Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2104: The Right Way to Lose 50+ Pounds, How to Fix Chronic Shoulder Pain, the Minimum You Need to Work Out to Maintain Gains & More (Listener Live Coaching)
Episode Date: June 24, 2023In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin coach four Pump Heads via Zoom. Mind Pump Fit Tip: If you want to live longer, EAT more protein! (1:47) Doug, the espresso connoisseur. (10:31) ... Going down the Jonathan Pageau rabbit hole. (14:11) The strange divide in America. (17:01) Navigating the life of a child genius as a parent. (30:00) Kids are sensitive creatures. (34:43) Tell your partner you love them. (36:45) Plugged in vs. unplugged. (39:01) San Francisco is disintegrating quickly. (44:50) Organifi is glyphosate residue free and third-party tested. (50:15) #ListenerLive question #1 - How can I train around a busy schedule while maintaining strength gains and compound lifts? (53:54) #ListenerLive question #2 - I am interested in your programs but, I'm not sure where to start and what program would be best for me. I can’t currently touch my toes and have always struggled with flexibility largely due to my weight. I've been overweight most of my adult life. (1:03:54) #ListenerLive question #3 - I have been working to decompress my spine by doing dead hangs and walking, but I would like to keep lifting weights. What are some exercises that are safe to do if I have Cerebral Palsy? (1:13:08) #ListenerLive question #4 - I want to build muscle, especially shoulders, and upper back to further develop the posterior chain after my latest shoulder surgery. How would you structure training next to full-time physical work? Additionally, what would you recommend for shoulder stability and growth? (1:21:14) Related Links/Products Mentioned Ask a question to Mind Pump, live! Email: live@mindpumpmedia.com Visit Legion Athletics for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code MINDPUMP at checkout for 20% off** Visit Organifi for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code MINDPUMP at checkout** June Promotion: MAPS Cardio or Summer Shredded Bundle or the Bikini Bundle 50% off! **Code JUNE50 at checkout** Taurine deficiency as a driver of aging - PubMed Visit NED for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Visit Kreatures of Habit: Meal One for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code MP25 at checkout** The Miami Heat's Jimmy Butler Brings This $6K Espresso Machine Everywhere He Goes White House bans three guests after topless video at Pride party Who is Kairan Quazi, the 14-year-old engineer hired by SpaceX's Starlink? The Wonder Weeks App BabySparks – A development expert in your pocket AI-powered church service in Germany draws a large crowd Surrogates (2009) - IMDb Westfield gives up San Francisco Centre, latest business to pull back Blackstone Raises More Than $30 Billion for Giant Real Estate Fund Mind Pump #1975: How Organifi Scaled To Be A $100 Million Company With Mae Steigler Visit The Cold Plunge for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump Listeners! **Promo code MINDPUMP at checkout for $150 off your order** MAPS 15 Minutes MAPS Starter MAPS Bands MAPS Fitness Prime Pro MAPS Symmetry What are the Best Mobil+ity Exercises for Shoulders? – Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Layne Norton, Ph.D. (@biolayne) Instagram Mike Matthews (@muscleforlifefitness) Instagram Jonathan Pageau (@jonathan.pageau) Instagram Arthur Brooks (@arthurcbrooks) Instagram Steve Kopshaw (@mindpumpsteve) Instagram Â
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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,
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All right, here comes the show.
New study shows that touring may be the key to longevity.
Actually, just study on multiple animal models and found that touring concentration
was a predictor of aging.
So they increased touring concentrations and animals like rats and some worms and some other
animal models and they found that the lifespan is increased by 10 to 12%. What is torrent?
It's an amino acid. It's known as a
conditionally essential amino acid meaning your body can produce torrent
but under times of stress or illness you probably need to consume more of it. So what's the key takeaway here?
Should you just supplement with torrent? No, you know, we get a lot of torrent protein. Really what's the key takeaway here? Should you just supplement with touring? No, you know,
you get a lot of touring, protein. Really what the study is showing is that you probably need more
protein as you age and this totally corresponds with studies on humans. As humans get older, they do
better with higher protein diets. So what's the, again, the takeaway? You want to live longer, eat more
protein. Is this a new study? New study for touring. So this will be interesting. I what's the, again, the takeaway? You want to live longer, eat more protein.
Is this a new study? New study for touring. So this will be interesting. When has our
friend Lane got a hold of it yet? No. So to be interesting, see how Lane talks about
it. Because it's like one of those ones that you could totally try and shit on it because
of it one being done in animal and then two, your point about protein. I hope that he highlights
that's probably the key factor.
That's what it is.
They'll do studies on like branching amino acids,
argonine, proline, whatever,
all these amino acids, all these benefits.
But if you get a good amount of protein,
what would be considered optimal for muscle building,
you're getting a lot of all the amino acids.
So that's what they're missing.
So really, with these animal models, it's like if these animals ate more protein, they'd get the touring. And again, that corresponds
with the data on humans where they find that as humans get older, having higher protein
intake, especially when you combine it with strength training. I want to add that, right?
You combine it with strength training. It's like, it's as close as you can get to the
fountain of youth.
So what's the motivation to study something like
touring by itself like that?
Because they identify what they know what different amino acids
do in the body.
Yeah.
And amino acid touring is important for energy production.
It's in energy drinks.
You know, like red oil.
Red oil's got touring in it.
It's an interesting amino acid.
It's not technically an essential amino acid
because your body can make it.
But when you're
stressed or sick, you could deplete yourself very quickly.
So they call it a conditionally essential amino acid.
But how many grams of touring is in 30 grams away protein, like plainly, more than you'll
get from just supplementing with touring?
Now, was that the class, like the energy drink class?
Because that wasn't a thing for us growing up.
But then it became a thing and it was like,
they have like B vitamins, touring,
and like they've just smashed all these vitamins in there
and like called it an energy drink.
Well, I think that the classic move there was just that
caffeine is the energy, the main energy driver.
And then the selling point is that,
oh, it has creatine, oh, it has vitamin B,
oh, it has K, D, it has all these other things
that they throw in it to make it more superior
than the other caffeine drink.
Yeah, be by the end.
Really, at the end of the day,
everybody who compares all of these energy drinks,
which is better and stuff like that,
it's really the dose of caffeine
is really what's making the biggest difference
as far as what you feel.
And then all the other stuff is just a bunch of filler,
bullshit to make you sound or sound like yours is better
or taste better.
And that makes it a P brighter.
So B vitamins have been touted for a long time for energy,
but really it's if you're deficient,
then it makes a huge difference.
Some people have a tough time absorbing B12
because they have gut issues.
So you give somebody,
or I think there's some genetic mutations in some people too, or
some genetic variances, I should say, in people where they just don't absorb a lot of
B.
You give them a shot of vitamin B12.
It's life chain.
I had a client like that.
I had a client like that who had chronic fatigue, couldn't figure out what happened.
Work with functional medicine practitioner.
With supplementing with B12, it just wasn't absorbing.
So the functional medicine practitioner was like,
do a shot of B12 once every,
I don't remember what was three, four days.
And she's like, bro, she's like, I did the shot.
And she's like, hours later, I felt like a new person.
This is why we talk about, you know,
when it comes to the supplement game,
nothing is more impactful than supplementing
something that you're deficient in.
Yeah, I mean, I remember when we first got the mellow product from Ned and the magnesium, it was like,
because you needed it. Holy shit. And that's why too, it's like, so why some people are like,
oh, it's not that big of a deal. I didn't know anything. Well, maybe you're not deficient.
And that idiot saying, and then somebody who does thinks it's amazing, it's like, well, yeah,
because you're now you're getting what you need. Yeah, that's why I think in the future,
and you're starting to see this a little bit,
but I think you're gonna see more in the future
that way protein, which is used to be just for body builders.
Now it's making its way into somewhat health and wellness.
I think that's going to be a longevity supplement.
Because you see this, you see that as people get older, their requirements for protein go up and
with strength training, it really does make a significant improvement on quality life and on aging.
And again, protein is chains of way, you know, a gram away protein is all the amino acids.
It's a complete protein, meaning protein is all the amino acids.
It's a complete protein, meaning it has all the amino acids
and it has high amounts of all of the amino acids
you hear about, the branch of the amino acids,
glutamine, which is the most abundant amino acid
and muscle, touring, which we just talked about.
So way protein, like give yourself,
make sure you hit your protein targets with food
and if you can't, you know, like get yourself
a good
way protein.
Legion's got a great one.
We work with their bases with that.
And remind me again, because Legion specifically, because I believe it's stavia that they
sweeten it with, instead of like a...
They don't use artificial sweetener.
It's not our official sweetener, but also too.
Don't they have enzymes and digestible enzymes?
Well, they use...
I know the one thing about Legion that I like is it's way protein isolate.
So it's like just protein.
Yeah.
Very easily digestible.
It's so much better for that reason.
Unless you can't eat dairy, right?
Do you know what else?
Mike Carries that I didn't know that he carried is the, which I love for because I mix a
lot of like way like in food, like if I'm making pancakes or waffles or back before,
we had creatures of habit, I'd mix it in my oatmeal.
And like finding a good way protein,
like the flavor that mixed with, he has the flavorless way.
And not a lot of, not a lot of companies carry also,
he has all kinds of crazy flavors that all are amazing,
but then he has a flavor.
I bet nobody buys that though.
Okay, well, let me sell it to you.
So if you mix way protein in pancakes, waffles,
oatmeal, and food,
to cook with, yes, it is the best to get flavorless way protein.
If you're gonna drink it, yeah, if you're a person
who shakes it up with water or almond milk
or whatever your thing is and then drinks it,
well then yeah, get your fruity pebble flavor,
caramel salted crunch, whatever.
But I, they have salty caramel. They do, it is bomb, it is good.
But I think it's made that up.
No, no, it's totally a real flavor.
He's got the fruity pebble one too.
That's a real flavor, right, bro?
Yes, he's got a real flavor.
It's like, yeah, fruity pebble or fruity cereal.
Fruity cereal is the name of his, and it's bomb.
But I tend to mix way protein in food.
I mean, we bake, we make homemade cookies that way,
we do pancakes that way, we do waffles that way.
Like I said, we used to do the oatmeal that way.
So if you wanna do that, the best is to do a flavorless,
so it doesn't change the flavor of the food
that you're already currently eating.
What do you see there, Doug?
They have all types of interesting flavors.
Cocoa cereal, apple pie, banana bread, Dutch chocolate,
birthday cake, chocolate peanut butter,
cookies and cream, French vanilla,
fruity cereal, honey cereal, mocha, capicino,
pumpkin pie, salted caramel.
Fruity cereal tastes like after you've had fruity pebbles.
The milk, the milk at the bottom.
What?
Yes, as a taste.
I remember that as a kid.
Yeah, I know.
That's why it was like a such as a black card.
Yeah, when I had it, I was like,
oh my god, that brought me back to the church.
You know what I, do you know what I did once?
What I went to Italy when I was 12 and my cousin,
I mean, I'd never tried this before.
So he would do cocoa, what was it?
Cocoa crispies or whatever, the chocolate?
Yeah.
Oh, cocoa crispy, milk.
Oh, this is the best.
Oh, no, no, no, he used chocolate milk
with the cocoa.
That's, that's, that's right.
That's overkill.
Yeah, he had that beaties now, but.
Wow. That's bad. It's like when I used to make notchos out of, that's not's right overkill yeah he had diabetes now but wow I was like when I used to make not show that it's not showd to read it overkill
yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah but no but he used him to you that I work out so well for
I know he doesn't have diabetes that was a terrible job but he's I felt bad for last
I know that's terrible. It's dark.
But no, you said, do that.
You buy chocolate milk and you mix it in there.
I'd be like, my as a 12 year old, yeah.
Oh, you could combine everything.
You know what else he used to do?
Then I went later on when I was 19,
set this pointies in college.
And he goes, you ever have super espresso?
I'm like, what?
Because you know, college you guys stay up and whatever.
So they would make espresso.
Then they would use the espresso as the water
for another espresso.
So you know, like, oh my God.
Yeah, dude.
Like super caffeine.
That's gotta be like chewing on like the coffee bean.
Yeah, that's what it takes like.
Look at Doug, Doug likes he's such an espresso
in the fish and auto, I just killed him right now.
Yeah.
How are you consistently using your,
you know, million dollar espresso machine you have?
Not a million, guys.
I use it every day.
You do.
Every day you use it.
You push a button and it picks the organic beans
and Columbia for you to bring it.
Yeah, bro, Sam.
It's great.
It's gorgeous.
It's so strong and everything.
I have a $90 special machine at home, you know?
Yeah.
I bought it on Amazon.
That's not really an espresso machine. It's a, listen, I'm a tie. I can sell it one about it. You know, you know that? Yeah. I bought it on Amazon. That's not really an espresso machine.
It's 80, listen, I'm a tie,
and I can sell it one about it.
You know, Doug is so good,
but remember, I don't know if I brought it up
in the show or not when,
and this was like, I think it was before playoffs,
when Jimmy Butler, which by the way,
made it all the way to the heat,
made it all the way to the end, right?
And he was flying on his private jet
with his espresso machine,
and it was the same espresso machine.
The same one that Ed had.
Yeah, Doug has.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. I think I showed you that. Yeah, I saw that. Yeah, Ed had done. That does, that does. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I think I showed you that.
Yeah, I saw that.
Yeah, you saw that.
Yeah, you saw that.
The exact same one as I have.
It's all chrome looking, right?
It's chrome, it's black and chrome this one.
Oh, yeah.
Well, I'm like, you know, you're just,
yes, he's flying on his, he gets off the plane.
I don't remember what city they're in,
plane another team, obviously.
And he is carrying an espresso machine on.
No, I'm not that serious.
And I remember I was looking at it
and explaining how ridiculous it was
and Doug's like, that's the same espresso machine
I also understand.
Yeah, then I was like,
now I know that thing must be that good.
If you guys, you know what reminds me of his space balls
remember when like, he had to grab this.
Well, no, he had to grab the suitcase.
And in her suitcase was this huge hair dryer.
Oh yeah.
Investors frame.
He read this face.
What a great movie.
Come on.
What a great movie.
Doug, do you have a particular water
that you use for espresso?
I mean, I have reverse osmosis water, I guess.
You know, it makes a big difference, too.
Okay.
So my dad is very specific.
Oh, okay.
He uses crystal guys or water
and he preaches the whole family.
Yeah. It makes a huge difference. Oh, my dad, no, you have to use crystal guys or water and he preaches the whole family. Yeah, it makes it makes a huge difference. Oh my dad
No, you have to use crystal guy. Did you make a crystal guy?
No for the longest time I was right. I was making coffee
From tap water and I could not figure out why my coffee was not tasty because I had moved to a new house boss
And the water is just tap water. Well, my thought what you're boiling it's so I'm like getting that's bad
You're gonna boil you're gonna boil off something and it's not bad,. Well, my thought was you're boiling it. So I'm like, I think that's bad, you're gonna boil off.
So I'm thinking it's not bad,
but it changed the way the coffee tastes.
Yeah, the coffee is in birch.
You know, the thing is though,
with the espresso machine,
you can't have a high mineral water.
Otherwise, it will get a lot of calcification
on the interior.
On the machine.
In the machine.
So there's actually test strips you need to use
to make sure your water's not too hard.
And so I do that. However, having minerals may actually improve the taste You need to use to make sure your water's not too hard.
And so I do that. However, having minerals may actually improve
the taste of the coffee, and here's a trick I've heard,
and I've tried, is if you get crappy coffee,
you take a pinch of salt and you drop it into the coffee,
and it will improve the taste of your coffee.
What?
Yeah.
Wow.
I just learned something.
I'm crazy.
Yeah, try it out.
Try the crystal. It makes sense. I'll try it. My dad's all about yeah. Crazy. Yeah, try it out. Try the crystal gai-sense.
I'll try it.
My dad's all about it.
I just want to, like, literally,
stop talking about it.
Okay.
Yeah, we have.
That's what we, so when we found out it was a tap water,
we used to, we always have bottled crystal gai-sert water
at our house.
So that's what we used.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And it made a huge difference.
As soon as we switched over to that,
I was like, oh my god, this whole time,
I thought there was something wrong with our coffee
because it was like the same coffee I was getting forever.
And I couldn't figure out why it was bad and then Katrina started pouring the the crystal guys
Are water in there and it was like oh shit. That's awesome. Yeah, that's okay. Dude, I got to talk about I've already
Brom up by three different times just and now is going down the rabbit hole of Jonathan
Hey, yeah, I think it's a mistake. I love this guy dude. I knew you would go crazy
I wish he was around man man, when I was like,
and just sitting the back of the church,
and then I would ask these really deep,
esoteric questions, the pastors,
and nobody had good answers for me ever,
and could explain the why in terms of like,
yeah, I get sort of the surface
of a lot of these parables and a lot of these things, but like he just explains it on a level.
It's just so distinctively, like I understand what he's talking about.
He gives this analogy.
It's, I've sent it to 15 different people.
He gives this analogy of the value of symbolism and rituals and how they create and cause
integration in our behaviors and what we do.
And he says, there's a period of time
when you don't know why you're doing what you're doing,
but you do it anyway because you're supposed to.
But then you have an awakening.
And he uses the best example of ever
in my entire life, Karate Kid.
Mr. Miyagi.
Mr. Miyagi, telling Karate Kid that, you know,
what's his name?
Wax R.
Yeah, do all these things.
Wax the car, paint the. Yeah, do all these things.
Wax the car, paint the fans, do all these different things.
And he has no idea what he's doing.
And he says in this video clip, he says,
because you're too stupid to know.
So just trust me and do it.
And eventually all will be revealed.
And he goes, this is the value that we've lost.
This is the value of symbolism and ritual.
And because it's been with us for so long, we forgot.
So we throw it all away,
because we don't need that, we throw it away,
and so he says we're lost because of that.
Isn't that crazy?
No, it isn't.
The karate kid thinks it's great
because it's like we just,
easy example.
Yeah, because we should,
we'll be shitting on that right now.
Like, oh, painting the fence.
How's that gonna help me with fighting?
I'll just do chores for you.
And you know, and you just see it for like,
that it's immediate surface kind of value
instead of going through the process
and like that's where you learn everything.
Yeah, and I mean, how many times have you done that in your life
where you look back and go,
oh, that's, I'm so glad I went through all that.
Otherwise, I wouldn't be able to do this thing right here.
But while you're going through it,
you're like, I wish I wasn't doing this, this sucks.
No. I mean, so we parallels that to fitness
and like your journeyman story.
Oh, that's so good.
It just, it all ties in though.
I mean, like, it's so hard to articulate
to somebody like the why of like,
especially doing something that's difficult like that.
Like, you know, going through and also trusting,
we say, trust the process all the time
and that's sort of like a sort of catch phrase we have.
But really, it's just like having to step in and have that faith in what you're doing that is going
to end up in a better result. And you can't possibly know now because like he said, like
you know, it's going to look like you're too stupid to know right now. So you just have
that faith and do it, you know, which is great. All right, so this is not timely because
this already happened by the time this air is, but I want to bring up what happened at the White House
where they had the pride, you know,
was it like a March or parade?
And they had the...
Was it a protest or was it just a march and something?
No, they were there to celebrate.
They hung up the rainbow flag and everything
and they had a transgender, you know,
activist or person, you know, go topless in front of the White House.
By the way, the White House came out and said,
you know, this is old news now, but they came out and they basically said,
you are banned from coming back or whatever.
The beginning of the backlash, I think.
This is the beginning of the like, okay, this is going too far.
You guys are, this isn't helping anybody type of deal.
But the whole, here's what really makes me upset about all this.
It isn't all that.
Politicians are politicians.
They're always gonna pander. They're all bullshit. They're all this. It isn't all that. Politicians are politicians. They're always gonna pander.
They're all bullshit.
They're all fake.
They only say what they say because they know their support
and they're gonna get voted in.
And if it's not that,
if there is no support, nobody's got a spine.
It's just the way it is, okay?
And I accept that, okay?
I don't, bottom line.
But here's what annoys a shit out of me.
They, in the White House,
or these big, you these big capital buildings,
they hang the American flag and then they put the rainbow flag or whatever.
Here's why that annoys a shit at me because the American flag is all
inclusive. It's the most fucking inclusive flag in the world.
That's it. That's all you need. That's it. That means if you're gay,
trans, straight, black, white, whatever, that flag is for everybody.
We're in this together.
And the idea of liberty, the idea that all, quote unquote,
man were created equal, that, that right there,
and although it hasn't been expressed perfectly in the past,
that's what's driven us to be leaders in the world
for all of these different things.
We need to move away from, like, what's happening?
What's been happening now for the last decade or so
is this division, division, division, division.
We're going the wrong direction.
Yeah.
That flag and our anthem and this country,
that represents everybody.
Immigrants, man, women, children.
You know, that's it.
We don't have to agree with each other,
but we're all protected the same way and that's that. Yeah, everybody's people have different experiences, but we've
got to stop this like, just the strange dividing that's happening. We're in backwards.
That's my rant. Do you think that a lot of this stuff is really like the root of it is
coming from our population? Or do you think a lot of it really is driven by politicians and media to divide
and to conquer and to separate?
Yes.
I don't run into a lot of these people.
It's not.
A lot of these are coming from a lot of this radical stuff that we see on both the left
and the right that gets highlighted on Fox or CNN or on your whatever channel
that you follow on social media,
I just don't see a lot of that in real life.
I just don't see a lot of that radical behavior in real life.
I feel like that gets highlighted to intentionally.
It gets exploited.
Cause, yeah, exactly.
It gets highlighted to use it to divide us more. And I wonder that.
Okay. And I know you're you're bringing this up because it's like, Oh, finally, are we finally
to see this like backlash and push back from this? I mean, the, the, the, the, I don't know,
if it's a realist or pessimistic attitude about it, I just, then we'll just find something
else. We'll just find something else to divide us and separate.
And like until people wake the fuck up,
okay, and really start to piece this together,
it's like, you know, who knows what it'll be next,
but this just seemed like it's the easiest way
to divide it right now.
There's my fear, my,
because here's what happens.
There's a, there's a,
if a movement starts to gain steam,
it gets identified by politicians or by media and
it becomes exploited.
It gets infiltrated, because it gets used like a tool.
It becomes wielded like a weapon.
So here's my fear.
Right now what we're seeing is what seems to be like this backlash against the extreme components
of the LGBT community.
Okay, we saw this with Target, we saw this with,
Bud Ryzer going a little too far, whatever.
Now, you know, topless transgender people
in the White House.
Now, the White House finally came out and said,
you are banned from coming back.
What I'm afraid of is the backlash is gonna get infiltrated
by people who are now not gonna say things like,
hey man, stop, you stop, stop doing these shows
in front of the kids where you have to make it or whatever.
Like that's inappropriate.
Now what are they gonna start to do is say,
hey, we need to band gay marriage again.
Let's go backwards.
That's what I'm afraid of.
I'm afraid it's gonna fuel.
It's, you can already see some signs of that.
Yes, not good.
Yeah, so that's why I mean,
exactly what you said Adam,
we need to be very careful because it gets exploited exploited either way and there's there's there's I guess negative and evil on
You decide yeah, and we need to be very careful even if we agree with some of the sentiment
We got to make sure we stay awake and say wait a minute hold on. I don't support going that like you're going way too hard
Well, and there's again to your point of like median what they choose to to kind of like hand pick out there in the environment.
It's like there's groups out there that are like,
gays against groomers is a good example of that.
It's just like people that are just like,
I don't see where this is appropriate.
If this is a very sexual presentation
and like we don't subscribe to that.
Like we're trying to live our lives, you say everybody else.
And this is not something we're putting all of our
emphasis towards and doesn't represent us well.
And so it's like, unfortunately, we're in this weird
climate where everybody has to profess their values,
profess their belief system, profess everything.
Otherwise, it's gonna get manipulated,
turn into something else.
Yeah, and I think what we're experiencing is the last, you know, gasping or grasping for air,
or you're dying breaths of legacy media. Probably. I think it's on its way out.
Yeah. There's more and more people. It feels the most...
It can't die soon enough. But it's going to and it is. Everything is showing is pointing in that direction that it's in.
I mean, you have the Tucker Carlson's who are leaving the Fox channel.
Like you're seeing more and more of these big names that actually carry most
of the weight with this legacy, legacy media are now leaving.
And it's only a matter of time before everybody just agrees that like it
all is trash.
Yeah.
Fox CNN all if it's on the new. I don't believe it. If it's on the news of time before everybody just agrees that like it all is trash.
Fox, CNN, all, if it's on the new, I don't believe it.
If it's on the new, it's getting well close to,
if it's on the new, if you tell me now, like honestly,
that's actually how I feel like I already filter information.
So if someone tells me something, I'm like,
oh, where did you get that?
Oh, I saw it on CNN or Fox, like automatically.
Okay, I'm gonna go over here.
Yeah, to me, it hasn't been confirmed yet though.
If you heard other news, to me, it's not confirmed now.
Well, here comes a turd in the punch bowl, okay?
Because we're getting to a point soon, very soon,
where AI is gonna get so good that you're not gonna be able to tell
what is real and what is fake and what people are gonna beg for.
People are gonna beg for arbitrators of real,
of authenticity, they're gonna beg,
please give us some kind of a regulation or certification
that shows us that this is real
because we can't tell anyone.
So this is where I'm gonna give more power
to less people, not less.
Yeah, so I don't know.
I feel more and more people,
I mean, how many people do you guys know,
listen to the show that claim,
and they've heard this, that say that they get their news from us opposed to watching the
news, because we're, they've built a relationship and a trust with us that the way we're going,
that their values and morals align with ours, so that we are going to filter whatever is
being put out there before we just put it out before we just record the numbers.
Look at the numbers of like Joe Rogan or like some of these big shows that are just like
more free, speech free thinking type of shows.
Like they get all, they get so many more subscribers, so many more views, but like the legacy
meet is one highlight.
So let me, okay, so get fast forward again.
Let's say for some reason we become this big voice
and they want someone on the other side
or whatever wants to attack us
and they can create fake images or videos of us doing things
that we didn't do.
And now we have to go out and how are we gonna combat that?
People are gonna beg for arbitrators of authenticity
and that's gonna give more power to less people.
They're gonna beg the government.
We need a seal of authenticity
because we can't trust anything.
So it's just gonna do this. So that pay attention to us, that trust us.
And then fast forward like you were saying,
maybe initially there's this like growing pains
of like people learning that like this shit
that people start to do to,
I mean, Candace Owens is going through it right now.
She just got pulled off of her YouTube channel.
It's like they're targeting her,
doesn't even know why.
It's like, so that's, it's already happening
what you're saying, okay?
And they're putting out disinformation about her
in order to cancel her.
So pretty soon here, the people that are loyal to you
and believe it, they're gonna believe what you have to say
over what AI and everything else is put out.
What if it can make you say what they want?
And it looks the same.
So what I'm saying is people are gonna beg for a way to know,
they're gonna beg for someone to create it.
To say that are gonna be out there, like voicing our voices and saying things that they like.
Sure, they'll have to be there'll be like security measures around platforms like let's say Spotify or YouTube.
Like so the only way you get to hear information from us.
So if it didn't come from our forms of self, that's right.
Exactly.
And they'll be value in being a platform that offers that.
That's a great.
That's a great point.
So that's a market response.
That's right. You come over to Spotify great point. So that's a market response.
That's right.
You come over to Spotify and what we guarantee is that if it comes from Spotify, it came
from that voice.
Yes.
And so we have put up, we have built it.
My fear is there's going to be a bunch of, like, it can be much better.
And there will.
And there will.
And there will.
And there will.
And there will.
And there will.
And there will.
And there will.
And there will.
And there will.
And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. And there will. like we talked about a while ago about like, you know, this new manipulative way of people
extorting money like on phones, you know,
copying your exact voice and then asking, you know,
for money, because they're an emergency.
Yeah, it's crazy.
I just, I just look, I just want people to,
there's a couple of things here that you can do.
One is activism should be about you actually going
and helping someone, not being angry and yelling.
That's, and it's also way more,
Arthur Brooks talks about this, it's way more fulfilling,
it's also helps more as well.
So that's number one, and then number two,
it's unifying.
Number two, there's dignity and respect
that each individual deserves,
and if they treat you shitty, they hurt you
or whatever, they go after your kids and wonder,
that's different.
Now, then the game is on.
But otherwise, like I had somebody tell me,
I was on a Twitter debate and someone was,
or discussion and I was talking about these,
these parents that bring their kids
to these sexualized drag shows.
I'm like, this is insane.
What kind of parents do this?
Well, what about parents who bring their kids to hooters?
I said, they're stupid too.
Why is that making any difference?
Yeah, I'm not defending that.
Just because it's a dude, that's doing it versus a girl.
Like, you take your kid to a club.
Yeah, more like a show.
Or, you know, it's the same thing.
You're still like, what did you generate dad?
Yeah, so like, you got to be consistent.
The difference though is that just to make me clear here,
is that the parents had the option
to take the kids to the hooters,
which would be a stupid decision for them to do,
where you're in a public school where they are forced to be at, and then they show up.
So there is definitely a clear difference. Both parents are idiots, right?
In that situation, who's advocating for these drag queens to read stories to five-year-olds
of that, that's ridiculous. And so would be bringing your five-year-old or seven-year-old
to hooters. It'd be just as irresponsible. Difference is, that's a dumb choice
that the parents make themselves to take them there,
where some of these parents don't have the choice.
They can't just do anything you know.
Yeah, they don't have the choice.
Can they school?
That's the other thing that's kind of scary
that's happening right now too,
is that some of this stuff is happening
and just parents are just unaware completely.
I've heard multiple stories of parents
just not even knowing that, like,
Oh, that's awesome.
Again, like you see media is gonna like dismiss it and say this is all just like right
We can conspiracy you know
There's just a lot of information out there that like will will stifle you know anything that's actually happening or not or
Exaggerated on the other end too and say that's happening everywhere, you know, so it's it's kind of let it's very
It's very much like what narrative
you're seeking is you'll be able to find something.
Yeah, and by the way, the public schools
are losing students at record paces.
You know, it's breaking records right now.
How many parents are homeschooling?
And the pandemic really boosted the shit out of that.
But parents saw what their kids were learning
because they were at home.
They're like, oh no, I'm pulling you out.
Yeah, so it's like exploding right now.
With some school districts actually not getting enough money
because so many kids are pulling out.
I mean, I hope that happens.
I mean, again, that's back to your, the market response.
I hope the market responds that way
and then that they have to course correct
because they can't fund the schools anymore.
Speaking to schools, kids, and students,
did you guys hear about Starlink's new engineer they just hired?
Mm-hmm. Okay, this is, I mean, this is, you want to talk about, I'm going to find the
article because Starlink has in Elon Musk, yes, dude, you ready for this? 14 year old
Kiron Quasi, Quasi, I think I'm saying his name right, from Santa Clara University, he's
a graduate, so he's about to graduate at 14 years old. Is he the one with three degrees? I'm going to let me see. I'm one kid. So he's 14 graduating from Santa Clara University
and Starlink already is going to hire him as a full-time software engineer. Wow. At the age of nine.
Well, he's already. Yeah. So let me hear you guys. What do you think, like think that through as a dad?
What is your thought on that?
Boy, that's right because he might have the intelligence
and all that, but that's still a child.
Oh, yeah, it's a child.
To do my job, a full-time job.
That's right.
And you can't tell me that he's not gonna be robbed
of his young adulthood and childhood by going straight
into being an engineer. That's a tough one. He's not gonna be robbed of his young adulthood and childhood by going straight into being an engineer.
That's a tough one. He's not a normal kid. Yeah. Which, and then there's all his genius.
He's brilliant. Yeah. So, he probably not stimulated like the rest of his peers.
And maybe he really wants to do it. Maybe he's more stimulated. He's got the adults.
There's no way they would force him into that, right? So, there's definitely that.
But then there's also, as a sick, this is mom calling for him.
I mean, let's just play this is mom calling for him. I mean, okay, come to me.
Okay, let's just play this out though a little bit.
Okay, so you're the dad and you have the kid and he is.
He's not forced to do this.
He wants to do this.
Like what's the conversation like for you?
Are you encouraging him to go do that?
Are you telling him about the potential
of what he's missing out?
What are you saying to your genius kid
who wants to go be a engineer at 14?
I would have him do it.
I would have him work way less than full time.
Exactly.
That would not be full time.
And then I would be barriers around it for sure.
Yeah, and then I would encourage him to build
and start something on his own.
Yes, it's crazy creativity.
That's what I would do.
I would push that direction.
I would put, like if you want to keep doing the engineering thing, you still, you want
to level up, like instead of us going into a working a job, a nine to five at 14 years old
or something like that, let's build something together.
You got to, if I have a kid that's that damn smart, with my experience of building businesses,
like we're going to build something.
We're going to create something together.
I'm saying?
Imagine how challenging this would be for as co-workers.
Like you're in a meeting, you know,
and you're like 30-year-old.
It's a 14-year-old.
And then you say something correct, you see?
Like no, actually that's the wrong code.
You got a little gizmo hazard.
No, we'll give you a wedgie.
Just give me a second.
I'm crazy not to, right?
I mean, imagine the challenges that come with that too.
Because again, you're a genius when it comes to coding
and things like that.
But you're still a child.
Social communication, leadership, you know.
Just wisdom, maturity.
Yeah, be able to, yeah, there's a lot of things
that that person is gonna be,
that kid is gonna be way behind on.
I wonder what, I wonder what that pan's out to be
over the next four or five years.
And I wonder how I would handle that as a dad.
Is that even legal? Well, hold on a second. Can you even do a full time job at 14?
With consent. You have to make a special.
So he actually commented on this. What do you say? So he says, I think there is a conventional
mindset that I'm missing out on my childhood. But I don't think that's true. I think again, that mindset would have me graduating
middle school now.
And I don't think it makes sense for someone
that's able to take rigorous graduate electives work
in a prestigious co-op.
I am joining SpaceX.
I mean, you're good.
I mean, he's like, you're holding them back, right?
And then there's gonna be a resent there.
So, yeah, that's a tough one.
I mean, he's, he's, yeah, I was gonna say it
from the narrow perspective of intelligence
and mathematics and code writing
and like from that perspective, like absolutely you're right.
Like let's push the education, let's let you go.
Like I would never want my son who's in middle school
who could be crushing college to be like, hold him back.
We're like, no, we don't want to excel,
like let him accelerate,
but there's a difference between accelerating your knowledge
and learning and then going to work.
Talk about how a work for another come,
what an interesting way to rebel.
No, you can't go to work.
You can't.
You never let me do anything, you know what I'm doing.
I just want to build a rocket. You guys are a lunchpale. Watch me get it. I'm gonna go work. You never let me do anything. You watch me. I just want to build a rocket.
You guys have a lunchpill. Watch me dad. I'm going to go work. Oh my
shuddy. Such a room. Yeah. I can't open it up. I mean,
our team is he still break down and have like tantrums and she like that.
Throw fence. It's 14. Yeah, you got it, right? You know,
you're still going to have to like that. You can. So dad, make me a sandwich.
Yeah. Oh my god. Hey, my son right now. So I promised that I would bring up anytime there's
like difficult stuff.
So we are, I think I brought up not long ago that we got on
the baby tracker thing and he's like,
I shouldn't say baby's not a baby, but the tracker thing, right?
So he's like going through this gross birth that's,
you know, should be ending any day now.
And this morning, I jump out of bed because I hear him
like just having a meltdown. I can never hear that from him him and I'm like I get up and I'm like and I think like Katrina is just like
Abandoning him or something because I'd never hear a meltdown like that
And I'm like what is she doing I get up and she's like left him like what what's going on there?
She's like just let him be and I'm like what she's I what's going on is his banana broke
What's going on is his banana broke?
He gets pissed
His banana broken house dude and he just a meltdown and I'm saying just was so kids are funny Yeah, not right and she's like there's nothing you can say to him right now
There's nothing you can say to solve that other than maybe go get him a whole another banana downstairs
Which I think it was the last banana so it's like it it's a lot. You can't stick it back on.
Yeah, I can't stick it back on.
So one time I, one time I started, I broke it.
Yeah.
He really didn't see it because he'll do the same thing.
Yeah.
I broke, Jessica saw me, she goes, no.
So I quickly held it with my hand and just fed him, like, so he's not gonna notice.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's broke.
That's what, so I didn't even know that was a thing.
I told you guys on the podcast, I don't know.
It was like almost a year ago, I think when I first figured we were driving in my truck somewhere
and I was giving him his banana,
and that was my natural thing.
It was like giving him my little two-year-old
a full banana, I broke it in half and I broke it in half.
And I was like, oh shit, what are you doing?
You know, I'm getting curious, like,
oh no, you can't break his banana.
He can't, I was like, well that was news to me.
And I tell you guys,
I have to sometimes peel a realist's chicken nuggets?
Peel?
Oh, he just like the fried skin.
That's funny.
About peel it.
I'm like, peel it.
It was an apple.
What am I peeling?
He's like, tick skin off.
I'm like, oh, okay.
He's like, oh, it's healthy.
He just got white nuggets, you know?
Nothing else.
Like this is not the tasty part.
What a fun thing.
That's the brand new ingredient.
That's hilarious.
I know, dude.
You got a peel.
I tell you what, too, and shout out,
I probably don't do enough of shouting Katrina out for,
but I did, I called her today after the fact
because of all that.
I actually got up, he never comes in on my side.
He came into the bedroom and he actually crawled
in on my side of the bed.
And I thought, oh, that was interesting.
He's never does that.
He either comes down the middle and then cuddles up with Katrina or goes to her side. He actually came to my side of the bed. And I thought, oh, that was interesting. He's never does that. He either comes down the middle
and then cuddles up a Katrina or goes to her side.
He actually came to my side and crawled in.
And so, okay, here's an opportunity
where I could be a good dad
and I'll put him back down instead of having her get up
because he actually came to me, right?
Because normally he refused me to do it
and it turns, like, oh, it sucks for you.
You know what I'm saying?
He wants you, right?
So he came to me and I'm like, okay,
I should do the right thing.
I should get up and I'll take him, right?
So I took him to bed.
But man, I don't, so back to my teasing me
about peeing sitting down like in Doug's story too,
of falling asleep, sitting down there.
When I get up to go pee,
that's another reason why I do this is that
I can stay almost asleep and like,
plop down on the toilet, go pee,
and then come back and then fall back asleep.
If I wake up,
man, it's hard to go out.
I'm fucking awake, man.
And so I was up for like three hours in the middle of the night
after I got up, I walked him to bed,
I rubbed his back a little bit till he fucking.
See you were done.
And then I was, oh,
so I'm like exhausted, man.
And then in the morning I hear him kind of breaking down
and she totally like left me alone.
And so I like I call there and I just said,
hey, you know, I always do, I I told you guys whenever I tell her I love you
that there's a reason what I'm thinking right. So I told her that she called.
She says, what are you thinking about? Oh, I just want me to tell you. And then I told her,
I said, I just appreciate that you just handle that stuff. And you don't ever say anything.
You don't ever complain. You don't ever say it's your turn. Like it and I know a lot of
relationships they do that right. It's like, I got a last night. So it's your turn to
get up this night. Like she handles all of that. And I don't ever have relationships, they do that, right? It's like, I got it last night, so cheer, turn it, get up this night.
Like, she handles all of that, and I don't ever have to.
And like, I was, I briefly had to have an example
of what it was like to not have a good night's rest
of doing that and realize like, oh my God,
if I had to do that 50% of the time,
I would be just a, you guys would hate me.
You think I'm a pain in the ass to do with it?
I think that's why she doesn't,
because you know what I'm saying.
She's keeping the peace from us. She knows who I am.
She's keeping the peace from us.
She's the business together.
I'm rather just trying to help you.
It's like just you and us.
Yeah, no.
We ran her text, just let him sleep.
And I'm terrible about saying something.
So I got to be better about that.
You just take this off a granite.
You know what I'm saying?
With your partner sometimes those little things.
Well, I have to share some news.
My, your pregnant?
Wow.
It's, it happened, you guys.
No, it's point 23.
No, my prediction, you know, with the whole AI being, um, some kind of the antichrist,
there's a church in Germany that's now using chat GPT.
To do its preaching?
To do its entire service.
Oh my god. So it's so far right now, like the
preachers used it, it's like 85% and so we'll prompt it and we'll actually like, but they
follow to exactly, you know, each part of it from the hymns, singing to the actual format
and the whole entire sermon is all written out
through Chats UBT.
Wow.
It's just trippy, right?
Like it's happening already.
The takeover's gonna be so easy
because they're gonna have everything already.
Cause now you're just a guy standing up there,
take it away.
Wow.
And it's like, why be the guy and then just go right to the machine.
I've actually already used it for that before.
So there's been times already, I've used it twice like that where I wish I remember,
and I have it in my notes.
So I'm able to look it up for the audience to figure out what it was.
But there's something like the Katrina and I were challenged with.
And I'm like, you know what?
I'm the Bible versus slipping me.
That's like so good for this thing.
And so I actually did chat GBT.
I said, what does the Bible say about X, Y, and Z?
And give it to me in the top 10 or like that.
And it listed out and was like beautiful.
Like it gave me all 10 of the different verses
and the meaning behind all that.
And so, the power of that thing is incredible.
You know that there's some women?
I see what they're doing. You know, there's some women that are having that have AI boy and so, I mean, the power of that thing is incredible. So, you know that there's some women, I see what they're doing, you know?
Yeah.
There's some women that have AI boyfriends already, right?
Do you guys know this?
Doug, look up.
Doug, look up women with AI boyfriends.
There's these, there's, there's women that are, like, they'll consider their AI their
boyfriend because it talks to them and understands them.
He really listens.
You really listen to him.
Yeah, absolutely.
Did you find a Doug?
Yeah.
Did the employees they have?
What does the article say?
The screen's not up.
I'm sorry, I'm pulling it up here.
No worries.
Yeah.
So it's already started, you know?
And this is without a form, like a physical form.
Yeah.
I mean, you add a physical form now.
Well, isn't that, I mean mean that's obviously that's a factor, but it's not one of the highest factors, you know for women in terms of like you know
What that's why it's really seeking yeah when they're physically safe for men. That's like that's not gonna cut it
Sheeran like chat about things
chat about things. Stop talking.
It's not extreme.
What is that?
Hey, it's so great.
What does that say?
What does that say there?
Something called man of your dreams for $300.
It sells an AI companion that will never die, argue, or cheat.
Oh, wow.
Except if you stop paying it.
That's like the selling point on it.
It's so bad.
Hey, there's, I mean,
see, women falling in love with their AI boyfriend.
That's an article
Wow, don't get bored. You have to like every now and then you make one like cheat. I mean all of this to me just I mean guy all this to me is
I mean, there's parts that were like oh my god. It's so surprising But it's like it just is falling right in line with the unplug plug theory. I just think that like I can refer to your theory
Is that fear? Yes, I don't make it like
And you know why if I don't say enough if I don't say enough what'll happen it'll happen We'll be like whoa this is crazy. I've been saying that for years on this spot years. I've been saying that
It's gonna be called that it's gonna be plugged in and you know what you need to name it something
That's what I plugged in an unplugged it'll be good. No, that's how they're gonna call it
They're gonna call it plugged in an unplugged and And that's how to be like, are you sure?
You're a Bruce Willis was in that movie.
Was it the one that?
That's a,
Shit, it's right at the tip of my tongue.
Chad Gbt would not know.
Speak great about Bruce Willis.
That's a, that's Chad Gbt.
No, you know which one it is.
Yeah, I do.
I mean, you know what he's talking about, right?
Where it's all, Bruce Willis is like,
you lay in these chairs and you're plugged in
all day long and you live in the virtual world.
Yeah, like you.
You use Willis?
Yeah.
Yeah, it's called.
Is this the one where you get taxi driver
in the future, is that something else?
No, that's something else.
This one is called,
God, that's fifth element.
Fifth element.
Yeah, no, that's good.
Yeah, this one, I mean,
and I actually think it's one of the better depiction
of what I think is going to happen, which is not. Yeah, this one, I mean, and I actually think it's one of the better depiction of what I think is going to happen,
which is this kind of, everyone will still have these kind
of home, like player one, player one is it's a little more
dystopian, right?
It's like this, like, you know, everyone stacked on trailer
park, whatever.
But this is more like you have normal homes,
but nobody goes outside.
See, here's why I think you need to name it something different.
I don't think the plugged in are going to be called anything.
I think they're going to be just normal. Yes. And then it'll be,'ll be unplugged. You're gonna have a name. Those are the weird ones. Like, oh, you're one of the unplugged. Whatever.
Oh, wait, wait, wait, what is it? Manual. No,
organic. You're organic. How organic. What is it? Is this surrogate? Yes, surrogate. Just what's it called? You play electric guitar or acoustic or
is there another term for that
where there's no electricity?
Why do you need to call it?
Custin unplugged or acoustic?
It's just acoustic, acoustic is anything.
I like organics, organics, I like organics.
Oh, you live organically, that's it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Oh, you're an organic, huh?
Yeah, yeah.
How can you tell?
Your face is freaking good.
Acapella is not your thing of it.
It was acoustic, was what he,
I think that's what you were trying to do.
To elute you.
I mean, it might be some different hammer
Whatever, but I mean it's I'll come up with a name. I feel like it's good. It's credit for it
Man sell hit it right on the head
I'm a capella. He's auto tuned
Hey, did you guys you guys hear what happened?
Don't change
Hey, did you guys, did you guys hear what happened? Wow, don't change.
It's just awesome.
That just happened right there.
It became younger.
A little bit more.
Hey, if you haven't watched Sergei,
did you watch it?
It's a worthwhile job.
Did you guys hear what happened in San Francisco,
the West Cape?
Yes.
Oh yeah, because I was bringing this up.
So they got, they're shutting down
because they already closed down Nordstroms.
Yeah.
Nordstroms left, right?
And it was because it was,
because of the fact that per month,
like what was their nut?
It was like 500 something million.
They had to make no foot traffic.
There's none.
I'm trying to look it up right now.
Okay, so that's what happened.
It was no foot traffic.
It wasn't actually theft.
I thought it was theft.
Well, nobody's up there buying anything.
Nobody wants to be there.
Yeah, why is foot traffic down?
There's theft, there's drugs, homelessness,
homeless shiver.
Yes, so they're gone.
And they follow lots of retailers that have left,
Amber Cumbian Fitch left.
You know what's weird about that?
You bring them.
Whole foods shut down.
It's a very obvious glaring problem.
And it's like the whole city's decaying
and it looks like it's going to be honest with you
to Detroit.
And like some people, you bring it up and they like,
don't wanna like acknowledge it or admit
that it's like a completely disintegrating failing.
Well, I mean, it's because you're literally
insulting their home, that's why.
Dude, it's awful, there it is.
But I mean, imagine you're committed, right?
You're on your own to home there for 20 years,
maybe you're on your second generation of living up there.
Then why aren't you fighting for change? Why aren't you actually like trying to implement things that are gonna clean up the city, bring back,
law, order, get rid of all of this, like just complete destructive behavior.
Yeah, so banana republic left, you said north from left.
Yeah, I saw the motion.
Yeah, so the occupancy of the center went down to 55%.
By the way, I've never seen it look like this.
I think commercial vacancies in San Francisco
wasn't like over 30% or so.
It's higher than I think.
I mean, that's, you know what that means?
You can't recover.
That's what that means.
That there, you wouldn't be able to recover because you reach a certain point you can't recover. That's what that means. You wouldn't be able to recover
because you reach a certain point,
you can't even fix it.
The manager or major hotel changes pulled out too.
They audit, they audit,
switch it to frickin' whatcha'ma call it to,
like a homeless shelter,
so change all that office space to a homeless shelter
and get them up off the street or something.
Well, if it's a figure out something,
you gotta have medical services.
You can't just shelter.
If we need to be worse than them being on the street.
We need mental health facilities to accommodate.
Did you see, since you brought up real estate,
I actually, if I tell you guys this,
did you see what Blackstone just put together a fund
of 31 billion to go buy and outs and buy enough properties?
Again.
Yeah, dude.
I mean, if they infuse $31 billion in buying up properties over there like could we actually not see this this housing market really go down much?
How how how long how long do they strings I mean we may just be well nobody wants to get out of their house
Everybody's a hell of equity so they could raise interest rates all they want and people are like
I'm not you see that I posted I posted that the other day of the amount, I'll show you the stat on.
Did you see that Justin?
I think I shared it with Sal, I don't know if I shared it
with you.
There, here it is right here.
So 67.6% have paid their mortgages off
or have at least 50% equity, almost 70% of people have.
So they're not going anywhere.
Yes, have 50% or more equity means there were houses
where double the what they have of an end or it's paid off.
Then there's another 20 or now excuse me,
another 32.4% mortgage homes with less than 50% equity
and then 38.7 on excuse me.
And then another 28.9% mortgage homes
with greater than 50% equity.
It's like insane. There's no, and then if you.9% mortgage homes with greater than 50% equity. It's like insane.
And then if you have a loan,
there's no way you would get into a loan
that's seven, eight% interest when you're sitting
on that much equity and a three, four, five% loan.
What do you think they're doing?
It's low-ranking.
It's stats right now in terms of people selling homes
right now numbers-wise,
because usually right now,
while it's getting into summer, that's when like,
yeah, so we're, I mean,
so they go off of like a rolling inventory
to tell you of like how much where we are and so with that.
And you wanna have like six months
when you wanna see, when you see it come the other way,
we still, like in the Bay Area,
have like three months of inventory for homes,
which is still a shortage.
Yeah.
So we still have the,
and that's part of why we have the shortage of.
One, we underbuilt for the last decade, and then in addition to that, you have people
that are just are not going to sell right now.
Now, you would think that they would potentially reduce rates to stimulate, but what you might
just see is you might just see, you won't see the rates go anywhere.
What you might see is big funds come in and buy a best, buy a throughout state, which
would just just just to just
drive it up even further.
So we just might be moving to a new time of renting.
Yeah, everybody's a renter and if you're not a renter,
if you own, it's a two million dollars
to get in on a property or whatever like that.
So.
Yeah, you know what's cool is on the Airbnb front
or whatever, you know, a lot of people,
we know this, Adam, I showed you this,
or you maybe you showed me,
a lot of people are buying land and
Building like fancy like Yerts
Intense and shit and they're renting them out like crazy and people are doing for vacation. I'm making killing
I've seen that yeah, they're not even houses. They're just like it's a fancy tent
No, they buy like a glamping piece of property out in the middle of nowhere
It has like a pond in the middle and then throw like five or six, you know, fancy yurt around it and some running water.
No charge like $500 an hour.
I love it as a business idea.
I think it's a great strategy right now.
Totally.
So, organify mentioned is coming up here and I want to say something.
I don't think we've communicated very often, which is that their products are actually
third party tested for glyphosate residue.
They're glyphosate residue-free, so glyphosate is what they spray on GMOs, but also oftentimes
you can get organic products that are organic, but because the plants or whatever were grown
next to conventional plants or farms, they get glyphosates on them.
Well, I haven't seen that marketed from other companies.
Is that, are they unique in,
because it's harder to control?
It's easier to control organic and say you're organic.
You have additional testing for glyphosates.
Yeah.
So they test their stuff for glyphosate.
Now, glyphosates, why don't you want glyphosate residue?
Could glyphosates kill weeds?
That's what they exist.
They act on something called the shikamati pathway,
which is also present in bacteria.
So not yourselves, but the bacteria in your body,
in your gut can get influenced by glyphosates.
They almost connect like a mild antibiotic.
So you want to make contribute to poor gut health.
You want to stay away from going back to the gut.
Well, isn't that the theory on what makes GMO really bad?
Because there's a lot of genetically modified foods
Yeah, these come out Z by odd Z by odd it gives a GMO right so there's not not everything that's GMO is technically quote unquote bad
No, no, no, no, but and but where most of the it's the the glyphosate that they douse them in right that's the thing that you got to watch out for
Right, it's not the corn. It's the fact that they spray shit out of the corn
Is it an insecticide or herbicide?
Glyphosates are herbicide.
herbicide.
Yeah, and they kill plants through a pathway that doesn't exist in the human body, so they're
like a state.
What's the difference between a insecticide and herbicide?
Insects.
One of the other things is plants.
And they're herbicide kills plants.
Herb like weeds.
Weeds basically weed killer.
Got it, got it, got it.
And then insecticide kills. So weed killer versus like it, got it, got it, and then insecticide.
So weed killer versus like raid.
I mean, wouldn't they do both?
If you do one, you would do the other.
Is there a situation where you want to do one?
Yeah, they definitely blast plants with insecticides for sure.
But glyphosate are unique because glyphosates
will kill all plants, but you can genetically modify a plant
and not die from the glyphosate.
Now you can spray the shit out of the crop
and all the non-JMO weeds die.
Yeah.
So it's like this brilliant way of like reducing costs
and increasing yield, but then you eat your corn
or your plant or whatever.
You get the residue from it.
And you get glyphosate transverse.
It's supposedly safe, but it interacts with this.
I also interacts with the bacteria in the soil.
So it's like sterilizing the soil over time.
Well, it gets up in the clouds, rings back.
Rings down.
This is why transfers elsewhere.
This is why organic foods can have glyphosate on them,
even though they're not technically, you know,
deliberately sprayed.
Yeah, it's a glyphosate.
But organify, again, everything's glyphosate,
residue-free, third-party test, it's really good.
All right, we're gonna shout out one of our latest
employees, Steve Copsha. You can find him on Instagram. My pump Steve
We brought him on board to work on a special project. Can't talk about it. That's pretty awesome. Anyways, he's been a pretty awesome addition to the team.
Already great. Yeah, fantastic
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All right, back to the show.
Our first color is Olivia from Florida.
Hi, Olivia, how can we help you?
Hi guys, thank you so much for having me on.
I'm really excited to be here.
I just wanted to say thank you and a quick
Testiment to how awesome you guys are and how much you know your stuff. My fiance was a long distance runner for years.
Ran for a D1 school would run like 100 miles a week said he would never give up running. I hate running
So I was like, let me get you hooked on mine pump and wait, let's do it. So I converted him over. We ran anabolic together and this guy just hit 2.25 for bench in like
three months of training and I'm still struggling to do a plate so but it's fine. Wow.
That's awesome. I'm going to say thank you guys for that because now I don't have to go on runs with them.
Awesome. Awesome. No problem. Okay, so I'll give some background info with my question,
because I think it'll make a little bit more sense.
But basically, my question is how I can train
around a busy schedule while maintaining strength gains
and compound lifts.
So I'm 23, 5 to about 125 pounds.
I ran in a ballac from January to March, and I loved it,
increased my strengths and all the big three lifts,
and definitely put on muscle, especially
my pods and glutes, because I need to get new scrub pants and jeans now.
I'm a veterinary medicine student and I'm starting clinical rotations and we rotate
through different specialties in the hospital every two weeks.
So starting Monday, I'll be rotating through our medicine specialty, which is pretty time-consuming.
The hours are about 6.30 a.m. or earlier to like 7.30 p.m. or later depending on the
case load. And I'll be on that for four weeks Monday through Friday and possibly
weekends. And then I get a four week break of a more normal schedule like 8 to 6. And
then I'll have another four weeks going through surgery, which is the same as medicine
like kind of 6 a. like 7am or 8pm.
So I won't really have time to commit to foundational workouts on those days.
I wanted to start performance because I know the flow is typically in a ball like performance and then aesthetic and also I haven't trained performance style
and probably about a year and a half, two years and I've been training full body style
since January and before that, I spent
a whole year training split style.
So I feel like my body probably would benefit from that challenge, but I just can't really
start that until later in the fall, and then I figured I could do aesthetic in the spring
when my schedule lightens up a little bit.
So for the time being, I wanted to get your guys' advice on how I can continue to challenge
my body in new ways, especially while not losing strength in my compound lifts because I'm
kind of worried about that a little bit.
Yeah, this is an easy answer, Olivia.
We have a program that would be perfect for you.
Maps 15, do the advanced version.
Basically, you'd be doing about 20 to 25 minutes a day of compound
lifts and exercises.
So you show up the gym or if you have a barbell at home, about 20 to 25 minutes every day,
you're doing maybe two exercises and you're not just going to keep your gains, you're probably
going to get stronger by following that.
As long as nutrition is good and as long as you're getting good sleep, I know it's stressful
what you're about to do. so that could always throw a wrench,
but you'll love it.
You're gonna be, and then when you're ready
to do a more traditional workout,
then I would switch to mass performance,
but mass 15 advanced version, done deal.
It's centered around two compound lifts a day, basically.
And so, and the way you can run it,
so if it's a really busy, stressful
week, you can keep the workouts just short the 15, 20 minutes. If you find a day where
you have a day off or you're well rested, you can actually combine the next workout together.
So if you want, if you want to run it for 40 minutes, we, we wrote it in a way where you
could stack it too. So it's like, you have that flexibility of, when you're in a time crunch,
when you're not quite as rested,
you can run just a 15, 20 minute version
when there's times where you're like,
oh, I gotta hold, it's a weekend.
I don't have any work to this weekend.
Like I wanna do a full hour type of workout.
You can combine two of the workouts
and run it like that.
So there's some flexibility in it, but running that.
And since you already own performance,
it's the only other thing that I would say potentially
to add if you have like these days
where you've got some days off or you're really rested
and you're like, I wanna do a little more,
it'd be mobility stuff.
Because you recognize that you've already been running
kind of a body builder and split type of routine
and full body, you're probably neglecting some mobility work.
And so we have that in performance.
So if you want to add an extra day in there or something,
where you're doing something,
I would do the mobility sessions
that are in performance to complement Maps 15
until you get back to your normal schedule.
How long have you been working out consistently
with string training?
Probably about three years now.
You're gonna probably get stronger with mass 15 then.
You're probably gonna, this is gonna,
it's likely to be not just something that keeps you strong,
but you probably are gonna see yourself get stronger.
That happened to me.
When we created the program and I ran it,
I hit new lifts, new lift PRs,
and I totally did not anticipate that.
So that's probably going to happen.
At the very least, you're going to feel good.
Yes, the frequency element.
I think people don't realize how effective that is and just how much you can get just
enough and then recover and then just keep that momentum going.
But it's definitely not just a preservation type
of a workout routine.
It's definitely something that a lot of people
have gained from.
Yeah, the only thing I'd say is just decide if you want
to do it in the morning or after work.
That's it.
Yeah, I'm definitely like a morning movement type of person.
I'm so used to like getting up at like 5 a.m.
and going to the gym.
And I feel like if I don't get that movement
and if I don't feel like I'm lifting as heavy
or pushing myself the way I want to, I'll tend to like freak out and I'll want to over
correct for it.
Yeah.
Because I have some bands at home so I didn't know if I should just switch to bands to
save time in the mornings.
Like if there's a morning where I have to be there like 5, 30 or 6, I was like well maybe
I could do some bands but I know like long term I would just be itching to get back and like 530 or 6. I was like, well maybe I could do some bands, but I know like long term, I would just be itching
to get back and like lift them heavy stuff.
So it would take a lot for me.
Literally, this is what you do, okay?
Literally, you shower, this is a 20 minute workout, okay?
So you're not even gonna sweat much.
Shower, get everything set up, drive to the gym,
do your 20 minute maps, 15 workout,
and then go straight to work.
Okay.
Yep, you'll be set.
And for those, the massive team workouts, I also have
prime.
So I do like a couple of just movements beforehand before I've
been doing my list.
And sometimes that takes me like 10 to 15 minutes.
Would I just be able to cut that out and just go straight into the
lift?
It depends how good your movement patterns are.
Um, so if you've got really good movement patterns
and the exercises are not ones that are like
really challenging for you to get into,
you could do one or two warm-up sets of an exercise,
and then you're gonna be okay.
The people that that, yeah, people,
that wouldn't work if you're like,
man, when I squat, I get hip pain,
where I really need to make sure I can deadlift right
because I tend to hurt myself. In that case, I would say, you know, make sure you do the priming, but if you feel good and you're okay,
like one or two sets of warm up and get into the workout, you can even just reduce it down to one of those
mobility exercises and do that beforehand. You know, the most effective one that you need and then
to like throughout the day, it's gonna be just as effective if you find a moment to just perform that
like for five minutes or something to break up, you know, whatever you're doing throughout the day, it's going to be just as effective if you find a moment to just perform that like for five minutes or something to break up, you know, whatever you're doing throughout
the day, that's going to play, that's going to do very well for you.
Okay, that makes sense. I'll probably be able to do the warm ups that's maybe just like
drop the weight a little bit to connect to the muscle and then go to the foot.
That's it. Yeah, exactly. Cool. So if you don't have mass 15, we'll send that to you, okay?
Awesome. Thank you guys so much. No problem when you get married by the way. Oh
2025. I want to graduate that school first and get all my ducks in a row. All right. It's good for you. Smart. Yeah, congratulations.
Get it. Thank you. Thank you guys so much. You got it. Yeah, you know, it's funny. We wrote Mass 15, right? And how many DMs do we get from people who are like,
I didn't think I'd hit PR.
I don't think I'd build muscle like this is crazy.
All the time.
Yeah.
I keep getting them.
Yeah, it's strange.
And again, I think that people underestimate
the frequency component.
I also think it highlights something else
that we have communicated on this podcast
and we've admitted ourselves that we're guilty of this
is obviously if you listen to a fitness podcast, you probably like fitness. You're probably and probably a good percentage or even probably
fitness fanatics like us. They could benefit from me. And we tend to we tend to overreach and over
train and not count all the other stress in our life. Family member dies, school tests, work
grinding like crazy. Oh, and then I'm crushing the gym too. And it's, school, test, work, grinding, like crazy.
Oh, and then I'm crushing the gym too.
And it's like, you know, I think a lot of people
didn't realize that maybe scaling back the workout
that would not hinder the results
in fact, and accelerating a lot of people.
You know, she brought up something else
that we don't talk too much about, like an example
of like where I cut out like my mobility stuff and I think you guys answered it
perfect and it's like so if I'm if I'm gonna squat and you said it's like that's a movement pattern where I have to do
combat stretch I've got to do like a quick zone one thing and prime up or back to to to perform a really
otherwise my low back will be feeling it my hips will be feeling it and I'll pay for it afterwards
it's like it's a non-negotiable.
But I can go into a deadlift cold.
I can go into even, all right.
Now, does that mean that I wouldn't benefit
from doing prime movements?
Absolutely, I would benefit.
But I can go into those movements.
You can warm up with the movements.
That's right.
There's certain movements that are just,
I absolutely have to prime in order to get myself
in a favorable position.
Then there's other movements that I can,
it's, it would be ideal for me still to prime,
and if I have the time, I'm definitely doing it,
but if that's something where I'm like,
shit, I'm crunched on time, it's okay,
I'm deadlifting today, I can get right into that movement.
So.
Next color is Carrie from Indiana.
Carrie, what's happening? How can we help you?
How you doing, guys?
Nice to see you.
Good, man, thank you.
Thanks for taking the time to have me on today.
I really appreciate it.
You got it.
How can we help you?
Well, just to kind of give you a quick file.
So I, uh, I'm sure you've heard this story about a million times
over your guys' years of training, but, um, I, uh, I'm divorced.
No kids over the last few years,
especially during COVID, put on a ton of weight,
just been a rougher years, like everybody else.
Currently 45 years old and 510,
305, started working out seriously
for the first time about three or four months ago.
And last but not least, 20, 25 pounds since then.
And currently I am doing 170 grams of protein per day,
2400 calories.
You're almost all my foods, some whole foods,
kind of took that advice from you guys as far as trying to stay away from the restaurants,
with seed oils and whatnot, so you guys have taught me.
And I've quickly learned just kind of like going through podcasts
and I thought you guys would be much going to get into the gym and just love how much I've learned so far
and I'm going back and listen to old episodes and just really appreciate everything you guys put out there.
So I just wanted to say thanks for that.
I'm just kind of at a point where I want to make sure that I'm getting everything I can
out of my efforts and I don't really know where to begin.
I know I love you.
There's so many like maps programs and things out there that are available and I love,
listen to some of the, a lot of the callers talk about different programs but I'm not really sure like what would be
best for me. I do have limited mobilities and just because of my weight I feel
like it can't be touched my toes like sometimes and hamstrings are tight from
lifting lately and but I will say that like I said I was about 20 to 30 pounds
so far I'm stronger than I'd ever been I'm getting PRs all the time because I'm
listening pretty heavy. You know I hear you guys talk about reverse dieting
versus cutting, hit versus on two cardio's,
or just walking.
I hear you guys talk about high reps versus low reps.
I'm not really sure how where to begin
and how to, I guess how to start this journey.
Yeah, well, you came to the right place for sure.
And congratulations on your initial 20 pound weight loss.
Thank you.
Yeah, so what does your workout look like now?
How many of you do you go to the gym?
How long do your workouts?
What are the exercises you tend to do?
Yeah, to come to do a three day split,
where like push pull legs.
I'm walking about 60 minutes on the other four days.
I work out to consist of usually about six exercises, about 18 reps anywhere between
and the low end like six reps if I'm trying to lift heavy first set or up to like 10 or 12 reps for
you know some of the other sets. Largely I haven't really gotten much into like some of the other sets. Largely, I haven't really gotten much into some of the core. It says
that you guys have talked about as far as squats or anything like that. It's more of a bench overhead press.
Yeah, most of the machines for legs currently, more of the kind of a beginner workouts that I found
online. Okay, Carrie, can you do a deadlift in a squat,
in a barbell squat?
Are you, have you tried that?
I was in.
Okay, maps down to Bologna would be the perfect program
for you, but I would start you in pre-phase
and I would do pre-phase for about six weeks,
maybe eight weeks, a six day weeks,
and then move to phase one and then follow the program.
I think that'll be perfect for you.
Okay.
By the way, what you're doing right now is not bad.
Yeah, you're okay.
You're actually doing okay, right?
Which is why you're seeing great results.
I think the only thing I would add, I might, I would probably bump your protein to like
200 grams.
Exactly what I was gonna say.
So I'd probably, I'd push you up a little bit on it, but that's about it.
I mean, like, you're, so that will also bring your calories to probably about 2600 calories
or so. So I would love to put you on maps and a ball,
like Sal said, that new stimulus,
especially with the squatting and deadlifting,
new movements in there right now,
with an increase in grams of protein,
I think you're gonna see yourself continue to build muscle
and continue to speed your metabolism up,
which would be the main focus, I think,
for the next probably six to eight weeks.
Like he said, I love that direction.
That's it.
The other thing I would do, but you're doing great, bro.
You are.
And the other thing I would do is I would track your steps every day.
Which I do do that.
Okay, so what are you averaging on a daily basis?
It kind of, I mean, honestly, like the four days that I'm walking in between my lifts, I
get a lot more steps, but I'm average, probably about eight to 10,000.
Okay.
Good.
So try to see if you could hit eight to 10,000 steps a day
without the treadmill.
That would be the one piece of advice I'll give you.
Now here's why, there's nothing wrong with the treadmill.
You're walking, there's nothing wrong with it.
But long term, if we're gonna try and create habits
and behaviors in a lifestyle that's sustainable,
because here's the challenge, I'm gonna be honest with you.
I know right now you're thinking the challenge is to lose the weight.
It's actually not gonna be the challenge,
the challenge is gonna be keeping it off.
Now they're both hard, but if I were to compare the two,
losing the weight is significantly easier than keeping it off.
Nobody keeps it off, like maybe five to 10%
of people are able to do it because what they do is-
There's actually the third time I've tried to lose the weight.
I've lost 100 pounds twice in my life already. Oh wow, Okay. So you know. You know that. Okay. Yeah. So yeah.
First you time that I didn't do it, the health we have trying to do it the right way this time.
You are so far. Stay on this. And so rather than then then walking on a treadmill and getting
those steps, see if you can challenge yourself to do it just throughout the day. Okay. So what does
that look like? In experiment with this. Literally, you go to the store, throughout the day. Okay, so what does that look like?
In experiment with this, literally,
you go to the store, park far away.
You gotta use the bathroom in the building,
use the one on the third floor, take the stairs.
You're in your chair, let's say you're watching TV,
be like, you know what, I need to get some more steps,
walk around while watching, like small things,
it start what happens, you start to develop
different behaviors, and it's, you're more likely to be consistent
with something like that, then you are to stop,
get on a treadmill for 60 minutes, something like that.
So that would be pretty much it.
And then the protein, 200 grams a day from whole foods,
eat the protein first if you're not doing that already.
So whenever you look at your food, your meal,
whatever the protein is, eat that first
then move to the
rest. That helps control cravings. It helps with satiety, it helps with blood sugar, and
it's another great behavior to learn. What will happen over time is as you start doing
that, that's how you're going to prefer to eat. So when I was a kid growing up, we always
ate the starches first, but then when I got into fitness, I ate the protein first. Now
I always eat the protein first. No matter hate, I'll always eat the protein first.
No matter what, I just the way I prefer to eat.
So it's another kind of behavior training tool.
That would be the other thing I'd say, but,
but that's pretty much it.
And then when we give you maps and a ball, pre-phase
and perfect form is the priority.
Perfect form.
Okay, so it's all right to lift heavy,
it's all right to go hard, but do not compromise your form even a quarter of an inch
Okay, because what the what you want to do over time is practice perfect movement and that's gonna pay back dividends
Here's how we're gonna make sure of that okay
We're gonna make sure that when you lose this hundred pounds this time that you keep it off forever
And we're gonna I'm gonna have Doug put you in the private form also. And then what I, my, my ask of you is that when you start going through the
map, Santa Ball program and you're squatting in your deadlifting,
share the videos with us and tag us so we can help you with the form and
technique. Make sure you're staying on point with all that and just check in with
us, continue to check in with us through your progress.
That's what that form is there for. It's an incredible community of a bunch of
people like yourself that have gone through most of the programs and then us
and make sure you stay in touch with us and we'll make sure that you not only lose this but you
keep it off forever. Awesome. That is exactly what I'm looking for. I mean, I just want to get leaners
and I want to, but I want to need strong. I don't want to just be skinny like I was before.
You're doing it right, bro. You're already doing it right here. That's it right here. Yeah, you're doing it. You're already doing it right right now
We're just gonna make sure you stay on the stay on the course
Awesome that is fantastic advice. I really appreciate it guys. You got it brother. All right, Carrie. Yeah, thanks for calling in man
Thanks a lot you guys have a great that
Wow, I'll tell you what when he said that he's lost 100 pounds twice. Crazy, right?
And now he's trying again.
Like, I want people just to understand that.
That is a big deal because what tends to happen when somebody loses a lot of weight and
gains a back, they never try again.
They never try, or they'll try second time.
And if they try second time and fail, which often happens, then they're done forever.
So deflating.
The fact that he's trying again is a testament.
That's really, really good.
And has the discipline to be patient.
Yes. And do it the slow right way.
Because people tend to not do a better second or third thing.
Yeah, yeah. No, you just get more extreme.
Yes. Typically people that do this, the second, the third,
the four, how many times they do this.
They work that time, go with the preparation.
They do, they just keep upping the extreme diet
or the extreme exercise routine to do that.
So the fact that he's had the mental discipline and fortitude to actually slow this process
down.
He's doing a great job.
And what's great is he's only been doing machines for lower body when he starts squatting
and lifting.
Oh, it's gonna be a world opened up.
Yeah, increase that protein and take a little bit.
He's gonna pack on some more muscle.
That metabolism and get roaring. He's on the right track, man.
So I'm excited to stay in touch with him in the form.
Our next color is David from Minnesota.
David, what's happening?
How can we help you?
Hey, guys, I just have a question for you
and I thought it was a pretty good one.
I work from home, so my spine tends to get compressed, and I know that certain things
like walking and pull ups and dead barhains help, I still want to lift weights.
And common sense tells me that chest press and shoulder press are not a good idea while
you're trying to be decompressed, but do you have other exercises that are
safe to do in the meantime? Yes, and now you left. I'm reading your question here, so there's
an important factor that we want to consider when we answer this. So it says in the question that you
have several, several, see, bro palsy. Is that correct? So cerebral palsy? Yes. Okay.
Okay. So now I'm going to give you a general answer that's true for anybody.
Any exercise that you can perform with good control and stability is safe.
Any exercise.
Now specifically exercises that may help the spine, I like the ones that you're already
doing. I also like you that you're already doing.
I also like you sitting on things
that require you to activate your core a little bit.
Like a fisioball might be okay,
or they sell certain chairs
that require you to be a little stable.
And there's also standing desks
that can help with that as well.
And that's just, I mean, I advise that
for most people anyway.
And it does make a difference
because it does require you to maintain yourself
with different stability versus like,
just kind of sitting into the chair.
That makes perfect sense.
And for more context, I'm an accountant who works from home.
So that's pretty sudden, Terry.
Yes.
Yep.
Also, what do you think about like bands
and suspension trainer and stuff like that?
Oh, I mean, amazing.
Do you go to a jammer?
Do you work at a home?
I work at home.
I do have like a local gym nearby, but...
What is your set up?
Mostly the system, yeah.
Yeah, what do you have?
I've got adjustable dumbbells, like the...
What's it called?
The Dumbler, that Norwegian Dumbler, where you fit plates on. got adjustable dumbbells, like the, what's it called? The
Dumbler, that Norwegian Dumbler, where you fit plates on,
it's got the magnetic clips, I've got that. And I've got
every band you can imagine, and a full bar drawer attachment
and a dipstand. Oh, you know, what would be symmetry would be
really good to map, well, I would go map starter. Yeah, I would just do map starter
I do have any of our programs. I
do that. I was wondering which one would be like the best to get first because I thought since I have all the bands maybe bands would be good but
Starting from step one might be a good idea. I'm gonna give you the experts. I'm gonna give you a map starter
Yeah, I'm gonna give you a map starter. We'll give you bands. You could do that later. It would be great
Yeah, but start with map starter
I think that would be the right program and then remember what I said right if you can do an exercise and you feel
Like you've got adequate stability and control and mobility then it's safe
Yeah, so any exercise could be dangerous and any exercise can be safe based off of those standards.
So.
And the goal that I'm doing with you, David,
if you're my client is I'm always challenging
form technique, tempo, stability, before I add load.
So let's say you and I are doing an overhead press
and you're like, Adam, I'm kicking ass at this.
They were doing, say, 90 pounds over your head
and you're like, we're super happy. And you're like, I can do more. I'm they were doing, say, 90 pounds over your head and you're like, we're super happy.
And you're like, I can do more.
I'm gonna go like, okay, what I want you to do
is stabilize at the top, slow down the negative.
And I'm gonna make that 90 pounds
even heavier, more challenging, without adding load.
So think that way too.
So as you progress yourself through the movements
in any of the programs that we have,
before you just jump to adding more weight,
because you know you can do more weight
Challenge yourself by slowing down the tempo or adding a stability component to the movement
That's going to serve you much more than just adding 10 or 15 hours to bar totally
That's that that would be all the focus. Yeah, if I was training 100% have you went how long have you been doing strength training?
I've been doing strength training since I was about
freshman in high school
Especially with cerebral palsy it sort of a game changer when it comes to just coordination and balance and like certain things that used to knock me over
Before I started lifting legs did not like that for example
It's it's It's 100% the game changer for someone like yourself.
100%. You're training, when you're doing strength training,
a lot of people think they're training their muscles,
and you are, but you're training your central nervous system
as much or more.
Yes.
And that stability and that control factor
is what I want you to focus on when you're following
MAP Starter. So when you look at the exercise and you do it,
go with the weight that is lighter,
and then try to make it heavier by doing a slower,
more controlled, right?
Add that muscle tension too.
So that slow tempo is everything,
but really too to really kind of squeeze
and connect to those muscles as you hold
in full extension and then slowly bring it back down.
It's just gonna do do wonders for you.
So yeah, and then we'll send you maps, bands.
That's a band related to workout as well.
But I think map starter is a place to start.
All right.
Stay in touch with us too, all right, David?
Let us know as you go through those because I think there's some great benefits
to symmetry for you after that.
So I like starter.
I like bands and then I even like the isometric and unilateral work for you for from symmetry
So we'll move into that after those
All right, yeah, I'll do the program and I'll keep you guys up today
Awesome perfect man. Thank you. All right, David
Keep after it. Thank you. All right. I can't think of a job that would be more tortures for me than accountant
I'm gonna count. Oh my god Imagine you imagine sitting down and doing everything alone?
I ever tell you about one of my high school best friends that he lived with me when I moved
to San Jose.
I remember he got a job with Deloitte and Tush.
And that was back when I was working with a gym and we were, you know, the grinding gym
schedule right at get home 10, 11 o'clock at night.
And I love the job, right?
So I come home all like,
yeah, psyched an energy like we all did, right?
And he'd come home just like he just got beat
and be like, what did you do today, dude?
So probably fucking photocopied for 12 hours.
Yeah, fucking God.
So, swear to God, and this was like every day.
Yeah, he, and he's like, in literally office,
they almost like put you through the gauntlet.
If you work for like one of these big firms, that they put you through the gauntlet. If you work for like one of these big firms,
but they put you through the gauntlet
for the till you make like partner.
And like that's like the deal is like,
you are the runt and you just do all the bitch work.
It's already like a laborious job as it is,
right, being in a accountant.
And then you gotta do all the bitch work on top of that
to like earn your stripes before,
because when you become part of it,
you make really good fucking money.
And he couldn't, he's like, he knew what the,
he knew what the pot of gold was the in the rainbow and he's like, I can't do that. I can't tell you, yeah, he make really good fucking money. And he couldn't, he's like, he knew what the, he knew what the pot of gold was the in the rainbow.
And he's like, I can't do this.
I can't tell, yeah, he never went back.
We didn't do it.
So he's actually in the wine industry.
Oh, much more fun.
He's a very successful too.
He's up in the, in fact, I told you,
I think I showed you a picture of him.
He was at the Laker Warrior game, download with me.
We hadn't seen each other in years,
and ran into him.
You ran into him there, that's what I'm talking about.
Yeah, and he's doing all the wine thing, but yeah, counting is back to David.
Have you guys trained anybody with cerebral palsy? I have for him. Yeah. And I've had
it. I actually have it. We had a close family friend that had it, but he was really like,
David looks like he's a, he looks like he's, he's, he's with it. Yeah, like my buddy had what,
like, yeah, there's very good real like, limited. Yeah. Very well. Right. Strength training
is such, I mean, it now with standard care, right little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit Yes, well isn't it is it considered a neurological degenerative disease? It can to general. Yes, right
So I mean you talk about if that's what's gonna happen. It's going to atrophy and lose connect
I mean nothing is gonna be better. That's the counter
One of the gone man, right that's it. All right. Our next color is Joe from Copenhagen Joe. What's happening? How can we help you?
Hello guys
so for the world I just want to thank you for putting yourself out there and
I actually found you like three years ago through full check and since then I just binge
most of your stuff and I also want to thank you for sharing your journeys as a father and as a man,
it's very impactful and also be doubtful because just growing up, like raising small humans,
it's quite a responsibility, so I appreciate you sharing your thank you your journey
So beautiful me
My background is I'm playing eyes looking to lowest 20
I also did karate. I had a lot of injuries throughout the time
But the last one I had the most impact on there also like why I'm here is I dislocated my shoulder and my elbow at the same time.
And then I had a year later, I had a lot of such a lot of such surgery because it was just an unstable.
That was four years ago. Since then, it's been going better.
I had had troubles with pushing and overhead pressing before I could do a like a L-sit from
the ground and go to the handstand.
Now I'm happy that I can do L-sit because my shoulder is just very painful, especially
in the back of the shoulder, where especially when I'm pressing and when I'm, it's actually
only when I'm pressing and when I'm moving my arms up. So I have been doing, I did maps and a bollic, that helped because I also did additionally
only like one sided dumbbell rows, presses and kettlebell presses and like high reps of
those, but it's been very slow.
So in four years I have not been able to recover.
I was able to shoulder press like 24 degrees, 24 kilograms
with one hand, but now I can do 20 and it's painful.
So the question that I have really,
and I skipped a little bit,
but the question that I have is,
what would you recommend?
Would you recommend
doing something like symmetry or, and also I skipped something. So I don't have a gym membership.
So the part of the problem is that I was a coaching. So I was a fitness coach. I don't coach anymore because of finances and stuff.
So I started in gardening and I also canceled my gym membership because of that.
So right now I'm doing gardening day job. I am doing band training and calisthenics.
And beside that I'm trying to get bigger and stronger and most importantly, fix my shoulders
so I can actually get a bigger and stronger without problems.
Okay, let's back up for a second.
Okay, yeah, I got scared.
It's so good to do it.
Okay, so, try to get information.
Yeah, so, latter jet surgery,
this is the one where they remove some bone
from a part of your body, attach it to the top of the shoulder, the humorous,
and they try to create a tighter,
basically a tighter shoulder socket to prevent further dislocation.
Is that correct?
Yes, they reposition the take a bone from the glenoid
and they put it on the,
they put it on the glenoid,
they take a bone from around the cloud
cooler. Okay.
How did you dislocate your shoulder? Because that, that's a
pretty substantial surgery.
Yeah, got pushed from behind playing on the ice up your game.
Yeah, during the game.
Okay.
I, yeah.
Okay. So traditional mobility work,
because here's a deal, your structure's different now.
Okay, so when they do that, they've changed your structure,
which essentially means all of the muscles
and supporting structures,
you literally have to relearn new pattern.
All new recruitment pattern.
Yeah.
Okay, so it's not like it was before.
So even if you had the old recruitment pattern,
which you probably still lost because you went through the entry process and the. So even if you had the old recruitment pattern, which you probably still lost
because you went through the entry process and the surgery,
even if you had that,
it still wouldn't need to change a little bit
because your anatomy is now different.
Okay, so your anatomy has changed in a small,
but significant way.
So correctional exercise is gonna be paramount right now.
Maps Prime Pro has shoulder movements in there
that I think you should do on a daily basis
and I think you should do them slowly and carefully
with intention.
And I don't know if you can expect to get back
to where you were before,
but you could definitely go a lot further
than you are right now.
So that would be the priority is what I'd focus on.
As far as your workout is concerned,
map symmetry would be the way to go, but you don't have dumbbells, do you?
No, I have to get some balls.
Okay, you're okay then. I think you can modify it. You could do it with kettlebells. Yeah, I think too like you said in terms of like really hyper-focusing on the what's
you know your mobility issues
and repatterning that whole process,
but then too, like after you get through
kind of that isometric kind of kin stretch type of work
to add load, I would very much like start
with rubber bands with that
as your next kind of follow up to that
just because of the low damage with that
and also the consistent sort of resistance
that you're gonna have to then,
because you just gotta take some time to realize,
you have to re-teach that function out of the shoulder
before we really start to kind of get to where
I know you wanna go,
because you've been able to lift quite some weight there
with your shoulder before but
to re-teach it and then also go through kind of more unilateral work so we can
simultaneously kind of have have both sides a work their way up together. So it's not just a fully
bi-loaded situation. Let the weaker side
dictate the weight by the way. So don't lift more weight just because you're stronger on your other shoulder.
Do exactly what you do on the weaker side,
on your stronger side.
Otherwise, you'll maintain an imbalance
if you continue to lift different weights.
So let me make sure I'm hearing you guys correctly then.
So then the prescription here is,
we're gonna send you maps prime pro,
do the shoulder work in there
like as much as you can really,
because it's just,
I would do it several times a day. Yeah, multiple times a day if you can,
so that follow what it says for shoulder in there,
and then progress into symmetry.
When you run symmetry, we're gonna use kettlebells.
Where are you gonna incorporate bands?
I wish, because in maps, bands, we have band distractions,
which is kind of what I'm alluding to in terms of like,
adding resistance to your mobility moves.
Do you have bands?
Yeah, I have bands.
Okay, so then why don't we give him bands
and then specifically take the band distractions
and implement that?
There you go.
So it's basically our frequency builder days
like in between.
So you would be doing that full session there
to kind of work your way back with Bands resistance.
Yeah, but think of it this way, Joe.
If you would have learned how to walk,
and let's say you started learning how to walk, okay?
And you had to really focus on your technique
because you're learning how to walk.
If someone told you to run real fast and you tried, you might be able to move faster,
but your technique would go out the window because now you're trying to do it with speed
and intensity, okay?
Because of your shoulder procedure, you have to go light, slow, and really, really focus
on developing new recruitment patterns and recruitment patterns that work for you. If you push intensity and speed to soon,
you will be a little bit more weight
and you will be a little bit faster,
but your body's not gonna go in the development.
The momentum's gonna mask some of those disconnects.
Yeah.
So we wanna reconnect the entire weight through,
and that's why bands are great for that
because there's no,
sort of getting around the fact that you're going to have resistance in every portion of that rep. A way for you to measure or know if you're on the right track to what they're saying is
prime pro, the real goal of what we just gave you and everything we said is to be,
is to get perfect at those shoulder movements. So when you, in the video,
in the video demos, you're going to see Justin doing a bunch of the moves. I think you're
doing most of the moves in there, right? Yeah.
And probably. Yeah. So Justin's doing most of the moves in there is to, you want to get
to a place with your shoulder to be able to perform the movements as well as he can.
That's more of a priority than loading and going heavier with your kettlebell. So make that the priority is getting really good,
that intensifying that workout,
more than trying to intensify the weight training work.
Yeah, one last thing,
in the shoulders are complex joint.
It's not just the shoulders also the scapula
that has to learn and develop recruitment patterns
that are now gonna be favorable,
considering your slightly altered structure. In Prime Pro, there's scapular movements and shoulder movements. Do them both.
Yeah. Okay. Yeah. But this surgery was four years ago. Since then, I've been doing
Brazangir Jitsuo. I actually got my blue belt and I won't compete against it, but still, my shoulder
is just weaker and I've been trying to work through it. Listen, I'm not telling you rehab stuff.
Yeah.
I'm telling you how to get your shoulder to stop hurting.
Yeah.
So you've gotten stronger, you're definitely stronger, but it hurts.
Bro, when you go through Prime Pro, if you do Prime Pro correctly, you'll be sweating
from the movements.
So it's not like this, like, you know, sit back and strut lace, like yoga shit, like
it's gonna be intense.
And that's where your intensity should be in there.
That's where you are really trying to create
this greater range of motion, better control
in the shoulder complex area.
That's what you wanna be,
and it's not like South,
it's not like some cheesy little rehab thing
that you're doing.
If you're hurting,
that means your recruitment pattern is not ideal.
And you've gotten strong in this not great recruitment pattern.
So if you push the weight, you're going to just keep doing what you're doing.
That's why we got to back down and get a reinforcement of this function.
You have to learn a new recruitment pattern.
You have to learn it and it takes a little bit of time and it takes practice.
But if you push the way you're gonna default
to what you're stronger at,
and right now you're stronger at a recruitment pattern
that's causing pain, I hope that makes sense.
Yeah, I also noticed my,
it has kind of been like this, maybe from Isaac,
that my one shoulder, I think my left one is lower
than my right shoulder.
Sure.
That could be also because,
and actually, Dr. Talbeth actually has surgery
on the right shoulder actually as well because I'm
Well, listen
Be careful. Yes, be careful with with you know when somebody has a hammer and you ask him
You know to put a screw in because they're gonna tell you the hammer to screw in so yeah, I'm not going there
Yeah, okay learning new recruitment patterns when you've already strengthened a bad old, you know, one that's not ideal and it's strong
Takes time. Mm-hmm. It takes time. So give yourself a year of
Focus and then you'll get strong you'll surpass where you are now and you'll have no pain or far less pain
Mm-hmm. Okay a year
That's something it takes a while it takes a while, but you've developed this recruitment pattern now
for the last three, four years.
It's actually been getting better
as I was getting stronger.
I had to push through a little bit,
but yes, it's been four years in surgery
and it's been hurting less, but it's still hurting.
It's not that much easier.
Well, it might take less than a year in that case, but it's gonna take some time as my point. Yeah, and it'll been hurting less, but it's still hurting. It's not that much easier. Well, it might take less than a year in that case,
but it's gonna take some time as my point.
Yeah, and it'll get progressively better.
It won't be like, you don't see anything for a year.
It's like, you know, so, but what Sal's saying is,
be patient, be patient.
This is not like an overnight thing.
It's, and the stuff in Prime Pro, you know,
I can't stress enough that it's far more valuable to frequently do
it throughout the day and every day than it is to do a one-hard session or two-hard sessions
a week, which is what a lot of people tend to do, is they approach mobility stuff.
Like a bodybuilding.
It's a beautiful thing, it's intense, but you can repeat it constantly because you can recover
pretty quickly from it.
So it's not like doing damage.
What it's doing, it's just reinforcing that better recruitment pattern.
So now, you know, your function and your strength is all going to be more stabilized.
Because you have experience to your athletic, you have a background here,
you're going to notice that there's like, you know, wall circles and there's handcuff with rotation.
There's all these different movements.
You're gonna find one or two of them
that you feel really good from it after it.
You're gonna do it and you're gonna be like,
oh wow, that does feel like it's working and helping.
When that light bulb goes off for you,
you do that all the time then.
Like make that be the, like let's say it's the wall circle
and you're like, oh shit, when I do that.
Yeah, five times a day
That really I can feel that helps me out and now when I move I can feel that the pain's decreasing like that sure signal
Like oh that's really improving what you need and do it all the time don't just do it once in every couple days
Do it four five times a day for just a minute or two like literally every time you get next to a wall
You got a few minutes right before you threshold, you hold it, squeeze into it,
connect with it back off.
And you just keep that pattern going and going and going
until eventually it's no more.
That's right.
All right.
All right, Joseph.
Thanks. So we'll send those for you.
Thank you. Guys, I have another question.
It's a bit sensitive, but if you don't mind, I'll
sell it.
Very sensitive.
Go ahead.
Yeah, I'm not afraid. I don't care. Don't hurt my feelings. So there is a't mind, I'll sell a lot of stuff. Go ahead. Yeah, I'm not afraid.
OK.
Don't remind me.
So there is a lot of, I mean, not much information.
How do you, so in my family, it's been genetically
problems with hemorrhoids.
And I find very hard to work out, especially to push
harder with that kind of issue.
Because if I wait, lift, it creates pressure.
It can create internal
pressure and then it clears up hemorrhoids and it's not enough information out there to
figure out how to work out around it or just give it the rest and wait, I don't know,
do you have anything there?
Yeah, well okay, so the experience I have with this is when I were training post-partum
women.
So hemorrhoids was very common in women
who just had a baby, super common, I think like 70%.
Is it really high?
Yeah, that's pretty, I mean, you're pushing a baby up.
Yeah, if I didn't realize it was that hard.
Yeah, and then they would hire me
and I would do strength training with them
and of course, this would oftentimes become an issue.
So number one, the number one factor that helped
was modifying their diet.
Lots of fluid and a high fiber diet without really preventing any kind of straining or
constipation. So they would eat well-cooked vegetables, they would add psyllium.
Cylium husk is a really, really good supplement for them. So they would start the morning off
with a serving, like a tablespoon of psyllium husk with two glasses of water.
You have to have a lot of water with psyllium,
otherwise it actually acts in the opposite, okay?
So that made the biggest difference.
Then when we would work out, I would have them,
and this is the thing with this,
as it gets better, you can start to train
with higher intensity, but in the beginning,
you have to learn to breathe and relax the body and focus on the target area.
So this is not an ideal way to lift heavy, right? When you're lifting heavy, you want to activate everything and you want, oh, you want to strain and struggle.
But with something like this, I would have them,
while they're doing it, try to keep the face
relaxed, you can brace the core, but don't create lots of internal pressure in the core.
This is the opposite of what I would tell somebody when they're doing a heavy PR.
Heavy PR is probably out of the question.
They would breathe out, relax the face, focus on the target muscle, and that usually would
create less pressure on the area that they, that they would, you know, they would feel it negatively otherwise.
But the fiber, well-cooked vegetables, the psyllium husk, lots of fluid, that made the biggest impact.
Okay. All right, I appreciate it. You got it. Thanks for calling, and John.
Hey, Herman. Thank you, Adam, for suggesting. You got it, yeah. Thank you, ma'am.
You're good. Remember when I helped you with that, Justin?
Yeah, yeah. You were real hands on with that.
I appreciate that.
Hey, you know, I tell you, I tell you, with the recruitment, this is the analogy I've
given before on the show, and I think it's the best analogy to help people understand what
I mean by what we talk about when we say recruitment patterns.
If you typed on a keyboard with your index fingers for three years and you got real fast
with it.
Because you can get kind of fast, right, with two fingers.
You can double-angle a squirrel.
Yeah, but you're just doing this, you know, all the time.
And then someone comes along and says, hey, you know, if you do it with all your fingers
in this particular way, you can be a lot faster.
Well, initially you're not.
Yeah, you're a suck-who-who.
Initially, you're slower that way.
And then if you tell someone to go as fast as they can with this new method, they're going
to be like, through that, I'm going to go back to my old method because you're telling me to go fast.
But eventually through slow practice and learning this new pattern, you surpass what you could do before.
This is what this is exactly what happens with recruitment patterns. If you push yourself too hard,
your body goes back to what it's good at. And it will avoid trying to learn this new pattern.
Everything he's talking about is just somebody
that just drives full intensity, full blast.
I can guarantee it.
Yeah, every, and that's what's so hard.
It's such a hard switch to,
that's why he didn't like what I said.
It's good to take care of.
No, I didn't like any of it.
What we had to say, it was honest,
and that's fine, you know what I mean?
But we're not gonna change, you know, the prescription.
It is gonna help and gonna benefit.
And you know, it's just sometimes you just have to step out
and be like, I need to take care of this.
I have to take care of my body.
And I have to allow this to fully recover.
I have to retrain it.
I have to relearn how to use my shoulder adequately
and that takes time.
Maybe one of the hardest people to help virtually
that we've had yet.
I mean, just really tough to communicate without-
This tough one to articulate.
Yeah, without seeing that person move,
and then be able to put them in a more advantageous position
and then say, feel that.
That's what I need you to do.
You know what I'm saying?
It's gonna be a real hard, slow, and good job.
Yeah, we're real hard for us to communicate that
with such a unique surgery
and all the potential ways that he could be moving well or not well. Right. And then
you add in the hemorrhoids on top of that and then like addressing that. I mean, that
was a, that's a, that's a, that's a top. I mean, I felt like the advice was really good.
I just hope that I tell you if I hope it resonates a little. I mean, if, if anything, and
if I didn't have experienced training, I trained a lot of postpartum women,
that was what I was set at,
a common thing with them.
That's the only reason why I know, you know,
what to do there,
because I would work with their doctors.
Yeah, so I hope that he sticks with the trust of process
and then also stays in touch with us,
because that is a tough one to try and to mend virtually.
Totally.
Look, if you like Mind Pump,
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