Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2006: What to Do if You Are Having Trouble Connecting With a Muscle, Diet & Workout Adjustments to Make if You Have Hit a Plateau, How to Stay Lean Without Being Obsessive About Food & More (Listener Live Coaching)
Episode Date: February 8, 2023In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin coach four Pump Heads via Zoom. Mind Pump Fit Tip: Strength training is the ONLY form of exercise that will make your body LOOK the best. (2:12) Do... males gain muscle strength & size with resistance training faster than females? (21:25) The future is here! (33:24) Cannabinoids and fat loss. (39:22) Being trapped in the Region Beta Paradox. (41:37) The Whole Foods 365 conundrum. (50:00) Trying to break down the weird Paul Pelosi video. (53:25) Organifi’s products taste good and make you feel good! (1:00:18) How political parties use the media for their benefit. (1:03:06) What can people do to prevent themselves from cheating? (1:06:06) Shout out to Songs for Littles on YouTube! (1:07:43) #ListenerLive question #1 - Do you have any answers regarding perimenopausal women getting estrogen replacement therapy? How it affects them regarding weight, muscle mass, and body fat? (1:10:14) #ListenerLive question #2 - During the post-newbie gains maintenance phase, was my body simply screaming for more calories to feed the muscle-building signal I was sending in the gym? (1:26:06) #ListenerLive question #3 - What can I do to feel my hamstrings when doing ‘good morning’ exercises? (1:43:13) #ListenerLive question #4 - Any advice for someone who doesn’t want to restrict themselves for the rest of her life to be lean? (1:51:51) Related Links/Products Mentioned Ask a question to Mind Pump, live! Email: live@mindpumpmedia.com Visit NED for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Visit Organifi for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code MINDPUMP at checkout** February Promotion: MAPS Performance, MAPS Aesthetic, and MAPS HIIT are all 50% off! **Code FEB50 at checkout** Mind Pump #1835: Why Resistance Training Is The Best Form Of Exercise For Fat Loss And Overall Health Mind Pump #1597: The Science Of Extraordinary Athletic Performance With David Epstein Sex Differences in Resistance Training: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Mind Pump #1565: Why Women Should Bulk Mooless vegan whey protein Visit ZBiotics for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Visit Magic Spoon for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Watch Pamela, a love story | Netflix Official Site CBD for weight loss: Does it work? - Medical News Today Whole Foods 365 Organic: Made in China. An ABC Exposé. Calorie labels are often wildly inaccurate. Here’s how to prevent extra calories from derailing your diet. Wild body camera footage shows Paul Pelosi hammer attack Put Me in Your Shoes: Does Perspective-Taking Inoculate Against the Appeal of Alternative Partners? Songs for Littles - Toddler Learning Videos - YouTube Visit Joy Mode for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code MINDPUMP at checkout for 20% off your first order** The Resistance Training Revolution – Book by Sal Di Stefano MAPS Powerlift  MP Holistic Health What Should I Do If I’ve Hit a Plateau With Fat Loss? - Mind Pump Blog MAPS Symmetry MAPS 15 Minutes Build Your Hamstrings- How to Properly do Good Mornings Groove in a Proper Hip Hinge- Good Mornings with Stick Mobility Session Visit Transcend for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Brendon Ayanbadejo (@brendon310) Instagram Dave Epstein (@DavidEpstein) Twitter Andy Galpin, PhD (@DrAndyGalpin) Twitter Jordan Peterson (@jordan.b.peterson) Instagram Chris Williamson (@chriswillx) Instagram
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
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In today's episode, we answered live caller's questions, but this was after a 65-minute introductory
conversation where we talk about fitness, current events, studies, our lives, and much more. answered live, callers questions, but this was after a 65-minute introductory conversation.
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Look, there's a lot of ways to work out, a lot of ways to exercise your body, but one of
them is superior to all the others when it comes to making your body look the best.
I'm talking about aesthetics, and that strength training, lifting weights, no other form of exercise allows you to target sculpt your body like strength training.
So if you do other forms of exercise, you may look better, you start to become healthier, but only strength training allows you to target parts of your body, develop them and literally change the way you look.
Get you that naughty body.
What?
Right, guys? you look. Get you that naughty body. Right guys. Not even. I just came up with that. Well, please clip that
engine. Please clip that. Not by me. So okay, when you were saying that, I was like,
obviously, but I was like, who would disagree or not maybe even think that. But then I forgot
there's a lot of people that do like
Pilates, what else is another example of somebody in a form of exercise that you do
with the intent of sculpting the body?
Or looking the way you, you know what I think about it?
Okay.
Because a lot of people do stuff to lose weight, right?
And that's their main goal.
And you can lose weight doing lots of forms of different exercise.
What is the challenges is that people look at like top yoga instructors or top Pilates instructors or dancers or swimmers or whatever
on social media and they think, oh that form of exercise
is gonna make me look like that. That's not quite how it works. First off when you're looking at the top
or the best of the best in each of these categories,
you have as a combination of hard work, effort, discipline,
they've been doing this for a long time,
but also their bodies genetically are great
for that particular endeavor.
So if you look at the world's top swimmers,
you can have a lot of people with long torso,
short legs, broad backs, kind of flat chest, right?
Because that's a body type that tends to do well,
and of course they train hard and they work hard as well. Same thing with basketball
players, football players, and so on. So it's not really a good way to determine how
a form of exercise is going to make you look. Really, you want to look at what, how that
form of exercise gets your body to adapt and strength training. There's no other form of
exercise that lets you target parts of your body. Like if you cycle, you're doing the
same thing over and over again.
You're working some parts and not others, right?
If you run, if you do Pilates, you are working your body in a particular way, but you're
not like target building, target sculpting, with strength training, I can literally look
in the mirror and say, I want rounder shoulders, I want better hamstrings, I want, you know,
my laths that come out, so my waist looks smaller. I want my arms to look a particular way.
And then I can train those parts of my body.
I can target sculpt and target train my body.
So it's as close as you can get to being a sculptor.
Know the form of exercise lets you do that.
So you think it's just they don't have a good understanding
of even what they truly want.
Or what'll happen, right?
They don't necessarily know. They, most people will
look at, again, they'll look at a picture of someone who does something a lot and say,
oh, that's what I could look like. If I did that thing or the other thing you see is they
see somebody and go like, I don't want to look like that. And that's what those out. For
example, like, I know some girls stay away from like crossfit type of training because they're afraid
that they're going to have these boxy hips.
And it's like, no, those top athletes that are women in the in Crossfit are good at dead
lifting and snatch and all that stuff.
The boxy hips help because it helps helps the sport.
It's not the sport made their hips look that way.
And so there's a lot of people that will avoid certain exercises
or modalities because they look at the top characteristics or you'll start to recognize
them, you know, in top tier sports because like some of those are advantages. And certainly
you're talking about the torso, long torso, like all these different types of, you know,
bodies that actually perform better for very specific tasks. So, you know, to attribute that to the training is, you know, something you got to check yourself on.
Yeah, there was this really cool picture I saw a long time ago where it had Michael Phelps,
right? So he's like, he's the most decorated Olympian, I think, of all time.
Definitely the best swimmer of all time. And they had his body, and they had him standing next to, I think it was the world marathon
champion, I think.
And the marathon champion was shorter compared to Michael Phelps, much shorter, but their
legs were the same length.
So Michael Phelps was like, wait, taller, but he's got really short legs, a really long
torso, really long arms.
The marathon runner had these really long legs, short torso, and that's their genetics, right?
And then their training, of course,
is also what makes them great, but that doesn't mean
you're gonna look like that, right?
And again, strength training,
anybody you can look in the mirror and say,
I want more butt, I want more hamstrings,
I want this, I want that.
And then you can go to the gym and the beauty of strength training
is there's body part specific?
What I think that's so amazing about strength training too,
is that you can design having both, right?
So if you have somebody who like gravitates towards Pilates
or gravitates to getting in shape with a sport,
or what's cool are like loves to swim,
like what's cool about having the strength training
is the foundation.
Like you can build your programming
to build the absolute ideal physique for you
that you want, and then you can integrate
these aspects of that way of training around it.
I had this before we got on.
I'm gonna raise my buddy, Brendan.
So, you know, he's in incredible shape.
He's a little bit older than we are.
He's an X NFL pro.
Yeah, X NFL, he has, what was he,
he was tested as one of those, the one,
one percent gene or whatever that he has.
Yeah, he's just, he's a piece.
He's a piece, he's an incredible shape.
And he's always trying to get a little bit bigger
and more muscular and stuff like that.
And we were texting back and forth and he was like,
yo, you see him, two or five or nine. He looks great. I'm like, yeah, I said, you know, if I could just get you stuff
Do know the sock mom exercises. I mentioned what you look like
We won't tell anybody
No, I I share that I'm busing his box guys it he he could run him
I think he's running a mile like five minutes something dude. I mean just yeah, he's a bad ass, right?
I think he's running a mile like five minutes something, dude. He's a super off-screen.
Yeah, he's a badass, right?
And he was laughing and he sent me back a voicemail, you know, being like, you know, and
basically rattling off the stats of how bad ass he is and all those things.
And I'm like, I'm just, I'm busting your chops.
But one of the things that like, I mean, if he was my client, one of the things I would,
I would get him to understand also is that I can give you all those things and still
build a program around strain training. I would get him to understand also is that I can give you all those things and still build
a program around strength training.
So I know it's not either or it's not like you I'm going to make you get bigger and more
muscular and therefore you're not going to be able to run or not going to be able to do
these things.
You won't be athletic.
I can still keep you athletic and and still have a a strength training focus program and
build more muscle or get you bigger
than what you currently are right now.
It's like this idea that you have to train all this crazy
endurance stuff, if you want to be good at just
the athletic pursuits, it's like no, we can program
a lot of, to be versatile in all directions,
to be able to jump, to be able to run,
to be able to get a good mile.
You can acquire all those skills,
and then also strength training.
But it's like the people that want those skills,
they gravitate towards this programming,
that is just like the whole programming
is all centered around just endurance,
endurance, and endurance.
And don't put it all together.
Well, name one form of exercise
that is more versatile than strength training.
It literally, strength training can be used to compliment
any physical pursuit.
You can't say that for any other form of exercise.
Literally, I could take strength training
and I can apply it.
The reason why we could do this, by the way,
is because it's so moldable.
There's, I don't know, 10,000 exercises.
There's five different ways to do each one.
There's ways I could strengthen for explosive power, strengthen endurance, traditional strength,
stability, correctional exercise.
So literally, it doesn't matter what you do, you can add appropriate strength training.
And the programming here is real important, right?
Because you got to have the right programming.
You can add appropriate strength training
and it'll make what you do better.
There's no the form of exercise that does this.
It's literally in a category of its own
when it comes to exercise and training.
In fact, it's the primary way people rehab their bodies
even.
You go to a physical therapist, what they're doing with you
or forms a strength training to rehab your body.
And all the cognitive benefits as well, which never gets highlighted in our industry.
In terms of being able to keep your mind stimulated and all these like receptors and being
able to go through and teach your body all these new movements, it's basically its own language
that you acquire as you get more proficient
a lot of the different skill of weight training and you're constantly stimulating it with
information so it keeps your cognitive abilities sharp.
Oh, it's the proprioceptive, so proprioception is knowing where your body is in space.
Because strength training is so multi-dimensional, so moldable. Right, if you do a sport or a form of exercise,
it typically tends to have the same movement or movement patterns that are repetitive, right?
So like running, cycling, swimming, tennis, basketball, football, whatever, it's like similar movements
over and over again that are that sport. Well, because strength training is, it has form and technique,
but it's also formless.
It's formless in the sense that I can do,
I can move any plane, I can rotate, I can, you know.
It's patterns, interruptions constantly,
which, you know, you get into that sort of,
which people love cardio and I understand why,
because you can really get into that zone where you're,
you know, you're lost, like you're getting that
endorphin experience out of it,
because it becomes mindless.
And it's almost like a form of meditation for a lot of people when they are able to just,
you know, get into that repetitive kind of rhythm. Versus like,
strength training, like it's just constantly having to account for all this different types of
students. It's got to be the most commonly used form of exercise across the board for all sports.
Like, can you name any other form of exercise that's used in almost every single sport besides
strength training?
No.
I can't, right?
It's incorporated in golf, basketball, football, swimming.
Whatever the sport is, strength training applied appropriately.
Well, that's relatively new when you think about it.
That was not always the case. That's when you look at some of the things
that have attributed, you remember there was a Ted Talk
we shared a long time ago on the show, way back when I forgot
the name of it, but it talked about all these crazy leaps.
The democratization of sports.
Yeah, something like that.
I think that was the name of the fact.
Oh, you think that was the name of the Ted Talk,
maybe Doug can look it up and see if we can find it. You might
remember what I'm talking about right? I do. And he was talking about performance improvements over
the years and and he was showing that it had more to do with like the track and the equipment.
Yeah, and then science with nutrition and I mean we we've just like human
steroids. Yeah, human. Yeah, exactly. What blew my mind about that, that was the point I was making, was that like,
I, if you would have asked me, you know, athletes today
versus athletes 40 years ago,
and we look at all the numbers,
we're blowing everything out of the way,
what would you attribute the most to?
Oh, performance enhancement drugs, for sure.
David Epstein, we actually had him on the show, I believe.
We did, yeah.
We did.
And what's the name of the tattoo?
Our athletes really getting faster, better, stronger. Do we have him on the show, I believe. We did. We did. Yeah, what's the name of the tattoo? Our athletes really getting faster, better, stronger.
Do we have them on the show?
We do.
Yeah, go away.
I don't even remember.
A long time ago.
Wow.
It was like, that must have been year two.
It was a long time ago.
Wow, you know, that would be an interview I'd rather do now,
like when we're better.
I know.
Because that's, he would be an interesting conversation.
I don't remember the color.
What's your favorite color?
Yeah.
It's red on some question.
We're probably asking some bad shit.
But I think I think that's just so interesting because I mean,
at least my buddies and I who all like argue and debate sports stuff all
of time, that was a big argument for the longest time of like what is,
what has made the biggest difference?
And we've just, we've come a humans are exactly the same as what they were 40 years ago and is their their abilities were
pretty similar in fact there's some examples of some older athletes that did some even
more impressive things than today. So it's not that we've evolved. It's that we've gotten
much smarter with our approach and straight training and recovery are the two I would say
have really evolved the most with athletes.
I mean, that was just not,
you have athletes now like the LeBron James
and many other of these top athletes.
It's been a million dollars a year.
I'm a recovery.
And people don't realize this up until the 80s,
up until the 80s I'll say, except for football,
even football though, if you go earlier than the 80s,
like 70s, 60s, up until the 80s,
athletes were encouraged
not to strength train.
They were actually told, don't go to the gym and lift weights
because it makes you muscle bound.
It'll reduce your performance, your athletic performance.
This is still a big thing, even in baseball,
that we were fighting.
Oh yeah, as we went out helping out the high school team,
it was like, we were constantly battling
with the high school baseball coach.
Oh, that's so fun. Because yeah, it's like, don't do any with the high school baseball coach. Oh, that's so fun.
Because, yeah, it's like, don't do any of the upper body stuff,
you know, like, anyways, yeah,
in some sort of...
What's that for?
Yeah, I was like, we're,
well, we also went on this, you know,
it's kind of like, okay, we weren't doing it at all.
And then we recognized the benefits of it.
And then there was the over application of it.
We're just doing it wrong.
So I think when you hear a coach that seems like
they're dinosaur ages, they were part of the wave
who probably adopted it, but adopted it incorrectly,
and then saw negative effects from it, and they're like,
don't do that, you know, like didn't do any of the skill
and conjunction with the way over training.
Or it was just bodybuilding.
Yeah, exactly.
And they had the end of bodybuilding. Yeah, exactly. And then the end of the bodybuilding.
Yeah, they're like, you're just gonna bodybuild.
It's like, no, there's specific, again, it's so moldable,
it has to be done appropriately, but when you apply,
because all strength training is,
is adding resistance to movement in the attempt
to gain strength, okay?
And also possibly muscle, depending on your sport.
That's all it is.
So it can be bands, it can be bodyway,
it can be, you know, weights, of course, and machines. It can be lots of different ways that you
could do this. You can do strength training to some extent just by explosive movement without
any resistance at all. But if you apply it properly, there's nothing more versatile that'll make
you better at everything. And then as far as making you look good,
I mean, in terms of aesthetics,
okay, forget athletic performance and movement also,
just in terms of aesthetics.
Oh, God.
Like, you can't.
Nothing comes close.
Nothing comes close.
No, Mayo female, I don't care who you are,
what your goal is.
You take your twin and they do any of the form of exercise
and you give me the other twin.
That was your opportunity, man.
Did you see this?
Yeah, whoa.
That's what I'm saying. Well, but there's really no other way. I do. Man, I just be like, look at this. Yeah. Whoa.
That's what I'm saying.
Well, but there's really no, there's really no, there's no other form that so many of you
would make that case anymore, right?
I brought up Pilates and not the rag on Pilates at all, but that's one of those ones that I
still hear, like, I have people that I've talked to that are like, oh, you know, I love
the way it makes my body look.
And I'm just like, if you think that makes your body look really good, imagine if you actually strain train because you could really sculpt the body.
So it's not that it doesn't at all is that there is a, which is just like the point I was
making about my body is like, it's not like what he's doing isn't not working
athletic points.
The proof is in the pudding.
He's in incredible athletic shape.
It's just like, I could give you what I know you want.
You want to be a little bit more jacked and more size to you, but still be that super athletic guy as the ages.
Like, I have the answers for you.
It'll take one, it'll take a little one day of me. Just one day of that.
Yeah, just, I just need to adjust a little bit of your, your strength training and the,
and the way it's programmed. That's all right now.
So the circuit style of training is obviously benefiting kind of where you are right now,
but we could get a little bit more that size.
He's got such mesomorphic genetics too that that guy.
Oh, yeah.
He could be a distance runner and he'd be built.
Like he just, the guy just must have.
Yeah, that's why I'm like, and I told him, I said, I'm just, you know, I'm just messing
with you, but the trainer of me would love to get a hold of him, Jannex for a little
bit.
Oh, just, let me, let me get a hold of that programming for like six months and show you
that. I'm so frustrating when regular, like a regular guy like me meets somebody like that with those kind of,
I mean I've had people like that work for me, not very many.
Yeah, the ones that like good McDonald's and they're just like shredded.
Dude, I've had trainers work for me and I'm just like, wow,
dude, he's so crazy jacked and I'd watch him and be like, he eats pop tarts and cheeseburgers
and he works out once a week.
What the heck is going on here?
I'm over here busting my butt to try and look at.
You know, do you think those same people,
or do you think this is a different gene that allows you
to even get away with, let's say, less appropriate training
for what you're trying to obtain?
Do you understand what I'm saying?
So like, do you think that's the same kind of gene
or do you think it's different?
Do you think there's like a gene for people that are just,
man, they are just blessed.
They touch weights, they build muscle or whatever.
And is that same gene responsible for the people too?
Like they could also train terribly, not eat, okay.
Yeah, when you have those muscle building genetics
that are on that 1%-
That just for you to get away. I mean, you ever look at pictures of like like Phil Heath right he was mr. Olympia for a while when he played basketball
His arms look like mine. He was monster. Yeah, when he was young
Yeah, this is also this is also what makes it very difficult for people to
Point to a person as an example of what they're doing and how it's worth it because there's such a large
Individual variants on how you respond? I mean we talked about how bodybuilders need very little calories of what they're doing and how it's worth it. Because there's such a large individual variance
on how you respond.
I mean, we talked about how bodybuilders
need very little calories.
There's people who can get,
which is also why you hear people be like,
you don't have to eat that much protein.
It, I only eat this much.
And look at my, like, there's some people
that probably assimilate protein
need less of a requirement
than other people do to build muscle too.
So just because we have
these these general truths and nutrition of like, oh, this is the best ratio that remember,
this is a collection of people over a study that are all individual. This is what they come out to be
the average or median. And therefore, that's what we put out as the science. But the truth is,
there's there's two ends of the spectrum. And everybody in between and if you get somebody who is an incredible responder
That needs very little of this the very little of the protein
He very little of the additional calories, but and just need to touch the weights
Doesn't have to be good programming and they respond then you have the other person who has to do
Almost everything perfect and then they barely see any any response from it
And then everybody in between and recognize that you're somewhere and you fit somewhere in that spectrum.
And the person that you're using as an example.
That's not fair, yeah.
Yeah, it could be so different on the spectrum.
Yeah, I like some people like Herschel Walker.
You guys ever see this guy?
50-something years old.
Like what is going on?
Orani Coleman,
Ronnie Coleman was top 10 Mr. Olympia, pro body builder,
natural, natural. Then the story goes, and this was collaborate. This is, I mean, this is- Him and Flex, pro bodybuilder, natural, natural.
Then the story goes, and this was, this is, I mean, this
have been flex, right? Flex is what introduced him.
Flex Wheeler and Flex tells the story, and so does Ronnie Coleman.
Flex, we was like, hey, man, if you just did some steroids,
like you would totally win.
That next year, he showed up on stage, and everybody was like,
this, who is this me, and you won, you know, and then one seven times
in a row, whatever. So those genetics are out there.
Unfortunately, most of us don't have them.
That's the shoe for it.
Speaking of strength training, Dr. Andy Gap
and post this study, that people were getting kind of confused
about and excited about.
So, and you guys saw this, you sent it to me, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So I'm gonna pull it up and read kind of the title of it,
because people were like, oh my God, this is crazy.
It says, males do not gain muscle strength, muscle strength
in size with the resistance training faster than women.
In fact, females often see faster progress
in upper body strength development.
So this is a sex differences in resistance training,
a systematic review and meta analysis.
So this was a great study.
Now people were like kind of confused by this.
Like, wait a minute.
Like women build more muscle or like what's going on. So I kind of want to explain this because I'm
sure this is going to make its rounds. So it's relative size and strength to their current size.
So because women are smaller and men are much larger, relative to their size. They will gain a greater percentage of muscle in a particular period of time than a man
Well, this is also true for a smaller man versus a larger man
So if you're for example if you have 10 pounds of lean body mass you gain one pound you gain 10% more lean body mass
If you have a hundred pounds of lean body mass and you gain, you know, five pounds
It's five times
as much muscle, but it's less.
It's a much smaller percentage.
So that's the reason why, because people were confused about this.
So women do gain great muscle and strength.
They're just as a percentage.
This is also kind of a selection thing in terms of women preferring more lower body centric
workouts and maybe highlighting development.
I imagine that was versus that bike.
Because then if they were to focus a bit more, because that being a novel stimulus is
being divided.
It's a made analysis.
There's a lot of things.
There's got to be some of those controls in there also.
That would be silly because you're right because they would gravitate towards one.
I think what the most interesting about the study that highlights more than else is that the potential
for women is equally there.
That's the real takeaway from this is that, you know,
a lot of women sometimes can be discouraged that
you're gonna see results that they can't build muscle
or it's so difficult for them or they've been told.
So, you know, the testosterone is we build muscle.
You know what the biggest channel, firstly, yes.
Of course, men can build much more total muscle. They start out with more muscle, of course. But here what the biggest channel, firstly, yes, of course, men can build much more total
muscle.
They start out with more muscle, of course, but here's the biggest challenges for women
traditionally, or generally speaking, when it comes to building muscle.
One, they're typically more apprehensive at consuming the right amount of calories and
protein to build muscle, whereas guys tend to be more, they're more ready to do so, or
they try to because they're trying to gain,
whereas women are a little bit more apprehensive.
So they tend to consume too little,
and they're also not as ready to lift heavy.
Right.
And so those two things play a huge role.
When women eat the protein, eat the calories,
lift heavy, I mean, you see phenomenally.
I wonder if, I wonder generally speaking to,
would you say that women are challenged more often
hormonally than men are too?
Meaning that if you just took 100 random men
off the street, a hundred random women off the street,
do you think there'd be a greater percentage
of women in there that have imbalanced hormones
or issues with their hormones compared to men?
And even the men that have issues with it still have testosterone and beneficial muscle
building hormones.
So there's two things to that.
One is that men across the board for the last I think six decades have been seeing a lowering
of testosterone.
Correct.
So men are actually seeing some pretty gnarly things when it comes to testosterone.
Now on the other side, women's hormone levels seem to be more sensitive to things like
stress, lack of sleep, and things like fasting.
Yeah, same low calorie.
Very careful.
Yeah, because a woman's body, obviously they evolved to be able to carry a baby.
And so when their body senses too much stress or overwork, it's go, let's become infertile.
We can't support a baby.
So I've had female clients, for example, fast, do fasting.
And then over time, we start to get these stress effects like hair loss and like they have
too much cortisol, you know, the story body fat weird,
and that's like, we can't fast anymore.
Whereas men tend to respond better to the stress
of fat.
You get where I'm going with that question though, right?
Like because I mean,
birth control plays a role too.
Right.
Right.
So that was my point.
100 off random mastery day.
And this is a thing that this is the problem
with studies like this, right?
Because there's probably a lot of women
that are reading that and be like,
man, that cannot be true.
I don't feel that way.
And they're probably right because they probably
fall into more of a more general or average,
if you were to select people randomly
and not control them for a study and go, okay,
let's get a hundred women who have good balance,
or good and balanced healthy hormonally,
and let's put them in this study,
and let's do the same for men.
And then, oh, look at that when everything's all equated for,
they actually can build muscle just as easily as men.
But the truth is, that's not the average woman potentially, right?
I'm saying, is there potential that when you would grab a random hundred
off the street, that there would be a greater percentage
and how much greater of a percentage would that group of a hundred women
that you pulled in a hundred men pull,
that would have in a hormonal imbalances,
which play a huge factor in the ability to build muscle and lose body fat.
I think, yeah, I think you're making a point with that.
I think too based off of the episode we did about like why women should bulk and what kind
of response we got from that.
It's like, you know, how often is that a conversation or something that women are actively
seeking is to, you know, go higher in their calorie intake.
The typical under-eater chronic dieter is a female.
Yeah.
You typically don't see that when you're not gonna build
well in that state.
Yeah, so when a woman's like, I'm gonna lift weights,
her goal is usually to lose weight.
And so she's afraid of eating or fueling her body
appropriately to build the muscle.
Whereas a guy, even if you want to lose weight, you know, you know, where you see that
men, where you see that in men is when men have lost a bunch of weight, because they were
really overweight.
Yeah.
They have a fear.
Then they become chronic under eaters, right?
So if you've met somebody who had to lose 50 to 100 pounds and they actually finally did
it, right?
For whatever means, they did it.
Whether it was properly or improperly, more often than not, it's improperly
where they cut hardcore calories and they do lots of cardio.
And then they are become chronic under eaters
because in fear of going the other direction,
so they're constantly keeping themself
in this crazy deficit.
You know, I'd love you guys input on this.
In my experience, the,
what the average man and average,
what so average male average female client within a year, and I say average,
so they're probably working out two to three days a week
in the gym consistently.
They're not like perfect about their diet,
but they're eating better.
So these are people I've worked with, okay?
The average woman I could get to build
about six to seven pounds of lean body mass in a year,
and the average male usually around 10 to 13 pounds of lean body mass in the first year and the average male usually around 10 to 13 pounds
of lean body mass in the first year.
Would you guys say that that's similar?
I mean, average people.
I mean, I think that's a pretty fair.
Yeah.
But here's, I don't generally speak in,
yeah, I would probably say,
I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't,
I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't,
to be honest with you, it's crazy.
It's been so long now,
and there were so many people that,
that number sounds fair enough
that it's not like it definitely wasn't something crazy.
It definitely wasn't no 20 pounds there putting on there.
But I mean, when you look at like your client base, especially if you include the first half
of our career, I mean, over the course of a year, a lot of my clients didn't see a lot of
results.
Just be honest.
I'm talking about the back half.
I mean, I'm not looking at the back. I'm results just be honest. I'm talking about the back half. I mean, I mean, the truth is, I mean, it's this,
even if you're a good trainer, right,
which I would consider myself the back half of my career,
the adherence to, to,
consistent consistency and diet and training is so,
so rare.
That's hard.
That when, you know, so it's actually hard to remember
what that looks like.
If I were to bring an average out,
I'd say it would be incredibly low and bad
because the average is, there's so many more people
that I guess the median, right?
Because the average would count like a lot of the people
that would.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, that's impressive.
It's the bringing it to the depression.
It's, it, well, I mean, you're right.
So this is what, I don't know about you guys. I mean, you guys actually, we're very rare. I'm very proud to get those transformations that were powerful, you're right. So this is what I don't know about you guys.
I mean, you guys actually train.
We're very worried.
We get those transformations that were powerful.
You guys have probably actually trained more clients than I have directly, right?
Indirectly, if you count my years as a fitness manager, indirectly, I had, you know, hundreds,
thousands underneath me through all these trainers, but you guys probably trained more one-on-one
people. I pretty quickly quickly I was over it.
And it was part of that was that.
It's the same reason why when, on the business side,
when people ask me why we don't do,
the mastermind group thing also,
it's like low hanging fruit shit.
It's like, you know what, I have a really hard time with,
and I don't know what this is.
I'd like to say it's my integrity.
I don't even know if that's true or not though.
Is that I have a hard time selling ideas to people
when I know what the failure rate is.
It's, and I just gotta be honest.
I'm challenged.
I'm challenged.
You know, you're saying that though too,
that I 100% that was always in the back of my mind.
I'm not breaking through, I'm not breaking through.
And this is why I reduced my client's
all down to like a few.
Yeah. The higher end model because I just felt like I wasn't doing
as much as I could.
I just changed my expectations.
I started to look at all the other ways that I was helping
these people.
They're showing up.
They're happier.
They feel better.
Yeah, they haven't lost any weight yet because that's tough
and it's hard for them to change their diet.
And then I was honest, I would tell people when they they hire me, I know you wanna lose 30 pounds,
it's gonna take a long time,
some people never do it, you know?
But here's what we're gonna do.
So that would be very honest.
And then if they did lose it, it was like this great surprise.
So I pivot to coaching trainers do it.
So I pivoted over to like,
I'll teach them how to do all this.
I can do it.
I don't know what to do.
This is what I tell people.
But I mean, I love this, right?
This is what I love about this is that it's like,
we can just continue to give all the information
and experience and knowledge that we've acquired
over all these years.
And there's no expectations attached to it for me,
which I love.
I love that.
I love this.
I'm gonna say, give you everything I know, you know what I'm saying?
And so with that, and then you go do it as you,
you go do it as you please. I'll hold you through the other. I'm gonna say to give you everything I know, you know what I'm saying? And so with that, and then you go do it as you please.
You go do it as you please.
I'll hold you through the open.
Yeah, I'm not hired.
I'm not being paid to make sure you're accountable to all of it.
I just, here you go.
You go do what you love with it.
It's not funny and it's more effective.
It's way more fulfilling too, because then we get all these like, you know,
life callers that come on.
It's like, oh my god, this is, then I'm like, oh, I feel so good.
This is why, I mean, this is, this is why I have so much respect for coaches and trainers.
It's like, I can't think of another job
where if you have a 50% fail rate, you're crushing.
Like if you're a trainer, baseball,
and half, that's a 300, that's even more fun.
If you're a trainer and half of your clients
eventually develop long-term success.
You are crushing it.
You're like the most successful,
one of the most successful trainers in the world.
That's how tough it is.
I mean, that's my appreciation for.
I mean, half of your people are in the front.
For the sport of baseball, it's one of the things
that makes it so unique.
I guess you could say basketball there,
but basketball is even a higher shooting percentage.
It would be considered really good.
Yeah, baseball, if you're batting 300, you're a killer.
Imagine what do you think about that?
What a tough mental sport?
Like, it doesn't get enough credit for the mental game
that it has, it's like, you are going to get to the play
and you're gonna fail.
Most of the time, yes.
Seven times at a 10, if you're lucky,
most of the time you probably fail eight times.
Like, that's, you know, like, that takes a lot of,
well, I would've, that would've been
I would've been argue training's harder because you're dealing with people. So you're not striking out. It that's, you know, like that takes a lot of mental discipline. I would even argue training is harder
because you're dealing with people.
So you're not striking out.
It's like, oh, sorry, Mr. Johnson.
And I just, you know, there's nothing else but...
You're not just dealing with your own emotions.
You're dealing with their emotions too, right?
That's why I tell trainers, I say, you know, rule number one,
it's all your fault.
Rule number two, don't own any of it.
Like you gotta do both.
If you're gonna be successful at this, you know,
really tough.
Anyway, I wanna tell you guys about the, we are here in the future.
I just read something the other day. The future is here.
Can you look up that protein for me? I heard about it. So yesterday I did our
meeting with our some of our staff. And I tell, I tell our team, if you guys ever
come across something that you think would be interesting to bring up on the show,
a topic idea or whatever, let me know.
Oh, this came from them?
Yes, came from them.
Oh, I love that.
I think it was Margaret.
I think it was either Robert Margaret that brought this up.
This, no sponsorship or anything like this, I'm not advocating for the company.
I don't know if it's good product.
I just thought this was crazy.
Vegan way protein.
Is that possible?
Okay.
When, when, when, when, when, when,
like, what is the definition of what? When they said that, I was like, wait, how's that possible?
I said, it's animal free, not vegan.
Animals.
So it's animal free.
So it's animal free way protein.
So you couldn't call it.
I know this is very confusing.
It's way, it's animal free and it's not vegan.
They literally make it.
Doug, if you scroll down and tell you how you make it,
I'll say from strawberries.
It smells like animals. No, it'll tell you stuff right there. How we do it? Read that right there, Doug, if you scroll down and tell you how you make it, I'll say from strawberries. It smells like chemicals.
No, it'll tell you stuff right there.
How we do it?
Read that right there, Doug,
where the molecules are on the right there.
What they do is they take microflora
that are given with an exact copy of DNA corresponding
to cow's milk protein.
Infermentation tanks, the flora grazes on flora food
and converts it into animal-free milk protein.
In the final step, the flora is filtered out, leaving pure animal-free way protein that
is identical to the protein found in cow's milk. Is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is, is it, is it, is, is it, is it, is, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is, is it, is it, is it, is, is it, is it, is, is it, is it, is it, is, is it, is it, is it, is, is it, is, is it, is it, is, is it, is, is it, is it, is it, is it, is, is it, is, is it, is, is it, they take bacteria. No, they take bacteria. You have a weird
thing. And they modify the bacteria. I thought they get a bad. Okay, this is confusing to me.
No, they modify the bacteria, but they did, but they get the bacteria originally from
cow's milk. Did I hear you like? No, that's what it sounded like. You're trying to construct
no. Yeah, it's exact copy of the DNA. So they take bacteria. Okay, so they're, it's
through crisper technology, whatever. Okay, so they're, it's through crisper technology
like whatever. Okay, so they're cloning basically
cow's milk. No, no, no, cloning, cloning.
Okay, no, I don't think cloning is right.
Okay, but you know, okay, copying.
Yeah, copy. Okay, they're copying it.
You, you still need the animal milk though for them too.
No, for the 90s.
Nope, you don't need anything.
Cow's could disappear off the face of the earth
and they'll be able to make a way protein.
So they take bacteria, they insert DNA into it
to make the bacteria create the amino acids,
the protein.
So it basically changes the...
Yes.
Oh, interesting.
Yeah.
And now you have way pro...
Well, isn't that pretty much what a probiotic does to our guts?
It goes in and it actually does it modify the bacteria?
Is it just populate new healthy bacteria?
No, no, no, no, no, this is totally different.
This is like, what's our company that we work with?
Seed?
No, for alcohol.
Oh, zybotic.
Zybotic.
Zybotic is bacteria that's been modified.
Right.
This is bacteria that's been modified.
So now it produces way protein.
Hey, does it not look exactly like they hired magic spoons
company to do their, absolutely. It looks exactly the same not look exactly like they hired magic spoons company to do their
job? Absolutely. It looks exactly the same. It looks so much like magic. Now, so if you're a vegan,
right? Now, like real, okay, I'm not going to say who they are. I'm not going to say real
vegans. Vegans, I did say real or fake. Vegans who are consistent, who stay vegans for life,
if you look at the data, are people who actually believe in the betterment of animals and the
wherefor of animals.
This is why they do it.
People who become vegan because they think it's healthier, they have a fail rate like any
diet.
So, vegans who care about animals, don't want to harm any animals, there's protein now
that they can have way protein.
What is this?
How crazy is this?
What's the psychology around why some people are attracted to become activists?
To become activists?
Yeah, do you know?
They need purpose, probably.
You're just guessing.
I'm guessing.
Can you search that for me?
Why do people become activists?
Yeah, I mean, there's got to be a psychological thing
that causes you to want,
to all of a sudden feel this desire or need.
Well, we saw it before.
You know, it's striking for me, right?
Or what's prompting this right now for me.
I watched the Pamela Anderson documentary last night.
So, what was I have to do with it?
She, well after everything went really bad for her
when that video was stolen, they went viral,
like it totally flipped her life upside down
and like they, so really, it's kind of a sad story
when you see kind of her rise and fall.
And one of the things that like reinvigorated her career or her
like purpose or whatever was she decided to use her character that they were basically
kind of mocking so like that to become an activist for PETA. And up to that point, she was
like not vegan, none of those things like that. And she read something or did something
that made her sound to me like she needed a sense of purpose and meaning. Yeah, well, that's why I'm prompted to ask this question
because it, I thought about, I was like,
that's really interesting, right?
Like this is not a person who like her whole life was like,
we went to watch that.
Thought about like saving animals lives and like that.
There's just something happened in her life.
And then it triggered her to become this activist.
And then there's some sort of probably a feedback loop
that's happening psychologically for them to like, oh wow, when I did this, this felt really good.
And so I'm going to do more of it and keep going.
Like, I'm sure, yeah, there's some instances of trauma or things to that might spark them
to want to make a change or a difference.
You got anything from me, Doug?
Yeah.
So it says those who find personal meaning in current events are inclined to speak out
for a cause. Individuals are more likely to feel a personal connection if they see themselves as part
of a community affected by an issue.
So that makes sense, right?
She's been ostracized by most people so that she found a community that would adopt her
and bring her in.
They love her because she's already got leverage and power because of her name.
And so it becomes this beautiful.
She's struggling so cool.
She's got a sense of purpose.
Now Jordan Peterson talked about this when we watch them talk.
He talked about how movements have religious undertones.
Now the ones that tend to be parasitic
are the ones that don't have the complete story.
That don't paint the good and the bad.
They just show the bad or whatever.
And then it's unbalanced, but I mean, that's what it is.
All right, more cool science stuff.
I've been reading about fat loss in cannabinoids.
Did you guys know that people that use cannabinoids
on a regular basis?
This is cool.
Every time you say cannabinoids,
I can't help but think of avoidinidinolid.
Oh, that's older than that.
I hate when I try and use that.
I messed it up, I don't know.
Dominoes, Domino's pizza.
God, they're gonna bring him back, you guys know that?
No, they did.
They brought him back to the board.
They brought him back like a year ago or whatever.
Did I miss that?
Yeah, I thought you talked about it.
In fact, I think we brought it up on the podcast.
I think we did.
Did you forget your introduction?
This was plea peptides.
Yeah.
Can we come up with an acronym like BCAD,
you know, for just like pre-P.
Yeah, no, it's J-P-J-P.
J-P-P.
Just in J-P-P. Yeah. Justin, J-P-P-P.
So, are you seeing this now in supplements?
Is that what you know?
Well, no, we'll also check this out.
And so, this is at risk of selling, you know,
cannabinoids as fat loss.
So, we're not gonna go there, but it is interesting
that people that utilize cannabinoids on a regular basis
tend to consume more calories.
Okay, well, that's not surprising.
They tend to stimulate appetite.
But they're also leaner.
They have lower BMI's.
So this is like this, and this is well studied.
So I look it up and I've seen all these studies on it
and it's like this paradox.
People use a lot of cannabinoids, consume more calories
and yet have lower BMI.
The theory is that the CB1 receptor,
so this is what a receptor that cannabinoids attach to.
Cannabinoids CBD doesn't attach to the cannabinoid receptors, but it definitely modulates them.
THC obviously, and there's a plethora of cannabinoids in the hemp plant that activate the CB1
and CB2 receptors.
The CB1 receptor plays a role in energy metabolism in the body.
So they think, speed up the metabolism. So cannabinoids speed up the metabolism or
or they don't control for how high these people are. They thought they ate. Yeah, they really did.
Wow, actually, I'm pretty sure I had a whole pizza. Yeah, I'm gonna report that. Well, I don't know.
Anyway, we work with a company called Ned
that has full spectrum employee like stress.
Not saying it helps you provide fat.
We'll look up the study.
Great, commercial like that.
It is kind of weird.
We look at that.
You know what, I'm really interested.
We have a, when does the Chris Williamson episode go, Doug?
Yeah, so this one goes out on, I think tomorrow.
Oh, awesome.
So this would be cool.
I'm really fascinated by that.
What's it called the region beta paradox that he talked about?
I think that's a really interesting conversation
that I've never really heard anyone talk about before.
So he explained.
Many people get trapped in. Totally. So the way he explained, many people get trapped in.
Totally. So the way he explains that he tells such, he uses such a good analogy.
He says, imagine that there's something that's a mile away.
So it's close enough to walk. So you walk a mile to your destination.
And let's say that takes you 30 minutes to get there.
But now imagine that that same destination is two miles away.
So like, as too far to walk, let me get in the car.
So now you drive there and only takes you seven minutes.
So the paradox is you get somewhere faster
that's further because you're using a car.
And the examples he gives are like,
you're in a relationship, it's not great,
but it's not so bad that it forces you to leave.
So you stick around.
But if it just got worse, you'd leave
and then turn your life around
and get into a better relationship.
So it's called the region beta paradox.
And I think a lot, I think a lot, I mean, I can remember a time in my life.
I think I've mentioned it before on the show when the time in my life,
before I left 24-hour fitness, I would say there was a good three to four years.
I was stuck in that paradox.
I was content with the amount of money I made. I liked what I did. I liked being in
the gym. You all remember that environment. It was a fun work environment, but deep down in the
back of my mind, I knew I wanted more. I knew I wanted to do much more, but I was contenting.
I didn't, there wasn't enough to shake me up. And to be honest, I'm very grateful
for the stuff that had happened right before I left
because it was enough to kind of rattle me
and run around.
And some happened right before?
Yeah, so it was in combination.
So like I had a, and it probably took this,
both these things happening.
We had, like the seventh compound plan change
since I had worked there, right?
So by the way,
a compound change is code for, we're gonna pay less. Yeah, we're, like the seventh compound plan change since I had worked there. Right.
By the way, a compound change is code for, we're gonna pay less.
Yeah, we're taking money out of your paycheck.
That's right.
Well, and here's the thing that I will give 24-of-fitness
their flowers for is they, they actually, every time they
change the compound up into this point, they still left a door
open for the top, top performer to still go out and get
his money.
Right.
They made me work harder and I had to go do some other things, but it was still the opportunity
was there.
Like, they made it and what they were what they were continuing to do is just like, all
right, if we're going to keep paying these people this kind of money, they're going to
have to do this, this, this, this.
You know, we can't do this in this.
What eventually happened and what was really the straw
that broke the camel's back with me was they put a ceiling.
It didn't matter.
How much I did or how much I sold or how well over goal.
It kept it.
It kept it.
They put a cap.
To a guy like you.
And that would have killed me too.
Yeah, I mean, it's like taking a limb for me or something.
You know what I'm saying?
I was no longer fully completely more.
So I was already there and then I get somebody offering me
more money than I've ever made in my life
to go and pursue this medical marijuana field
that I knew nothing about.
I knew nothing about.
But you didn't even smoke weed at this time.
I did it, I did it.
I didn't.
In fact, that was kind of an anti-wee guy for sure.
So, could I-
Hold on, did you tell, I never asked you this.
Did you tell the people
at 24 fitness what you were gonna do?
I didn't not only tell them,
but the first canvas club we opened was right
down the street.
Across the street.
Yeah.
You know those medical right there
and say, I'm treason of crossing part of it.
That was our first club.
Oh my, were they like, so I used to go back and forth.
Yeah, I'm leaving fitness, you're gonna go sell weed.
Yeah, well, you know what happens.
It's very, very, very told you this story when we were,
this is, remember, I was completely green to like weed.
Like it, so I'm still like easy my way into trying it
and how I feel.
And I was at the, I was getting,
we were just starting to build a store up.
People, vendors were coming in and dropping off samples
for us to try and stuff like that.
And I am running this club,
so I'm gonna try these things so I can communicate about them,
learning all about them.
And so I would try all these different strengths.
This guy comes in one morning with these teas
and coffees and hot chocolates,
all these pre-packaged stuff,
and tells me the dosage that's in there,
so with that, I said,
listen, I'm really sensitive to this stuff.
You know, is this high dose load?
Oh no, no, no, it's very, very mild.
You probably won't even feel it. Maybe a little bit if you had like this one or that one or what that.
So I decided to try it. And at noon, I had to go back and do a talk at 24 of fitness.
And I got so fucking high. It was one of the worst experiences of my life.
Still bit the talk? Yeah. I can't tell you. I have no idea. I said, and nobody was the
wiser, but it was so like inside the anxiety that was my, my, my drips of sweat off my palms.
I was so like nervous and, and it felt like it was the longest talk of my life. And I thought I
rambled and mumbled and just, it was up there with like one of the most,
you know, awful experiences that I ever went through.
But yeah, I was, so yeah, I was, I was going back.
But if it wasn't for the combination of someone offering
or ridiculous money and I just recently got that news,
also actually, we had a new GM came in.
So I was working with this girl that was relatively new
the company we adopted her from Circuit City
when they did that whole merge.
So I now have a partner.
So at the gyms, GM FM and OM were partners.
It was like the three of us ran a club together.
And I always got along with my GMs.
And so at that, and here I get this person who's an outsider
because they come from another company,
and maybe in circuit city, she was really good.
She just didn't know shit about fitness.
And then she was trying to micromanage me
and because she wasn't in, she didn't.
She's not in your, you're not exactly
the most political computer.
Oh, man.
And I had a reputation in the space
if you've been there for a long enough.
So I got the respect for my peers,
but if you didn't know who I was,
who she did it.
So she comes in like all authoritarian,
not knowing her shit.
Yeah, so it took all of that to finally rock my world.
And then of course I look back.
Now one of the best decisions I ever made in my life,
although scary and difficult,
not necessarily like necessary,
it could have stayed there.
So I mean, how many people get trapped in this place
physically, emotionally, in relationships, in work?
I immediately think of all the cubicles out there.
Yeah, like what, it's that comfortably numb,
as they call it, right?
Like you just get in, you check in,
you do the nine to five, you go home,
and it's just like, you're getting paid just enough
to keep going, but you're just not really motivated to look for another job because this is the safe thing
This is where everything's like controlled. You know how many startups like that now where these amazing companies that
Happened because of recessions where people got they lost their jobs
Yeah, and they were brilliant, but they were you know like this they were comfortable or whatever they lost
So like all right, I'm gonna start a company.
I'm already fired, let me just take this big risk.
It's crazy to think that,
and the whole idea of the paradox is that, you know,
something negative or worse happening to you
would actually be better.
Yeah, that's the, that's life, man.
That, it's crazy to think that you,
if you were in that position that you technically should be
wishing or praying for, something traumatic or bad to happen to you to kind of sh- It's crazy to think that if you were in that position that you technically should be wishing
or praying for something traumatic or bad to happen to you to kind of...
And wake you up.
How about this?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I mean, many times I think those things happen and then we instead of using that as a
sign or motivation to move you in the right direction, we take the victim role. Hey, I said, I'm from me or poor me versus like, oh, it's a sign. I need to move you in the right direction, we take the victim role.
Hey, I said, for me or poor me,
my son, I need to move my ass.
I mean, my severe gut health issues that I had
in my early 30s that literally were terrible.
It was a year of tell.
If that never happened to me,
and when it's happening, that's the thing.
When you're in the middle of it,
you don't think, oh, this is good for me.
You think this sucks.
This is terrible.
But if that never happened to me,
I would have never pursued wellness and health
the way that I did after.
I was a meathead up into that point.
I would have never moved in the direction
of the voice that you hear now on the podcast.
Had I not gone through that health crisis?
Yeah, you wouldn't have started eating organic food.
No, I bring that,
because you guys see that video from Whole Foods.
Talking about Whole Foods.
Yeah, it's like on what is this?
ABC.
It was like some piece that they were talking about actually their brand.
It was like 365 organic.
I think is there.
So a lot of the frozen, the frozen vegetables that they get are
directly from China, and which is not regulated specifically.
And it says organic.
And there's same guys of how they regulate organic foods here.
And so people are like, wow, I didn't know.
It was very sneaky,
because you look on the back of the label
and you could see direct from China
or like process in China or made in China.
And people started to be like,
so what is this?
I didn't know that that was Whole Foods.
So I read about this.
I don't know any specific brands because so you guys know this would be doing this long
enough.
The organic market was so small when I was back in the day when I was training that in
order to find organic food, you had to go to an organic grocery store and Whole Foods
was the only place.
You couldn't find organic foods at Safeway, Lucky, Albertsons, anywhere else.
Now they have whole sections and it's a huge market.
Costco didn't have organic food.
And then it totally exploded.
And the market demand was so high that American organic producers couldn't meet demand.
So they import the hell out of these foods. And you're right when it's coming from a country like China,
they don't have the same regulations.
No, no, no.
And it's also open the door because it's so competitive now
for all these shady gray areas.
Like you ever see, you gotta be careful
with grass-fed beef even, that it's grass-finished.
Grass-fed grass-finished.
It's very in the categories that that would be.
Yeah, they can categorize it as grass-fed beef
if they fed it most its life beef.
But yeah, for the last two,
or whatever I think is the last two weeks,
or a month or whatever that,
they fatten them up,
like creating my pump in them full of grains and stuff.
No, maybe look this up.
I think grass-fed technically means
that they only have to be fed grass for like,
it's a small, it's not even,
it's not even a week or something.
Yeah, it's not even like half their life or something like,
or maybe half their life, it was something small.
And then after that, they feed him.
And remember, when you're in these
for profit businesses, that they're going to skate the lines
as closely as possible.
Just like I always talk about the 20% room for air on labels,
it's like if you are naive to think that you're a weight loss type of food, right?
Like you advertise you advertise low calorie high protein, you're not going to lie by 20%
because you're technically not quote unquote lying because that's part of how they they
allow that room for air.
So it's like they're going to skirt those lines.
What's it say, Doug?
Yeah.
So cattle that were started on a grass diet, but have either received supplemental
grain feed or are finished on a fully grain based diet or considered grass fed.
Okay.
I'm not seeing it.
But what constitutes grass fed?
Yeah. That's what I got basically.
I did.
Yeah. I'm trying to find the details here.
Interesting.
Speaking of weird stuff, what do you guys think of that video of Paul Pelosi?
Okay, so here's,
going back on this before I get into that,
grass fed standard is built on two key criteria,
namely a minimum of 90% of an animal's diet
during their lifetime on a fresh weight basis.
Whatever that means,
it must be grass or grass-based forages.
Okay, better than I thought.
Anyway, Paul Pelosi.
Okay, so this whole thing happens, right?
I'm even more confused.
Some guy, super confused.
Some guy attacked him with a hammer in his house called it.
Wait, lay out the beginning, Sal, for me,
like how, like, when it,
how did they portray this initially?
Yeah, he calls, he called Capitol Police,
but the regular cops show up.
And the story was that he got attacked by some crazy person
who drove them to his house.
Right in the bathroom and he called or something like that.
And he got hit by a hammer and it was attacked at whatever.
And so then you had like these conspiracy theories
were like, actually it's his lover
and you know, they're covering something up
and then the other side is like,
no, this person was attacking.
Anyway, they showed the video,
the body cam video from the cops.
And it just made me more confused because they opened the door.
First of all, Paul Pelosi opened the door.
So they're frozen together, right?
Just looking at the car.
And he's like, he looks like he's almost holding the guy's hand.
And he's got a drink in the other hand.
Like he's got an alcoholic beverage.
He's got no pants on.
He's still had ice.
He's got a button up shirt with no pants and barefoot.
And a mixed ring.
And he's holding a lot to look like a beer or something.
And then the other hand, he's like gingerly holding his wrist.
He's not like gripping, he's like,
like almost like he's holding his hand,
but he's holding his wrist.
And that dude has got a hammer and his other hand.
And when he answers the door to the cops,
he says like, hey, what's up?
Hey guys.
And then there's this weird awkward moment
of nothing happening.
And then also the dude with the hammers
are swinging and paul below.
He went for it, no doubt.
Now there's video of the guy breaking into his house
with the hammer.
So he did break in.
It's just the weird, like, you open the door that way,
plus he wanted capital police,
he didn't want the regular police.
So there's like, oh, it's just seemed like
they're waiting for the police to show up
to then all of a sudden now we're gonna do the drama.
But it is that.
Like, I was so, again, like, to me,
it's just like so many questions that it's hard for me
to just take it as just, oh, this guy broke in.
And part of me is like, maybe he was like,
trying to keep the guy calm.
So he's like, let me just go see who's at the door,
and let me just see what's happening, right?
So maybe that, I don't know though,
if I do broken my house on the hammer.
She's still here.
Yeah, if a guy broke in my house with a hammer though,
I don't know if I'd answer the door of the cops,
like, I'd be like, hell, man!
You know, I'd run out of whatever.
Yeah, exactly, like, oh, you're here, huh?
Yeah, but I don't know.
Something.
It feels totally staged, but what I can't wrap my brain around is why?
Oh, yeah.
Like, what is the desired outcome of staging something like that?
I don't think it was staged.
I think there's more to the story, though.
Obviously, there's more to the story.
I mean, you have to hold the intriguing.
Well, it feels like they are...
What crazy is how this will get between the two then, whatever that was?
What's crazy is how this will get brushed the two then, whatever that was. What's crazy is how this will get brushed
under the rug as like no big deal.
And no one will be talking about it in a week, right?
And I just think it's like, there's something here
that is very obvious if you watch that video.
Like this, that is not, there's nothing normal
about that situation.
And to just be like, oh, he was like a random attacker
and that's what happened.
And then he's now, you know, doing 30 days in jail
like that.
And then we just, we're on going about our business
is just, I don't know.
I know.
I watched the video like 10 times.
I'm like, why is he holding a drink?
Why is he holding his wrist that way?
Why is he smiling?
Yeah, Katrina didn't want to watch it.
I made her watch it.
I was like, you have to watch this and try and explain to me
what you see her.
She's like, what the fuck?
This is weird.
Yes.
Like, I don't get it, dude.
I have something to do.
I can't figure this out right now.
Oh, do that.
Those videos on YouTube, the Aussie Man commentaries.
Yes.
I want him to do a commentary on it, that would be fantastic.
What are those?
What is he saying?
That Aussie man, he like, there's videos playing
and he speaks with a real strong author.
Oh, that's the guy who does hilarious.
Every once in a while I see those go viral
where they're doubting over like the,
a lot of times they do it with them,
like senators and stuff like that.
Is that who you talking about?
No, no, no, that's bad lip reading, but I love those things.
Oh, that's my favorite.
I like those are great.
Those are good.
So, like you have to really,
to be able to, looks like that's what they're saying.
Like I wonder how long it takes, because like you probably, yeah, you watch is it without the sound looks like that. Yeah, it looks like that's what they're saying like I wonder how I want how long it says because like
That's right. Yeah, you probably like yeah
Watches it without the sound and all that and he's just probably looking at it and like just probably writing notes of like
It kind of looks like he said turkey or whatever
Yeah, do you do you think that person has like a lip reading skill going into that?
And that's why he can do that because that would think about what the skill would take to do that. To actually script something without spending hours.
We're in that skill.
I don't know.
Lippery?
Maybe he's deaf.
Oh yeah, that's true.
That would actually be interesting to look into that
because you have to have a skill to be able to listen
to it silently and then come up with a funny
weird kid that's very observant.
You know, he's just looking at some really
absurd scenarios.
I agree with Justin.
Oh, you don't think it's weird enough yet? with Justin. Yeah, I think he's worthy of that.
And creative.
Yeah, I don't think it's.
I've known kids like that.
Oh, no, I bet he's got a lip or he's still.
You know, kids like that.
Yeah, those are just like, dude, this was the past time of mine.
Like we would sit on a bench and we would like portray,
you know, characters for these people that walk by.
And we would like make up stories for them
and like, you know, boy, so we,
we do that all the time.
I did.
Hey, let me take a look at that.
But you could treat it like first for a day.
So she's, she loves people watching, right?
So she's like, she's like, my favorite.
So do I.
Well, I think it's part of the gym, right?
When you work in the gym, like that was one of my favorite parts.
By the way, gym, like companies figured this out.
They used to make the cardio face the TVs.
Yeah.
New gyms, the cardio faces the weight room
because people prefer to watch people
instead of the TV.
It's way more entertaining.
Yeah. So what I,
Katrina and I would always do this.
We did this for years when we first started dating
and we would be out on dates and so on that.
And we'd see another couple
and we would pretend to have their conversation.
Yeah.
So she would take on the role of the chick guy,
take on the role of the guy
and we would be watching them in the corner of our eyes
but then we'd been trying to act out with her.
Have you guys ever done this?
This has happened to Jessica and I, like watching TV shows and I think might even happen with their stuff. Have you guys ever done this? This has happened to Jess and I, like watching TV shows.
And I think it might even happen in public once.
Have you guys ever had an argument with your significant other by proxy?
Like in other words, you're watching a TV show and the couple is getting
their arguments.
Something that's kind of in course.
And then you take the guy's side and then she takes a girl and then you end up
getting a fight.
Or the TV show.
I hate that so bad.
That happened to us. It's like paying attention to Linda. and then you end up getting a fight. Or the TV show, I hate that so bad.
That happened to us.
It's like paying attention to Linda.
Well, she's acting crazy.
Maybe she's acting crazy on that.
Whoa, he's not paying us.
We'd go back and forth.
It happened a couple of times at the end.
I was like, this is so stupid.
Why are you over TV show?
That's what you think?
We're fighting over a reality show.
That's like we're gonna get a fight because it's some dream.
Your wife has the night before. That's what I'm saying. You know, Katrina is the when you're getting a fight because of some dream you know, your wife has the night before.
Oh, that's sad.
That, you know, Katrina is notorious for that one.
I'm gonna tell you.
She gets mad at you for three times.
She has very like vivid dreams.
I mean, I told you, she has like the dream book.
They all mean some of the, so there'll be times
she wakes up and she's just like in a bad mood with me.
And I'm just like, what is wrong with you?
She's like, I had a bad, I had a bad dream about you.
And like giving me me this dirty look,
like I did something on my way.
Wait, see, you're gonna be mad at me
because of your crazy history.
How's that work?
You did it in my dream.
I know.
Speaking of dreaming, the goal juice for more GANIFI,
I just started using that again before bed.
So relaxing. It does help with sleep. using that again before bed. So relaxing.
It does help with sleep, it really does.
Very, very relaxing.
Now you do that like in a, like warm it up.
Yes.
Yeah, that's what we do.
Yes, macadamia nut milk.
Okay.
Yeah, and I have one of those,
one of those things called this little
swifter or swifter,
or swifter,
or swifter.
You guys are in the bathroom.
Swiffer is what you do, you're flour.
No, you see the swifter.
Yes, swifter.
You know what though?
That sounds like a should be. I know. Somebody was like, I'm gonna No, you see the swifter. Yeah, you know what though? I that sounds like a should be I know somebody was like
I'm gonna start a company a swifter
It's a brand. Can you you can you sweep my drink real quick make sure it's all twisted
Real good, but no back in the day. We had that not milk warm about an hour before bed
Ah, do you know what their top products are sold have they their green juice? I know that's one of them. Yeah, I know that's one of the
No, they've is that because they've just had it the longest oh their top products are sold. Have they? The green juice. I know that's one of them. Yeah.
I know that's one of them.
No, they've, is that because they've just had it the longest?
Oh, I was speculated.
Yeah.
It's got the mocha during.
It's got the mocha during.
It's got the mocha during.
It's got the mocha during.
It's got the mocha during.
It's got the mocha during.
It's got the mocha during.
It's got the mocha during.
It's got the mocha during.
It's got the mocha during.
It's got the mocha during.
It's got the mocha during.
It's got the mocha during.
It's got the mocha during.
It's got the mocha during.
It's got the mocha during. It's got the mocha during. It's got the mocha during. It's got the mocha during. It's got the mocha during. the time because my entire fitness career, I knew I under eight vegetables.
And so I was wise enough to attempt to do green juices and they always tasted like
yeah, great.
Yeah.
I remember I remember like literally drinking these green juices and being like, fucking
the terrible vegetables are better.
Like I'll just eat the stupidest vegetables because I didn't like vegetables right?
I had those like sprout thing.
It's like you're literally just eating a hedge.
They were, it was terrible.
And then when we got introduced to Organified,
they were honestly the first green juice
that actually tasted good.
I was like, not bad.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, it's the stuff that they would make you eat,
not Organified, but like the greens, stuff like the sprouts
and stuff, like when I would eat that,
I just think to myself, like this is what people would eat when they can't find food.
What am I to cow?
Yeah, like if you're starving, this is what you would eat
because there's no food.
Otherwise, why would you eat this?
What's that?
What is that that?
They used to do this at smoothie bars
where they would juice something for you
and it's a dark green.
Oh yeah, wheat grass.
This grass is good.
Yeah.
What nasty.
Terrible.
But the corell apparently in it
is supposed to be really good for you
because it mimics or it looks like red blood cells.
That's the selling point.
I never got benefit.
Is the chlorophyll the stuff that you had me take in
way back in your COVID days?
And that was that chlorophyll?
Oh, that's chlorine.
No, no, no, no,
what was the thing?
Those droppers,
those illegal droppers you gave me.
Yeah, that's,
wait, what was that?
It was a chisler.
It wasn't it for one, it wasn't now.
It was a chlorine dioxide. It was chlorine dioxide. Told you chlorine. Oh, that'll see. It was for one, it wasn't now. It was chlorine dioxide.
It was chlorine dioxide.
Told you chlorine.
Oh, that's a chlorophyll.
I don't remember.
Yeah, it was very green.
But you don't dare say that because you'll get,
I'll get a lot of heat now.
No, I just, that's like more of a possibility.
No, you know what, let me see here, don't go anywhere.
But chlorophyll, by the way, you know, if you have heavy metals,
that's good for getting those out of your body.
That's just...
I ran a poll because I have the Mind Put Media thing today and I was just interested in all of them.
You didn't get the Mind Put Media page?
A little bit.
No, no, I just, okay, so I was just curious.
Like, I asked about how many people got to vaccine.
This is what I brought up the other day about.
Now that all a lot of stuff is coming out,
I was voicing my frustration with my friends and family
that like haven't like come forward and like apologize
or even admitted like, I kind of regretted it or whatever, right?
And so I was like, you know, okay,
that's my own personal experience.
And maybe that's just a few people in my life.
I wonder if that's the, you know,
the average person who pays attention or listens
to us or what that.
So I did a poll and they're just saying, like, how many people got the vaccine?
How many got it?
Didn't get it?
Regret it and don't regret it.
And the number that I was most interested in was the, how many people got it?
And then if they were not regretted and not regretted it it and 24% of the people that took the poll in our
audience got it and of the 24% 26% of those people regretted it.
Wow, full quarter.
Yeah, yeah.
And only only 6% admitted that they didn't regret it.
So that was a very, very small percentage of people who got it that follow us.
Obviously this is interesting bit of a bias.
You know what I'm seeing now, and I don't know,
this is what I hate about politics,
is that the politics, politicians, political parties,
use the media very effectively.
So I don't know what to believe half the time.
So you know what I'm noticing now?
I'm noticing all these articles from right wing, right?
Propaganda, right propaganda,
you know, I guess outlets,
that every day they'll post a new young person
that died randomly.
Every day.
So-and-so, 24-year-old died suddenly.
So-and-so, 36-year-old died.
And I'm like, you know, young people die all the time.
Are they doing this to make people,
of course they can participate in a way?
Of course they can participate in a way.
You can see a method.
That's why they're just as guilty.
You'd numbers from when we were in, you know, the,
cause that's the thing.
It's like you, you want like this emotional response.
And so to drum that up, sometimes you got to.
One of the, one of the best things that ever happened to the radical right or Fox news
is when the crazy left comes out with some bullshit because then they can counter it.
Now they have, then they're playwright.
Of course they playwright.
I have family members that are,
you gotta be able to see that too.
This is okay, so I don't love this.
Well, maybe I do,
because I'm kind of an asshole this way,
but I have family members that are like super conservative,
and I mean, super to the point where they love
the propaganda side of it.
And they'll share stuff like that all the time.
Oh my God, another kid died.
You know, 17, another person died.
What's going on?
I'm like, there's 300 million people in America.
This happens every day.
Are you sure that you're not manipulating you just like?
No, the other side, manipulate.
It's not this, are they okay?
That's how you know you're getting manipulated.
100% I know.
Meanwhile, they're all having lunch together after lunch, hey, you guys want to hear a stupid study
I love studies that are as long as it's really stupid
It's just it's just it's just sometimes I look at studies and I really did you really fun this? Okay, so there was a study
I thought I was about most studies just so you know there was a
Adam like what are studies?
Dinosaur's aren't real hey, I don't you know, I just, do you think dinosaurs were real?
Yeah, no, I don't.
Actually, there are bunch of bones that were,
that they put, have you ever seen the thing?
You know what, Jason, Jason, Jason,
Justin put me down in the rabbit hole
because I heard him make a comment.
Wait, are you really?
Can you put this on me?
Yeah, he made a comment about something
and I'm like, I have never searched this before.
I have never taken it.
Where are you going, guys?
That is how you can arrange dinosaur bones to create like like actual animal other animals
And yeah, and so there's this there's obviously conspiracy theorists that are like no
You know all he did was take a mixture of a bear and this and that and then you put this bone for that
And you you put them all together and then you get this like dry
Serzo femur't fit on any other animal.
Yeah, it's possible.
That's what I'm saying.
I do not believe that, by the way.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I know before you get a bunch of,
but so here, so dumb study, okay.
So they did a study and they said,
you know, what can people do to prevent themselves
from cheating?
So people who have a tendency to want to stray,
like what's an effective thing they can do?
And so they, the study concluded that if they put themselves
in the other person's shoes,
they were less likely to steal.
Stupid.
Oh, like what?
That's the conclusion.
Imagine if you got cheated on,
who I would have liked that.
Mark that down.
I think we found the secret everybody.
This is a study.
Love them.
The dumb study.
Who you have fairly?
Really? Oh, I got a YouTube page this time.
So this was shared to me by Rob, who works for us.
It's a YouTube page for kids.
We has a little, he has a two year old.
And he says, you gotta check out this YouTube channel.
It's really fun.
My kid loves it.
It's songs for littles.
It's a YouTube channel for little kids.
He said it's really great.
I watched it for two seconds.
Looks cool, but I haven't really looked at all things.
So I'm gonna caution with that
because Katrina's the one who's stricter about this
than I am is like, we don't really allow max on YouTube
because how easily they can,
cause the ads and everything.
Ads and how they can,
real quickly they can be watching a child's children thing
and because it's connected to a dinosaur
that's connected to Jurassic Park, the movie,
which is the connected to an actor that's in there
is now connected and then before you know it,
you get this adult content that they're looking at.
That happened to my daughter.
She was on YouTube when she was little
and I was looking at what she was watching
and it was, it was superhero stuff.
So Spider-Man, Superman, Wonder Woman,
and they were tying up Wonder Woman,
almost like BDSM.
They were tying her up and doing stuff to her,
and I'm like, what the hell turned that off?
That was like purpose.
Do you remember that?
Yeah, the Spider-Man guy,
yeah, they filmed it specifically to get in that category.
Yeah, I mean, I'm super,
Katrina's got me all paranoid about them now,
and I saw this.
This shenanigans they need to clean up.
Let's just put that one.
Yeah, of all the platforms, it's actually the one that I'm
most weary about with him being on because of how quickly
you can go down the rabbit hole.
Plus, I also read and they're trying to figure out how to fix
this in the comments of videos.
There are people that will post links and places to search for,
you know, like not good stuff.
Like they'll put like code words and there's a link.
So, like people looking for like, you know,
underage sexual content or whatever.
We'll go to a video, look in the comments,
that's where they find the stuff.
So there's big investigation going on about that.
I know, kill them all.
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All right, here comes the rest of the show.
Our first caller is Pam from California.
Hey, Pam, how can we help you?
Hey guys, well, first I wanna thank you for having me on.
And it's really great to listen to a podcast
that's informative and entertaining.
Thank you. Thank you. I am asking about hormones for a parimony, parimony,
parimony, and a pausal woman. I'm just going to read my question. I'm wondering if you have
any answers regarding parimony, parietal metapausal women getting estrogen
replacement therapy and how it affects you in regards to weight, muscle mass and body fat.
Great question. Can I ask you what your symptoms were and why you went on estrogen?
I did not go on estrogen. I don't want to go on estrogen. So a little context. I'm 46.
So a little context. I'm 46. I have been a lifelong cardio girl until about last June. And since then I have gained about 10 pounds. Some of it intentionally, some of it not. And I granted I probably needed to gain some of that weight. I started with night sweats a few months ago and a few years ago I started having a lot of issues
with sleep. So my concern is weight gain. I'm not gonna lie. I am a fitness
fanatic and I want to stay lean. I want to stay fit. And.
Okay, great question.
So Pam, you might if I ask you some more questions.
Yeah.
Okay.
Do you have a history of any dysfunctional eating
or a, let's say unhealthy?
Okay.
When I was in college, so I was like 20, 25 years old.
But as you know, those thoughts don't totally go away.
Yeah, they never do. They never do. I can totally relate to that because I struggle with
my own body image issues. And they'll still rear their, it'll still rear its head when
I'm under stress or I feel like life's a little out of control. You said you gained 10
pounds and you kind of made the comment that you feel like, well, you probably should
have gained or you needed to gain that 10 pounds. Last April I was about a buck 12.
Okay.
And which was way to I'm 5'7, way too skinny for me I know that. So I intentionally increased
my calories from about probably 2,000 calories to around 2,300. By the summer I was around
116, I was happy with that. And then I started, I got your book. I started one of your programs
June 1st. I ran that. Then I tried KB4A. I like that. Then I did anabolic and
I gained the rest of the way pretty much from when I started anabolic until now. Okay, and you're five seven, so that puts you at what, 122?
Yeah.
Okay.
How would you feel about intentionally trying
to put on more body weight and body fat?
Well, I backed off going on the scale so much.
I had a, I had a text that's done in November
because I was freaking out about it. And my body fat at that time was around 14 and a half percent.
Yeah, okay, so I've been doing this a long time, okay?
And just based on the way that you're answering my questions and some of the information that you're giving me,
I'm going to say that in the you've had some kind of issues with body image in the past.
Yeah, I think a lot of what you may be feeling
is due to the fact that you probably need
to put on more weight and more body fat.
The female body in particular is quite sensitive
to being too lean or too high under stress, physical stress.
So if you exercise a lot,
you're not necessarily feeding yourself enough,
then you'll start to exhibit symptoms of low estrogen
or you may have low estrogen
or you'll have an imbalance of estrogen and progesterone.
And you'll notice things like low libido, irritability,
sleep disturbances, hair, skin and nails.
We'll seem like they're not as healthy.
Obviously, go ahead.
I'm sorry, the thing is,
I've always been skinny.
Like, I've never had a problem with my weight.
But when I started your programs, I intentionally, like, cut out a lot of cardio.
So because I needed to be, I wanted to do your program and gave some strength and gave some muscle.
So I don't know.
Well, if you were my client,
and by the way, this is gonna be,
this is not, this will be hard, okay?
It's gonna be hard for you.
Yeah.
For a couple of reasons, one,
because of your past, that you're afraid of gaining weight,
you're not weighing yourself,
so that tells me right there that you may be triggered
from seeing the scale,
changing direction you don't want to.
It's gonna be tough, but I would say try and move in that direction,
try and move in the direction, continue moving in the direction
of strength, of eating more calories.
In particular, you want to give yourself the essential nutrients,
fats and proteins, although carbohydrates are not bad, so I would eat carbs as well.
But really push yourself and move yourself in that direction.
Don't weigh yourself on the scale. Your best gauge is going to be your strength in the gym.
In fact, do you, you're following some of our programs? Do you have maps, power lift?
No, actually, I'm finishing aesthetic now, and I was going to do strong.
Strong is fine, but I think Power Lift would be even better, because the goal that I would want you to focus on
is strengthening. If your strength is moving up, you're going in the right direction.
Also, what it'll do is it'll take your focus away from body to performance.
And that is, in my experience, when I've worked with people in your situation, the easiest
transition is to go from body to performance. To go from body to ignoring the body to,
it's like you need to focus on something. So if I can get you to focus on strength and
all you do is single-mindedly,
I want to get my bench press, my deadlift, and my squat to go up. And if those are going
up, then you're doing the right thing. If they're not going up, then you probably need to
eat more. You probably need to bump your calories a little more. So just try to get as strong
as you can with maps power lift. I'll send that to you. I'm going to send that over to.
I also want you in the forum, Pam, because I am in your forum. Ohlith. I'll send that to you. I'm gonna send that over to you. I also want you in the forum, Pam,
because I am in your forum.
Oh, wonderful.
I want updates.
I want you to tag me, tag the guys.
Let us know what's going on,
because you're gonna need to support this entire time,
because here's what's gonna happen.
You're gonna get stronger.
You're gonna do what I'm saying.
You're just okay, South said, eat more, push the strength.
Then you may notice, clothes may start to feel different.
You notice your legs feel a little different.
You're gonna want that support along the way.
Now, what's gonna come along with that?
Is improvements in mood, improvements in energy,
improvements in sleep.
All that will start to follow,
but strength is gonna be the gauge I want you to measure,
the entire time.
So if your strength is going up,
you're moving in the right direction, that'll be the best indicator that you're doing the thing,
everything the right way. At the end of that, if you've gained lots of strength, you start
to feel good, I doubt you're going to need to go on something like estrogen. You know,
body fat can have a significant impact on a woman's hormone levels, having two little
body fat or not or overtraining or not feeding yourself enough
or a combination of all three,
almost always will cause a hormone imbalance, almost always.
So once you fix those, then you may notice that you're like,
okay, I think I feel a lot better.
I go ahead.
Go ahead.
I'm sorry.
No, I was gonna make a comment that I actually think
that we're the wrong professionals in this conversation, No, I just, I was gonna make a comment that I, I actually think that we're the wrong professionals
in this, in this conversation.
Meaning that I know, I know your desired outcome
of asking us cause you respect our knowledge
around weight training and body composition
and that is our expertise.
But I also think that's the wrong focus for you right now.
Like that's, like you, you need to do what's best
for your body and the advice that Salis giving
I think is excellent advice. But the best support I think that you can get is from somebody who's like you need to do what's best for your body. And the advice that Sal is giving, I think is excellent advice.
But the best support I think that you can get is from somebody
who's helping you work through all those things that we all,
I think most people have it.
Very few people are willing to admit it and talk about it.
I think the fact that you're open enough to share.
Oh, well, I've gotten like, I'm recovered.
I mean, that was a long time ago.
But those thoughts, they just, they've never, they never go away. You know, that was a long time ago, but those thoughts,
they just, they've never, they never go away.
You know, you're always.
100% 100% and that, and that to me,
this whole thing will be that.
It'll be that the mental battle.
It's less about the X's and O's from us as far as like,
oh, follow this eating and do this training.
It's like more of like these things are gonna rear its head.
I need to make sure I'm mentally prepared for it.
Stay the core.
Do it, yeah, support.
Do what's healthy for my body,
not necessarily what I maybe want or wanna see.
You know, and so I do like the idea
they'll be in the forum.
I think that we can be a great support,
but absolutely, your body's probably asking you
to put on a little bit of weight.
And I think after you do that,
I think you will sort of see things move in the right direction.
And focusing on strength is just a great,
in your case, it's a healthy distraction,
it's a healthy direction.
Because what's gonna be tough for you
is to change your focus and not have it go on something else.
Because it's gonna wanna go there.
So if I could take your single-minded focus,
you said you're fitness fanatic, so I know you have that.
If you could take your single-minded focus
and make it strength and say, okay,
I'm gonna follow Mass Power Lift.
Let's see what I can do in the three big lifts.
Let's see what I can hit in those three big lifts.
It'll be a great, it'll give you enough space
for you to move in the right direction.
And then that space, it gives you the space for awareness
is what it does, okay?
So I'm giving you all the kind of like,
you know, why we do it, but I think that's the right direction.
And then yeah, Adam's absolutely right.
Like if this is challenging in any more mental aspect,
then yeah, you're probably gonna wanna work
with someone along the way.
Yeah, I understand that.
But because what about the effects of estrogen
on the woman's bikes? I don't mean they their testosterone tanks and they get testosterone.
You know, what about for women? Is that beneficial or is it, or the risks outweigh the benefits?
No, so okay, so, so okay, I want to disclaimer. We're not doctors, but... I know about that. Yeah. Estrogen is extremely important hormone for both men and women, for health, longevity,
strength, muscle gain.
So a man could have testosterone that's through the roof.
His estrogen can be in the floor and you'll have trouble building muscle.
So, and for women, estrogen that's too low.
I mean, you feel like garbage,
your body doesn't adapt well. But hormone, remember hormones are adaptive to your lifestyle,
right? They tend to reflect your lifestyle. Now, let's say you do everything right. Let's
say you're healthy, you're following everything right. Your body fat percentage is great,
you're not too lean, you're feeding yourself, you're getting stronger, hormones are still a little off, then you can look into hormone replacement or supplementation.
At that point, what you're looking at is quality of life, because the risk versus benefit
really falls there.
What's the quality of life benefit that I'm going to get?
But I would bet that if you move in the right direction with your training nutrition,
I would bet that your hormone levels would also move in the right direction with your training nutrition, I would bet that your hormone levels
would also move in the right direction.
Okay.
That's very, very likely.
Yeah, I do that.
But if somebody's estrogen is off
and they're trying to do everything right
and it's still off and they supplement
and it brings it up to more optimal levels,
yeah.
They're going to react better to exercise.
Pamela, are you in our holistic health forum? The one with Dr. Cabral's team? No, not. Oh, yeah, they're going to react better to exercise. Pamela, are you are you in our holistic health forum the one with Dr. Cabral's team?
No, no, yeah, I go there. Yeah, I think there'd be some some value of you getting it's a free forum. It's on Facebook
Yeah, it's mind pump holistic health and
MP MP. Oh, it's MP. So MP holistic health
Okay, and his team is incredible there and there and they do talk a lot about this stuff
And so you know as you're going through it, that'll be another really good group to add to Okay. And his team is incredible there and there, and they do talk a lot about this stuff.
And so, as you're going through it,
that'll be another really good group to add to.
Okay.
No, I'll check it out for sure.
All right. Thanks for calling in.
And we'll send you a mass power lift, okay?
Thank you so much, guys.
Thank you, Pam.
All right, thank you.
Bye-bye.
I tell you what, is going through body image issue stuff
with such a gift now. I can look back and
be because it's something I can recognize. Yeah, you can recognize it. You know, when you
talk to somebody right away, you know, kind of what's going on. And people don't know,
but they who are watching, they'll send us their full question. And there's information
here that I can see that she didn't say on the podcast, like how she's trying to regulate
her mood and your ability and libido and all this other stuff.
And then based on how she's talking
and what she's saying in her fear of getting away,
and then of course I can see her on video,
like, I had a pretty educated guess
on kind of what was going on.
That's why I asked her those questions.
And I don't make a huge difference,
but that doesn't mean she's gonna do it.
That's the challenging thing is,
now you gotta do it and you gotta fight that inner voice that says, mean she's gonna do it. That's the challenging thing. Now you gotta do it,
and you gotta fight that inner voice that says,
oh my God, you're getting fat.
Oh my God.
I'm glad you brought up getting professional
to kind of consult with as well in that regard
in terms of like having some kind of,
another professional voice in there,
because a lot of this is just conversations
that need to be had continuously.
It's not necessarily like, here's the playbook and then just go do it because,
you know, you could just see the resistance immediately to any kind of advice.
And it's just that's kind of the mental state that she's in. And so to be able to work through
that I think is would be. Yeah, it's a quick default for me because I failed a lot of women
that I trained that were in this position because
I was trying to give them what I thought was what they wanted, which was the Ants.
Like, oh, you want to stay lean?
So we'll do this.
So I was being the coach with the answers with Matt.
You were dealing with the smoke, but not the fire.
That's right.
And so I'm very aware of it when I see it and know better than to even,
even if I do have the answers to their question,
I know there's an underlining thing
that needs to be addressed that's far more important
than the questions that they're asking me.
And so I almost always like just,
I'm not the right guy for this.
Same here.
Same here Adam.
The only, the real success I had in situations
where somebody had some dysfunctional relationships
with, with diet in their bodies and that kind of stuff, was when I worked concurrently with
a therapist, I would get a client like this and I would eventually convince them to work
with a therapist, then the therapist and I would work together, that's when I saw success.
But if they didn't have those us too, later on I got a little better
because I had worked with so many therapists at that point
that I kind of knew what questions to ask
and kind of, you know, they asked me,
how do I get lean and how do I get strong?
And I knew like that's not really what we need to focus on.
But if I didn't have that other support there,
it was like, you see me twice a week, I'm training you,
I'm not a professional therapist,
like this isn't going to necessarily work.
Now that we covered that,
I think it's also important
to address that, you know, there tends to be two camps
when it comes to taking exogenous hormones, like,
you know, like estrogen, like either you're like
super anti-at, you should never do that
or you're like pro default right away to it.
And the truth is I've seen in both cases,
I mean, I've seen someone who gets on estrogen
and it's been life changing.
It's in the middle, the answer's in the middle.
Yeah, I've seen someone who gets on estrogen and it's been life changing. It's in the middle. The answer is in the middle. Yeah, I've seen it completely change everything for them and they do one by taking that.
And then I've seen other people where that wasn't the answer and there was other root causes.
So, you know, this is not as simple as like, don't or do.
It's like, we need to investigate more. There's a lot more potentially going on here.
Exogenous hormones are not the answer until they are the answer.
And then they are the answer. Yeah
Our next color is Ryan from Maryland Ryan. What's happening man? How can we help you?
Hey fellas?
All right, so let me just jump in here my question has to do with
kind of
How to prime oneself for your very first bulk
Just to give you a quick background. I am 38. About three years ago,
I had this sort of, I guess you can call it like a moment of clarity where I realized I wanted to be
a dad at one point. I had a couple obstacles in the way. The first one was I was just super unhealthy.
I was about 240 pounds. I just not taking care of myself.
And I also have a lot of history of heart disease
in my family, my dad died when he was in his early 60s.
His dad died when he was 51,
so I kind of wanted to try to get them
going in the right direction.
So for the next year and a half, I would say,
I kind of went back and forth between dieting and eating
at maintenance, got down to about 180 pounds,
but truthfully, did it in all the wrong ways.
I dieted too hard.
I was only doing cardio.
But about a year and a half ago,
I decided to start lifting weights actually when I first
started listening to you all.
For about nine months of that I kind of was on the newbie gain train as it were gained
about ten pounds over the course of those nine months.
And then a plateau like I thought it would.
And then at that point, especially after that again,
listening to you all talk about what you do,
I realized at one point I was gonna have to start eating more,
right?
And by this someone who is like an ex, exo-beast person,
I guess you could say, it's scared the shit out of me.
I know you guys have talked with other people
that have those same issues.
So what I decided to do was, when I first started lifting,
I was doing the four days a week.
And what I thought I would do is kind of like a prep
for my first bulk is I thought about, OK, let me kind of lock
in everything else, right?
I'm going to make sure my sleep is good.
I'm going to make sure my diet is good, I'm gonna make sure my diet is good.
I switched from lifting from three days a week
to four days a week to three days a week,
kind of on the advice of you guys,
kind of I shifted to just doing compound movements, right?
I tried to lock in everything,
I actually backed off of the weight a little bit
and it just worked on my movements, right? I tried to lock in everything. I actually backed off of the weight a little bit and just worked on my
My movements, my mobility stuff like that anyway, so and then once I did that for a couple of months then I jumped into a
Balkan and it was very
Minimals like maybe 200 calories 300 calories over what my maintenance was and I noticed that my body absolutely
Exploded I had such like I was feeling better on my lips
when not through the roof, but relatively through the roof
from what I was experiencing.
And I guess my question really boils down to,
do you all, if you, this is something that you ever
kind of like run into, is there any science behind the idea
of kind of prepping your body about going
into a bulk where you kind of eat it maintenance, but you kind of lock in everything else and
you kind of, honestly, I feel like my body was like so pissed off at me for so long saying
like just give us like a little bit more food, little bit more energy and we'll put it
to get used because even, and I did this bulk for about 12 weeks. And my body fat went down a percentage, but my weight increased about 7 pounds.
And I thought about you Adam, when you talked a lot about your body recomb, where your
weight kind of stayed right around the same point, but your body really changed.
And although I only did this for 12 weeks, I was just curious, is this something like
you front into with other clients?
Is this something that maybe I can do more of going forward?
So I just curious with the thoughts on that.
Yes and yes.
You know what happened to you, Ryan, is you started lifting weights, you got to a certain
point, your metabolism got faster.
So you needed more calories.
This is what we talk about when When we talk about strength training,
it'd be so effective for fat loss.
You got a metabolism boost.
What happened is your metabolism
met your caloric intake.
So you can no longer gain any muscle
because you were burning what you were eating
because you had extra muscle
from that nine months of newbie gains.
So what you did is you bumped your calories two to three hundred.
You fueled your fed your body, the extra that it needed. And it still was a little lower than what you did is you bumped your calories two to 300. You fueled your fed your body, the extra that it needed.
And it still was a little lower than what you needed
because you still went down a percent body fat.
So yes, this is exactly what you can expect.
If you do this consistently over time, as you build,
you'll get a faster metabolism and you'll require
more calories to maintain your physique,
which is a great place to be, especially if you've dealt with being overweight in the past, because you're going to eat more, but be leaner
than you did when you were heavier, when you were 240 pounds.
In a perfect world, you continue down this path of kind of doing the same thing as far
as adding a couple hundred calories every time you hit these little plateaus, and you look
back in a year, and you're eating a thousand more calories
than what you were a year ago and you're in better shape.
Your leaner, stronger and you're eating a thousand more calories.
That's exactly what will happen if you keep going this direction and it's a good place
to be.
And it's actually more common than you would think, especially for somebody who has put
on a lot of weight.
This is what they tend to do is that they are afraid to add too many calories.
So they always lean on the other side, right?
It's an opposite of other people, right?
It's like, you guys know, like, oh, God, I've been there before.
I don't want to go back.
And so if I'm going to increase calories, I'm going to do a little bit.
And they just want to do a little.
They're too worried about slapping on four or 500 calories, but your body's been screaming
at you to give it to you.
Give it to me, I need those calories.
I'm trying to build, you're doing all the right thing
as far as you're training.
And so it's actually a really good place, dude.
You're doing really well right now.
Yeah.
And I guess my, go ahead.
Oh, one thing, let me add, Ryan,
the only caveat is don't get stuck
in the same workout routine because that'll also get you
to plateau.
So make sure that you train smart, don't over train, be very intelligent about it, but
phase your workouts, low reps for a few weeks, higher reps for other weeks, change up some
of the other exercises, you know, more volume, less volume.
Ideally, if you want programming, right, you can go from the maps programs, go from one
program to another program to another program,
and that's kind of how we design them.
Are you following a maps program, by the way?
So I'm not.
I've definitely been thinking about it,
and obviously you all would know best,
but I feel like symmetry might be a good call for me,
especially since I moved to doing three days a week,
and I've been doing just the compounds.
Sure.
I have been messing around style a little bit with
what I've been doing when I first started doing
the three days a week.
I did a five by five, and with one minute rest
in between just as something to kind of shake it up.
Lately, I've been doing three sets,
but I've allowed myself three minutes in between sets,
but even when I'm doing that,
I've noticed a couple of spots where,
especially if I'm doing like a dumbbell, like overhead press,
I've noticed that like my right tricep is like a little weaker,
even back stuff when I do, I've noticed when I just start,
I literally just noticed that I could start doing
legit pull-ups lately, which is rad,
but I also realized that when I'm lifting myself up, my left side is like a little
stronger and I have to kind of like edge it to kind of get them even. So I thought symmetry might
be a good call for me, but I'd be interested. Yeah, you're on track. It's perfect. It's a perfect
program for you right now. We'll send it over to you and stop thinking about it and just do it.
I mean, that's I think it does sound like though, just so the audience knows, you were doing some good things.
So I mean, as far as the way you were phasing things out,
changing up your rest periods and like,
obviously, and that's, it's why you're seeing the results you are.
So, but it's nice to have something laid out for you.
I think you'll enjoy, hopefully having a couple of professionals.
You've got stimulus going.
Yeah. And symmetry is a great decision.
I think it's great.
Symmetry and the dynamic and then performance in that direction. That's great. I do have one more
quick question for the three of you. If you have a second. Yeah. So again, as being someone who
like wants to be a dad and has been kind of got into this later later in life, I'm curious
of how the three of you see your training.
Like if you were able to look in the future and say,
okay, 10 years from now with my training,
what am I still doing?
And what could you see completely changing 10 years from now?
Because I would assume from what I know,
you all will be in your 50s at that point.
So I'm curious of like what you all would change.
Because I know that's something I'll eventually put into.
Yeah, um, God.
Sounds a bad person to answer this.
He's still in the phase of being addicted to training.
Justin and I are probably going for a real good.
I would probably look a lot like I am now.
Actually, I hope that my actually volume increases a little bit.
I'm pretty low volume right now.
What's beautiful about where you're at,
and if you actually think about fast forwarding 10 years from now, if you do a good job,
you do a lot of power walking. If you do a good job of being consistent for the next 10 years
of lifting and building muscle, you're going to love what you notice. It's easy to keep. It is
a lot of you to keep. I'm getting away with a day
or two of training. Sometimes those workouts are only 20 minutes long. You can almost tell you
where it's out. So a lot of my training right now is, you know, I prioritize some of the big lifts
because I know I'm doing so little right now, so I don't lose a lot. Now, I recognize that I looked better four or five years ago,
but my volume was incredibly higher.
I still do mobility stuff,
although I don't have to do as much of it
because I put so much good work in in the last couple of years.
So, yeah, volume of training, just a lot lower.
And I think, selfishly, we created Maps 15
based on the fact of our lifestyle and
how that's shifted and how we've really been able to schedule that around.
It conveniently having a home gym too and all that kind of stuff has changed and really
kind of flipped the dynamic for me for how I used to train in commercial gyms.
But I'm always considering those quote unquote,
functional lifts, and so I will do the main compound lifts
to just keep that baseline strength there,
but I'm trying to address some of those things
just to keep me mentally stimulated when I work out,
keep it fun, but also I didn't really tell them,
but my new focus is really to incorporate a little bit more
cardio back in the mix, God forbid. I didn't really tell them, but like my new focus is really to kind of incorporate a little bit more cardio
back in the mix, God forbid.
Undercover, yeah.
I don't tell them, why does it teach me?
Because these are like a shame.
Yeah.
They seriously hanging out with these guys.
I'm eating wheat now.
We're on a treadmill last week.
Anyways, so yeah, that's my plan.
What's that sound outside?
Hey, nothing good. Hey, Ryan, I'll tell you something that I actually I haven't shared a some show.
I've been in my notes to bring it up to talk about that I think is one of the the the
the like biggest epiphanies I've had in my life in the last like five to 10 years of
lifting.
Um, I have gotten much better and hopefully you see this in your journey of having a even healthier relationship
with my nutrition and volume of exercise.
Like in the past, even being as a fitness professional, notoriously what I would do is I would be
all in and I'd be dieting and training hard and like like very consistent.
And then when I'm off, I'm like, ah, fuck it, whatever.
I'm having ice cream.
I'm doing whatever I want to do.
Don't worry, I know how to whip it back
into shape. And I had this really back and forth relationship with diet and exercise
where I have a much better and healthier approach, which is I recognize when my volume of training
is low and I tighten up and I discipline myself with my food choices when those times in
my life are. And then when I'm really staying trained
and conditioned, I allow those things that I enjoy
in my diet more.
And what I've noticed is I don't have these dramatic swings
and I never really fall way out of shape.
And maybe I'm not as shredded as I was when I was competing,
but I tend to keep this really healthy kind of body fat
percentage, strength ratio, all that, like by just not going extreme, and I think that's, I think a lot of people can relate
to that, that they, they're on or they're off.
And I've gotten better about never being completely off, you know, and I'm also not all the way
on all the time either.
I have a lot better balance.
And I think that that is really changing.
It's allowed me not to have to go in these, you know,
oh, I got to get a hardcore cut now because I let all this
body fat come on.
It's because I never really get way out of shape anymore.
Here's the beauty.
You're right now you're figuring out or learning the
metabolism boosting, incredible metabolism boosting
effects of strength training.
Here's what you're going to learn 10 years from now is
that it's the most, it produces the most permanent results.
Now, there's no permanent results with exercise,
but what Adam's talking about is very true.
Like, you do this consistently for 10 years,
it doesn't take much to keep it.
It's pretty remarkable, it's actually pretty awesome.
I don't know what the form of exercise offers that, so.
But I think you're gonna love map symmetry.
I think that's a perfect program for you.
That's great to hear because this is someone I will say last year and a half have been
really consistent, which is great. But I know it's not always going to be like that, especially
if I start a family like those sorts of things. So the idea of being able to find that
balance is really really great. Do you have a good woman? Do you have a, are you single?
Or you want to be a dad, but do you have the right woman?
Yeah, I am single at the moment. I thought I landed someone in the fall
But it's in didn't quite work actually had a really funny you guys always talk about
People carrying weight at different point places on their body and
One time not to get too personal on you guys, but me and this one were in bed,
and she said, all of a sudden, she was like,
God damn, and I said what?
And she was like, you're late.
If I didn't know, like she's like,
I don't think you're like super lean or anything.
But if I just saw you from the waist down,
I would think you were like six percent body fat.
I was like, oh, thank you.
But unfortunately, I carry in
and other places to make it.
I'm like, places that make it
So it's another reason why symmetry might be good for me. No, Ryan.
Yeah, just
I'm working on working on the day.
Anything for sure.
You'll enjoy symmetry.
And then one to look at too is I think that for later, I think having or during those
times when you're not asking, I think maps 15 would be a valuable program to have in your
experience.
That's the that's the program for parents.
100% yeah. I had a that's the program for parents.
100% yeah.
I had a PR doing that program by the way. So it works.
Yeah.
Awesome.
Well, I appreciate you guys.
I just wanted to say one last thing is just that as an aspiring dad, some of the conversations
you guys have about being parents and constantly learning, I think it's a huge thing.
When it comes to being a parent, a lot of people think about that sort of thing, how you can learn how you can evolve as
a parent and as a partner.
It's just pretty amazing.
So I really appreciate you guys.
Ryan, do you have a social media handle you want to play real quick since girls will
be watching this?
Maybe we'll get you some dates.
Yeah, I mean, I can throw it out there.
It's pretty simple.
Yeah, what's your Instagram?
Let's get you some.
I can't believe I'm doing it. So on Instagram, it's Brian R.Y. and
M is in Michael and then my last name, Pranger, P-R-E-N-G-E-R. So if you're out there,
hit me up. I'm in Maryland, but I work for Moms. I'm flexible and
logistic and things. All right. You hear that lady's
flexible. He's got lean legs and flexible.
I appreciate you guys.
Thanks, man.
Take it easy, man.
Have a good one.
Yeah, I tell you what, what you said is so true.
I mean, all joking aside, you look like somebody works out, you know, four days a week,
five days a week.
But that's because of the foundation you built, and it's so true, you know, and people
are looking for that, right?
They're looking for exercise that sticks around,
the results are still going.
Strength training does that.
When you do it for a long, pretty time,
you get this kind of permanent muscle almost.
It's not permanent, but it's pretty amazing.
I'll never stop.
I'll never stop doing it for sure,
but it'll be modified based on what my body says.
So I'm sure at some point,
I'll probably have to use a sled primarily
for everything lower body.
You keep finding a new angle that keeps interesting.
That's my favorite part about getting older that I feel like nobody really communicated to me when I was younger.
And I get you know what?
If you would have told me that that would have been motivating for the 2020s and 30s to know like,
hey bro, you're gonna put a lot of hard work in right now,
but it's gonna be easy as you get older and you're gonna look better than most of your peers.
Do you remember how hard it was to be over 200 pounds?
Yeah.
Oh, dude, just pressing there was everything.
Yeah, now it's like I could be 200 pounds
workout once a week and have 200 pounds of muscle.
Yeah.
Our next caller is Amanda from Australia.
Hi Amanda, how can we help you?
Hey guys, oh, I'm so excited to be here.
I was so sure I wasn't going to fangirl at you
but I kind of am.
So thank you for having me on. I'm very excited to be here. I was so sure I wasn't going to fangirl at you, but I kind of am. So
thank you for having me on. I'm very grateful to be here and it's keep up the good work. Thank you. All right. Thank you.
So I'm just going to jump straight into the question. I'm on the last base of your
Maths and a Ballet program. And I'm struggling with your good morning exercise.
I don't really feel my hamstrings working at all
when I'm doing it.
And I'm like, I'm loading it out quite heavy.
And I've watched your video on YouTube of how to do it correctly.
And I recorded my form and everything looks fine.
But I feel nothing.
And I am very flexible.
Like I train and coach aerial tissue
So I have a lot of active flexibility, so I don't know if that's impeding or like is doing anything that
That is why or I'm doing it wrong. Yeah, so my wife did aerial tissues for a while
She traveled with sirk. She was actually worked for sirk and so, and she was very flexible when I first met her. And doing good mornings and stiff like a deadlift, even hip-hing properly,
she would like, we'd have to like have her stand on a box because the weights would hit
the floor and she wouldn't get a stretch.
She's the range of motion.
So it's just that's part of it. Part of it could be your form and technique. But if you're
hip-hing, okay, if you're properly hip-hinging, if it's not at the lumbar spine, in other words,
you're maintaining neutral spine
and you're bending at the hips
and your butt is kind of coming back
and your knees are slightly bent but fixed.
Your hamstrings are working, they are working.
So even though you might not feel them necessarily,
they're working, something you could try as a technique.
First off, I wanna make sure your form is perfect.
If this is gonna be, I'm gonna say this,
considering you have good form, okay?
So if your form is good and you wanna feel your hamstrings,
try this pre-exhaust superset.
Try doing leg curls and then go right to good mornings
and then see if you feel your hamstrings.
Nine out of 10 times, you'll be able to feel the hamstrings
in the good mornings if you pre-exhaust them
with a leg curl. Amanda, where do you feel it when you do them?
And especially since you're loading it, when you get done with a wrap or a set, where do you feel it?
Honestly, I feel it slightly in my glutes, but mostly it's like my back gets it like my lower back starts getting exhausted from just holding the heavy weight.
Do you notice a difference when you do,
are you having the same experience like Sal was saying
that Jessica had where even when she did like
stiff leg of deadlifts, do you have you done any
stiff leg of deadlifts and do they feel the same way
also in the deadlift?
I, when I do them, I do what Jessica does,
like I stand on a bench.
So I can go even deeper and then I feel it,
but if I just do regular ones,
it's it's very hard for me to feel much. Yeah. Yeah. So I mean, the key is when you're when you're
doing this, right, you can bend over and the lumbar spine can flex and extend. The hips can also
cause flexion extension. So your spine has to be perfectly rigid. So when you're doing the movement,
you want to lead with your chest, stick your butt out,
and then as you go down,
let the hips kinda travel back a little bit.
You're probably not gonna feel a stretch
because you're so flexible, and that's okay.
You're still working the hamstrings.
But try the pre-exhaust technique that I said.
And you could do leg curls on a physio ball
or leg curls on a machine, then go right to good mornings
or right to Romanian deadlifts,
and you'll probably feel the hamstring.
Well, just in terms of your back,
lower back in fatigue,
have you gone through and like,
braced with a,
with a PVC pipe down your spine
and tried to make sure that your lower back
was touching the PVC pipe as you hip-injed at the same time,
only because that is a great tool to be able to kind of teach
your body to maintain that, that bracing position, as, especially if you're loading it and making sure
that, you know, you're keeping that rigid back completely. No, I haven't tried that. Neither the pre-exhaust
one. I'll try both of them. So just from a perspective.
It's actually really what you're experiencing is actually common with somebody who has this
great of a range of motion in their hamstrings.
It's like when you're teaching somebody an exercise to feel it in the muscle, we're going
to feel it at the end range is the most, especially when you're first learning how to activate
and work that.
So because you have such a great range of motion in the hamstrings and you're not taking
it to the end range, it's really hard to make that.
Because there's no peak contraction at the top,
it's not like your hamstrings are fully contracted.
That's right.
The main, the range of motion,
the part of the range of motion
that someone would feel in a good morning is the stretch.
And because you're so flexible,
you're just going, it's all mid for you.
There's no stretch, there's no squeeze,
either at the top, but it's working.
Now here's the other thing I want to say to someone, to someone like you, there's no squeeze either at the top. But it's working.
Now here's the other thing I want to say to someone like you, which is rare, someone
is flexible as you.
I don't even think you should search for the stretch because it's so deep that unless
you go really, really light and your form is like pristine, perfect, I wouldn't load
it very heavy and do that because the odds that you're going to have perfect technique
with that kind of range of motion is quite low.
So I would go, if you're gonna push for the stretch,
I would go super light.
Otherwise, let the weights hit the floor,
so don't stand on a bench.
Get perfect technique and do a pre-exhaust.
Leg curls on a physio ball, go straight to the good mornings,
go lighter with the good mornings
because you pre-exhausted,
and then you'll probably feel the hamstrings.
Okay, and even though the flexibility makes makes it so I don't get that
rating, uh, end of range motion, I still get, I guess the same benefit as somebody. Yeah.
The hamstrings are still working. They're still functioning in that hip hinge. And you're still
taking them through a pretty big range of motion too. So it's not like you're neglecting a range
of motion. And it's like this shortened little range of motion,
but you're still taking the muscle through
a great range of motion.
It's just that you happen to be really, really flexible there.
I mean, if your form is good
and you're getting stronger in the good morning,
I wouldn't worry too much about this.
Not the feel of it.
Yeah, and I love the advice of doing like lying leg curls
before so you can feel it.
You'll feel it.
But that's the reason why, because lying leg curls,
there's tension on the hamstring the entire time.
Regardless if you're at the end range or not.
And you get the squeeze there.
And so that's why you feel that.
The reason why you don't very much
is because on a good morning at the very top,
if you're not really contracting that much,
there's no resistance because of gravity
because you're up.
And then when you go all the way down,
you're not even close to your in range,
so it's not making it feel that stretch feeling.
So that's why, that's why you're feeling the way it is.
And it's not uncommon for somebody who has flexibility
like you, and it doesn't necessarily mean
something is necessarily wrong, though, either.
Yeah, the pre-exhaust is I think gonna be key
for you to feel.
But I mean, like when you do like a pancake stretch
or whatever, you flatten yourself out, right?
You're totally, you could bend all the way out.
You're not gonna, you're not gonna feel the stretch in any kind of a hip hinge
movement unless you super modify it, which I don't know.
We're eating that muscle tension, is everything?
Yeah, so pre-exhaust. Do the pre-exhaust. If you want to feel your hamstrings, go leg curls
and then straight to good mornings or straight to Romanian. So it's a superset, right? So
it's like you do 10 leg curls. And with the leg curls, squeeze the contraction, focus on getting your heels to your butt, squeeze, squeeze, squeeze,
do 10 reps there, then go to the hip hinge movement and you'll feel them.
Okay, great. Thank you. You got it. I'll try that.
You got it. Thanks for the lesson.
Yeah, you guys, I've shown you, because when I first started dating Jessica, I would send you guys,
you can see the flexibility and strength.
There's plenty of strength. There it is. Crazy.
Yeah, I mean, because you have to be flexible,
but also strong to support yourself.
But, you know, good mornings, remain deadlift,
like unless you can stretch the hamstrings,
you're just gonna be, it's gonna be hard to feel.
I'm gonna do it, you know?
Anybody that has like kind of like hyper flexibility,
it's a difficult client to train.
A lot of times it's a control thing, like,
and to be able to, you able to create that muscular tension,
like, took a lot of time to develop.
But your guys' points about her already being in that,
only feeling and range is so far
that to be able to feel that is very challenging.
And searching for it wouldn't necessarily be a good idea.
Well, and in a good morning, you get to understand that when she stands all the way up her there's
nothing. There's no there's no like even though that's the fully contracted position from that.
Years there's gravity's not resisting anymore. So she doesn't have to be squeezing very much.
And then when she goes all the way down, that's the other point point. But she's so she has
such a great range of motion that she's not at the end stretch. And it's not even a fully
contracted, right? Because your leg is still straight.
Right.
When fully contracted, it will be like a curled leg
at the top, it's the glutes.
But there's no resistance up there.
You're not going to feel anything.
Our next caller is Nicole from California.
Hi Nicole, how can we help you?
Hi guys, thanks so much for having me on.
You got it, yeah.
I'll get right into my question, and I'll wait your time.
So I've been listening to you guys for about eight months after I read Sal's book first.
I love what I read about such a difference.
My mindset about like cardio is the only way to lose weight and weight training just seemed
so amazing to me.
My husband was the one who actually encouraged me to do it and I started my research and found her book first. So the podcast itself, I love just for all the other content you put out. It's really entertaining and
Anyway, so my question is I started weight training about eight months ago
I had a program that I bought years ago and I just did it in my own
Well, I have my own little studio here with dumbbells. I'm gonna stay at home mom.
I have my younger sister's two years old.
So I didn't have access to a gym
and I listened to you guys the whole time.
And it was going pretty well.
I tended to hurt my neck often with that program
and I also hurt my Achilles on one, on my right leg.
But it was all right.
I felt like I was getting stronger.
At the same time, I was still doing
my spin bike that I have and a cardio kit class. Both of them I was doing like two times a
week, as well as walking. And my goal was to basically after the baby, like, tone up.
I know that's not really a term you use, but to tighten up my core and to lose like eight
pounds. And in the first month, I think I gained a couple pounds, which I felt like that's what I'm trying to use, but to tighten up my core and to lose like eight pounds. And the first month, I think I gained a couple pounds, which I felt like that's what you
guys always talk about, it's kind of normal.
And then after five or so months of doing that, my husband kind of talked me into using
he's got a rack and a bench and stuff that you brought from work and he put it in our
garage and I bought anabolic.
So I'm on a week, 10 of anabolic garage and I bought anabolic. So I'm on a week 10
of anabolic and I really like it. I mean I actually my neck hasn't gotten hurt
since. I feel like I'm definitely lifting more and getting stronger but in the
beginning eight months ago I took my measurements basically from the waist down
and that hasn't changed at all and I was hoping to lose
a book like a dress size, but my arms and back seemed to be getting bigger because all
my t-shirts in the last couple of weeks are tight, like mid-byeset.
And as a woman, like, that's kind of the opposite goal, what I wanted.
I wanted to feel like my clothes were loose and comfortable on me and I'm just feeling
kind of bulky in the upper
body. So I want to know if you adjust the programming and not do as much of the upper body movements.
That's kind of what my husband suggested, but I wanted to ask you guys what you suggest.
Yeah, no, it's not a programming issue. Actually, building muscle is what's speeding up your
metabolism and give you the fat burning machinery that you want for sustainable fat loss.
But that's going to be a nutrition situation.
So, are you tracking your calories? Do you know how many calories you're consuming?
Grounds of proteins, fats, carbs, anything like that?
I do. So, I have a bit of a restriction in eating disorder passed. So I'm able to use an app and track and see about what I eat.
And I know I'm around 2,000 calories
is probably my maintenance.
And I love proteins, so I can eat like 130 grams
of protein, no problem.
I tend to restrict carbohydrates for quite a few years.
So that's usually on the lower end,
like 80 to 100 grams of carbohydrates is the highest I can usually get to. And what was your other
question?
I mean, you know, you answered it. Yeah, you answered it. So I have more questions. I thought
I heard you say that you were doing the spend stuff and then also like a hit cardio thing.
Are you still doing those four days of cardio week
in addition to the anabolic?
I stopped going to the cardio hit class
and I stopped my bike.
I just do two mile, like a two mile walk every day with the baby.
Okay, okay.
I mean, and that might be part of why we're seeing
how long have you been not doing those things right now?
I stopped doing the bike and the cardio hit probably in the last
six weeks. Your body weight hasn't changed but you feel a little bit tighter in the upper body.
Yeah, I think I started like you might if I say how much I weigh or does it matter?
I think I started back in June. I was like 142 pounds and I'm like 145,
144 pounds. You're kicking out, yeah, you're doing it.
You're actually really good.
Yeah, but you probably got leaner and built some muscle.
Consider it, consider when you eliminated
all that cardio you were doing,
that's a tremendous amount of calories
that you were burning in the week.
When we look at it as a whole,
when you do four days like that
and then you add it all up
and then you add it over a month.
So the fact that you've been able to still eat
the same amount of calories and really the weight you have is probably negligible. You're
talking in probably a little bit of water weight for the most part.
Maybe some muscle because you've got strong.
Yeah, you've you're actually probably doing really good. This is a matter of like kind
of staying the course. A couple things. I know you said protein is good, which is one
of the common ones where my female clients would miss.
How's your strength gains from lifting?
How are you pushing yourself weightwise?
One of the challenges I had with clients, even Katrina, when we first met, that would tend
to gravitate towards cardio-type training or circuit or hit-type stuff, getting her
to think about, let's get that squad up as heavy as you can.
The uploading process has always been difficult.
Right.
How are you with loading the bar?
Are you are you pushing the weight?
What's it tell me how that how that looks right now for you?
Yeah.
So the bar is pretty new to me.
Like I said, I certainly think early December and in November.
So I I'm squatting.
I want to say like I probably gained at least 20 pounds on my squat.
When I was doing the lower rep range, I forget what phase I was like two or one.
One, one.
Yeah, I love that.
And I'm probably like a 30 pound difference from that lower rep range than the higher
rep range I'm currently in.
I think Nicole, you're on week 10.
You're going in the right direction.
You're totally, so fat loss or weight loss from strength training is more of a snowball
effect.
So it starts off slow.
And usually what happens is you see the weight not change much, you see strength go
up, you notice changes in your body, but the scale doesn't change much. But then as the metabolism starts to speed up, which takes a second, then the fat loss starts to happen.
You're actually moving in the right direction. Yeah, you are doing good. Yeah, you're totally
moving in the right direction. I wouldn't even have you change much right now and just kind of stay
the course. And did I hear that correctly? You're, are you lifting more weight in this current phase and you were in phase one. No, I think that's one.
I think it's a squad that likes the 8 to 12 rep is around.
It's not a lot, it's not impressive, it's like 80 pounds, but I was 110 pounds with the
wonderful rep range.
Yeah, you're doing great.
Yeah, and I also think that you have room when you get back to going back around, if you
go back in through anabolic or you go to any of our other programs because phase one,
we typically are strength,
not all of them, but most of them are that way.
The conversation you and I be having, if we are client,
I be really trying to motivate you
to stretch yourself on the weight, really pushing the way.
I think that you've got probably more strength capacity
in there and granted, you're doing things the right way.
So I want you to know that like, obviously,
loading the bar super heavy when you're just learning it, that's not a good idea. But that's
where I want to get you. I'm going to be pushing you in that direction. You got more in there,
we're going to get stronger. Especially for that leg development, those big compound lifts,
those squats and dead lifts, and really kind of pressing yourself in that direction. We'll
provide that development you're looking for.
Yeah, and so if you were my client, what I would do is I would have you stay the course,
I would have you slowly reverse diet, so I'd have you slowly increase your calories,
get you to the point where you're eating like 2400, 2500 calories, where you're not really gaining any
weight, but you're stronger, and then from there I would do a cut, and then that's where you would see
the big fat loss. And what you're doing is you're setting yourself
up for sustainable, lean, sculpted physique versus what you might have experienced in the
past, where it was really hard to keep it off. And it was kind of like, oh my God, if I
go off, I'd routine it all. It comes right back on my body. What you're going through
right now is the metabolism boosting process. And it can take months. It can take months to
do so,
especially if you're only a couple of years postpartum.
You have a two year old.
I would see your old, yeah.
Yeah, you're totally, you're going in the right direction.
You're doing good Nicole, you need to know that.
You're doing good right now, you really are.
Don't get impatient because that's where people screw up
because what'll happen a lot of times,
especially with women, is you're like,
you're 10 weeks into it, they start to get impatient, then they cut their calories like crazy, they throw a bunch of
cardio at themselves, and then they end up where they were before.
And by the way, like very easily, I could tell you, cut your calories, three to 500 calories,
three to 500 calories, add a cardio, hour of cardio every single day, and I would give
you the initial thing that you want. Like, you would see your upper body shrink down
a little bit. So be aware of that, right? Like that's right there, if you wanted to go there,
but that's not setting yourself up for long term success.
Trusting the process is going to,
and it's a slower process like Sal said,
it's a snowball effect,
but I want you to know you're doing a good job.
You really are, you're doing a good job,
and you're heading the right path.
And as you start to go around
and go through more of these maps programs,
just keep working on getting stronger
Yeah, getting stronger increasing those calories and you're gonna get to a point where you are eating
2400 2500 calories and not gaining weight and then when we bring you down to your
2000 calorie maintenance now you're leaning. It's easy to maintain it feels itself
Yeah, and as far as the routine is concerned you could do all lower body for the trigger sessions
Are you doing trigger sessions on the days in between?
So the trigger session days,
I have not been able to squeeze in with the baby,
but I really want to start doing that.
So, one thing I haven't been doing.
Oh, that'll make a huge difference.
Cool, that makes a huge difference.
Okay, so here's the...
So, just body weight squats, that's everything.
Yeah, yeah.
So here's what I want you to do.
On the days in between, I want you to twice a day,
just try twice a day, five to eight minutes
of lower body exercises.
And the idea isn't to get a crazy workout.
The idea is just to go through full range of motion
and kind of feel the muscles work a little bit.
And what that's gonna do, it's like adding a turbo charger
to the hard workouts that you do three days a week.
Okay, a question to that.
I have like a larger lower body.
That's kind of what I would like to strengthen.
That's not going to increase my size doing that type of thing.
No, but you said you wanted to avoid upper body stuff.
Really, you can target whatever you want.
You could do core exercise, you could do upper body.
Just do five to eight minutes, maybe 10 minutes of some exercise, make it moderate intensity
at most.
You just want to kind of feel the muscles a little bit.
That's it, think recovery, don't think workout.
Do two a day, one in the morning, one at night,
and then watch what happens.
It's literally like adding a turbo to what you're doing.
Nicole, if you tell me, you told me about where your weight is,
you just told me that you have a very,
you're, you're thicker in the lower half.
I've got, I've got you squatting 185 in the next six months or less.
That's what I got.
If I'm training you, I've got you squatting 185 for five reps.
Like I'm pushing, you're gonna have that in you.
That's the thing to focus on.
Get strong.
Don't be in, and the beauty of having a thick lower body
is there's a lot of muscle in there,
which, and more muscle speeds the metabolism.
So there's advantages of having a stronger,
thicker, lower body to the overall fat loss.
So, and when you get,
as when you get to the process of cutting down,
it looks really good.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's what I love to do for it.
Yeah.
All right.
You're doing great.
Let's get you in the forum too,
so we can stay in touch with you. Sure.
Dominic have Doug send you access to the private forum and then just keep us posted
on your journey.
Feel free to share videos of your squatting or exercise like that so we can make any
critiques on your forum or let you know how you're doing great.
I can a lot of times tell by the way somebody is moving away on how much they are pushing
themselves weight wise and be able to give you advice that way too. So get in there and make sure you
tag us and share your journey. Okay, that sounds great. Thanks guys. So I'll probably just
run anabolic again when I'm done and I'll make sure to include the trigger sessions and
push myself a little bit more. Yes, love that. Thank you guys so much. You got it.
Cool. Thank you. That was just a, hey, am I on the right path?
Yeah, basically.
Bro, she, she, she forgot to mention
that she had well developed legs.
I, I, I, I, I, I smelled it, bro.
I smell, I, I swear to God, she looked strong to me.
Yeah. Yeah.
Like I see her and I'm like, that chick is squatting.
She's just uncomfortable.
She's, she's squatting 80 pounds and I'm like, she can,
when she gets to the bar, when she reversed diets,
and it just stays the course,
metabolism is already boosting already,
she stopped doing that cardio,
and she hasn't really gained any weight.
When she gets the point when she starts to cut,
when she's comfortable cutting,
she's gonna be very happy with the way she feels.
Very easily.
Hey, check this out.
If you wanna find out if your hormones are optimized,
if you're healthy, if they're within range,
go to mphormones.com, fill out intake form,
and talk to a professional.
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