective when you look at the whole picture. And again, not a great argument.
I'm sure we'll figure more things out later on, but that's kind of where I stand with it.
But I think you're dumb if you go, well, I'm only going to pick this.
Yeah, get out of the camp. There's no reason to be any camp here. I do want to head off
though, something that will probably come back to us whenever we out some of it. Oh, but why if you guys advocate for both
and why does this program not have any of it in there? We have multiple programs. I know. And so
that's because this always happens when we talk about a benefit of something. And me always it always
happens. We talk about the benefits of them. Then someone's like, well, then why doesn't your
program have that? Well, it's because all of our one program isn't designed to run that one.
We're all pieces of the puzzle. Yeah, it's right. So our one program isn't designed to run that one.
Well, they're all pieces of the puzzle. Yeah, it's right. So it's like you should run
that for a while and then move into another program that does have them.
Next question is from Olivia 11 Welch. Can or should women take the week off lifting
during their period? And if so, what should they be doing in place of lifting?
So here's why I don't like. First off, can you, yeah, you can take a week off
whenever you want.
Should you, I don't think that's a good question
because when you look at all of the things
that can affect or influence whether or not
you should take a week off, your period is way down the list.
What's higher than that?
Well, you're sleep, you're daily stress,
you're nutrition, you're nutrition,
are you over-trained, are you under-trained,
you have joint pain, whatever.
So you could be on your period and everything feels great.
So then what should you take the week off
because you feel great, just because you're on your period,
that doesn't make any sense, right?
Or you could be during the week
when you're supposedly your strongest,
which may be ovulation, but you're over-trained, you're supposedly your strongest, which may be ovulation,
but you're over trained, you're tired,
you got poor sleep, well then take it off.
At the end of the day, it's really about how you're feeling
in the moment, not about when your period is coming
or what time you're in the cycle,
because you may be stronger during that period of time
when you're on your period, not because you're on your period,
but rather because of all the factors I talked about. We've answered this question a couple of times before. It's been during that period of time when you're on your period, not because you're on your period, but rather because of all the factors I talked about.
We've answered this question a couple of times before.
It's been a while, but I have recently seen more marketing material around this,
which is why I'm assuming that this question has come back up.
Because it's an easy sell.
It is, right?
It's an train with your natural cycle.
And that's what you're seeing
is someone saying that and the truth is
there's such an individual variance,
not just from, you know, person to person genetically,
but also all the factors that Sal said
that it really depends on the person
and programming specifically.
So there might be somebody who, you know,
bought some program where they someone does this.
Whoa, they put it and it's like, oh my God,
that was the missing key for me.
It might have been.
I mean, maybe you are the person who,
that during that time.
Or maybe you just need a week off.
Yeah, or that, right?
You know?
But I've had enough clients and dated enough girls
that have been, had both sides of this, right?
That are like, I've actually had girls
that during this time actually felt great
and loved to train hard during that week. And then I've had others that are like, I've actually had girls that during this time actually felt great and loved to train hard during that week.
And then I've had others that are like,
they don't want to do anything, they can't move,
they feel miserable, so it just really...
So you know what's funny about this?
I like to flip this on women, right?
So, because you'll have female influencers
or whatever selling programs around this.
But I like to flip this on them.
And I like to say, so when your boyfriend says
that during this time of the month,
you're really irritable and you shouldn't be around you,
is there truth to that?
No, it's because he's an asshole,
because this happened, right, of course,
because there's other factors
that can influence how you feel,
not just your hormones.
And if you add up all those other factors,
they can actually very strongly outweigh
what's happening with your cycle.
That doesn't mean don't consider it.
That just means creating a program based on your cycle
that makes you maybe ignore all these other signs
and signals, it's not smart.
It's not smart.
By the way, at one point, I thought about writing a program
like this and the reason why I didn't was exactly that. I thought, this doesn't make any sense because somebody could have
poor sleep or diet or stress or whatever. And I'm going to be telling them to work out harder
just because they're ovulating or work out lighter just because, what if that's not right
for them at that moment? Yeah. I'm not teaching people how to train themselves, probably.
I actually teach them how to ignore themselves is what I'm trying to do. Of all the factors,
it's not the top three that should make the difference on whether you take the week off or not. That's right. That's the beauty
too. Resistance training is moldable. So you can titrate your intensity, your volume, and all that.
So it's more of a recovery. If this is something that's sort of debilitating for your or if it's
not really affecting you that much, you know, it should be just fine.
Next question is from parlor, life is intermittent fasting
the same as calorie restriction?
Yeah, I like this question.
Physiologically, the benefits that we see from intermittent fasting
seem to mimic almost exactly the benefits you get
from cutting your calories.
In other words, the improvement in things like blood lipids
and the way that it affects cell autophagy,
all these like buzzwords of the use,
mitochondrial health, all that stuff.
Is there not what Dr. Walter Longo
showed in his studies with this low protein diet?
Yes, his fasting mimicking diet.
Yeah, so 500 calorie a day.
Yeah, so physiologically, it's, I think, so far, the data shows that's pretty much the same
thing.
If you cut calories or you're in fast, you'll get the same physiological effects.
What about the psychological?
There you go.
That's what the difference is.
From restricting from that.
That's the coming present.
And actually, you're learning what hunger really feels like versus cravings.
Which is, by the way, if you've been listening to this show long enough, I think that's been
the consistent messaging that we've presented in our event fasting for years now.
I mean, we wrote a guide on it.
I don't know how many years ago.
And we don't recommend it to the average person.
We don't recommend it for fat loss.
We recommend it for the relationship with food.
Many people have no idea what real hunger feels like.
They think they do, but it's normally cravings.
And a lot of the things that we do
is that if cravings are at a habits and just reactions,
like so I love teaching someone fasting for those reasons.
Not ever.
In fact, if someone ever comes in,
he goes, I want do the intermittent fasting,
because I wanna shed 10 pounds,
I'd normally ride away, say, don't.
Yeah, dumb way to use fasting.
You know, it's probably the oldest
and most worldwide, I'd say, consistent dietary modification
that we have in history is fasting.
And it was never used as a way to lose weight.
Of course, weight loss diets didn't exist until much later.
But it's almost always been used as a spiritual practice
as a way of detaching from earthly things
of becoming present.
So like you don't eat food for a while.
Now of course, this is a good dysfunctional direction.
So if you have any type of eating disorder,
I'm not talking to you.
But for the average person who doesn't go,
three, four hours without food
or never has gone 24 hours without food,
except for maybe when they were really sick,
not eating anything for a day or two days or three days,
there's definitely a component, a spiritual component.
There's definitely a component in where you start to realize,
like, oh, I like to reach for food to numb myself
when I'm stressed or when I'm sad or this is really weird.
It's lunchtime, I'm not supposed to,
I'm not eating today, I'm finding myself, am I really hungry?
Or is this just a craving?
And then when hunger actually kicks in, wow,
this is so different.
I almost eat almost anything whereas before I had preferences. So from that psychological
spiritual side, fasting can have tremendous benefits. When it comes to like weight loss,
the physiological effects, when you take that out of the part out, it's no different than just
cutting your calories. Next question is from Jada Rankin.
Could you explain more about the central nervous system
and how it influences performance and recovery?
I love that somebody asked this question.
You know, of all the things that I think that we've shared
with each other during this journey
that we've been in for almost eight plus years now,
one of my favorite things that you have ever said,
was the speaker amplifier analogy.
I have to admit, up into that point,
I don't think I ever communicated central nervous system to my clients very well
until that.
I felt like a light ball went off from me.
What a great way to explain
its role because it is extremely complicated, but unbelievably important to your recovery
and performance and muscle building. Yeah, muscles are dumb. If you take your bicep off your body,
it just sits there, it doesn't do anything. The sensual nervous system is what tells it what to do.
And so the analogy that I used is that your muscles are speakers and your central nervous system is what tells it what to do. And so the analogy is like
that I used is that your muscles are speakers and your central nervous system is the amplifier. And
you could have like very high performance speakers, very big powerful speakers. But if your amplifier
is non-existent or sucks or weak, you're not going to get any performance out of the speakers.
Or very minimal. Or very very minimal or you could have
Subpar speakers, but a phenomenal amplifier and get incredible
Performance and by the way give give the analogy of what that person kind of looks like right? We've dealt with that right. Oh, yeah
Like you you'll see Olympic lifters are great examples of this right they compete in weight classes
They can lift tremendous amounts of weight
for the the the their. And what they've
done is they've become masters of CNS of their central nervous system. They know how to just
squeeze out every bit of juice and energy and fire it in such a unified, efficient way
that this 170 pound athlete can lift weights that a 270 pound bodybuilder can't even touch.
So, go ahead.
It's been practiced so many times
that it's basically been bearing the subconscious
where this is like a hard-wired system now.
That now it allows like these governings
that are usually in place to kind of lower
the amount of force you're able to produce.
It allows a lot more force to come
through. And this is an advantage that the Olympic lifters have because of that discipline,
dedication, all the nuance and the detail of being able to repeat this process perfectly.
Totally. On a simple level, right, the CNS tells the muscle how hard to contract.
Right? The CNS tells the muscle how hard to contract. On a more complex level, the CNS is what organizes the technique and the skill.
So, if you look at like, uh, throwing a baseball, okay?
You take a bodybuilder who's obviously got far bigger, more powerful muscles than a high school baseball player.
But the baseball player's central nervous system organizes their body in a way
to maximize technique and so the ball goes further. But then again, if you go down to the
simple level and you just look at just the bicep, right? The CNS can make the muscle relax.
By the way, this is what makes you flexible or not flexible. People think a muscle that's flexible
is more pliable, like it's like it's rubber that you warm up or something like it doesn't work that
way.
It's literally a central nervous system allowing the muscle to stretch or to contract.
So it's like the governor controls everything.
And when you train your muscles, you train your CNS.
You train them both all the time.
And if you disregard the CNS, then you're going to not be able to reap all the maximum benefits
that you're looking for from your training. Because you can actually fry your CNS, but here's a good example.
Lose two nights of sleep, go work out, you're way weaker. What happened?
Are your muscles smaller? No. Your CNS is fried. On the flip side, you could give someone an injection of adrenaline,
and they'll go lift 10, 15% more weight. What happened? Their muscles get bigger? No, the adrenaline made their CCNS fire.
I love talking about this because I always used to be mystified as to how some of these
smaller guys were able to pull off these superhuman feats of strength while these big, muscular
guys couldn't perform the same thing.
And a lot of times too, like it is adrenaline,
you know, as part of that. But really, it's like, it's that whole process of your body just allowing
all that force to be generated. When normally you're pretty much stifled from being able to do that,
because all the governings in place keeping you safe. Yeah. It's the communication system to your
muscles, from your brain to your muscles,
and just imagine all things that would improve
if your communication system from your brain to your muscles
is improved.
Recovery is better, performance is better,
strength is better, it's all better
because you have a better communication.
If you have a poor communication to all these muscles,
you're gonna have all those things are a little less.
That's how impactful having a strong
central nervous system is.
And so I love this conversation, too. I think it's something that is one of the most overlooked
things when like programming and thinking about the intensity applied in a training routine. Like,
I really think it's an area that even a lot of trainers neglect because again, it took me even
years to understand it.
Then I had never had brought the words to be able to communicate it really well to clients
and until I remember us all hanging out and like, Sal, you know, I was like, what a great
way to explain that to the average person who's trying to understand what the hell is this
thing.
Yeah, you know, it's interesting.
I've read articles on this and they, they, in some, and a lot of these articles, they think that the average person can exert at any given moment up to like 50 or
60% of the actual potential strength. And that's because their CNS doesn't allow them to
exert any more strength because it doesn't feel safe or unstable because it's got these
kind of like, it's like a speed limit on your car.
A limbic atmosphere up the bone sometimes?
Yeah, well, Olympic athletes on the other hand, 80 or 90, right?
Yeah, they can exert 80 to 90% of their total potential and the ones that go above 90
are obviously world champions.
It's also why you hear the story of like the mom who lifted the car, the burning car
off her kid, you know, and you're like, how did she do that?
By the way, these stories are true sometimes where you see these crazy feats of strength.
Well, under extreme duress, the CNS is like,
okay, we're gonna injure ourselves
because this is obviously worth it for whatever reason.
And so boom, the juice hits, and they injure themselves,
but they move the car, or they actually
are able to lift something really.
It's one of the simplest ways to explain
the 185 pound Olympic
lifter who is stronger than Phil Heath. Yeah. I mean, there's examples of these, these
high level Olympic athletes that can, you know, squat more weight than someone like Phil
Heath. And you're looking at it. It's a very obvious how strong one of those guys look,
but the other one may not look as strong, but it is stronger because of this. I mean, that's the simplest explanation
for the difference between those two.
It is, and this is why you feel stronger
when you're angry or when you're excited
or that's why people, power lifters
slapped themselves in the face and sniff smelling salts.
It's all you get to CNS.
Yeah, totally.
See if the CNS kind of fired up.
So I love it.
It's a great conversation.
I think you need to consider both when you train your body.
You don't want a bunch of dumb speakers,
but of course you want to look good
and you need to have the speakers as well.
So train everything personally.
I like, I like, I've always wanted to be stronger
than I looked.
That's just because that's what I appreciate.
And so this conversation for me, if you ever want to read up on this kind of stuff,
you just look at some of the Soviet era weightlifting studies,
because they were like masters of figuring this out.
That's why they dominated weightlifting for decades.
I feel like there's a pickup line in there, like,
hey, girl, got beautiful looking speakers, but do they sound good?
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