Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2001: Why Priming is Better than Warming Up, Ways to Troubleshoot the Cause of Mysterious Aches & Pains, When to Start a Cut & More (Listener Live Coaching)
Episode Date: February 1, 2023In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin coach four Pump Heads via Zoom. Mind Pump Fit Tip: Eating small meals throughout the day doesn’t help with fat loss but can definitely help with ...bulking! (2:21) Shout out to Dustin over at UPS! (7:46) Kids hear EVERYTHING! (9:24) Max’s aggressive phase. (11:42) Poor Chad. (13:20) The latest in psychedelic research. (14:41) Big Pharms hates fit & healthy people. (22:01) Blaming everything except the vaccine. (25:51) Sodium is one of the most performance-enhancing substances. (35:36) The longest fast in medical history. (41:06) How Organifi is making protein feel good for vegans. (45:19) #ListenerLive question #1 - What is the best way to effectively incorporate priming movements and mobility programs into your full-body type programming? (47:39) #ListenerLive question #2 - Is it a common thing to experience aches and pains after starting MAPS Symmetry? (56:33) #ListenerLive question #3 - What advice would you suggest for a client who has trouble stabilizing and controlling dumbbells for all movements? (1:07:34) #ListenerLive question #4 - Should I try a mini cut to lean out and then try to reverse diet higher than my current maintenance or is this an expected part of the process? Should I soldier on and risk having even more body fat to lose after getting calories higher? (1:17:19) Related Links/Products Mentioned Ask a question to Mind Pump, live! Email: live@mindpumpmedia.com Visit Drink LMNT for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Visit Organifi for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo 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. The Meal Frequency Myth – Mind Pump Blog Ketamine Therapy and Its Benefits | Psychology Today Biden Admin Appoints Doctor Who Claims Obesity Is Mostly Genetic To Dietary Guidelines Committee CDC identifies possible 'safety concern' for certain people receiving COVID vaccines Concerns About COVID-19 Vaccines Remain High Justice Department Announces Largest Health Care Fraud Settlement in Its History The Surprising Benefits of Salt for Strength Athletes Angus Barbieri's fast Visit Butcher Box for this month’s exclusive Mind Pump offer! MAPS Fitness Performance MAPS Prime Webinar MAPS Prime Pro Webinar MAPS Symmetry Mind Pump #1765: Bodybuilding Vs. Powerlifting With Ben Pollack Mind Pump #1715: Ten Mistakes Fitness Trainers Make Reverse Dieting 101 | MAPS Fitness Products Reverse Dieting: What Is It and Should YOU Try It?? | MIND PUMP Why The Scale Is Not Always The Best Way To Measure Progress – Mind Pump Blog Welcome to the Huberman Lab Podcast Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Ben Pollack, Ph.D. (@phdeadlift) Instagram Andrew Huberman, Ph.D. (@hubermanlab) 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.
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Eating small meals throughout the day doesn't help with fat loss, but it can definitely help with bulking.
If you're bulking, try eating small meals throughout the day.
This was, it's so funny how small meals were sold one way, but in reality, it actually works a lot better the other way.
Because that's where it makes the most sense, right? You're trying to eat, you know, 3,500 calories.
That's like, you know, what is that? 1,200 calories of meal or something like that? If you eat three meals. Those are huge meals after a while.
We're really trying to stack it up. Yeah, you have bloated and you feel, you know, digestive issues or whatever.
It makes more sense to turn that into like five smaller meals. For fat loss,
it doesn't really, you know, help that much except for maybe somebody's, you know, behavior,
spent a fitting, but that's that's also, you know, yes or no sometimes. But when it comes to
bulking, I think small meals is kind of a staple,
especially when your calories are real high
or trying to eat a really high protein intake.
You know, this was, I don't know if you remember
when we first started the show,
this was my biggest gripe when we would talk about this, right?
So obviously you would lead the show with presenting
that the whole small meals myth has been debunked
and there's whether you want a meal or two meal,
and I was right in the thick of preparing
for bodybuilding shows.
And you're like 4500 calories.
Yeah, I'm like, you're literally poking right at me.
I'm eating six meals a day.
And yet, you know, so I'm carrying all this top wear around.
And so people are probably going like,
you know, with the salasane,
this small meal seems ridiculous.
And yet, here's Adam carrying all around.
And I remember my argument was, dude,
try eating 5,000 calories in two meals,
like just, and clean, like, that's not happening.
Just, I don't know anybody that does that.
Even some of the biggest bodybuilders
that eat tons of food, like,
that just had to portion it out in six meals
that throughout the day.
And even those are decently sized
when you're crushing 4 or five thousand calories.
So yeah, I have found that the value,
and I will say the value for someone who's trying to lose weight,
that I still found in it,
even though the research clearly shows
that there is no benefit metabolically
to breaking it up over six versus one or two meals.
But what it showed clients was portion control
and that part of weight loss and meal prepping
and there could be some behavior in discipline, right?
And like, I'm putting it together
and preparing it ahead of time.
Yeah. And seeing what, you know, eight grams of protein
looks like and what, you know,
40 grams of carbohydrates look like and what 40 grams of carbohydrates look like
and getting an understanding of that,
having that many meals consistently prepared
and breaking them up, and then you eat that and you're done.
You don't just keep eating until your stuff.
I think that was a good behavioral thing
even for someone who's trying to lose weight gain.
But yeah, you gotta admit though,
for bulking, it's definitely like way more value.
Better, more value.
It's far superior, yeah.
Way more value.
I mean, you're trying to eat, if you're a female
and you're trying to eat, you know, 140 grams of protein a day
or a man who's trying to eat 200 grams of protein a day.
Like that's really hard to do in three meals.
It's super satiating to eat a high,
like a 50, 60, 70 gram protein
or for women, 35 grams of protein and a meal, that's really tough,
but if you break it up into smaller meals,
now it's more possible.
And that becomes a challenge, right?
I'm kind of going through that right now.
I've been kind of on the slight bulk now for a little while.
Got health is still good, so I'm kind of pushing it
and see what can happen.
And there's no way that I could bulk with three meals a day.
There would be so big and so uncomfortable,
and it feels so terrible.
I have to eat five kind of meals a day
in order to make this kind of possible.
Well, the original way they were selling it
was very misleading.
It was very much like the thermogenic effect of food
and like eating these small meals was like stoking the fire
and like you would burn, you know, more fat with this type of an approach.
And so that's just kind of like the information
we got coming up as coaches.
And I think that's why initially we were like,
okay, we got at least put an opposite position to this.
Yeah, and it's funny because the bodybuilding space
has contributed a lot to the fitness space because the bodybuilding space has contributed a lot to the fitness space,
because the bodybuilding space was really the first
kind of strength space that tried to apply, tried to,
apply science to nutrition and to dieting
that kind of stuff.
And bodybuilders have been eating small meals
for a while now.
And so what they did, what the fitness space did,
is they took what bodybuilders did,
and the reason why bodybuilders did this,
was exactly what we're talking about.
They were eating 4,000 cows a day, 3,500 cows,
5,000 cows.
And you got to eat small meals throughout the day
to do that, or multiple meals, I should say,
more than three meals a day,
in order to make that happen.
So what the fitness space did is they took that,
and since the average gym consumer,
the average person who wants to work out,
not a bodybuilder, but the average person, they're interested in fat loss. They're not interested in building
tons of muscle. They're not interested in being shredded on stage. They want to lose weight.
So what they did is they took this thing that bodybuilders did, which was they had to do
to eat this many calories and grams of protein, and they twisted it and made up some stuff
to sell it to people who want to lose weight when that's totally false.
Behaviorally, it may contribute and it depends on the person
because I can also, I also know people that small meals
hurt them when it came to weight loss
because it was easier for them to not wear to skip meals.
But when it comes to bulking, I mean,
just pragmatically for a lot of people that just make sense.
And that's the real application.
That's where I think it makes the most sense a little off topic
But I wanted to ask you because you brought it up in our thread. We haven't talked since then you found out the UPS guy was a
listener so cool right how did that happen? Well, no, so I've known him
I know that he's a listener for a while so you you know he drops off package
Package you know sex toys like for the time this week
Just box by my brain. What is it again?
back as you know. Sex toys like fourth time this week.
Sex is bopsy vibrating.
What is this again?
Let's go back.
Yes for you.
Everyday.
No, he drops off packages and one day he came,
I said, I love your show or whatever.
So I was like cool and I met him.
Well anyway, every time he comes by, I say hi to him
because he delivers packages in the neighborhood.
Yesterday I'm outside with Aralius and we're playing outside.
And the UPS guy comes and he's delivering something
to one of my neighbors.
So I'm like, hey, I'm like,
you mind if we look in the back of your truck
because my son's like super into cars and trucks.
And he's like, sure, so we go back there
and he opens up the back and we have this super pumped
and excited, he's checking it out.
And anyway, I admit this guy's name is Dustin,
super cool guy, and he was talking about how he got
the rest of the crew over at UPS, the list of the show.
So, give him a shout out.
Super nice guy. Does Jiu Jitsu and he was asking me? I had a great of the crew over at UPS to listen to the show. So give him a shout out. Super, super nice guy. Does Jiu-Jitsu and he was asking me.
I agree.
Do you tell him about your purple belt?
Huh?
No.
It's not even, I'm a white belt now, dude.
You know how long it's been?
You lose belt?
You can't lose belts, right?
That's not the way.
My skill level's gone, dude.
I know, but if you were to go back at it, they wouldn't put you back down, right?
You automatically get to...
I would put myself back down, right?
Be embarrassed.
Well, I mean, that's like, I mean,
I technically have my pro card,
but I would never go get back on a pro stage right now.
That's what I mean.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But I mean, it's been how long it's been?
I was doing the math the other day.
How long it's been since I've trained?
It's been like 15 years.
Wow.
A long time.
Wow. So yeah, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, I had a purple bell speaking of a railiest that I got to tell you guys so funny
So he went to my parents house the other day loves hanging out my parents. He always has fun when he comes home
He's always like you know none of this house fun, you know
Really, it's has fun. He's so excited anyway. I go over there to pick him up and my parents are speaking to each other and
To me in Sicilian, okay, which I really says't understand. So they're speaking to me and it really is
eating and then he looks at us and he goes,
blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,
blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,
blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, bro, we were done. I'm like, what is clashes? What did none of the saddies like made a ban?
So I wonder what, okay, so that's interesting.
You bring that up because there is,
I'll have to ask Katrina which ones they are,
but there's two or three cartoons
that Max prefers to watch in Spanish.
It is the funniest.
Yeah, it is the funniest thing ever.
Like, and if you try and change it, it gets pissed.
And so, Katrina's like, okay, whatever.
If he wants to listen to it in Spanish,
we'll let him listen to it in Spanish.
So he's like, and it's only, it's only,
that's what we figure, it's like, okay,
if he wants to, I'm not gonna not let him do that.
So of course you could listen to it.
But it's only like, there's like two of them, I think.
I'll ask her which ones they are,
but for some reason,
did you pick them any words or anything?
Not that I know of, not that I have noticed.
I mean, he's still barely getting like,
he's like, he's still, I mean, he was behind on his speech.
And so he's still for his age,
because I remember my best friend,
so when he said this age, was saying things a lot more clear
than he was, he still is not putting like,
consistently full sentences that all makes sense,
which is the, you know, the fun part,
because the stuff doesn't always speak.
Oh, that's so fun.
Complete sense that you're trying to do.
Yeah, I really saw something new every day.
And I don't even know, we're here.
He hears half the shit.
Like he was, he was in a blanket the other day
and he's like, oh, but, but it's so cozy.
I'm like, what?
Cozy.
Like who says cozy in that?
He says stuff like that all the time.
It makes you realize that they hear everything
that they pick.
Oh, he said shit.
I didn't tell you guys.
Oh, he cussed.
See, Max isn't cussed.
Bro, he dropped.
I'm that's like, I'm proud of us that we keep it up.
You know how he did it?
He did it the way I do it.
Cause I think he can't hear me.
So he dropped something and he's like playing
and he whispered, he goes,
shit.
I'm like,
like Jessica, I think he just said shit.
That's it.
Here's what we said.
You know what I'm going through right now.
So this phase we're at is really interesting.
And I definitely noticed a difference when he gets to go to school and when he does it,
he is going through a really aggressive physical phase now with me.
Like he's always kind of wrestled and we play.
And a lot of that I feel like was me, you know, you know, kind of mess with him where now
I had to catch myself because I'll come home.
I might be doing something still work wise or working on something the house
We been putting things together at the new place and so and he'll just I don't know where off the couch
Just like jump on the back of my neck and face rake me and like fucking stick his e a fingers in my eyeball and my nose
He's like he's very
Physical and and and aggressive right now, and he hasn't had that.
I took a treat him like, man, he's more than usual.
And what I think I'm actually connecting it to aside from he's kind of probably going
through this phases, it is definitely more when he doesn't go to school because we've been
in this transition from moving from the other town to this one.
And so he's been out of school more the last two or three weeks.
And if I come home and he has and he hasn't got that playground
energy out, oh boy, that's the,
he don't even say hi to me.
It's as soon as I walk him door,
it's like, oh, he was over and hits me right in the nuts.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
And then it's like on, you know what I'm saying?
It's like I cannot get, cannot get him to stop.
He's just the last stop.
I made a really, it was throwing his toy cars and one of them hit me in the nuts and I'm like, oh, and him to stop. He's just the last stop. I made, I really was throwing his toy cars
and one of them hit me in the nuts and I'm like,
oh, and I'm, you should never.
Yeah, because now you got a reaction.
Yes, so now he knows.
That's where I aim.
So you'll walk up to me while I'm doing something
with a toy and if I don't see him,
he aims directly for my nuts every time.
And it's like, I'm so happy for Everett's birthday.
I think I told you guys, I don't think I told on the show,
but we got him this punching bag of one of those guys,
it's like a torso and then just a face.
And so I put that downstairs and this is like working famously
because I knew, I'm like, dude,
if he's anything like I was where it's like,
you get frustrated and he's going through the spell
of like, he just wants to like, just resist and rebel.
Like almost anything that you're gonna promote to him.
You know, it's like any kind of schoolwork,
any kind of like, go into gymnastics or doing anything
that like he's not doing right then.
He's just like, ah, you know, I'm like,
okay, go beat up Chad.
He named him already.
He named him Chad?
Yeah, he named him Chad, he goes down there
and he listen to, like, ah! Ah!
It's just like, he's in the shit out of this thing.
I love it. It's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, it's so, Justin. I've already buried that, that, that, that ain't going to go to.
You got a long time ago, dude.
Let it, let it out, everyone.
We might need to get like a really strong one, though.
You guys want me to surface it.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
I'm just, that's why we don't want you to use psychedelics.
God knows what I'm talking about.
You hit the wrong.
You're choking out of shaman, dude.
Yeah.
You want to be the release this, it's all.
Hey, speed of psychedelics.
We're, what's the, you know, you, you were pretty good
about updating us on a pretty regular basis
on the legislation that was going on
and like, are they making any new moves?
I mean, you were, you were an owner of Compass.
I know you had their stuff before.
I still have some of their stock.
So, ketamine therapy is now legal in,
I know here in California.
So you can actually get that.
I've never tried that before and I've been told to.
I've never heard.
I mean, I haven't either.
So I actually talked to a therapist who's an expert.
She doesn't do the ketamine therapy,
but she's works with it and is familiar with it.
And she says that what it does is it allows the brain
to rewire thought patterns so that you can overcome these kind of automatic thought loops or
react to processes. How does she compare it then to psilocybin? Because I feel like that's what
psilocybin does. They all do that to an extent, but they're all different, right? So I MDMA,
psilocybin, both I've experienced, both I've used like in the relationship therapeutic way,
and they do have a similar yet different feeling from.
Yeah, that's a really good question.
Adam, I'm not quite sure.
I know that they work similarly from what they see,
but they're obviously different.
Yeah, I thought ketamine was kind of,
I don't know any of that, right?
Ketamine tranquilizer.
Oh yeah, I just say,
I thought it was more like an opiate
as well as what I was gonna say.
Something that's more sedative.
I don't know.
So, so what MDMA is obviously not sedative at all.
No, so the way she explained it is she's so so she has experience with it
She had a severe fear of flying and she said after one session
She can get on a plane now. She couldn't get on a plane and after a session she can get on a plane
So the way was and there's literally places in San Jose that you can go to so the way she explained it to me is
You meet with a doctor slash therapist.
I think they do a session with you.
Then they give you the ketamine to take home.
And it's in a, I think it's called a trouch,
a trouch, trouch on how to pronounce a TR-O-U-C-H-E.
So I don't know how to pronounce that.
A trouch.
I don't know.
A trouché?
A trouché?
No, it's a French word.
It's trouché. Butouche. No, no, no. It's a French word.
It's Trouche.
But anyway, you take it home, I think you call them, then you write in a journal, you
put it, you take it, and you make sure you have a sitter.
They say you have to have a sitter, so someone kind of get your water and whatever.
You take it, you lay down, and then once it starts to kick in, you sit up and you write,
and you think you have to have an intention.
Like, I want to process this, I want to process that. And that's it. So you get home.
Yeah, okay, so there's places here in some image.
I mean, is that anything?
No, you go home and you think about, it's not illegal, so?
No, it's legal.
I didn't know that.
It's legal for this, for therapy.
Well, especially, they allow you to go home with it.
Yeah. That sounds crazy, like a big step.
So, I mean, legally-
There's a website, I could find the website.
Yeah, I find it.
So, legally, could we do it and then, like, do it on an episode or something?
I mean, you have to have to actually have-
No, no, no, you gotta bro, you can't just go through a psychological issue.
Yeah, well, I mean, you guys, I'm sure you guys have lots of fun.
But yeah, I know you guys pretty well, so-
Justin, we don't want to do that.
You qualify for 15 sessions.
Or you told us.
Yeah, that's cool. But- I'm just gonna be angry. But anyway, that's what want to do that. You qualify for 15 sessions. You told us. Yeah, that's cool.
I'm just going to be angry.
But anyway, that's what's happening right now.
And I think that's what the way these things need to be used.
Because you also look at the research and it can, as effective as it can be for helping
people with certain issues, it can also trigger and send people into terrible anxiety.
Well, and it can create PTSD.
And it can also be very addictive as I've seen in our space,
the people that...
Psychologically addictive.
Yeah, I mean, I could see how that happens.
I mean, I, in the last, what,
a few years introduced Katrina to it.
And, you know, one of the things that we notice is every time.
So in five years, we've probably done it four or five times.
So once a year, I'd say we have done like micro dosing
with psilocybin.
And every time we have, we have amazing breakthroughs
in the relationship and we feel even,
so I could see how people could get addicted to that.
That like wow, man, every time we do this,
sex is amazing and oh, we learn something new.
Yeah, and because it's a powerful tool, I could see how you start to play that, you know,
justifying.
Well the way you would do it again this weekend, it was good.
That's the way that it was explained to me is the integration is the work.
Right.
So you get the feeling, you get the ability to think about things in a particular way
for give yourself, whatever, however you want to word it.
And then it's the integration of the work afterwards that's important.
Falling in love with the feeling that it provides
is then that becomes addictive behavior
and you distract yourself.
Well, and then I think also the other part
isn't just the integration part.
And then also I think the goal would be
just like how we talk about like intuitive eating.
The goal would be to figure out what it's helping you
break through with and start to teach yourself
how to do that organically.
That's what I was really.
So I think, you know, when I talked to like Katrina's mom
who's more on the holistic side of things
like that, they don't use anything like that
and she's hardcore in a meditation and the spiritual stuff.
Like I would tell her about my experience with that
and she just kind of laugh at me and she goes,
oh honey, she goes, that's the beginner stuff.
When you get, when you really learn to do this,
you don't need any drugs, you do this naturally.
That makes sense.
And I don't disagree with her.
I'm like, I could see how people could get addicted
to the drug and the high part of wanting to utilize it.
And to me, maybe that's the lazy part,
is that you just...
I could see it being a tool.
Like, imagine this.
Imagine if we had a way where someone could take a pill
or something
and then be fit and healthy for 24 hours.
So it would give them the feeling of, oh, this is what it's like.
Right.
Oh my god, this is what it feels like it feels good.
Right.
So then that might be the impetus that they need to say, okay, this is what I want to do
and take care of myself.
But the work is still in doing those things.
And also, there is no end goal.
We've talked about this a million times.
It's the journey process. that's where you learn.
So, and someone could get addicted
to just taking something to think about.
Exactly, yeah.
I mean, highly likelihood
to be seeking those pills out like
continuously to fuel that feeling.
Speaking of that, what we see,
I mean, we see that a lot in our space.
I feel like our space tends to,
which I'm sure there's somebody who's listening right now
who's gonna get defensive about this
like as you're poking at that.
Our space does this because,
I mean, my theory is this,
is that the health space is a growth-minded,
whether you wanna look better,
burn body fat, build muscle or not,
you stay in it long enough,
it's a pro-personal growth journey,
because that's what it is, really.
And if you stick to it long enough,
eventually you're like,
okay, I got this fitness thing down. Wow, I've developed a good relationship with nutrition. Okay, I've got a better relationship
with stress and now relationships and eventually get to spirituality. And that's why you see all these
fitness and health people who've been doing this for 10 years. Next, you know, they're, you know,
doing psychedelics, they're doing ayahuasca, they're doing crystals and they're searching, right?
Because you keep going down this path,
you're eventually gonna touch everything. And it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, reason, praying to my mother, Ayahuasca and doing crystal stuff doesn't seem as religious to you.
So you go, sorry, I know I'm probably offending people.
I just, no, I mean, it's just, it's growing.
I mean, I see, yeah, it is ironic to me, somebody who's seen both and been around both.
I don't believe in all that, but you know, the universe told me.
Yeah.
It's like, it's a difference.
Yeah.
Anyway, speaking of pills, I was thinking a lot. So there's this doctor that has now been interviewed a couple times.
Don't remember her name, we'll find her, but there's this clip of her talking about how,
you know, regardless of this, like something along the lines of regardless of your lifestyle,
how you eat, you're not going to change how you're obese.
It's like the your odds of being obese if you have two obese parents.
That was a 60 minute.
That was a 60 minute interview.
Yes.
The odds of you being obese if you have two obese parents is 80%.
She's like, so genetics play a huge role this and that.
And it makes me want to rip my remaining hair out of my head because the reason why you
have an 80% chance of being obese with obese parents
is because you live the lifestyle that they live.
It's not, it's not a disease, stop trying to sell it.
So I was thinking a lot about this.
You got to help us in that fact.
And I'm gonna make a statement that I 100% stand by,
which is that the pharmaceutical industry,
so big pharma and the medical industry,
either knowingly or unknowingly,
so consciously or unconsciously,
do not like fit and healthy people.
In fact, they hate fit and healthy people
because fit and healthy people
are the worst consumers of their products.
If you're fit and healthy,
you don't take far less medications
or the medications that you do take
if you have to take them,
or typically generic and inexpensive. So maybe you're a diabetic because you're born
to insulin or you have to take thyroid. Okay, but you're not taking expensive pharmaceutical
drugs that are controlling all these different symptoms. You don't go to a hospital or
the doctor very often at all. You are not the consumer. They're looking for you are not
a profitable consumer.
I think it's I think it's less insidious than that. I think it's just more straightforward
that the way they make the most money
is giving you the pill.
The easiest way to convince you you need that
is to convince you that it is some genetic thing.
Well, that's what I mean.
I know, but I mean, I don't think it's like
there's this like evil plan, like we hate we want everybody.
No, I think it's easy.
It's like, hey, if we tell people it's not their fault,
they already don't want to exercise,
they already don't want to make those choices.
So now we're giving them the easy out.
And then what we're gonna do, and that's what, by the way,
like if you cannot see the setup that's coming.
Oh, come on.
It's like way too hard.
It's pushing so hard.
Yes.
And that's the follow up to this is all these medications
that are gonna follow that.
And now you're gonna have all these people that are gonna be on these and now you're going to have all these people that are going to be on these fat locks.
You're going to be able to go to the doctor and by just being overweight, no other conditions,
you're going to qualify for obesity drugs, insurance is going to cover it and they're
going to make a killing and they're going to convince you that there's nothing you can
do lifestyle-wise to change this, so try and take our medication.
Now I'm not saying, this is what I mean
by unconsciously, unconsciously unconsciously.
I don't think they have this big meeting
in the like, we need to get rid of,
like we hate fit and healthy people.
But I mean, it's-
Dr. Claude, there, just not.
No, what I mean is that the system itself,
the system itself is-
It's a specter gadget, right?
It's excellent.
It's geared and designed to treat people
who are not fit and healthy.
So by design, you are not the consumer.
You fit and healthy people, exercise regularly,
people who eat right, people who take care of themselves,
are totally not the consumer.
They're looking at everybody else.
And so if they can get everybody to move from here,
to here, or take people and prevent them
from moving in that category of fit and healthy, they've expanded their market.
And the largest, most profitable potential market that I can think of is obesity because
you don't have to have eye blood pressure, you don't have to have diabetes, you don't
have to have anything.
If they can make obesity a disease, you qualify for treatment, insurance companies cover it,
doctors can now treat it.
And you have just opened up a billions
and billions of dollar market.
And that's the whole point.
Yeah, I agree.
That's a lot of money out there to be made.
Bro, speaking along those lines,
let's go, I'm gonna go down a little tangent here.
So, okay, so I'm not gonna make any statement,
like, opinion, I'm not gonna pass any opinions,
but it's really weird, okay.
I've been, I wrote them down.
I've been seeing articles, like I've never seen down. I've been seeing articles like I've never seen before.
I've been seeing articles that are saying, eating too many eggs is causing blood clots.
Climate change is increasing the risk of heart attacks, sudden heart attacks, solar flares,
social media, solar flares too. Gas stoves,
set in adult death syndrome is like this big thing now that people are talking about,
that I'm seeing articles come out like crazy,
how's this thing?
Isn't that weird?
Yeah.
I've never seen so many strange articles connecting.
I just imagine things.
You're giggling, and you're trying to figure this out,
like why what you're seeing is,
you know, and then you're going to stumble upon an article that's telling you like, you know,
solar flares happen every so often, and then, you know, people get heart conditions as a result. Well listen, we need to give, we need to give people something to
attach themselves to and share to their friends when they're defending their reasons for their five shots that they've taken.
That's what it feels like.
Really, what it smells like to me is just like,
here you go, here's some articles to help defend yourself
on why you're gonna get your next booster
and why it's smart for you to keep doing that
because this is attached to other things.
It's just weird to me because I, you know,
like, again, I'm not gonna make any statements,
but when I see the propaganda machine go in full swing,
and literally, I've never in my life seen articles
that have said anything like this.
It's very weird to me.
So it's like, why are they saying all this?
Is it because they're preparing people for data
that's coming out, that's showing?
Of course, that's, that's, that's, that's,
that's strokes, blood cloth,
and heart attacks is this blow up?
Okay, so explain how the process is invested. Yes, it's, explain, explain the process to me, because I that strokes blood cloth. Well, didn't you take it to this point? Okay, so explain how the process is investigating.
Yes, it's a explain explain the process to me
because I'm unfamiliar with this like CDC launched
an investigation.
Yeah.
So what should we look forward to as far as like
how long does that take before we start to hear numbers
and feedback?
Where is it going to be announced?
Is it going to make mainstream media?
Has it already been announced?
Yes.
Are you?
Oh, years.
Oh, wow. That's crazy? Yeah, it'll take years. Oh, wow.
Yeah.
That's crazy.
Yeah, it'll take, it'll take at least a few years
to get all that data.
And I told you guys that.
And between that time, we should be able to get at least four,
or five more boosters out as well.
Five are saying, right?
Like, oh, we still got four, or five more.
And now we have to, we have to change, you know,
with athletes and people getting physicals, like,
to make sure, like, they account make sure they account for any kind of
like-
They're doing EKGs.
Yeah, so schools-
That's protocol now.
Yeah, a lot of schools now are as part of your physical.
When you get a physical, I don't know,
I've gotten physicals when I was a kid for judo and tournaments
and they don't do an EKG on you.
But now lots of schools are requiring EKGs as part of physical because of the they're
saying because of the risk of sudden, you know, heart failure.
Yeah.
Just on the course calls up mouse or whatever.
What was the percentage of it?
Because I know the the people that defend this or try and argue it is that this has been
around for decades and we've known about it. And I can't remember what I read,
but the percentage of athletes on average
that have gone down for the sudden death, right?
Yeah.
I forgot what the number was for the last say decade
we've been tracking, and then in the last year or two.
There was like more.
Then in the last year, then the world previous.
Right, right.
I think that's what I read.
So in the last year than the previous right right. So I think I think that's what I read right So in the last year all of a sudden we have we've accumulated more in one year's time than we did the previous 10 combined
To me that's well, and it's hard to because you'll get like countering
Articles and in all this other information trend to dismiss a lot of the numbers and kind of shuffle the numbers around
And so it's like what what are the actual numbers?
It's really hard to get, but just from examples
that you can Google of like all around the world
of people, whereas this happened to,
and especially in the athletic community,
where it happens very infrequently,
it's very substantially hard.
So here's, and this is gonna,
for sure, we're gonna piss somebody off here.
I was talking to my cousin, day before yesterday,
and they just had a family friend that was hospitalized Here is, and this is gonna, for sure, we're gonna piss somebody off here. I was talking to my cousin, day before yesterday,
and they just had a family friend that was hospitalized
with the clot a week later after the vaccine
or the booster or whatever.
And one of the things that her and I were talking about
was like, you know what's really crazy?
She, and she's like, I know nobody that died from COVID
or had anything, everyone got, I know a lot of people
that got sick and felt like a bad flu,
who just, I have nobody connected to me personally
that died of COVID.
And I said, well, I have, I know one person
who was connected to me.
She goes, but I got at least five people I know
that had some severe adverse effects
after they got at the vaccine.
And I said, I can't deny that either.
I said, I actually, I have way more people I know
that I've heard issues of the side effects
from taking it than I knew that actually.
And I know somebody who died from COVID.
Look, this is anecdote, okay.
So not evidence, we're not doctors,
but I have a cousin, 14 years old,
who he lived in Italy,
and they really pushed hard over there.
Like you got a digital passport, you couldn't work,
you couldn't go grocery shopping.
And he had to be hospitalized,
and he's still getting treated.
They can't figure out what's wrong.
That was after he got his vaccine.
I have another cousin who was breastfeeding,
and by the way, you could look this up.
The sounds crazy, but you could look it up,
and in forums, you'll see women talk about this,
that their breast milk changed,
and turned a blue tinge.
Her breast milk changed, started turning a blue tinge,
she stopped breastfeeding her baby, couldn't figure it out.
By the way, I do wanna say this, again,
that's all anecdote, but the industry itself
is to blame for all the people who are not trusting them
because of the way they pushed it,
because of the way that they gaslighted people.
There were women who were like,
this is messing with my period
and they got canceled off social media.
Then later on, they're like, oh yeah, it does affect your period.
There were people who had canceled for certain thing.
Oh yeah, it does do that.
We got that rasmussen,
a poll that came out, a palt poll that came out.
Seven percent of people in the poll
said that they got side effects that were severe enough
for them to go back to the doctor or take work off.
Well, the biggest thing that's,
the most bullshit about all of this to me in my opinion
is that, and we will get this from this conversation, is that, oh, I don't want to hear political
talk on that.
That there's, we've attached it.
We've attached a medicine and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and
that we can't have an open discussion about our thoughts around it
without us supposedly staking a a claim for a political side. That's ridiculous to me. We're in the
science business. That's what we've been doing. That's part of our field. You need to not to not
be able to communicate that openly with other intelligent friends that I have in the space
without it turning into oh, you're making
a political stance.
It's fucking crazy to me.
Why can't I know?
I don't, I have, this is nothing to do with how people vote.
I'm just, I'm so curious about what, what's going on.
What's concerned people's health and so on, and to me it, it, it's in that sphere of what
we talk about, what we're concerned about.
It's always like a consideration is like how we can advocate for ourselves.
That's just the natural thing to talk about.
Look, you can go back, we recorded podcasts
when this is all going down.
And I kept saying, we gotta look at the data,
I wanna look at this, I'm healthy, so I'm gonna wait.
I'm gonna wait a little bit.
I was never anti, never pro.
I was very much like, let's look and let's see
what's going on.
Well, with the current accepted data,
the current accepted data, these are at the very
least, nobody can argue this, ineffective, they're terribly ineffective.
They don't prevent transmission.
They last like three months, the preventative, whatever.
The side effects are nasty.
People feel like shit the day after and then other people, there's other reports of other
stuff.
But the accepted data shows that these are ineffective, like risky
in terms of side effects, and the most profitable.
That's a terrible combination.
Yeah.
Especially without scrutiny.
Especially when you have a pharmaceutical company or a company in general, a corporation
that got a deal with the US government guaranteed taxpayer dollars to the tune of billions of
dollars.
So that's where I'm like, let me just wait and see what's going on.
Let me continue looking at the data.
And oh, by the way, you tell me almost anything.
And I'm gonna question it because your incentives
are to lie to me.
There's no incentives for you to tell me the truth,
unless the truth is in your favor.
If the truth isn't in your favor, your incentives are lie.
And do you have a history of lying?
Well, the largest lawsuit ever for fraud was towards a pharmaceutical company.
Largest ever paid out was that they lied and that they got to pay out.
I think what drug was it.
I don't remember what the drug was.
That's crazy.
There's so many examples.
Yeah.
And then the government, do they lie to you?
Yeah, they lie to you all the time.
I mean, that's what they do.
They lie to you all the time.
There's so many examples of these pharmaceutical companies getting sued like crazy for adverse effects that they were withholding from public knowledge
I'm just over the gaslighting about having a conversation. I think this ridiculous. Oh, which by the way too
Trump was a huge pusher of this thing for
It's not a left or right thing. No, he's still is not a left or right thing
It's a it's a government and fucking pharma thing. And the fact that you can't openly communicate it
without being canceled or people fucking getting all defensive
like you're trying to make a political sense.
Saying political, so the fucking wake up,
open your eyes, do you pay attention to the signs?
And guess what?
And we said it here and we've been saying it here,
watch what's about to happen to you all with the obesity thing.
That's coming next.
That is 100% and that's the thing for you.
It's easy to predict. They're setting the table right now
with the bullshit gaslighting around
it being a genetics thing.
And then the next thing is gonna be,
they're gonna solve your problem.
Yup, yup, yup.
All right, so you mentioned athletes, Justin.
You reminded me of something interesting
that I just read about one of the most undervalued
performance enhancing substances that you can find. It's one of the most undervalued performance enhancing substances that you can find.
It's one of the least expensive, most effective performance enhancing substances.
It's sodium. I just so check this out. So, so you can lose about half a liter to four liters of sweat per hour
during a workout, okay? So that's on average. Half a liter to four liters of sweat. Each
Okay, so that's on average, half a liter to four liters of sweat.
Each leader has roughly 900 milligrams of sodium.
Okay, so if you sweat a lot in one workout, you might need up to two to three grams, two thousand to three thousand milligrams of sodium to replace what you lost.
So what does that mean?
When you don't have an sodium in your body, your muscles can't contract effectively.
You can't, you lose stamina, you lose strength,
you lose the ability to hold on to fluid.
For bodybuilders, you don't get a good pump.
Your protein synthesis can drop as a result.
In extreme cases, you become faint dizzy
and all that stuff, you feel like garbage.
Headaches.
Yeah, headaches.
So do you have any idea?
Any idea on how much you lose from the sauna and jacuzzi?
Oh, probably more because you swip more.
If I sit in there, if I don't stay hydrated
or take my element T before I go in,
and I sit in there longer than 20 minutes
in either the sauna or my jacuzzi,
I get a massive headache.
And I'm always remind, God, damn it, I know better.
So I've identified for myself, I'll drink one element T during my workout.
So that's a thousand milligrams and I'll drink another one when I go in the
steam room, which is another thousand. If I do that, I feel good.
I wonder how much you lose. Can you look it up, Doug? Can you tell me what like how much
sodium, what like what? 30 minutes or something? 30 minutes of a sauna or 30
minutes in the jacuzzi. How much salt? This just happened to me that
at night. Like Katrina and I, we were out in the our jacuzzi. Maybe how much
sweat you lose, dogs, because then we
know it's 900 milligrams per liter. See what that looks like. But it's got to be more.
Yeah, a pint of sweat during a short stint. So it doesn't give you an exact comment.
How many liters of pint? It's less than a liter for sure. It is. Well, two pints in a
court. Well, four courts in the gallon. So I mean, I think a leader, it would really motivate me. Like, hey, you know you're losing this much when you do. One leader is two pints.
So, you're probably losing, I would say you're probably losing a leader to two leaders,
depending on how much you sweat.
And you know the more you sweat, the more you do it, the more easily you sweat.
I don't know about you guys, but if I sauna regularly, I'll break a sweat real fast
and sweat real nice.
I haven't even noticed that.
I don't know if I've ever been.
This always reminds me though.
I mean, when I was playing and it was like humidity levels
really high, we were just like sweating,
just getting to practice.
But the protocol was like, drink a lot of water,
make sure you're properly hydrated.
There wasn't enough talk about sodium intake.
And there was still that dehydration effect that you would feel
even after you're done with practice and we didn't have that right balance.
That's because we grew up in the air of salt being demonized.
Yes, salt and fat was a big one.
I think that still persists.
It does.
No, no, no, you're right.
It does, but it was real high.
At least, I mean, there's brands like Elemente and some of that
that are now popular.
If your sodium's low, your cravings are off,
your mood is off, you're not gonna have good performance,
you're not gonna sleep well,
it could throw off your hormones,
sodium will affect things like your thyroid.
So you need to have adequate sodium,
it's the most underutilized, undervalued,
and yet most effective when needed,
compound you can think of as salt. Wars were fought over salt.
You know, it's a really big deal. And by the way, I mean, if you're somebody who's like,
I know we're connected to, we're actually partners, we're an army, excuse me,
investors, investors, and element T. So obviously, there's a motivation for us to steer people to
LMT, but listen, if I can just salt your food, go out of the way to go get that. I mean,
I'm seeing you in your water. Yeah, I mean, if you, if it's like a money thing for you,
it's like, oh, it's ridiculous. Why am I paying this? But then don't then then salt your
food. The point, the, the science, the information, the point we're trying to make still stands
true. Like that's something that people don't get enough of.
What's nice about that is that it's convenient.
It's easy.
Yeah, you can rip it up.
It's also got the right, poor right in.
It's also got the right ratio of magnesium
with potassium, because you want to have those,
a little bit of those as well.
And you know, right?
Like, I mean, when I salt my food,
like how much am I really getting?
Like I'm not like weighing, measuring my salt,
then putting on,
going, oh, that's how many milligrams I have.
Whole natural food has very low sodium.
Very low.
Yeah, I mean, you'd have to eat processed food
as an athlete to get the sodium that you probably need.
And you know what's terrible,
what you said, Justin, is that athletes don't know this?
They think they're just dehydrated.
So they just drink more water.
If you just drink more water,
you'll actually throw your electrolyte balance off
even worse. Yeah. Even more. And this is where you'll get people drink water, drink water, and get actually throw your electrolyte balance off if you will be worse.
It will be worse, yeah.
Even more.
And this is where you'll get people drink water, drink water, and get dissier and feel
shittier.
I need more water, and feel worse and worse.
That's happened to me, yeah, like I said, that was the only protocol, and then they would
weigh you, you know, before practice and then after practice, and like, that was really
the only, like, sort of standards they had.
Yeah, they're trying, but we're still, you know,
having the effect.
Speaking of weighing, I just read about the longest fast
in history in the history.
Longest fast?
Yes, the longest time.
40 days and 40 nights.
Somebody with a, someone beat Jesus.
No, yeah, dude.
Somebody beat Jesus.
With somebody crushed Jesus.
No way.
What?
How many?
This was recorded, medically recorded, and it's in the Guinness Book of World record.
So Agostino Barbiari, this was a Scottish man, he was, let's see, he lost 276 pounds.
So he was a big dude, he was like 400 pounds. He didn't eat for 382 days. No way.
382 days. He's literally living off the reserves in his body.
So he was 27 years old.
It was 1965.
And he got, his doctors monitored him.
All he had was tea, electrolyte powder,
multivitamin and coffee is what I read.
For 382 days, he only had those things,
had nothing else, lost all that weight and checked this out.
Trip off this.
Every 37 to 45 days, I think it was, he still pooped during that period of time.
What?
He was pooping his own fat.
No.
It's bought and it's what he survived off of.
He was so obese and they showed before and after picked up.
Just oil just dripping.
What?
They show him before and after. I thought it was never even come close to guessing that yes, isn't that crazy?
That's insane. So they show him that he was you know what you know what it is look at his before and after what is that highlight for you?
That how we net how we think we go
Star I was supposed to have lunch an hour ago
So hungry after you guys star I was supposed to have lunch an hour ago.
Yeah, I'm sorry.
Oh yeah, he's been bro.
I know he had like 60 days.
You'd be fine.
Bro, how wild is that though?
That's about a wee here.
That's fat.
He survived off his own body, which obviously he had a lot of body fat.
He was, he was a big dude.
Bro, the discipline to stay on that like that for that long.
Yeah, and so like he must have made a commitment to himself.
I'm gonna not eat until all of this weight comes.
That's exactly what we said.
I'm not gonna eat till all of this.
He said, I'm not gonna eat until I hit my target weight.
I wonder how long you actually struggle with it.
You know, at a certain point, it was like,
it just-
Did he have the education or did he have somebody
who's close to him that was like a doctor who said,
this is even possible?
Well, monitor your-
No, the whole time, that's why it's in the Guinness Book of World Records
because he would go in every week
and was getting monitored, measured, tested.
They would test this blood.
Make sure he was okay.
Look at his organs for, I mean, this was in 1965.
So it wasn't like, you know,
this was when we had some, you know, some okay monitor.
So I wonder, I wonder, you know,
it'd be really interesting is actually to see his labs
with that and I mean, someone that obese,
I bet not eating for a very very long time should nothing but positive benefits
Right like I you would start to see like his cholesterol levels blood pressure all these things probably
Move in a really really healthy direction for a long period time at what point did it hit the curve and come back
I don't know it or did it ever that's interesting
Yeah, like was he like bedridden for a long time?
No.
He's just moving around and not eating.
No, he just lived his life.
He didn't exercise.
He just lived his life and just didn't eat and was able to.
Now what's crazy about that is, yes, it's 270 something pounds, over 384.
So on average, how much weight was he losing per month?
What is that, Doug?
386 divided by, what was it to?
Do we know what happened to him afterwards?
Well, he died at 51.
So he was 456 pounds when he went in.
And he went in and he lost weight and got to 180 pounds.
So he lost on average 12 ounces per day
or 22 pounds every single month.
So every month he lost on average 22 ounces per day, or 22 pounds every single month. So every month he lost on average 22 pounds
by not eating.
So anyway, we're gonna, we're gonna, we're gonna,
we're gonna come out with a new diet called the Barbeary.
Yeah.
That's super complex.
Water and coffee, yeah.
You save money.
You lose weight.
It's super easy.
Only one thing.
Don't eat anything.
Wow.
I did not know, I didn't know there was anybody
even close to that. Did you know, I mean, did you even, would you read about that? I read a long time thing. Don't even think. I did not know there was anybody even close to that.
Did you know, I mean, did you even,
would you read about that?
I read a long time ago.
Oh, you did.
Yeah, and then it sparked my,
like we were sitting here hanging out and I'm like,
oh, shit, I gotta look that up
because I'll be interested in bringing up on the show.
But sure enough, there it is.
Wow, that's great.
Yeah, that's pretty well.
Anyway, we're supposed to mention Organifi.
I wanna tell you guys that we have a postpartum doula
and she's a vegetarian and I've been having her take
the organif, I protein and she's like,
I wish somebody told me that eating more protein
would feel this good.
Oh wow.
I mean, a lot of people don't know.
I feel like, yeah, there should be,
we should be more of evangelists in that sense
in terms of like, you know, vegans and then also too, like with like
creatine, both of those combined, organize creatine, like, I feel like that's just such a
must.
Well, you know why?
Because the vegan community pushes this, this over prescription of protein.
And so that makes you as, which is such a terrible message because most my female clients
doesn't matter what they would label themselves vegan or regular eater homo,
or whatever, doesn't matter under consumed protein,
especially if they were lifting weights
and trying to build muscle and speed up.
Oh, I think she was eating like 50 grams of that.
Yeah, so, and so the,
so one shake,
then you're told that like,
oh, you don't need as much protein as they tell you,
you don't need as much protein.
It's like, that's such a terrible message.
So, I mean, go for it, go be vegan, I'm all for it, do it.
But then make sure you get your protein up, you'll see a huge difference in how you feel, your muscle, your's such a terrible message. So I mean, go for it, go be vegan, I'm all for it, do it. But then make sure you get your protein up,
you'll see a huge difference in how you feel,
your muscle, your hair, all that stuff.
And then I have my brother-in-law, same things,
Jiu-Jitsu, he lifts weights every once in a while,
he's training for tournament that's coming up.
And I'm telling him, dude, just do me a favor,
do just bump your protein.
He's like, aren't I gonna gain body fat
from having the extra calories?
I said eat it first and then watch what happens.
Sure enough, he's messaging me.
He's like, bro, I got, I don't know why I don't always listen to you.
He's like, I feel great, I feel great.
I'm so much stronger.
He's like, I'm leaner.
Like, I told you, he's like, how am I leaner?
I said, well, the muscle probably burned the body fat.
You're probably eating less.
You don't even realize it
because you're hitting your protein targets.
Sal loves when people tell them that.
I know.
I don't know why I don't just listen to you all the time.
Yeah.
Just listen to you all the time. Just listen to you all the time.
Yeah, learn something.
Hey, what's happening?
There's a company we'll work with called Butcherbox.
They deliver grass-fed meats and wild caught fish
to your door for incredible prices.
If you value your health and you like protein,
you like meat, go to Butcherbox.
It's a great company and they've got some giveaways.
In fact, right now you can get three pounds of free range organic chicken wings in every box for the life of your membership.
Plus, two hours off your first order. If you're interested, go to butcherbox.com
forward slash mind pump. All right, here comes the rest of the show.
First color is Len from Florida. Len, what's happening? How can we help you?
Hey, how's it going guys? Good, man. How are you?
Good. Thank you. Hey, uh, I just How can we help you? Hey, how's it going guys? Good, man. How are you?
Good. Thank you. Hey, I just want to start out with the obligatory, you know, thanks for everything you guys do. You guys really kind of helped shape my past couple of months here. I've been listening
for about a little background. I've been listening for about about a year. I've been really trying
to take working out seriously now for like the past, know nine months or so. So starting out you know we started out of course with the beach body type stuff I know that's
not the best thing to do but listening to you guys started more into strength training.
The one thing I did like about the kind of the beach body type programming though was all that
the mobility stability stuff. So that kind of led me to get into your priming you know your prime
and pride pros. I bought both of those here over the Christmas, you know, or the
Black Friday holiday sale. And just kind of some questions about how to work that
into my programming. You know, it makes a lot of sense, you know, like if I was
running like a traditional like split type programming, like chest in, you know,
triceps, okay, you know, I can prime my chest, I can prime my triceps,
it makes for a pretty easy day, but kind of just how that works, with the full body
type programming that we've been utilizing now, because I'm in a static now, I ran maps
in a ball like before.
So I'm just wondering, what does a prime in session look like for a full body type routine
with the Prime Pro and Prime Programs?
Yeah, you guys have questions.
Well, you'd love good question.
Mass performance is, you know, there's mobility sessions program name
just like you would see in the Stenic for the focus sessions
for the days in between for active recovery.
So just in terms of like the easiest way to see how that gets programmed in, you
know, that's one example, but, you know, it turns like the prime program itself, that's
really setting you up for your individualized needs in terms of like any kind of dysfunction,
any kind of restriction you might have joint wise. You're going to be able to pinpoint
that with our tests in there.
Yeah, it depends on the person. So when you get maps primed, there's a compass test in there.
You take the test and you see pass or fail.
And then that'll tell you what your priming session looks like.
So my priming session for a full body workout
would look different than Justin's or Adams, right?
I may need more thoracic mobility,
which thoracic mobility is needed for almost every upper body
exercise and even lots of lower body exercises like squats, right?
so
Based on the compass test you will have your priming session and that's your quote-unquote warm-up. Now prime pro
You want to pick your areas of concern the areas that you feel like you need the most mobility like shoulders
wrist hands, ankles, hips, whatever and then those you do as much as you want.
You pick one or two movements from that area.
Let's say it's your hips,
and you pick two mobility movements for your hips.
Anytime you have five minutes,
get down the floor or use a bench or a chair
and do five minutes of mobility.
And that can be done as frequently as you want.
You don't have to do it before, during, or after a workout.
Your personality as far as, you know,
are you the type of person that like,
oh, give me all these list of things
and I'm gonna execute you all of them
or I'm trying to build consistency
would matter how I respond to something like this, right?
So if you go through the prime,
prime is gonna show you like all these areas where you fail, it'll direct you over to these movements or what you want to address.
Now, what happens a lot is most people actually fail all three and then there's a whole host
of things that they need to do. And then they get a little overwhelmed with all the different
things for them to prime or all the mobility we're do and then it makes them kind of inconsistent. Now what I personally like to do or teach people to do is to pick two,
three at best prime movements that make the biggest difference in your performance in the gym
and really hammer those home and practice them and practice them and be consistent with it.
And then over time we can start to add other ones
that also assist it.
But so for example, for me, like the combat stretch,
absolutely necessary for me to be able to get
into a deep good squat.
And it's a night and day difference when I do it,
and I don't do it.
So that check, I've got to do that.
When I'm benching, I absolutely have to, you know,
thoracic mobility really prime my upper back
so my shoulders stay in place like I want them to be.
And so that's a must.
And then also doing some sort of, you know,
either wall circles or zone one to really prime my shoulders.
So they're stable and in position for when I'm doing upper body
exercise like any shoulder presses or just are those are like my three now work 90 90s I I love scorpions I do all these other things too
but the the three I've nailed down that make the biggest impact on how well my performance isn't in the
gym are the ones that like or I'm religious about and so I tend to teach it that way is like you know
pick up a couple of them
that you know, you can feel a difference in helps
and get really good at being consistent with that.
And then over time, start to build in the other ones
if you can if that makes sense.
Do you have mass performance other way?
By the way, because I know Justin mentioned that.
I think you'd love a program like that.
Yeah.
Yeah, no idea.
I just have the prime, prime pro, and a ballic
and a static right now.
So yeah. I'm gonna send you performance because performance is
Movement focus. Yeah, if you really like mobility and movement, I mean, that's the program for you
Yeah, you know, like I'm not really into this to like, you know, like look better
I mean, you know, I'm getting 45 years old. I'm more about this how I feel, you know
So my my fear is I guess, you know, if I quit doing kind of like a full body type,
prime mobility stability type thing, I don't,
I know that my areas are my shoulders and my upper back,
my thoracic area, but I don't want to lose hamstring mobility,
for instance.
So I just kind of was, yeah.
So yeah, I totally relate what you're saying, Adam.
So thanks for that.
Yeah, and I actually just hinted,
listening to you even more now,
you could perform as is made for you bro.
You're gonna love performance.
It is the single program of all the programs
that we talk about that I think that you could run over
and over and over and really kind of hit.
Never, never have it.
It's very much geared towards movement
and addressing joints, issues and reinforcement.
And it's the one that's gonna take you, you know,
into your ladder years, like feeling great.
Nice, nice, okay. Yeah.
I'll definitely look forward to that.
You got it, man. Awesome. Thanks, Lynn.
Well, thanks for your time. I appreciate you guys.
No problem. Thank you, Lynn.
You know, the irony of what he said is, he's like, I just want to feel good,
which the irony of that is that's how he's going to look good. Yeah, yeah, totally.
Yeah, you trained to feel good in a healthy way, right? You trained to feel good.
You're going to look good. You always trained to look good.
You end up not feeling good, which then means you end up not looking good.
You know what I wish I would ask him. I wish I would ask him is because it's interesting to me that
he bought prime, prime pro, an and Estetic, but not Performance.
And when he, like, Performance was written for him.
Right.
So I would, from a marketing standpoint, selfishly, I'd like to disconnect there.
Yeah.
Where did we, where did we do a bad job of not delivering that message to somebody like
that?
He's obviously aware enough to pick up Prime and Prime Pro for the mobility and stuff like that, reasons, but to miss out on performance when literally
he is like perfect for that. So I'm curious to why the other ones and not that one because
I think he's going to absolutely love that program. And we do get asked a lot the prime
questions of like, because what happens is most people, we will fail that test.
And then they go and they see all the exercises
and priming movements they should do to address it.
And it can be a bit overwhelming.
And with my clients, it was always hard to get them to do
the little tedious work, right?
The stretching, the mobility stuff, the foam rolling.
And what I learned over years of coaching people was,
even though I know they need all of these things
and that that's ideal, a better strategy
is to implement the one or two
that make the biggest difference for them,
the one that I can do and they go,
whoa, I feel like, okay, let's hammer that.
Let's see.
No, I love that point and I think it's easiest
to figure that out if you have a coach kind of helping you determine which ones, but otherwise, you know, if you're doing this yourself
to really just kind of go through, you know, some of those, most of those exercises and really
feel your way through it, feel which one has the most impact.
Stick with that one and like you said, simplify it.
But really, if you go into prime and you read the instructions, if you fail all three, it tells you what to do.
If you fail one, it tells you what to do.
It does.
So it'll tell you, and then within that category,
then you pick the ones that give you the biggest impact.
Our next caller is John from California.
John, what's happening?
How can we help you?
Hey, how's it going guys?
Good, man.
Thank you so much.
Thank you so much for taking the time
to answer my questions.
And thank you for all the amazing information you guys put out there.
It's been really helpful.
Awesome.
My situation has evolved since I submitted my question.
So would you like me to stick to my original question or kind of?
Let's hear it on that.
Well, you can read it. Go off your original and then tell us how it changed.
Okay.
So, I finished Power Lift.
Now it was three weeks ago, but two weeks ago.
And I felt great throughout the program.
I started symmetry right after that, and my body hasn't been feeling as good.
I have more aches and pains, and my lower back has been pretty sensitive.
So I was wondering if this is a common thing or if I should just keep going with symmetry.
And yeah, I haven't been sleeping well either because of the minor aches and pains.
The evolution has been the aches and pains have gotten better and my lower back feels better,
but then I'm experiencing a lot of pain in my kind of
trap area. And so I went to see a physical therapist and he mentioned that it might be like a
disc issue, so I'm getting a MRI in a week. So yeah, I'm kind of wondering where to go from there. I obviously want to avoid surgery at all costs.
And I just listened to a guy named Shane on the last episode you guys put out and he experienced sounds like similar issues. So yeah, kind of where to go from here. So John, when you do something new, if the highlights imbalances, and the intensity is too high
for you and your imbalances, you can start to experience aches and pains.
So I'm going to, I think what's happening is you probably, before symmetry, did you
train mostly bilaterally, barbells, dumbbells, traditional strength training?
Absolutely, yeah.
Even before I started power lift,
I was always bilateral.
Okay, so like if you balance on one foot
or you're doing one arm stuff,
like your joints have to stay very stressed.
Different than they did before.
So what I would say, if you were my client,
as I would say, cut way back on the intensity
with symmetry, because it's opening things up or highlighting things, and you're probably
training too hard for where your body's at in the context of the program.
So you might not get the muscle burn in the pumps that you're expecting, but that's
okay.
We're allowing your joints and stability to catch up.
So I'd slow down and go easier in map symmetry.
And in fact, you're already seeing
some of those old aches and pains start to get better
because you're just gonna start to bounce on it.
I was gonna say, I think he's already starting to see
what's gonna happen if you keep going that way.
It's gonna get better, I think.
But the intensity's probably a little too high
for what your body's looking for.
And then as far as a discousie, which is concerned,
of course, you wanna make sure that you're okay to exercise,
but go easier.
That's what I would suggest.
Go easier with that.
That's hard to tell somebody.
It's hard to tell.
Well, so John, here's what happens with a lot of people
when they go on one side, when they stop bilateral exercise
and they start doing one arm or one leg, is that they have a tough time with going lighter
and they tend to compromise technique and form without realizing it to try to be able
to lift the amount of weight or with the type of intensity that they're used to with bilateral
exercise.
If you always bench press with a barbell and and now you're gonna go on a bench or whatever
with one dumbbell, and you're used to a certain amount
of CNS output and driving, you're not gonna get that
with one arm yet, because there's a lot of balance
that's involved.
Like the limiting factor is not the weight,
the limiting factor is gonna be the stability
and the balance.
Your form has to be perfect.
If your form's not perfect on both sides,
then you're all gonna do a strength
and imbalances, you're not gonna do a strength in imbalances.
You're not gonna correct.
You're so strong in other directions.
And to be able to now place yourself in a position
where your body has to stabilize
and account for a lot more balance.
And this lateral type of stability
is gonna be completely different in the bracing
and the core and everything else of these little secondary muscles are gonna be completely different in the, you know, the bracing and the core and everything
else of these little secondary muscles are gonna, are gonna be worked a bit harder than they were,
you know, previous to that, which is then gonna, you know, so that's just something to consider
in terms of like going to intense, it really will play into like how you feel afterwards.
Listen, this is actually, John, this is actually really common. When you, especially when you, if you would consider yourself or if you identified as kind
of like a power lifter type of guy, if you've trained most of your life with that kind of
mentality, the way you hit the weights, we're really kind of asking you to completely shift
the way you think in the way you approach them.
And that's hard.
If you've been a consistent lifter for a long time
and lifted a certain way,
just as like it's really difficult to get a body builder
to lift like a power lifter,
who's lifted like a body builder for his whole life.
And then now you go,
hey, you're gonna do your first power lifter
and he does it with all these weird short range emotions.
And like he doesn't, you know what I'm saying?
And it doesn't know how to drive his legs.
Like, I mean, so that the same is true for them.
And so as you approach into symmetry and then probably should do a program like performance to follow it up, like you have to, it's really the mentality as you go into it, which is tough for a big strong guy is to like be obsessed with the control and the movement and, you know, almost look at it in this like artistic way and making the movement look pretty.
He said, which is, you got to kind of think it.
It's totally different workout.
I think too, I guess.
I know that sounds really weird and funny,
but that's how much you have to shift the way
you look at your training now.
It's not about how heavy is the dumbbell
that you're holding onto,
and it's more of like how perfectly can I make my left side
look like my right side, you know, and and keeping it
Control through the whole movement and slowing it down. Well, I think even like so you did our maps power lift like even Ben
Pollock who is this very accomplished power lifter then you know goes to do a split stance movement right and and just start working on getting better at that
That was a big struggle for him. Oh, he was a 700 pound squadron.
He's like one of the strongest guys out there.
And he was doing 135 split stance and you could see
and it was shaking like a leaf.
It was very tough for him because it was totally new.
So in other words, to put it differently, John,
the limiting factor here is not how much weight you can lift.
The limiting factor is how stable you can be during the lift.
Your stability will go far before your strength does.
So you'll be able to handle way heavier dumbbells,
but your stability's not going to be so great
and you can cause yourself some problems.
So your technique is the limiting factor.
And what Adam said is exactly right.
Perfect, perfect, perfect technique, matching right to left,
going slow, going controlled, total, total
different mentality. That's a hard switch. It's hard to go from power lift to symmetry. That's
going to be a very difficult switch because it's totally different mentality. Now, at the end of
symmetry, you've got five by five. The last phase is five by five. If you feel amazing,
go into it. If you still feel like,
ugh, then I would go back through symmetry
and then go into that last phase
on that second time around.
It's tough when you're the strong dude, man.
I mean, nothing's more humbling than, you know,
being a guy who can bench press, you know,
315 plus no problem.
And then I'm asking you to use like 40 pound dumbbell presses,
like, you know, and you're doing something that you're like,
oh my god, I feel like, my wife can do this. This is bullshit. You know, like, you have presses, like, you know, and you're doing something that you're like, oh my God, I feel like my wife can do this.
This is bullshit.
You know, you have to like, you have to like get rid of that,
bro. You have it's and it's tough, man.
So it is, but it is common and and and also is actually
highlighting a really good thing.
There's lots of of opportunity here for you.
And if you can get your, if you can shift the mentality
and lift like this for a while, it's really
going to serve you. And you'll come back even stronger. So I mean, I think what you're
feeling and going through is your body talking to you and telling you like, this is needed.
We need to do this. And it's going to suck for the ego for a little bit, but I promise
you it'll serve you in the long run.
That's right. John, do you have mass performance? Because I'd like you to follow up.
Yes.
Symmetry of performance.
I do.
Yeah, I have symmetry and performance.
Okay.
So that was kind of my next question is, um, that would be nice.
You think semi finish symmetry and because the caller before Shane, he, you
mentioned to skip the bar, the bar, the five by five section of symmetry based on his issue
And so yeah, but he had you think I should
He I should assess how I feel well
Potentially yes. Yeah, potentially. Yeah, he had he actually had surgery
You haven't been diagnosed yet if you get diagnosed with her needed disc or something like that
Then yes, I would have you do I would have you avoid that last phase
Yeah, but if you but if you feel good, go for it.
Go ahead and test it and enjoy it and see how it is.
But I mean, it would be one of those things.
And I tell you what, why don't we do this, John?
I'll have Doug put you in the private forum
and then just keep us posted.
So as you get further along the program
and get closer after you get diagnosed,
shoot us a message and they're just tag one or all of us and let us know what the diagnosis was and
or how you're feeling through the program.
And then we can give you some some tips from there.
Okay.
Excellent.
Sounds awesome.
All right, man.
Right on, John.
All right.
Thank you guys.
That's funny.
You brought up that video with Ben.
I remember that.
Yeah. It was 135. He was a guy who squat seven hundred pounds.
He was the strongest guy out there.
And it was so hard.
And it looked awkward as fuck watch.
It did because he's never done that.
No, obviously obviously he has the actual force.
He's got the strength to lift more than that.
But in that position, his stability was the limiting.
You know, and what will happen?
I can, I'm visualizing like a power lifter
that's used to lifting in some serious way.
Then they go to one arm dumbbell press or something like that.
And you have this tendency to, I mean, he probably, John probably has a strength to press
100 pound dumbbells over his head.
Easy.
Easy, because he's got the strength to do it.
But then he's overcompensating to the left or right or here or torquing something.
And this, this stabilize, it's supporting.
That's right.
And then the low back is like firing like crazy.
And he's just like, why is it causing this these issues? And it's like, you know, you're approaching
the lift like you would. I remember the first time I did a Bulgarian split stand squat. I
didn't do it again for years because, you know, and the jam I was squat with this painful
the soreness you get after that. I do. I squat 300 plus pounds in the jam, no problem. And then I
go to do a Bulgarian split sand squat
and 20 pound dumbbells.
20 pound dumbbells, and it was hurting.
I was like, I'm not doing this, this is embarrassing.
I guarantee you supporting cast muscles
are just really, you know sore.
Our next caller is Christine from Arkansas.
Hi Christine, how can we help you?
Hi guys, how's it going?
Very good.
Good.
So I am a personal trainer, I currently have a client who is a middle-aged male and
he has major instability in his shoulders.
So I've been putting him on machines because he's comfortable with having that, how would
you say, I guess,
the support and the stability,
and it gives him more confidence doing things like that.
But if I attempt to use dumbbells or bands
or anything of that sort,
he just gets really frustrated and just feels defeated.
And that's not my goal.
My goal is to get him stronger, motivate him, keep him engaged,
but you know, so at what point should I kind of veer away from machines and move into using free
weights? I mean, ideally, ideally, you already, you would make him do that stuff, but I mean,
that we have to talk about adherence to, right?? So there's this is this is the great juggle for trainers, right? I know what he needs,
but I also recognize that he may hate this or not want to do this. And so,
you know, that's that's probably one of the greatest challenges as a coach and trainer is,
this is why Sal talks a lot about the number one quality of a trainer is sales, and not because you have to
reassign him and sell him on more training,
but you're selling your ideas to him all the time.
And you've got to find a way to be able to communicate to him,
communicate to him that he needs that stability component.
The machine is working as a crutch for his issues.
Right.
So he has this instability problem in the shoulders. So of course, sitting on a machine is working as a crutch for his issues. So he has this instability problem in the shoulders.
So of course, sitting on a machine is much easier
because the machine is stable,
but now we're not addressing the root cause
of what is going on here.
And if your goal is to get strong with me
and lose body fat whatever his goals are,
and you want longevity and you want to feel good
as you get even older.
This is what we need to do.
And hey, it sucks at the beginning
because it's just like anything you,
like I don't know what his job is,
but I always love to give analogies related
to one of their job as if he's like a computer tech guy.
It's like, you know, you're wanting to write code
it's your first day in school of learning how to do that.
And so of course, I could crutch you
and have a teacher give you all the answers, but then you're never gonna learn to do it. And so, of course, I could crutch you and have a teacher give you all the answers,
but then you're never going to do it.
So this is your body
on what we're trying to do right now
is and understand that you're expecting
to be able to write code right away.
Be really good at it.
No, you're gonna suck for a little bit.
So, yeah.
Right.
Yeah, and I think somewhat there's a fear to like,
trainers that it's gonna be boring and tedious
and that they're going to leave and
not get any benefit where your biggest benefit is to be able to kind of
include the
entertainment the enjoyment of coming in but also like really dive into that like this is a very glaring issue that you can
solve and address and not you know, yes, there's good mobility movements.
And I'm sure if you haven't already, and you've gone through our prime tests and our
prime pro, and all of these things that we've laid out as free resources or even our programs
that can address some shoulder stability issues, you can also load and just start gradually
where you have them hold in certain positions
in an overhead and just an isometric.
Just to get that.
Yeah, so he just gets that sort of, he gets acclimated to that top position and then
also in the rack position and then also down for, let's say, a suitcase carry.
What I like to do is add a bit of movement with that.
While they're also like just focused on stabilizing
and making sure that they're reinforcing that.
So with a little bit of load,
and you can gradually increase that load
while the entire goal of it is stability.
So it's still something engaging and fun,
but now we're addressing that very specific.
I love that, like overhead carries would be for that one.
I see Metrix is gonna be the way to go. But look, you have two jobs as addressing that very specific. I love that. Like overhead carries would be phenomenal. I see.
I see metrics is going to be the way to go.
But look, you have two jobs as trans way.
I like talking to trainers because you really have two jobs.
Job one is get them to do what's right for them, but job two is more important is get
them to want to do what's right for them.
Okay.
So we need to sell this to him that you have to sell this.
Now there's two ways I can sell this.
I could say, hey, if you don't do this,
you're gonna hurt yourself and you're not gonna be able
to progress and you really need this
and that's boring and blah, blah, blah.
And that's not selling it to him.
Does he wanna build muscle?
Christine, what's his goal?
What are his goals?
Well, he wants to lose belly fat.
So I'm like, okay, stop being a cardio bunny.
Stop, get off the machines and start lifting weights.
Here's what you're gonna do.
This is what you're gonna do next time you see him.
You're gonna go up to him, be like,
all right, you wanna get lean?
Okay, here's the best way to get lean.
I've, I've, I did a lot of research,
and I've come up with the best way to get lean.
And what we're gonna do is we're gonna build maximum muscle.
We're gonna speed up your metabolism
and it's gonna make the fat loss a lot easier.
You wanna do that?
Yes, I do.
Great. This is what we're gonna do. And then you're easier. You wanna do that? Yes I do. Great.
This is what we're gonna do.
And then you're done.
You gotta sell him on what he wants.
And you're not lying.
That's the truth.
This is the fastest, most effective way to get him there.
So you can do the negative stuff.
Like, oh, you need to do this.
And we gotta go slow.
And you gotta crawl before you walk.
And he's a guy.
And he's not gonna hear that.
He doesn't like you.
And that's more difficult being a female trainer
with a male, you know, he wants to look good. You know, listen. He doesn't like you. And that's more difficult being a female trainer with a male.
He wants to look good.
You know?
Listen.
He wants to look strong.
Like, I did.
Listen.
I go up to him and say, you want to get lean and you want to build muscle?
Yes, I do.
All right.
This is what we're going to do.
He's going to feed off your confidence and you've got to sell him on the result.
I really think what I think Justin hit it really the more I hear you and the more I think
I'm piecing together this guy,
I'm assuming that the kind of tedious,
you know, isometric mobility type work
is he feels, especially if he's like a cardio move, sweat guy,
is probably like this is stupid.
Why am I laying on the ground doing this prone cobra thing
and he's probably not enjoying that?
I think being able to load him like Justin is saying
so he's challenged a little bit strength wise,
but then you're really focusing on that stability component.
Oh, I see overhead carries.
I see overhead carries, and if you've got kettlebells,
that'd be great, if not dumbbells, over a set,
and then being very meticulous about how he's moving.
Is his core tightened up?
Is his glutes engaged?
Is he stepping and be real meticulous
about how he's doing that as he's holding it.
And then just try and get stronger and stronger
every week by loading that more and more.
And so you're working on the stability,
but then you're also giving him this kind of strength
exercise so he doesn't feel like he's lying on the ground
and doing nothing.
And clients, listen, clients love it.
When the trainer tells them what to do and says, just do what I tell listen, clients love it when the trainer tells them what to do
and says, just do what I tell you.
They love it.
We're so afraid to do that to our clients and it's silly.
It's like we're asking our clients,
hey, do you want to do this thing?
It's okay.
No, you don't ask them nothing.
John, this is what we're gonna do today.
I don't wanna do that.
I don't care what you want.
You told me you wanna get buffed,
then we're gonna do this.
I know what I'm doing.
And you know what? They're gonna be like, oh fuck, I'm gonna going to do this. I know what I'm doing. And you know what? They're going to be like, oh fuck, I'm going to listen to this guy.
That's what they want to hear.
They want you to get stronger.
They want you to tell them what to do.
I've never had a client ever in 25 years where I would say that
and they would still be like, I don't want,
they'd like, all right, I'll do it.
And then eventually, after two or three times of me telling them,
you're going to do it my way, because you told me what you want
and I'm going to get you where you want to go.
After two or three times doing that,
they stop asking me, especially when they start
to see the results.
So remember that, you gotta sell it that way.
Sell it that way, you're not gonna have any problems.
Okay.
Good deal.
Listen, you're a trainer, do you have maps prime pro?
I do not.
All right, I'll send that to you, relax.
Oh, I appreciate that, thank you so much.
You're mad at him.
I'll send you prime pro.
That'll be very valuable for your clients. Yeah. All right, appreciate that, thank you so much. You're mad at him. I'll send you Prime Pro. That'll be very valuable for your clients.
Yeah.
All right. Appreciate that. Thank you.
No problem. All right.
You know, just speaking to female trainers who train men,
oftentimes, not always, but oftentimes they go into
the relationship automatically feeling insecure
or not confident because it's a man.
I'm going to tell him how he's going to build muscle.
He might get stronger than me.
How am I gonna spot him?
He's not gonna wanna listen to me.
They feed off of your confidence,
or your insecurity, or your hesitation.
If you're, I don't care if you're a man or a woman,
you tell the person follow me, we're doing this.
They're gonna, people hire you because that's what they want.
They want to follow.
They want to feel that confidence.
If you hesitate, imagine you go to the doctor
and the doctor says, well, I mean, you know,
what do you want?
And we can do that.
I don't know.
I don't know what to do,
but if he's like, no, you gotta take this.
It's what you gotta do.
You're like, thank you, doc.
I appreciate you being confident and giving me the answer.
Yeah, and I hate pills.
Well, do you want to get better?
Yeah, I do.
Okay, take the guy that pills.
I mean, if I had a doctor talk to him,
I would just get to you at ease. I mean, it's the same thing. It's like, oh, I don't like it.
I mean, you want to build muscle. You want to lose your body fat, right? Okay. Well, these are the things we need to do.
I literally when I would say that literally they would, I don't know if I want to do that. Well, you want to build muscle?
All right, then this is what we're gonna do. And I would walk away towards the piece of equipment. We're gonna use and they would follow me and do it.
But they feed off that energy. Yeah, I mean, it's really how you, and it is, this is not a man, woman thing.
It doesn't even matter that she's female.
It's literally the confidence that she delivers it to him.
I've had lots of female trainers that just,
they just crushed it.
Yeah, and this challenge for trainers is definitely,
I saw it in both sexes all the time.
It's literally just a lack of confidence
and maybe your abilities or your knowledge or like that.
And you got to be assertive.
And if you want them to trust you and do it just,
I mean, don't be afraid to say this is what we're gonna do.
And it's because you told me you want X, Y, and Z,
this is the path.
Our next color is Kelly from North Carolina.
Kelly, how's it going?
How can we help you?
I'm doing great. Thank you guys so much for having me on. I really appreciate it.
I have been listening for about five months now. And in fact, my kids are tired of me always
having you guys on either on YouTube while I'm working out or in the car. So they've
said you have to use iPod now. So they don't have to hear it too.
But I just wanted to ask you some questions
about reverse dieting.
So I had been a chronic dieter most of my life
in my email.
I mentioned a nickname I had as a kid.
So I was an overweight kid.
And so having a name that rhymes with belly is not fun.
So I about a year ago, I started to really gain a lot of weight. I got to the point that I was just doing so much cardio. I was eating about 1100 to 1200 calories a day. And just was like,
I can't stop. I can't lower my calories and I can't increase my cardio anymore.
So I kind of found out about the reverse dieting.
I got hooked into you guys.
I got the reverse dieting guide.
And I had some initial weight gain, which I understood.
Like, okay, the guy tells me that you guys tell me that all the time.
But now I've gotten to about 1700-ish calories,
and every time I try to increase beyond that, A, it's really hard because I'm like full,
and I have to eat like crappy food in order to try and get calories in, or I immediately
shoot up even more and wait. So I know I'm getting stronger, I've got maps, the RGB, and I completed anabolic.
I just finished the first week of performance
and I know I'm getting stronger.
But I am also finally being able to kind of monitor
my body fat percentage and it's starting to creep up.
And so I'm like, okay, am I gaining more fat than muscle?
Same amount, because I mean, I trust you guys.
If you tell me this is just part of the process,
let's suck it up, that's fine.
Or do I need to do kind of like mini cuts?
Because I've also heard Adam say,
sometimes you do like a mini cut,
and then maybe you try and reverse further out of it.
Yeah.
Kelly, when you, so I'm reading your email,
so you went from 1100 calories to about 1700 calories.
And during that period of time, gain three pounds on the scale.
Also, what happened with the cardio?
Were you doing a lot of cardio before and then not so much anymore?
What does that look like?
Yeah, so for your recommendations that I've always heard and the reverse dieting,
I stopped doing the cardio.
I am doing about 12, about 1200 to 1500, 12,000 to 15,000 steps a day.
Okay, but you only went up three pounds. Yeah, as you can say, please commend her on what you've
actually accomplished a lot more than you probably think you have. Is that true? Is that true?
Is that true? You went up three pounds. So I immediately went up three pounds. So like,
you went up three pounds. I went up, so I immediately went up three pounds.
So like before I got to you guys,
I had found reverse dieting first somewhere else.
And as soon as I started reverse dieting,
I dropped a few pounds and then I added creatine
and jumped up three pounds.
And I was like, okay, that's the creatine cool.
I went from carbs that were like 50% to carbs
that were more like 30% with appropriate protein. So I was like,
okay, that makes sense. But since then I have slowly like I continue to increase. So I'm about
10 pounds more total than I was 8 to 10 pounds more than I was a year ago.
And also stronger. And stronger. I think. And stronger. Yeah, definitely stronger, but like the
the clothes are starting to get a little tighter.
Yeah, well, okay, so first off,
you gotta think about, look at where the clothes are tighter.
If it's in your butt, you know, in the upper thighs,
then you're probably building some muscle.
And you're stronger, so you're definitely building some muscle.
The little bit of weight gain that you had
when you reversed diet is nothing
considering you went up 600 calories.
And you got rid of cardio.
Yes.
That's exceptional.
Now, here's a deal.
Okay, I want you to get rid of your scale for a little while.
I don't want you to weigh yourself anymore
because it's gonna mess with your head a little bit.
You gotta give yourself a little bit more time.
And yes, gaining some body fat, a little bit of body fat
is part of the process.
I'd like to see you get up to close to 2,000 calories and then cut from there.
Now, one thing you said though is that you can't eat anymore. You feel like you're stuffing yourself.
Is that correct? Okay, if that's the case and you feel like, oh, this is really tough,
then it's okay to go on a mini-cut. You can do a mini-cut for two weeks or three weeks and then go back to you in a week.
Yeah, or even a week. Now, here's what I want you to do though, or to understand.
Don't expect to lose any weight in your mini cut.
People go into a mini cut thinking, oh great, I'm going to see some weight loss.
That may not happen.
What we're looking for is your appetite to reinvigorate it so we could go back into the reverse
diet.
Okay.
But because you dieted for so long on and off since you were a kid, the reverse diet
process, meaning reverse dieting, maybe with some mini cuts, trying to build muscle this
entire time, is going to take a little longer than you think.
Because there's some theories out there, but some people would say you're your CNS, your
body's got a bit of a memory, and it's going to adapt in the negative very quickly as soon
as you try and do a cut. So I would slowly work up towards getting up to about 2000 calories
before trying to do a longer than many cut.
I want to ask a little bit more. I know you have the RGB bundle.
I think I'm reading that you ran through Annabelle already. Are you currently in performance? Is that's what's going on?
Yeah, I just finished the first week of phase one.
And even in that, like, it was amazing from what my starting strength and antibiotic
was to my first heavy week of performance was.
So I'm already squatting more than my body weight.
I can deadlift close to one and a half of my body weight already.
Wow. Hold on. where did you go from?
Strong.
When you first started squatting, can you tell me how much weight you were squatting versus
what you were squatting?
So I was, I mean, I wasn't completely naive to lifting weight, but most of it was like
cardio lifting weight because it was like body pump.
So I had been lifting weights before. So I was about 120. I was
squatting. And you guys are the ones who convinced me to actually go below parallel. So I'm below
parallel. I'm the deepest stuff I've ever been. I've got prime. I've passed all the compass stuff,
but I've been working on the ankle mobility.
And so like I can get super low with good control.
It feels so good to be able to be at like I I've squatted this week.
160.
You got way deeper.
Yeah, yeah, just so you know, Kelly, if you were my client and you came into me saying
this, how shake you.
This is a big way.
I was shaking like this a little bit and say,
you need to wake up, you're actually doing really, fuck.
You're moving in the right direction.
And keep in mind, like you've gone up 600 calories.
So even, you're going to even hold,
your body's gonna hold a little bit more water
than it's used to do.
So even the little bit of what you might be seeing
is like, oh, I feel like I'm putting on a little bit.
Four pounds of that is water.
Yeah, a lot of that's probably waterway.
The fact that you are as strong as you are,
you've increased your range of motion,
you've cut your car you out, we've up to 600 cal.
I mean, you are fucking winning.
We're doing really well.
Let me put this in context, Kelly.
You increased your calories by over 50%.
So 600 calories a lot for anybody to go up.
But in context of the fact that you're eating 1100 calories, doing tons of cardio and you
couldn't lose any weight, it was like, that's where you were stuck at.
You dropped the cardio and increased your calories by over 50%.
That's phenomenal.
You're not just moving in the right direction, you're flying.
Yeah, you're killing it and the reason
I was asking more about the programming so that is you know, keep trusting the process because I bet as you go through the different phases
of performance and then aesthetic you're gonna hit a really novel one that's going to probably
stimulate the appetite again. It's interesting when we when we do things that are somewhat familiar for us. And then also when we hit someone's like,
oh my God, I've never done these movements.
Or boy, this is kicking my ass.
And then also when you see that appetite spike up also.
So, I mean, I'd probably be pushing you to be,
stay the course.
I think you're doing a great job.
Doesn't mean that I wouldn't potentially interrupt
one week of low calorie just for the mental part of it
for you to be like.
But don't weigh yourself.
Yeah, but I'm not tripping on the scale.
What I see or what I'm hearing from you.
How long have you been doing this?
How long did it take you to go from 1,100 to now?
One year, she said.
Is this a year process?
This, the reverse diet started in September.
Of September?
Oh, you're not even.
Okay.
Kelly, I'll tell you a story.
I had a client who was really, really bad shape
in the sense that her metabolism was just
in the context of slowing down, which is so wrecked.
Okay.
It took us a year and a half and here's what happened.
That year and a half process, it was kind of like this.
She gained a little bit and then we were just kind of
maintaining and maintaining and slowly reversing
and getting stronger and getting stronger.
And then like a snowball
All of a sudden it was like she got ripped her body just she just like oh my god. It's crazy. So I'm eating more
And I'm just getting leaner. I don't know what's going on
I'm like we have got things working. Yeah, so you gotta have some you started and you're on that you're on that path
Yeah, give it some time. Yeah, you're on that you're you're I was hoping that you guys would just like just
Continue to trust the process and I was just
getting a little too out of myself.
There is, there is nothing I would shake the shit out of you.
Yeah, there's nothing that you said here.
There's nothing that you said here.
You're a loving way.
That's how you guys remember you almost got fired.
You're a very, very young man.
You shake his clients.
There's nothing you said at all that would make me pause.
In fact, everything you're telling me is telling
me that you're crushing. You're like on the right path. So, so stay on.
Do we have time for one more question? Sure.
Sure. Okay. So, um, I know you guys have talked about it in the past. The fact that, you know,
clinicians are out there giving, um, advice on, uh, exercise and diet. And unfortunately, we don't
have a lot of great education on that.
I'm a practicing neurology PA.
And I'm very interested.
I also happen to have a PhD in neuroscience.
So I'm very interested in aging and cognition
and how our hardware, our body helps the software in our mind.
So where would I go to get good education?
Because I mean, yeah, there's like the the guidelines for 150 minutes of exercise.
Do you follow Andrew Giberman?
No. Oh, there you go.
Yeah, Andrew, you're going to love his content.
You know what else, too, Kelly?
If you think of the, it's obviously you know this, look, you know this better than I do.
The brain is part of the body, right?
So think of the hormones and, you know, the cataclysmines and the, you know, all the compounds that affect brain
health and how they, how muscle, body fat and activity affect those compounds. So just a
silly example would be like glucose metabolism, right? So, you know, that dementia and Alzheimer's,
there seems to be somewhat of a correlation between those and
almost like like glucose intolerance or issues, you know, metabolism glucose. Some people call it type
three diabetes like the jury's still out on that, but we know that muscle greatly increases or improves
insulin sensitivity. So for example, knowing that I would start there. So, what you know about the brain, and what makes it healthy and youthful, then go and find studies on exercise and muscle and body fat,
and how those things affect those particular compounds and chemicals.
And then from there, I think you'll open up some rabbit holes to where you'll be able'll go down and say, oh, okay, so BDNF, great for the brain.
Wow, I just read that BDNF also has effects and muscle.
It looks like when you build muscle,
you increase BDNF in muscle tissue.
Does that then increase BDNF in the brain?
And you can kind of, it'll take you down
some really cool rabbit holes.
I literally think that's like Andrew Huberman's podcast.
Yeah.
So if you have it, his podcast, is it called
Andrew Huberman?
Is that what it is?
I believe so. Or Huberman Lab podcast. Yeah. So if you have it, his podcast, is it called Andrew Huberman? Is that what it is? What is it?
I believe so.
Or Huberman Lab.
Yeah.
Okay.
You'll geek out on his content, for sure.
If that's what you're interested in.
It puts great stuff out there.
Awesome.
Well, thanks for calling in.
Thank you so much for answering my questions.
I appreciate it.
You got it.
It's great.
Thank you.
Bye.
She's kicking ass, dude.
Prussian.
Holy crap, she's kicking ass.
Bro, sometimes you just don't see it for yourself.
I mean, I get, you know what this highlights is what we always talk about is how much of
this game is psychological.
How much of this is?
99.9.
Yeah.
I mean, she said her clothes are feeling tighter.
I bet you, I mean, how many times you get a few more clothes?
Muscle.
It's the butt, like, oh, my legs, my pants around here and.
Dude, for what she's talking about in terms of like her strength gains with her legs,
I guarantee you a lot of it's there.
Oh, yeah, absolutely.
Yeah.
And the amount of the weight that she has seen come on with the increase of six, 700 calories.
50% more increase in calories.
That's the last one.
Had she done that without what she's doing now, you know, in her old way, with all the cardio,
whenever that would have been like a 15 pound body fat game. And no muscle gain.
You know, obviously I think she was searching just for us to, I think,
reconfirm what she was wanting.
So which is good.
If that was a client and I was really having a hard time,
you would just shake the show.
Yeah.
After that.
After that.
I'm sure if I shook you and you still were getting it through,
I might run a one-week cut
actually to literally just lower the calories, lower the water and let them see like you're
actually way better than you think you are.
We just pulled some water out and now you don't think you've put on body fat.
And then that would also kick the appetite back up and then we're back to the course, right?
So I might do that if I felt like they were really strong.
But you'd have to be there monitoring.
I worry about that as I told her not to wear, is that she would do that and expect to see all
stuff on the walls.
Yeah, it was great.
It was great advice.
You're right.
I mean, obviously it's different when we can be talking
to them every day versus not, but she's kicking ass.
Totally.
Look, if you love Mind Pump, head over to MindPumpFree.com.
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You can also find all of us on social media.
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Adam is on Instagram, my pump Adam,
and I'm only on Twitter at my pump sal.
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