Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2141: How to Build the Glutes & Hamstrings When Nothing Seems to Work, the Importance of Adjusting Caloric Intake Based on Activity & More (Listener Live Coaching)
Episode Date: August 16, 2023In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin coach three Pump Heads via Zoom. Mind Pump Fit Tip: Don’t miss the forest for the trees. Make sure you communicate in effective ways. We are los...ing the war. (2:39) Magic Spoon is a great option if you're going to take one step toward a better direction. (30:31) Sal’s on the mend. (32:51) An update from Sal on his first Ketamine therapy session. (40:41) What a WIN for Dave Portnoy. (55:01) How long should sex last? (57:42) Following up on the viral plane lady. (1:02:06) Sal’s experience with Entera so far. (1:03:35) Some people should NOT be parents. (1:07:20) Shout out to Paul Chek. (1:11:08) #ListenerLive question #1 - What else can I do to drop body fat if I am limited by movement and steps to help create a caloric deficit? (1:12:30) #ListenerLive question #2 - Can I use the winter months when my steps go down by maybe 1/4 to a 1/2 of what they are during the summer to bulk, without having to put much thought into it? I want to take advantage of building muscle as much as I can to have a long healthy life and be active with my children. (1:23:55) #ListenerLive question #3 - Is it possible to permanently fix my quad dominance? What can I do in my workouts and/or everyday life to fix my quad dominance and activate my glutes and hamstrings more so I don’t keep reverting to utilizing only my quads for certain moves? (1:30:37) Related Links/Products Mentioned Ask a question to Mind Pump, live! Email: live@mindpumpmedia.com Visit Magic Spoon for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Visit Entera Skincare for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code MPM at checkout for 10% off their order or 10% off their first month of a subscribe-and-save.** August Promotion: MAPS Anabolic Advanced 50% off! **Code AUGUST50 at checkout** Paul Chek reaction video to Max Lugavere - Instagram Mind Pump #1237: Why Most Group Exercise Classes Suck Mind Pump #2132: Six Reasons Men Today Are Weak Harmonie Stone, LMFT Dave Portnoy Paid Just $1 to Buy Barstool Sports Back How Long Should Sex Actually Last? Woman From Viral Airplane Freak-Out, Tiffany Gomas' Emotional Apology Mind Pump #2130: The Truth About Hair Loss With Jay Campbell & Nick Andrews 'Pretty Baby' chronicles Brooke Shields' career and the sexualization of young girls Visit NED for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Mind Pump #2112: Is 15 Minutes Enough Time For An Effective Workout? Mind Pump #1667: The Best Exercises You Can Do To Develop The Perfect Butt Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Max Lugavere (@maxlugavere) Instagram Paul Chek (@paul.chek) Instagram Josh Trent (@joshtrentofficial) Instagram Dave Portnoy (@stoolpresidente) Instagram Â
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mind, hop, mind, hop with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the world's number one fitness health and entertainment podcast.
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In today's episode, we answered live caller's questions, but this was after a 66-minute
introductory conversation
where we talked about fitness, current events, family life, and much more.
By the way, you can check the show notes for timestamps if you want to skip around to
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We did a recent episode with Jay Campbell.
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All right, here comes a show.
Teacher time.
And it's T-shirt time.
Oh, shit.
Oh, you know it's my favorite time of the week.
We have six winners this week, three for Apple podcast, three for Facebook.
The Apple podcast winners are Emma Ash Jane, Oprah follower, one,
two, three, and NK 14, 14.
And for Facebook, we have Nick Degner, Haley Neiman,
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shirt right out to you.
Today's Fit Tip goes out to all of you in the health, fitness, and wellness industry. Don't miss the forest for the trees.
Make sure you communicate in effective ways.
Don't turn people off.
Don't alienate the average person.
It's easy to get health and fitness people to level up.
It's really hard to get the average person
to take that first step. Remember that when
you talk about your health and fitness and wellness advice.
I have a feeling I know what this is in regards to. Don't major in the minors.
Yeah. Well, so you know, it's interesting because I mean, for all intents and purposes,
the health, wellness, fitness, and performance space, which I guess you could loosely categorize, right?
Like the whole space into those four categories.
They, we failed, completely, we completely failed
at really helping the average person.
People are sicker, people are fatter,
people are just getting worse and worse,
both mental health is worse and worse,
physical health is worse.
Like for all intents and purposes,
if it's health,
the average person is just way behind the eight ball.
We are.
And I like to take responsibility for this failure.
I know it's easy for us to look and say,
oh, it's not our fault, we're trying.
But what we're doing is not working.
And one of the things that we do that is detrimental
is infighting.
Lots of, you know, you're not perfect enough or, oh, I know you said that exercise is
great, but it's not functional enough or, yeah, you gave that fitness, that dietary advice,
but, you know, that kind of food also isn't perfectly organic or raised in this particular
way. And so a lot of this infighting happens and we end up losing the battle.
And the average person hears this and what they hear is, they go into it and say, I think
I'm going to start exercising once a week.
And then they hear people talk about how it's waste of time.
Waste of time working out once a week.
You should work out every single day, otherwise,'s waste of time. Waste of time working out once a week. You should work out every single day, otherwise, why waste of time?
Or they say, you know, I think I'm gonna like,
I'm gonna just cut my calories for now.
I'm gonna kinda start that way.
And then they hear a bunch of people be like,
you know, calories don't matter.
Everything's about eating the most perfect foods or whatever.
And it's like, so people just get turned off.
It's like, well, I'm wasting my time.
Well, I haven't even tried.
And that only confirms the fact that I failed so many times. Maybe it is that I just can't do everything, right? So I'm wasting my time. Well, I haven't even tried. And that only confirms the fact that I failed so many times.
Maybe it is that I just can't do everything right.
So I'm gonna give up.
There's a hilarious short or real,
maybe Dylan could look it up and put it in the show notes
because I think it's so great.
And I don't know who did it first.
I've seen a couple people remake it since then,
but it cracks me up every time I see it.
And it's basically somebody making a video
and it splices to like Paul Saladino giving advice,
like Max Lugavir giving guys, Paul Cheggett,
all these like big, you know, health and fitness influencers.
And they're like, it's like,
it's like, stay away from vegetables.
Okay, and like, it's like a guy getting ready
for like to eat something in the morning.
And he goes right before he goes to bite it.
It clicks to like one of the influencers that are telling him like, that's unhealthy for
you.
It's like by the, it's like six to four vice.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think that's actually how it ends.
I think he ends like eating like ice cubes is like the last thing that he ends up eating.
So this is all come.
So this is where this all comes from, right?
So Max will give you a good friend of ours.
First off, I want wanna say this about Max.
He's, everybody we're about to talk about
are good people in the space.
100%.
And they're all good people in the sense
that they all genuinely wanna help people.
We know these people personally.
And to our knowledge, to the best of our knowledge,
they're all like real, authentically caring.
They wanna help people, okay?
And they all have different strengths.
And one of the strengths that Max has
is Max does a damn good job
of getting the average person to kind of pay attention
to certain things.
He does a really good job of this.
He's actually one of the best communicators in this sense.
So what he does is he does his post
where he talks about how, you know,
well, if you're in a pinch
and you don't have a lot of money
and you're gonna eat McDonald's,
did you know that you can order,
like what is it off the menu or whatever
where you could just order patties,
just order meat patties.
Basically a pound of meat.
Yeah, so that's what it is.
He gets in the drive through.
It's like $8 or something.
Yeah, he orders four quarter pounder patties plain.
And he eats, and he's like, this is not the best meat.
He goes, but it's in a pinch, it's a better option. It's protein, this, patties, plain. And he eats them. And he's like, this is not the best meat. He goes, but it's in a pinch.
It's a better option.
It's protein.
This that and the other.
And then now what happened was Paul Check,
who for all intents and purposes
is the Godfather of the wellness space.
I mean, literally I'll say, if it wasn't for Paul Check,
wellness as we know it probably wouldn't exist.
This guy's, he's a God in the space, okay.
But what he did is he did one of those like-
Strong Steven.
But he's just, a lot of the stuff you hear now,
wellness that we take for granted,
he's been saying for decades, my point.
But anyway, Paul does a video where he's listening
to this clip from Max, and then he's basically talking
about how McDonald's patties are so terrible.
You should not be promoting them.
They're so bad for you, so toxic.
And then the comments starts this whole thing.
Our friend Josh Trent gets in there,
talks about how dare you essentially promote McDonald's meat
because it's so bad and this and that.
And it's the whole time I'm looking at it,
I'm like, man, you guys are missing the big picture.
Like what's happening right now is your fitness
and health enthusiasts are intently listening.
The average person who's 99% unhealthy,
like everything they do is just not great for them,
has just got turned off.
They heard Max say you could just order a bean
and they considered it for a second, right?
They're like, yeah, maybe I'll do that
because I do go to McDonald's every day.
And you know, that might be a better step
and I think I can do that.
And then they heard also this stuff
like, oh, it's waste of time.
They also think it's toxic.
I might as well go with what I've been doing.
It's like, this is too confusing, and that's that.
And that's too bad because the average person,
just we just got to get them to take like one little step.
We can't, that's it.
We got to do that first.
We can't make, what is it, perfect?
Be the enemy of better?
Well, this is where it gets tough because we start to get in a bubble.
And we start really like proselytizing and speaking in a way where this is the
ultimate perfect way to operate and to function.
And we tend to lose a lot of people along the way because like you said,
it becomes confusing,
it becomes like, well, it's frustrating because there's all of these things that you have to tackle
all of it once. And so like for your average person, they'll just see that as like this laundry
list of items they have to tackle before they even can step inside the gym. And it's frustrating because these are all very, very smart people that have got to a level
where they've gotten because of all the research and all of the ways that they've found
optimizing human body and brilliant in that regard.
But in terms of being able to invite people and to allow them to take baby steps.
That's really where we see that as kind of our mission is, you know, from being personal
trainers and trying to connect with our clients and being relatable.
We can't lose that relatability.
And I think that's something that is lost in the post like this.
So I know all three guys really well.
And like totally know exactly where each person was coming
from, so it's an interesting perspective, right?
So first start with Paul.
I love Paul the death, but Paul probably has to have his wives
help him turn the Instagram on to know how to even use it.
And he's told, and he knows that he has to be better
about self-promoting.
And so he's got a team of people that are helping him like,
hey, these are what people are doing reaction videos.
Like he has no idea what he's doing.
I swear to God, like that guy,
he's so deep into reading and research
and social media is not his thing.
So he's literally just being told like,
hey, do these things and it'll go viral.
I'm sure Max's clip was given to him to do some sort of reaction video to it.
So he, I don't even know if he knows Max really well or not, but his intent,
I'm sure isn't malicious.
And he'd probably, if he knows, if he knew Max's true intent,
I'm sure that he would actually support most of what everything that
Max says. So that's his perspective.
Then you have Max, who's a really good friend of ours
who communicates very similar to how we do, right?
Like Max is the guy who talks about
final chemicals on receipts and in your hair and so that.
So he's definitely not somebody who would promote
eating garbage, he promotes grass fed beef all the time.
But I also know that we've been asked in a position
before or been in a position where someone's asked us,
well, what I do if I can't afford whole foods,
or, you know, and they think that you can't eat healthy
unless you're eating all these really expensive
organic foods.
And so I know Max, the reason why he made that video
was to explain to people like, hey, even if you only had eight bucks, you could literally hit your entire protein intake in one drive
through meal.
That's basically the message that I think he's trying to present, but it's not, you know,
it's in short form.
So it goes, and then Josh, I know Josh really well.
And I know that he's, he comes from our background from the big global gym type atmosphere.
He's a once bro guy who's definitely dove headfirst
into the wellness fear and is really trying to promote
that message that it's more than just macro calories
and counting, and he doesn't know Max probably very well
at all, and so he jumps to conclusions
on what that whole message is about.
So, you know, welcome to social media.
I mean, that's really, this is why it's such a fucking cesspool, dude. It's so awful. on what that whole message is about. So, you know, welcome to social media.
I mean, that's really, this is why it's such a fucking cesspool, dude.
It's so awful.
It's like, here's three people who I have a lot of respect
for all three of them.
I like them a lot.
I know them really well.
And they got themselves all cut up in a big circle jerk,
not even realizing, like they all probably agree.
And they don't even realize
that all of them probably had the right intent and then probably turned off more people than
they turned on by that entire post.
Yeah, it's like one of the main strategies if you're trying to beat a message or let's
say win a war, okay, is to create or foster infighting among the other side.
And this is where messages get lost.
Cause if you took, I'll tell you something right now,
here's what's, here's what sucks about this whole health space,
which is like, like I broke it down,
but let's just say that's the big sphere.
If I had a power lifter, a body builder,
a functional medicine practitioner, a doctor with integrity,
so like a Western medicine doctor, an acupuncturist.
I don't know who else we would put on there, a fitness influencer, put them all in a room.
They would all start fighting and arguing with each other.
The irony of it is all of them want to help the average person become healthier, and
all of them have some value.
Okay, they all have some value to present, but we end up not moving forward because somebody
goes on social media or tries to read up on something and it's all this infighting.
It's this bodybuilder saying that that type of training is terrible because it's not going
to cause as much hypertrophy and hypertrophy helps with insulin sensitivity
blah blah blah blah and then this will person well that's not functional
You're not training functionally. You're just trying to build big muscles and now you can't move right
You're not doing split stance exercises and you're not doing this and then another person jumps is you guys don't know
What you're talking about all this focus on strength training and you're not strength?
You're not working on calming down the central nervous system with
Relaxing and resting and then someone else jumps in and says,
you guys are eating too many calories.
And then the person comes in and says,
it's not about the calories, it's about food quality.
And someone else says, but the animals are not raised right.
And there's too many antibiotics.
And then everybody's like, you know what?
Turn it off.
Forget it.
Yeah.
I'm gonna listen to the news.
The news tells me.
Well, me and Audrey, and then while,
it reminds me of, yeah, like, what am I relative to me?
I'm like, all excited because they switched
from soda to diet soda.
Yeah.
Where do we put them in this conversation?
You know, where are you just gonna alienate them
and make them feel like shit
that they're not even trying?
Well, the truth is that most our clients
that were starting their health and fitness journey, you know, subconsciously
are looking for an excuse to quit.
Totally.
I mean, like all you need is an excuse.
That's inside.
We go too.
And nothing gives them a better excuse than the health people disagreeing or arguing
and fighting with each other or coming off pretentious.
And so it's a quick turn off.
I mean, I met a lot of people that are like, oh, I don't, that's spaces in for me. And so it's a quick turnoff.
I mean, I met a lot of people that are like,
ah, I don't, that's spaces in for me.
I don't want to be like this.
Everyone's vain, everyone's this.
And it's just like, oh man,
it's so unfortunate that we've done that.
But I don't know, I mean, at the same time too,
I only get so riled up because I also realize,
I mean, when we got together eight years ago,
like that was, we saw that.
Yeah.
We knew that, you know, that was like very tribal.
Yeah, we knew that there was an opportunity to be a voice for all of these different camps,
you know, to be able to talk about all these different diets, all these different training
modalities and share with people, all the pros and cons of all of them.
Yeah.
And to not marry one single ideology and communicate,
which is exactly the conversation that we used to have
with clients, because how many totally,
right, your clients would come to you.
And they would say, oh, I read them back then.
It was before social media for us.
So I was like, oh, I read this book on this,
I heard this and that.
And I told you this, or Dr. So-and-so said this.
And so, most of my career was spent unpacking this and that. Dr. Oz told me this or Dr. So- So- So- So- So- So- So- So- So- So- So- So-
So- So- So- So- So- So-
So-
So- So- So-
So- So- So- So- So- So- So-
So- So- So- So-
So- So- So-
So-
So- So- So- So- So- So- So- So- So- So-
So- So- So- So-
So- So- So- So-
So- So- So- So-
So- So- So- So- So- So- So- So- So- So-
So- So- So- So- So-
So- So- So- So-
So- So-
So- So- So- So- So- So-
So-
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So- So- So- So- So- So-
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So- So- So- So- So- So- So- So- So- So- So-
So-
So- doesn't mean everyone or it's the end all be all and it, but here's these other things that totally contradict that,
that also have some value too.
This, by the way, some humility, okay?
Just straight up.
Like we totally messed up a lot when we first started
as trainers.
And this is the main way that we screwed up.
This right here is the big way that we screwed up.
It's that we were playing checkers
when you need to play chess
when you're trying to help the average person
accomplish lifelong health and fitness.
So what's checkers?
Well, somebody sits in front of me and says,
I only have 30 minutes a week to work out.
That's not enough.
You gotta make more time.
If you make more time to exercise
and you have more energy,
then you'll have more time on the rest of the day.
It'll make you a better mom or make you a better dad. You'll
be a better person blah, blah, blah. And I do this whole big speech. And then either
A, I convince them to over apply themselves. And then if they fail or B, I turn them off
completely. You lose. What's chess? Chess is how can I eventually get a checkmate? How
can I get this person down the path? So then it became this. I only have 30 minutes to work out during the week.
Awesome.
Let's figure it out.
Let's do a 30 minute workout.
And then I know if I do a good job
that that 30 minutes, that person eventually will say,
I think I have another 30 minutes.
Or let me talk about, maybe I can do something
with my diet.
And this strategy, what's funny about this
by the way, I'm saying is that the three of us,
as trainers, we all figured this out on our own.
It was the biggest shift.
It's what turned me from a trainer
who was just good at selling training
to a trainer that eventually got people
to really accomplish this and be able to do this long term.
It was patience.
It was communicating in particular way.
It was focusing on the big picture, not all the small details, not again, making perfect
the enemy of better. But we all screwed up like, you know, many people I totally turned
off to, to health and fitness because that was me. It's a down and so. So how do you to reconcile then when we come after something say like group training?
So hearing everything to the spiel that we just went on about what we just called our
friends out for doing and not wanting to turn them off, how do you reconcile the moments
today that we have
where we say something like,
group training should die.
I think we had a good example of that
with a life caller who called in
and kind of presented the fact that she,
this was literally the only way she would go to the gym.
Right, and it was-
And do something.
Yeah, do something.
And it's like, this was opportunity for her
to get excited to move.
And this was just like her comfort.
And like, so I think for us, it's nobody was really talking about the somewhat problematic
ending of like staying in that group class setting for too long.
I just don't think that was being presented
enough. And so I think it, we kind of took it upon ourselves that to provide a thought,
a thought of like, well, okay, maybe this is your entry point, but it's not going to be
beneficial for very long.
Yeah. What about you?
Yeah. No. So the context, thank God we have a long form podcast because this is all, first
off, you have to be honest.
So when you're communicating something,
you're not gonna say this is perfect.
What do we always say about group fitness?
Look, some movement's better than none.
If that's what gets you to go, then that's fine.
Here's what you're probably gonna run into though.
And here's probably, these are gonna be the drawbacks.
And this is why you're gonna have to probably figure out
how to move from that into a different kind of training.
And then we list why.
But it's not like, we're not telling them like,
no, this is a horrible idea.
Yeah, like, well, I also, so I'll tell you how,
like I've thought about this, right?
Because I've, of the three of us,
I probably have come the hardest on.
That sounded really bad.
Yeah, well, not you stopped.
Yeah, actually, I was saying that. I was saying it was not.
It sounds like it was.
It was going to sell worse as they came the rest of it.
Because it was already.
Oh really?
Yeah.
I'm back.
I was like, Oh, that's not going to go well.
Okay.
It was a stop that where it's.
So I'm the one who gets after the group training classes, probably the hardest.
And here's how I feel is that I feel really passionate about saying something when the client
or the person I'm trying to help is doing way more than they need to or making it more
difficult for themselves.
And that's what and they don't realize it or recognize it.
It's like you're hammering yourself in this class.
Like, yeah, okay, you could do that.
If that's all I get you, motivate, but let me tell you, there's a much easier pathway than that way.
Granted, just like you said, the example you're giving us, we did just have a
caller recently and I did start it off with like, listen, what I would do with
you is because you've admitted that that's the only way you'll come is to have
this group class and community that I would start you there and then I would
slowly start to wean you off of that and transition you into training
by yourself.
And then we all went around and gave tips.
But the way I reconcile it is that it's your you're doing way more than you need to
in order to see the same or better results.
And that's why I think I feel so passionate about it's like somebody if you saw somebody
who was just like stressing out about macro counting and weighing and doing most of it's I feel so passionately about. It's like if you saw somebody who was just like
stressing out about macro counting and weighing
and doing most of it's like, that stuff's not bad.
Like I mean, I did a lot of that for,
but if I saw someone like stressing out over that
and putting so much effort in it,
it doesn't have to be that hard.
Like literally just avoid these things
or just count your protein in like watch.
You'll have a much easier time, weightless, stressful
and you'll probably see better results that way. So I feel passionately about the advice out there that's given that is just over
complicating or making it more difficult for these people and just adding more stress to them.
That's kind of how I feel. Yeah, I think that's a great point. Yeah, totally. I think that's
a totally great point. No, I think that there is no, there hasn't been, I should say, a unifying voice in the space.
There just hasn't.
And hopefully that's what we're trying to do as much as possible.
So we've tried to do as much as possible, is help unify the message because we're losing,
we're not winning.
We're continuously getting pushback, we're losing ground, things are getting worse, people
are getting less healthy,
and we need to figure this out.
Because of, I can't think of a space
that's more equipped to actually win this.
There is no space that exists.
Other than the health space,
that actually has the tools that can solve our health problems.
So we just need to figure out, hey everybody,
let's gather, let's unify, let's gather together,
let's unify our message, and let's get people to take those steps.
Let's start with step one.
I know the goal is to climb the mountain,
but this person hasn't even stepped outside their door.
Let's start with one step, and let's get everybody on board with that one step,
and then what typically happens is people start to feel
a little bit better and then they start to take,
hey, they say, I wanna take maybe another step.
I mean, if we just got everybody, literally,
if we just got everybody to, I don't know,
eat the right amount of protein and work out twice a week.
Okay, that's so far from perfect, it's not even funny.
But if you just got everybody to do that, do you know what person, how much of a significant impact that would have
on everybody's health? Yeah. That says more, by the way, about how poor everybody's health
is. That's, that's obviously the point. Not that we're, you know, we're, we're getting
it by the way. That's magical or anything. Yeah. It's just we're so bad or health is so
bad. It's like getting off the couch would have been, would have tremendous benefit.
It just reminds me, I mean, there's camps out there
that are like shaming people for exercises and saying
that like we should all strive to be coming,
you're saying bolt and sprint.
Like you have to make the pinnacle of training.
Like that's how ridiculous, like the space is.
And how ludicrous, like you're really trying to help somebody,
and you're trying to turn everybody into a,
you saying bolt, you think that's reasonable?
So let's all check ourselves, and realize,
there's such a bigger need out there for people
to just find their way into fitness,
and helping themselves get healthy.
Have Mrs. Johnson just start sprinting?
You know, this is the most fun.
You just need to sprint. Yeah, just run as fast as you can. Johnson just start sprinting. You know, this is the most fun story. You just need to sprint.
Yeah, just run as fast you can.
Ah!
It's insane.
I never, we're all guilty of it.
We're all guilty of it.
All of us.
Sure, of course.
It took me, but you gotta admit it.
It took me years.
You're not admitting it.
I'm gonna call you out.
It took me years and years and years and lots of faith.
Well, that was like the video games.
Oh my God, the video game comments that I got
on that thread. Wow. We have a story about that. I knew that would be the the video games. Oh my God. The video game comments that I got on that thread.
Wow. I'm sorry about that. I knew that would be the most. Oh, you know, it's so funny because you were sick.
And so I had a day on Instagram. You know, I'm never on there commenting and stuff. And I'm like,
oh, it's out today. So we're all in the studio just kind of hanging out. We're not recording. And so I'm like,
and that had just dropped. And so I was just like,. And I was being, a lot of it was sarcastic, right?
I was just messing with people,
but the part that I think is so funny about is I'm like
picking on these people and being sarcastic about
some of these video game dorks.
And I'm like, bro, like I'm not coming from a place
of like standing on my pet, like I was there.
Like I remember like being just like you
and my buddy trying to give me a hard time
and me being like, Ruh, look how much money I make and I'm still a grown man, and my buddy trying to give me a hard time and me being like
Look how much money I make it. I'm still a grown man. I'm gonna play too on 50 You know him you know saying like I said those things. So yeah, this isn't me like like at all pointing out that and
It it wasn't so funny because the clip the way it was presented right because it's just a clip
You know, it's out of a whole episode where we talk about a bunch of other things
that are making men weak.
That are a little targeted.
Oh, okay.
So the story, right?
So I walk my dogs and my good friend and his dog.
We're like kind of talking and just walking
and he's like a big video game guy.
And like, and so his girl like sense in that clip.
Oh, it's like, he's your friend.
He's your friend.
He's like, my pump's saying.
I was like, oh no, like he was like,
oh man, like I shouldn't be playing with you guys.
I should be reading a book, I guess.
You know, like, oh man.
You know what I hate, I hate this argument too.
It's like, it's like somewhat, like,
dude, you know, you smoke too much weed.
It's better to get drunk all the time.
Well, yeah, okay.
I guess if those are your two options, you know.
Well, video games are bad,
but it's better than me, you know,
doing something else at the terrible time.
There was, there was something,
and I gotta give him credit
because he did at the end of going back and forth with me.
He did say, okay, fair enough,
but he kept like going back, like arguing with it.
And then he was just like,
hey, bro, how about your Sunday football day?
And I'm like, yeah, definitely bro, hindering my growth.
100% agree. Like I'm not saying I'm perfect.
I've said, I don't binge watching Netflix.
And I know it's not. That's the point of this.
Like we're all we're putting this message out, not of pointing the finger and
oh, look at us as like, hey, I struggle with like all those things.
At one point, I've struggled with all of these things.
And so and inconsistently struggle with that,
the pursuit of growth and allowing myself
to be distracted by all these other things.
I mean, that's where the place that we've always come from.
So this fact that everybody got so defensive.
Just to count for it is like your inventory.
Like this is where I'm spending time.
And like assess like how you're spending time
and like what that's contributing towards the value of your life. You know what it is it's that we've
all been there right where you're doing something that's probably not moving
your life in the right direction and rather than be honest with yourself be like
yeah I know that this is like not really great. You don't want to make that
assumption you don't wanna say that.
Because then that puts responsibility on you.
It's not even that's how.
It's, again, I know so, I'm so close to this
because that was me.
You love it so much.
You're so deeply addicted to it
because it's given you,
it's given you all those feel good feelings
from playing it.
So you're so, you love it so much
and you've already justified it to your girlfriends
and friends and stuff like that.
It's better than going out drinking at the bar with people.
It's better than this.
Look at my life.
I make six figures and have a house
and I've got my shit together.
So you've already built like this.
I don't trust her.
And yeah, and identity around it that,
anybody coming in at poking at that, like you already feel like you have the defense on that. It's just like, oh yeah, and identity around it that, you know, anybody coming in at poking at that,
like you already feel like you have the defense on that.
Just like, oh yeah, well, and so, yeah,
you just, you've identified with it so strongly
that it's hard to do, and it's like, hey, it's like,
and if you're happy where your life is,
and you're successful and you play X amount of hours
a week of video games, I'm not judging, I'm just saying,
like, it's really the messages for the people
that are stuck.
The message is for somebody who's like,
feels like they can't get ahead,
or the person who feels like their life sucks,
and then you're also doing these things.
That's really who the message is.
It's not my point of the finger at somebody
who's found some balance in their life
or they love to play in our two video games a week.
Like, who?
That's not the point of it.
And let's be honest, most of you fools are getting defensive.
It's not an hour or two a week.
It's you are freaking mucking for hours.
Okay?
Like I did.
Get home from work at like 9, 10 o'clock, you and your buddies plug in and you don't plug
it.
You don't have to.
You know why they got so mad, bro?
Because when we were talking about video games, what they heard was their girlfriends' wives and the shit
that they're both wives.
And they were like, how dare you know my wife is gonna make me listen
to this shit.
I know that's as afraid of as like the pile on.
You know, like my friend got it from his girl.
And I'm like, we're not sitting here like shaming you for that.
Like, dude, it's the only thing I look for too.
I get one hour. I'm like, that's not the, you didn't listen to the podcast.
That's a clip that you know. And it's like, that's so funny.
So that thought is pretty fun. Back to the whole like perfect versus good type of deal.
Like this is actually a great way to mention magic spoon cereal.
Magic spoon cereal is a processed cereal that has been made to taste like the
cereals that you grew up eating on Saturday morning, watching cartoons. The
difference is it's very high in protein and low in other calories and so it's a
great option if you're going to take one step towards the better direction or if you're
going to indulge in some processed food.
And I want to say that because when we started working with Magispoon, you had the purist
come out.
You're promoting cereal?
This is processed.
I like those protein powder's processed too, right?
I can't tell you Katrina would have tested this.
I can't tell you how many times Magispoon has come in in replace of me having a bowl of ice cream
at 10 o'clock at night.
So many times.
Where I wanna go downstairs and I'm craving
like a bowl of ice cream and I get that kind of sweet flavor
that is a quarter of the calories
as a Ben and Jerry pint of ice cream would be
and five times the amount of protein for it.
It's like such a better choice than to.
Now never in my life would I say it beats a plate of chicken bread.
It ounces of chicken breast and white rice and broccoli.
Like no, I do not think that whatsoever.
And I don't use it that way.
That's what I heard.
Yeah.
And that was like the max look of everything.
Like max is not the guy to be like every
Bush and you're McDonald's. This is the way to get healthy and fit. It's like I know what
he's he's been bombarded by people talking about how expensive healthy food is and he's
like this is a healthy choice in comparison. I feel bad about max. He's poor kid can't
I say kid he's a might I can't poor guy. He can't win. win. He gets he's gotten a shit from the extreme macro side like Lane Norton.
Yeah, for saying that he talks too much about laboratory science like
Christianists.
Yeah, like talking too much about like you know the fight of chemicals.
Yeah, yeah, the zero estrogen is stuff like that, right?
And now he's got the wellness.
He's trying to navigate.
Hey, I think that's a sign you're doing.
Get me to do something, right?
Yeah, you're doing so right.
You're getting hate on both sides.
I'm shouting to Max, man.
Much love to Max, for sure.
Anyway, so I want to just keep talking.
How you feeling, by the way?
Oh, I'm just, you sound better at least.
I'm coming out.
Hey, that episode was like sales.
Hey, sales were up on Sunday's episode.
My people empathetic.
I was seeing people felt sorry.
So my kids bought more programs.
So people that know my kids were, my wife and kids were in Arkansas.
It was very somber.
I went to, I was there, only with there for a few days,
came back because we worked, went back.
My kids were sick.
So my daughter, she had, my son and daughter both had feverers,
kind of on and off.
And then afterwards congestion, youngest my eight month old had
Group at one point so they were kind of they were pretty sick went to go we went back to Arkansas
We flew back and then I got what they had
Hit me kind of hard tested myself turned out to be coven
So this was coven around to actually worse than the first time I had coven
So I had a fever few days. I do want to say, commend you guys on your bravery.
You guys had me come in and record a podcast.
We're stupid.
Yeah.
Justin and I are gangsters, fuck.
Yeah.
I'm here day one.
Oh, I need it.
Yeah.
I've seen you eat a breetal off the bath in Florida.
Yeah.
No, but you guys are good.
Yeah, but no, you got it.
Adam got it.
Well, I mean, I don't know what,
I didn't get, I didn't test positive, right?
So I, but I, you were in here, Katrina was in here
and all of us that are like, Doug, right?
And I got sick the same time that Katrina got sick.
And, but it didn't feel that bad.
So I didn't think twice about it.
And then I thought, well, I better test just to make sure
that Sal tested positive. So I was like, it. And then I thought, well, I better test just to make sure I got a cell tested positive.
So I was like, oh, let me test, I test negative.
And then I noticed that Katrina was getting sicker
than like she never gets sick.
So to see her sick at all was already rare.
Is this her first time getting COVID?
Yeah.
It was, oh, that's why.
Yeah.
And so, and she was getting, she was worse than me.
So it's weird that we had a cold that was,
I assumed was the same cold and she's worse. It. So it's weird that we had a cold, that was, I assumed was the same cold,
and she's worse, it's never like that.
So I thought that's kind of weird.
I'm like, okay, you should probably test.
She's like, I'm not testing, I'm fine.
I'm like, you need to test, just see.
And sure of shit, she tested positive.
Yeah.
But now I'm a lot better and I did,
you know, I did all this stuff I took.
That was number two for you, right?
The second time.
It got you worse than the first time.
I mean, it wasn't like
Horrible horrible, but it was up there
I had a fever for three days which for me is a lot. I don't typically get that
So I had a fever for three days and then just congested and shitty feeling you know
Tired cut, but I never lost sense of smell or taste or anything like that
Everything else was fine. I'm on the man. I did, you know, the whole
protocol of herbs and shit, which by the way, you guys know that doctors can now not that the FDA's
promoting this. So this is not an official treatment for the change your stance on mectin or
that. Well, they didn't, they got challenged in court by a doctor. And the court said,
doctors can prescribe
Ivermectin for COVID.
Now this doesn't mean the FDA advocates for it,
but now they can without getting in trouble.
So now you can go to a doctor,
give us a shot of what the FDA says anyways.
I know.
Wait, I care way more about my personal doctor
than I'd care about the FDA,
but they can now prescribe it for COVID.
Where's the course?
Of course.
They were told like,
pharmacies couldn't be...
Okay, so help me wrap my brain around
what potentially could have happened to me.
It's almost certain that the cold flu thing
that I got was from you.
I wasn't around anybody else that was sick.
We did kiss a lot.
Yeah, and we missed each other, Doug. I didn't, and I also, by the way, too, when Katrina got it, was sick. We did kiss a lot. Yeah. And we missed each other, Doug.
I didn't, I didn't, and I also, by the way, too,
when Katrina Goddard was positive,
like we didn't, I mean, we had sex twice afterwards.
We slept in the, like, we didn't,
there was no, like, trying not to get it.
Was it the same day, you guys had sex twice?
Or was it two days a month, same day?
Wow, that's pretty good.
Yeah, we ran it by vacation.
Checking how that is, right?
So, yeah, first day.
We'll get to that, actually.
This staff found out Justin's faster than 75% of men. Oh, yeah, that's the crazy staff. Yeah, first. We'll get to that. This staff found out Justin's faster than 75% of men.
Oh, yeah, that's the crazy stats.
I'll read you, dude.
Yeah, I'll tell you about that.
But no, help me understand.
So, so okay, you know, wherever you get your news here,
supposedly if you, you know, you didn't get the shot
like I did, you actually got, I got
COVID twice.
The antibodies are supposed to be in me for six months to a year.
So there's different types, there's different layers to an immune memory, okay?
There are, there's like the top layer and then there's lower layers. And there's some, you probably have some type of immunity
for a year or two years.
The strongest type of immunity last,
I think something like six months is what they're finding.
Okay, so then how does something like,
why is it then once you get chicken pox,
you never get them again?
Depends on, so some viruses cause such a robust immune response
that you maintain like really strong immunity forever.
So chicken pox have, you know, is one of those things.
Where if you get it once,
if you get it good enough once, by the way,
if you get it really mild as a kid,
you can get it again.
So that's kind of how I feel about what's happened to me
with COVID, is that I got it early and I got it bad.
The first time.
The second time was like a little snivel and cold,
I didn't even realize I had it until
Katrina made me test. And then now here I am in a in a COVID incubator with you and her. And
then I and then I stay with like in a tiny room. I mean, we drove in a car for five hours together
back and forth. All the way to Yosemite. We were in a little cabin together. Like there if there was
a possibility that I could get it,
like I couldn't have put myself in it.
You did get it, you just got it real mild,
and you didn't get a viral load that was big enough
to show up on one of those over the counter tests.
So that's the thing, like if you did one of those,
like, but here's the thing that's weird, I'm beyond a year.
So supposedly, because you remember
when everybody, remember all the vaccine pro side
was just like, well, natural immunity's all gonna last you for six months anyways.
And then you're good.
So that was the big, so explain that to me how a year has gone by.
I haven't had it.
I was in a situation like that.
And by the way, both you and Katrina were pretty bad.
And I'm around it.
I got a cold from it, for sure, but nothing else.
Well, I mean, you want to explain immunity?
No, I don't know.
So complex and there's so many factors.
Yeah.
That play a role from individual factors like your stress,
your sleep, your vitamin, your nutrient levels,
this, that, and the other, your own immune response.
Did it recognize the virus fast enough?
How much of it were you exposed to?
Did I just spray the shit out of you with virus
or did you get enough, just enough to cause a small reaction
and to fight, I mean, who knows, dude, it's weird.
I mean, I didn't make out with you, but I did with Katrina.
Yeah.
So it's like, definitely, if there was a possibility
that I would get exposed.
I mean, there was no way that I didn't get exposed.
And again, I got sick.
I was not around anybody else.
I was sick.
That was it.
So weren't you holding some crystals or something?
Yeah, some rocks that were pouring off the evil.
I don't know.
The point of me bringing it up is just that I know that when a ridge, one of the arguments
that I was having with my friends early on when everybody was all scared about this,
I, you know, I told them, I said, like, you know, I'd rather get to natural immunity.
And then they're, they're, they're defenses like, oh, that I'd rather get to natural immunity. And then their defense is like,
oh, that's only good for six months anyways.
And then it's gonna mutate.
You know, never in the history of the world has,
like, that's so funny to me
that people were making that argument.
I know.
That's never been healthy.
Natural immunity is gonna win every day of the week.
Period.
Yeah, period of story.
And then, yeah, it was all just like,
it was crazy how that shifted it
because it was so motivated by ushering everybody
to one solution.
This was just vaccine and that was it.
And so it just dismissed all like regular logic and reason
from the conversation.
I know, crazy.
Speaking of treatments and stuff like that.
So I did my first ketamine therapy. Yeah, how the conversation. I know crazy. Speaking of like treatments and stuff like that. So I did my first ketamine therapy.
Yeah, how was that?
Okay, so besides giving you COVID,
I know.
Well, actually I started getting sick that day too,
so it might have influenced the whole experience
because I started to kind of feel sick
when I did the treatment.
But anyway, boy, it was...
Can you compare the two to me?
What? The two therapies you've done. You've
done these two EMDRs different. Obviously. This is a drug, right? So I'm under the influence.
Yeah, yeah. It was, did one feel more impactful than the other? Oh, well, the, you're, the
ketamine puts you there and you can't get away. So I can get away, you know, with EMDR if I want to or anything else.
But so I, so here's how it all went down, right?
So we, you go into this office space and I'm working with somebody.
Actually, she said I could mention her name.
Her name is Harmony Stone.
She does this.
That's her real name.
That's her name. Yeah.
I know. Sounds like, you know, it's not, it's a real name. Sounds like Stone. She does this. That's her real name. That's her name, yeah. I know, sounds like.
Maybe it's not.
It's a real name.
Sounds like somebody would do this therapy.
Yeah.
I know, Harmony Stone.
No.
She's extremely qualified woman, extremely educated, very qualified, very, very good at what
she does.
Can we, can we just and I guess how she was dressed?
No.
That's it.
Okay.
It's weird.
I'm sorry, she's crying.
She have a mood ring.
No, I was wondering.
King God, sorry.
Oh, she's a gem.
She's a gem.
I'm apologies, Harmony.
It was getting too,
she's like low-hanging fruit.
She's very, very qualified at what she does, really good.
But anyway, you're in this room and you,
you know, you talk a little bit with therapists,
then you take, they give you like,
there's like three doses.
There's an initial dose, which is big,
a second dose, which is big,
and then what's called a booster dose.
And so the first two sessions or so,
you're figuring out what the right dose is
for your body, because people are all kind of
individual, some people more sensitive with others.
You guys want to guess if I'm more sensitive or less sensitive?
You're more sensitive. For sure, yeah. 100%. Yeah, as I sensitive with others. You guys wanna guess if I'm more sensitive or less sensitive? More sensitive.
For sure.
100%.
As I'm with everyone.
You're the guy who takes a supplement.
It's like, it's working.
I can feel myself building muscle.
You just swallowed it.
Yeah, dude.
So anyway, 100%.
So I do the first, so it's a tablet,
and you put it between your gum and your cheek.
You let it sit there for 10 minutes. You swish around, then you spit it out.
Then you lay back, you put an I am ass con, you put on some noise canceling headphones,
it has music, and you just let your mind go where it wants, right?
Now you have your intention, but you let it go where it wants.
So when you say you have your intention, did you, yeah, do you put that intention out?
Yep, before.
Yeah, yeah.
So like your intention might be like,
I want to, you know, I want to quit drinking alcohol or whatever.
So then you lay back.
Now the thing about, I've only done this once.
This is my personal experience.
So I am not representing everybody.
I've read lots of people's accounts and what people say.
It was hard. It was really hard
Like emotionally you mean it's super now it makes sense for me because I don't let myself feel hard emotions
so I lay back and
The I guess it starts to kick in and you know and this is what my therapist told me she says
You're gonna go where you need to go. Like, I'm prosecuting with you during this,
or it was like sitting there with her and tension.
No, she's in the room.
Yeah, and she's not.
But then when it's time to try the second dose
or whatever, then she'll tap on your shoulder, you come up.
Okay.
And then if you want to talk, you can.
And she can help you kind of process what's going on.
Okay, so let me get this straight.
So okay, you communicate your intentions with her.
Like, oh, I want to stop drinking alcohol
or so whatever, whatever.
So you're not telling us, right?
And then you take the dose, you put these headphones on,
you get the eye mask on.
And if she leaves the room.
No, for the first session or two,
I think she stays in the room.
But I mean, she's not communicating to you.
No, like you're literally, and she literally tells you,
don't worry, it's gonna come up.
Yeah, oh wow.
So I lay back and sure as fuck,
that's exactly what happened.
How long?
Here's the weird thing, it distorts time.
Yeah, and yet, an idea though.
Well, it's probably 15 minutes.
It felt like an hour or an hour and a half.
So I lay back and all the tough shit that I don't let myself think about, right? It starts coming up.
And I'm like, oh fuck, right? And I can find myself like trying to avoid thinking or feeling a particular way.
It wasn't happening. It was going there. So I finally let go, went into each of these thoughts
and whatever, and it was hard, bro.
It's like all this hardship came up, and I'm like,
so do you feel yourself like,
because you're blindfolded basically,
you get this stuff in your life.
Also, you just start crying, I don't know where.
Yep, oh yeah, a lot of it.
Oh, I don't cry, bro.
So it was a lot.
Well, you like uncontrollably crying?
Like, like, and snob bubbles. Yeah, so lot of it. Oh, I don't cry, bro. So it was a lot. Well, you like uncontrollably crying like
Snap bubbles. Yeah, so no
But it's still very sad. I think if you guys saw me you feel very bad for me
You guys have to pet your hair a little bit I'm not sure if you're getting comfortable with the room. I'm gonna be like, oh well, we'll be back, Sal. Let us know when you're done.
But yeah, I just love some tissue.
Just heavy dude, heavy, hard shit.
And how long's it last?
When I did the second dose and then boom.
Well, hold on, come here, jump ahead here.
So you're in it, you're crying, you're working through
these things like that, that lasts about how long
and then what's the intermission look like?
Or is there no intermission?
I think that was like 15 minutes or so.
And then I took another dose.
And so she comes in and just like, she was there.
She sits, she's watching you.
Yeah, she's sitting in the room.
She's just chilling, right?
Then I did the second dose, again, laid back
and just more hardship.
Now there were moments of gratitude and appreciation,
but what came up for me mostly was all a shit.
I don't let myself feel just the bottom line.
I know Justin over there's like,
that's why he's not doing it.
Yeah, I'm not.
There's so much there.
I'm afraid Justin would die.
You're like a masochist.
You know what? What I'm afraid Justin would die. You're like a masochist. You know what?
What I'm learning, like big time, is that if you don't process
an emotion, it doesn't go away.
Yeah, just store.
It's in you.
And what it does is it drives shit that you don't know.
And it, without your permission, it drives your shit.
So if you don't like complete the cycle,
it's like a cycle, right? If you don't let it complete, it's fucking stuck. So if you don't like complete the cycle, it's like a cycle, right?
If you don't let it complete, it's fucking stuck.
So what does that completion look like?
You gotta go through the like hard, painful,
like there were, I don't wanna go into other,
like too many details,
but two easy ones for me to talk about,
we're not easy, but ones I've talked about before
were, you know, I had somebody close to me die of cancer
when this person, they were very close to me.
When they died, I remember I couldn't cry.
Late on their chest, they were in their deathbed,
passed away, and I remember thinking,
why can't I cry?
Why can't I let this out, right?
Oh, that came out.
That came out.
They're gonna get me there.
And I thought my grandfather, boom, that came out.
And then other shit that I don't wanna talk about
that just all came out.
So it's like I had to let it out had to come out.
Okay. So after you process all that, yeah.
Yeah.
Do you get this feeling of you come out of it and you're like, I'm better now.
No.
Or is it just there's still work to be done?
I don't think it's that easy.
I think yeah.
I think that no, it was heavy.
It was it was definitely heavy and hard.
So it's more like an awareness thing first.
Yeah. And then now do you now? I don't know what the next ones are going to be like. I know
I've read a lot of people's accounts and they say that they'll there's times in their very
euphoric and they just feel like they're like you know just they feel the connectedness of things.
And you know I don't know if that's going to happen to me but this was heavy hard but necessary.
that's gonna happen to me, but this was heavy, hard, but necessary, but necessary.
And what makes me want to go back is,
I always bring it back to the space
that I understand, which is fitness,
which is like, you're gonna work out,
it's gonna be fucking hard, you know?
That's it, and it's the only way,
if you're gonna progress in any significant way,
it's gotta be hard.
So, do I want to progress or not?
Am I going to be a coward?
Or am I going to have some bravery here?
And the reality is I want to be a coward.
I want to run away, but I'm going to choose to go through it.
So I'm going to step into the fire again.
Now, how do you, when you come back to like,
you know, with your family and everybody,
so like that, is it difficult?
Yeah, because you're still like processing all this.
Oh, bro, I so, like, you're like,
So you're not supposed to drive afterwards, right?
So afterwards I leave and I go down to call it Uber,
but I waited for like 45 minutes and I literally,
I swear to God, if you guys are all by there.
This are crying.
Well, if you guys drove by and you didn't know me, you guys throw a buy if you guys throw buy
And you didn't know me you'd be like that poor man. I was sitting. Hey listen. I'm a grown man
You're like on a bench. Hey, I'm a 44 year old grown man. I'm sitting on the curb
Okay, on the street on the curb just sitting there just for 45 minutes
Just trying to piece
Fully aware that the how I probably appear to people drive me wide,
but I can't, I can't call my car right now.
I gotta sit here for a second.
Yeah, so then I got home and then I just laid on the couch
and you're just still trying to process all that stuff.
Yeah, so has it made this past week easy, difficult,
calm, calm.
Oh, okay.
So good. Even through challenges and stuff, I'm finding myself more aware of my own behaviors and
reactions and more calm about certain things.
But I'm fully aware it's like the first step.
So we got a lot of work to go.
But it's, I tell you, man, people, I don't, here's the thing.
I remember thinking this halfway through, halfway through, I'm sitting there bawling, like this is, oh my. But it's, I tell you, man, people, I don't, since here's the thing, I remember thinking this halfway through,
halfway through I'm sitting there bawling like this is,
oh my gosh, it's so hard, I'm letting myself go in there and shit.
Like people use ketamine to party, what the fuck is wrong with?
Yeah, that doesn't make any sense.
I think it's like other psychedelics,
like you hear people talk about like,
tough and dangerous.
Is it the environment that just really drives a different
change to it?
It's the intent.
I think it just brings up with the intent.
I mean, it's just like, I mean, you've ever, you know,
ever, I would think most people have had an experience where
that's been amazing on alcohol and then a really depressing
or a bad one.
If you go, if you drink your sorrows away, a lot of times,
that's a really awful drunk experience.
If you go with your buddies to a concert,
you're excited about, it's like it's a fun.
So it's like the same thing.
I think, I'm just another level.
I think it literally brings up what needs to be brought up.
And so if that just so happens to be some shit
that you don't wanna deal with, because it's hard,
that's what's gonna come up.
Because I've had that with Silasibon, right?
I've had great experiences with you guys creating
or doing something positive or business related
that it's all good.
And then I've had other ones
which are really deep with Katrina and I
and we're like working on some relationships.
So I think it has a lot to do with.
You remember that time, Dustin?
We had an experience with the Silasibon.
Yeah, they were like, what the?
It brought some shit up, yeah.
It's because my family was close by
and it was like, oh, it just hit me different. Yeah, by and it was like, oh, just hit me different.
You know, like normally I was like,
oh, cool, look at these colors
and these interesting bugs and whatever.
And then it was just like, I had the thought of my family
and it said this like, overwhelming,
like just, I don't know, man.
It was emotion.
Emotion, it was just, it was just,
that was an emotional rack for like a few minutes.
And then he found me in the house,
I literally left you guys on purpose.
Yeah.
I left those.
I gave, I only see me like,
I gave him a really long hug.
Yeah.
That, that, that,
that,
probably Williams, that Damon,
that's not your fault, your fault,
that's your fault.
This is what he was,
that's the thing to,
and I was like thinking about this
because it's like,
you, you think about
like stoicism and you think about these practices and like, it's almost like that on steroids,
right?
Because you're really facing like worst case scenario or like things of the past that
have really like affected you in a certain way or traumatized you in some sense to where
like, I think like people just don't take the time to really acknowledge these events and these things
and to really learn from them and move forward.
Like there's a balancing act.
The balancing act is you gotta get shit done.
There are things you have to show up for.
And so sometimes that means you gotta just move forward
and you can't think about hardship
because otherwise you're not gonna be able to work,
you're not gonna be able to be there for people.
Yes, get shit done.
Or whatever.
But there's a balancing act because you also need to allow, not run away from those things
because otherwise they start to pull the levers and how you interact with people and the
things that you do.
And then you're not, you don't even aware, you're not even aware that you act a particular
way, you do certain things because of this shit that you're not, like,
you're not particularly facing.
It's all about bravery, by the way.
It's all about bravery.
So that was another thing I realized.
It's like, oh, me not allowing myself to feel this isn't,
isn't making me better.
It's actually making me worse since because I'm scared.
I got to face this, you know, kind of shit.
So yeah.
So you think there's a, like, a possibility that someone has like this all positive experience. Oh yeah. Oh,
you read, read about them. Okay. Where it's like, oh yeah. And so I could, I couldn't,
I mean, I would think that I'm gonna do like a what? I'm gonna do eight sessions. I think
it's an anal. Sorry. What did you say? Like I said, give you a different out completely out of the stairs
Wow just like that you lost Justin and I
Was going there
Start crying like you know I'm doing eight of them. Sorry. Sorry. We're still a little, you're still a little cloudy.
No.
No.
No.
Sorry.
We're still a little, you're still a little cloudy.
No.
No.
Sorry.
Sorry.
Sorry.
Sorry.
Sorry.
Sorry.
Sorry.
Sorry.
Sorry.
Sorry.
Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Oh, yeah, I totally left turn, but did you guys? You guys see the news on bar still sports with day point. I what hey, we're so explain that he
So he sold the company for a half a billion dollars, okay?
Okay, so and probably made a good Julian right so I'm sure he made a lot of money on that cell
Two pen national. I told you guys about pen a long time ago, that's the gambling, gambling, gambling, gambling
and stuff. So I bought shares in them a long time ago. And so they basically were partners
now in business. I don't remember what the exact percentage of the company that pen
owned after they after they bought, but they sold back to him for $1.
Yeah. Why? Because it's obviously this was a plan. It was like, let me sell to you.
Well, to give it back to for a dollar was a plan.
And then if there's a little more to it, right, too.
So if he then goes and sells again,
that he they're entitled to a bunch.
So basically it's basically giving him full control
and ownership.
Was it now, did he, did he stay away?
Or he sold, therefore he's therefore his hands are free of particular.
Was it on the decline or something?
Was he worried about the price?
No, what was happening was that with a gambling app or company, the laws and regulations and
the rules were so, we're getting so stringent that they couldn't, and what they were about
to do.
So Penn National was about to sign with Disney, ESPN. And Disney wanted nothing to do with Dave. So the
deal was if we are going to, if Penn National was going to partner up with ESPN and Disney,
you can't be with Dave. And so basically they sold, they sold it. So Dave's out. So
no, Dave was out. Well, no, they sold the company.
And so then Penn can go back and,
so Penn is no longer associated with barstool.
So basically they sold barstool back to Dave.
Dave is in.
Oh, I see.
Yeah.
And now they can go, they can go full on over to ESPN.
Yeah, real smart.
That's really smart, isn't it?
Yeah, I mean, God, what a win for Dave.
Yeah. To be able to sell,
get back control for a dollar and now he's running his company the same way he wanted to run his company.
After we sold it for half a year after he cashed out. And the only thing is in the contract is that
if he turns around like sells the company, say, for $2 billion in so many years, penns in title too.
I don't know what the breakdown is that they would get paid out.
He's a smart business guy.
He is.
Yeah, I thought that was pretty savvy
and a win all the way around for him.
Because he felt like his content
was being steered by the penational
because of all the regulations.
And something couldn't say or talk about.
And so interesting.
So what is the statistic that you're trying to... Oh, that you're faster're faster than relate to me. Well, actually, Sal pointed out, I brought this
this thing. He's like, Oh my god, just throw me in your set. Yeah. What did you say, Sal? So 75%
of men, uh, actually orgasm within two minutes of intercourse.
with in two minutes of intercourse. Steve, that's a lot.
We need 75% of men.
I beat you.
Yeah.
Orgasm within two minutes of intercourse.
Wow.
So that's, is that true?
I mean, like, it's very beginning.
I can't be like, I'm sure you're not reported.
Are they, yeah, are they like, anonymously, right?
Who's reporting this?
Well, you're anonymously, you're not being like, hey, I'm the guy who can only they, yeah, are they like, anonymously, right? Who's reporting this?
Well, you're anonymously, you're not being like,
hey, I'm the guy who can only last a minute 30.
First place.
And two, it's not,
it's somebody who get a new relationship.
I mean, at least give the guy a bit of a clear.
Right.
Like, you think at that point,
it's gonna be, you know, longer than I thought.
I mean, that's a lot.
Three quarters of men.
I, I wonder how they got the statistic though.
Like how, the fact checker me right now?
I'm looking for it, yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Just Google how fast?
What you got Andrew?
It's true.
It was reported 75% of the maniac with in two minutes,
but it's all that is based off of study from the 1950s.
Oh, well, from the 50s.
Oh, you think we're better than now?
I mean, back then, no.
But like, you barely saw ankle back then.
Yeah, I want to know.
You know, that's different.
Yeah, guys were on edge.
I want to know more and then.
Oh, yeah, I want to know how they would study that.
Did they have a bunch of guys in a room?
No, I bet you, okay, do you remember I've told you guys before?
Ready to go.
I have, I'm a part of this like survey.
It's been going on since I was like six or seven years old.
They find me, they find me every like three to four years.
They pay me like a hundred and something box.
It's gone up over years.
I don't know what it is now.
They haven't found me in a while.
Courtney was part of one of those.
But they've really, yeah, and every house that I've ever lived in, like they've gone
and found me.
And I put these headphones on, I have a laptop,
and they're like very personal questions.
And it's an anonymous survey,
and they basically have followed my life.
Everything from, and obviously I remember doing it as a kid,
and then as adults, so a lot of these questions,
like when I was like 12, asking me about drugs,
or trying to like, no, on either of those,
and some things have changed.
And so that's where a lot of these statistics come from
when they, and then they ask questions
about my sex life too.
So that was where in there.
So that type of stuff.
So I'm sure it's like a survey like that
where they anonymously answered a bunch
of these random questions.
But I've always thought that was really interesting
how I got like thrown into that thing.
Well, you know, there was a whole art. There was an argument for a long time as to what the purpose
of the female orgasm was because evolutionarily speaking makes sense obviously for a man to
ejaculate orgasm and also for it to happen quickly because it increases your odds of,
you know, you're gonna, you're gonna pass on your DNA, right?
But then the argument was like,
well, why do women orgasm,
is it just a leftover byproduct?
What's the value?
Now, they've shown in studies that when a woman orgasms,
her odds of becoming pregnant go up,
but it's not enough to really make sense.
So the big argument really is that it shows how social we are
and that it
really wasn't the story of just guys going around banging chicks as fast as they can,
but rather actually wanting to please them as well. And that the women pick mates and say,
well, he actually cares about how I feel type of deal. So yeah, I know, interesting. But yeah, but yeah, Justin definitely fastest in the West.
Yeah.
Gunslinger over here.
Yeah.
He read that stats and we're like, please read it like this.
Yeah.
I know.
So we have no idea about it.
Yeah.
Oh, you guys are going to comment on this study.
It was a Kinsey study.
So it was back in like 1948.
But the stats have changed since then.
It's between 5.4 and 7.5 minutes now, in time. 1948, but the stats have changed since then.
It's between 5.4 and 7.5 minutes now, in time.
Oh wow, wow.
What do you go guys?
Suggesting that men have adapted their sexual behavior
to better fit the social ideal.
Oh, interesting.
Just say what it says.
Double their time, that sucks when you're so low on time
that double your time is five minutes.
Yeah, I crushed it.
Yeah.
You know, anyway, did you, uh,
do you guys see the follow up on the plane lady?
Yes.
Yes.
Is it real?
Is it real?
Well, okay.
She's a politician basically.
She's a politician.
It was, it was a weird, a weird apology.
And why, why was she even, I mean, yeah, I get that she was like cursing and so she probably
felt bad. There was kids and like, you know, embarrassed about it and like, I mean, yeah, I get that she was cursing and so she probably felt bad. There was kids, you know, embarrassed about it.
And like, I mean, that's gotta be weird to become an instant
like viral meme because you have a freak out.
Like, she literally freaked out.
And so she probably was just like very embarrassed
by that fact, but doesn't reveal like any of what caused that.
Like, she doesn't like bring up, who was not real?
Like what spurred that?
There's no context of like,
well did she take any kind of medication
or was the guy just acting weird or like,
what's the rationale other than like,
we're still left with the fact that you saw something
and it freaked you the fuck out
and you had to get off the plate.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We're, we're, she gave us nothing.
Someone sideways blinked.
That's what I think.
She just didn't want to say.
Yeah.
Cause they, they, they threatened her.
Yeah, I thought it was really weird to, to be silent that long.
And then she, like, you could tell she, like, got all done up in her makeup to do, like,
this formal, like, you know, apology.
You're, what are we going to do?
Yeah.
And thought, that's really weird, dude.
Like, I don't know. I'm excited. My And thought, that's really weird, dude, like, I don't know.
I'm excited. My painting should be here any day now.
Oh, yeah.
Cheers to the best painting.
I'm so pumped up.
That's the best thing ever.
Super fun.
Hey, I want to, I want to comment on when he's the interviewer.
I want to comment real quick on a falletin, which is the,
the peptide hair product that we, we did an episode on hair
regrowth with Jay Campbell.
And there were people say,
oh my God, it's so expensive.
It's a three month supply.
I want everybody to know that.
It's very little.
So it's a three month supply.
It's a three month supply.
Yeah, so that's why it costs as much as it does.
But, you know, Vicki's still telling me,
she says she could tell little by little
that it seems to have some positive effect on me.
And I've been using it now for two months.
Well, you're the best because you're the most consistent with it.
So I was like consistent for a minute, then I fell off, and then I was like, it's so hard for me because I don't care.
I don't want to care, right?
I want to care.
I want to do the cell palm that I want to do for that too, right?
I was using salt, palm, eto, shampoo before, but that all that does is reduce DHT in the scalp.
But are you sure you don't care, or is it that you're just,
you don't wanna be let down and sad about it?
That would imply I care.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
I mean, I don't know if you guys remember or not,
but I don't know what you're saying.
There was like two years there where like,
Katrina and I would kind of get into it.
Like I wanted to shave it.
As soon as it started to thin, I'm like,
oh, I'm over this.
Let's shave it.
She's like, no.
She was so adamant about me, not shave.
She was so afraid I was gonna be like this ugly bald guy.
Like, this like got a pretty good round head.
I said like I used to shave it when I was a kid in sports.
I loved it, you know, and made it think made things easy.
And so every man loves the feeling of being.
And not to me.
I never liked my hair.
I don't want men just doing this.
Oh, that's the best.
Oh, with the best.
Even when I had all my hair, I didn't like it.
I was never like, I see my son's hair.
I wish I had my son's hair.
My son has cool hair.
You could do stuff with it.
So I-
What was your hair?
It was like wavy and nappy.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, big old hair.
Yeah, it's like,
kind of like your son's hair like that.
Yeah, yeah.
It's like that you can't ask him. You can't fucking do anything with that hair. It's hair like that. Yeah, it's like they and ask him
You can't fucking do anything that it's awful. You can't style it. You can't do anything just poofy
So I never liked it
So I think you know what I'm saying I think you know be careful what you wish for
I think I'm just like I the fuck this hair and so then God's like okay here you go
No more hair
How about this buddy
Yeah, so I just I I'm not, I don't care enough.
I'm not, I guess, I wish it was a bigger insecurity
so maybe I would be more motivated.
My brother, my brother's swearing by it.
He's been fighting his, yeah.
He's been fighting his, isn't it?
Like, it's actually like a really,
I shouldn't laugh about that, right?
There's a lot of men that like suffer from depression
and stuff because of baldness, isn't it? It's like a mate, isn't like a mate isn't it like one of the top ones that their identity was through their hair
like they do it like and that's maybe like if I had like Patrick Swazie hair or something and
then I lost it and I'll be like you know or like how Craig Capurso yeah if I had like this like
this what's the guy's name Jesse from Full House who's oh yeah if I had like beautiful locks
and then I went bald maybe that would do that but but I hated my hair since the jump. Oh, yeah, what's the what's the depression stats?
Well, I don't know what the stats are, but my thought is yeah a lot of guys are very concerned about it and
Myself personally, I think I have a really strange shaped head, so I don't think I look good bald
Yeah, so you're concerned too. Yeah, you're concerned the same reason Salas. Yeah. Yeah. We're good shape. We're
talking about really who told you that. I what? I don't. You
told you that you and I have a very similar shape information
like. And hold on a second. No, my head and your head are
very similar. Not the face. You got way more way more
cheeks. But the head you and I have a very similar shape
test. True. Justin not Justin's got. He's got a fucking
juggernaut. I got a hand ready for a helmet.
Yeah, he does, he doesn't need a helmet.
He doesn't need a helmet.
Yeah, I think it's a baseball.
He said, let's see, let's see, let's see.
What can you just, ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha Hey, can we talk real quick about you brought something up that I vaguely remember knowing about but then I I
Read into it and I was like I can't believe this was allowed to happen the thing with Brooksheel's oh
What have we not talked about this? I feel like we might have alluded to it
Yeah, if we did I was like not paying attention to you guys brought this up because I knew nothing about I knew about it
Kind of but I for some reason really think that and then when you brought it up
Yeah, I like you realize that I went down the rabbit. It's so creepy. It's like it was hard to like believe
Yeah, it's like I can't believe she was how old 10 10 10 years old 10 playboy
Posed in playboy 11 make it 11 plays a prostitute in a movie.
And she had to make out with like a 28 or 30 something
your old man.
And there's like full nudity, I think of her as well.
It's like absolutely repulsive.
Like I cannot believe that made it through.
And this was in the 70s, right?
Yeah.
This was in the 70s.
You know, it's crazy.
That would never fly today.
Well, back then, what's crazy to me, what's crazy to me is,
there's my pick it up. There's a, no, I mean, why it's actually really crazy to me is,
I thought what's been happening in the last, you know, five years with like, you know,
the, what was this, the, the, the, the, the, the, yeah, cuties and the,
armor free and all the stuff that would pedophilia going on. We have the documentary that just came out and just like, man
We're like and all the all the Hollywood getting the Epstein like all this stuff coming out. I'm like, God
This is like so bad, but it's been happening for such a long time and
We were like normalizing it back then, you know, because it came I know that they put it under the umbrella of art
Yeah, and it was right around the you know the big sexual revolution right was like, I was like, the 60s, you know, make love, pee,
so all that stuff like that is going on.
And so they put it in the kind of like art, free spirit,
anyone should be allowed to do, like, beyond discussing a 10-year-old
fully nude in playboy, and then at 11 years old, to do that.
One, you're a fucked up mom to even allow your kid to do that.
Or evil. Yeah. So, you know, you're like, old, to do that. One, you're a fucked up mom to even allow your kid
to do that, or evil.
Yeah, evil.
Un-unbelieveable.
Imagine what she's had the deal with,
like looking back at that,
like how traumatic that must've been.
The rest of her life, fucked up.
You can't not, you don't make it out of that
and not get fucked up.
That's impossible.
You guys don't even know, dude.
So if you go down this rabbit hole,
I've done it a couple times,
but I can only do it for about 10 minutes
because then it just bothers me so much.
Did you guys know I want to say in Germany,
there was a psychiatrist who made the case,
effectively made the case,
that orphan children,
in order to help them,
that they'll be okay
They'll be better off if they're with in a relationship with an adult where the adult cares for them and
Still has consensual right quote-unquote consensual
Sexual contact so small a station, but you know not hurting the kid. This is how they argument
It's better for them. They're being cared for they actually care for the kid because they have this relationship with them
This was the case that was made to the point where Germany
It was public policy. They took orphan children
Put them with known sex offenders for a decade or so and these kids were being knowingly put with
Sex offenders. It's absolutely poly and that was the argument that it was going
to it was better for them than being on their own or you know being orphans or whatever.
Crazy. Crazy. And this was in the 60s I want to say. Yeah. Insane. I'm with Putin on
how to handle this. What did you do? Do you know what they do over there? Chemical
castration. Yeah. You're if you get caught as a pedophile. Yeah, get rid of your shit. Yeah, that's crazy
That's I think a little too easy to be honest. Yeah, let's give a shout out to I can't believe it never gave Paul checker shot
Out Paul chat. That's crazy. We talked about it earlier. I again, I've called them the godfather wellness
He's a legend in the space. He is a total legend. He's one of the smartest people when it just comes to total overall health and wellness.
Very interesting guy, also very entertaining.
We've had him on the show a few times.
You have your new listener and you want a wild couple episodes.
Go back in.
Yeah.
I'd say you went on a journey with him.
But he's a good time.
He's a great guy, love the guy.
So wealth of knowledge.
Check him out.
All right, you've probably read about the potential benefits of CBD.
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code mine pump and get 15% off. All right, back to the show.
Our first caller is Mike from Nevada.
Mike, what's happening? How can we help you?
What's up guys? How are you doing?
Good, good.
Good, man. How are you?
I'm good. I'm good. So I'll get to my question and I apologize Adam if I misquote you, but I remember a couple
episodes ago you were talking about to a caller about losing body fat and that you would
what you would do would be take more steps.
So if it was 10,000, you do 12,000, 14,000, so forth and so forth.
But what if you could do that? What if I couldn't walk?
Was what you're saying?
Yeah, so basically my issue is, so I have scoliosis which hasn't really bothered me,
but I have a shift in my L4L5 lawn march find which causes numbness in my quad.
I also have a couple of fun on both hands.
It's just like, great.
Which doesn't bother me when I work out.
It never happens when I work out.
But let's say, in general, if you were going to Costco
and you were parked like, I don't know,
over half the length of the parking lot.
If I was there, I'd start feeling the numbness.
And the longer I was there, I started to have your hip pain.
So I had to step, I had to like kneel down for a minute
and my leg happened to keep doing this.
So if you couldn't put that many steps in the day,
we'll go.
Got it, got it, got it.
Okay, that's a lot better.
So the main focus in is I wouldn't want to put
a lot of energy towards building muscle
so that I have a faster metabolism,
so it doesn't require as much activity to help me lean out.
So that would be step one, right?
Like I would wanna get to a place
where we have enough muscle mass on our body
that you're eating a good amount of calories
and good I mean for a man, your size,
I want you north of 3000 plus calories a day
without putting body fat on.
So that would be the foot.
Yeah.
So that would to get there.
That doesn't mean like today you go from where you're at to there, but that would be
the main focus first.
And then I would reduce calories to lean you out because I know that I can't make you
do 12, 15, 20,000 steps a day.
So then I would cut.
But the mistake that a lot of people make that may be in a similar
situation as you is go, Hey, I want to lean out.
I hear Adam say you've got to walk all time.
I can't do that.
So I should just cut calories, but you're coming from a place of only eating, say, 2200 calories
a day and you're sure.
And so I don't know if I was close at all or you're at, but that the problem with that is if you've got more than
Five pounds of fat that you want to lose
You're going to end up at such a low calorie. It's going to be really difficult to maintain
So let's say that if I let's say I guessed a similar number to where you're at and you're like, hey
I want to lose like 15 pounds of body fat
So we reduce two to three hundred calories you lean out a couple pounds, didn't we reduce 200 calories again? You lean out a couple more pounds. Before you know it,
you're eating 1500 calories a day and you're still about five pounds from your goal. So it's like
you're at a place where you're so low of calorie, it's not sustainable long-term. And so that's a
sign that we should have done it the other way, which is we should have put more energy and focus on building muscle and
And get a faster metabolism so that when we reduce those calories
You land in a place that you're like, oh, this is sustainable. That's why I said 3000 plus so now envision that we go on a journey for the next six months of
Building muscle and I build say 10 pounds of muscle on you over the course of, say, six months.
And then, and we get your metabolism up to 3,300 calories.
And then I slowly bring you down, and then you get to your place
where you're lean and you're happy where you're at body fat wise,
and you're eating 2,200 calories.
So that's how I would approach, you know,
getting you there if we were limited by movement and steps
to help us create the caloric deficit.
Yeah, and honestly Mike, trying to walk or run
or burn fat off through activity
isn't really a great long-term approach anyway.
So right, which is what I hear from you guys.
I've been listening for the last two years
at the Runnier Maps program,
which I absolutely love, which I have a question for you Sal, you've met in something a few episodes
ago. You guys were told you and I were talking about dead lifting grips, right? And how you
were saying in balances you should, if you use a mix grip, which I know Adam you're saying
you should use a overhead grip, but if you use a mid-script, should you do even step like switching them?
You know what I'm saying? Yep. Yep. If you go right-hand supinated,
left-hand pronated, and then switch, and then switch. Yeah, I would do even sets, or start the next workout with the other
position. So if it's only three sets, then in let's say,
two sets were right hand, supernated.
Then the next time you work out, do two sets
where the left hand is supernated.
Also, you actually want to do okay?
Okay.
And I have one more question for Adam,
which we make you my second favorite.
Yeah.
It's on set and stuff and Justin,
what I love both, but make you my second favorite. I'll be back to ball. I'm chicken on your nose. it's not it's not it's not and jensen would love
but it's making my
second
uh...
im checking out
you know
who's the
who's the
goat
oh man
i mean
here's
a thing and this will be
this will be an
unpopular answer
because i'm
a huge michael
jordan fan
and by the way i could
argue this cave we had an hour to talk about this.
I could argue Jordan and I could argue LeBron
for both different reasons.
Like statistically what LeBron is doing,
I mean, what he's surpassing numbers wise,
you can't deny what that man's done as far as how many
championships he's been to,
all the trophies that the guys got,
the scoring title that he has.
Statistically, you have to give,
you have to tip your hat to him and say, he potentially
is that.
But what Jordan did in his era at that time, the way he was feared at that time too, I
mean, you have a lot of people that got to play with both.
And they would say that Jordan is still the goat because of the player mentality that
he had on the court.
So I could argue either case.
I know that's probably not the answer you're looking for,
but-
Plus the bronch on the line.
Yeah.
That's beyond us.
Yeah.
Unfortunately, I've liked LeBron less and less
for less about his basketball and more of what he,
the way he talks outside of basketball.
So it's hard because of that, I like him less.
I loved that Jordan played the game and left it at that and didn't try and
involve himself and so many other things. So personally, I have more respect for him for that,
but you can argue either way, man. He really can't. I'm assuming that you didn't have anybody else on
that list. It's Jordan or LeBron, right?
Correct. Yeah. I was asking your opinion. So you're going to play, you're not going to choose one the other.
I'm not because it's, I don't think it's fair because you, if you can't compare somebody
that generationally they're, they played against different defenses and players.
There was different rules in the game.
You could get away with so much more defensively back in the days with
Jordan. So the physicality of the game is different. So the game has evolved and changed.
So it's hard to compare, just like it's hard to compare boxers. It's hard to compare,
you know, Muhammad Ali to a Mike Tyson era because stylistically, the athletes, they were
fighting against where we're at. So it's one of those things that's fun to get drunk or high and talk to your friends about for two hours and argue. But the
end of the day I don't think it's fair to to compare you know I'm saying. Well let me let me give
one for a shout and Justin to go down a rabbit hole. You guys talked about this the other day about
errors. From error gold error you asked this question about what was the next era be? Yeah, remember this yep. Oh, yeah, it would be iron
the iron era
And only reason why is because in
In the Bible there's a story about nebuchadnezzar who has a dream about a statue of head of gold
Silver bronze and iron
over Franz and I was looking at and I'm like,
I'm sorry, so there you are.
I'm looking at you.
Hey, that's cool.
I like that.
That's cool.
I was thinking platinum.
Yeah, yeah, I like that.
I like that.
Good deal.
Hey, guys, thank you for your time.
I appreciate it.
You got him right.
Hi, Mike.
Take it easy, man.
What about Dr. J?
Didn't he score the most?
He's not even close enough.
Because nobody could defend his...
The only thing I would say is air hook, right?
I've heard arguments on Jordan's behalf
about the well-roundedness in terms of like
him winning awards for defense
and him winning awards for a lot of things
consistently that LeBron didn't.
But I mean, to your point, the game was a completely
different animal back then. And so I just, to your point, the game was a completely different animal back then.
And so he, I just, I liked his mentality and his tenaciousness.
He wasn't as physically dominant as LeBron.
So for me, I lean more into that just based off of like him being able to grind his way
towards like all those championship.
I also lean towards Jordan because what he did was so unique and unprecedented when he did it.
Like, and this is kind of an unfair way to do this,
but I mean, I think it's true.
I think you guys imagine being in an era
where when you look at the landscape,
nobody is doing any of these things
and you go pay for the Maverick versus nowadays,
like what LeBron's peers are all,
they push him, right?
Like, where Jordan had to push himself.
Like, he was so far ahead of everybody for so long.
Imagine, and I have a lot of respect for that.
It's really easy to settle
when you're already clowning everybody
for already for a really long time,
to keep pushing, to keep driving, to be better and better.
Where I feel like LeBron has, I mean, there's a lot of, there's a lot of very talented
players that are pushing the envelope today in comparison to then like just the level.
I mean, God, if you just go back 50, 60 years ago, NBA players were also contractors and
plumbers.
And they played Jordan was one of the first decks. We start weight training.
You know, like he kind of brought that in
and you look at the physicality of LeBron
and like just how like strong and like able is
to shoot threes and like he's so versatile all over the place.
But yeah, like you said, I think like Michael Jordan
really brought in ushered in a lot of that
to hand off their buttons. But then I so like I that I could defend it both ways. If I go this
way, if you put those two guys one on one, LeBron would he would stop them.
Yeah, physically and I need to say that. But would LeBron exist of Jordan never
existed? Right. Right. He grew up, he grew up idolizing.
That's what I'm saying. Player. Look, it's like Jimmy Hendrix when he played,
when he played that feedback with the guitar.
Nobody ever heard that before.
That's it.
Now everybody does it.
But when he did it, everybody's like, what the hell?
That's why I think that's why you get the edge, in my opinion, when you paved the way.
Yeah, when you paved it first for the rest of the guys to follow the blueprint, you've
got to get a little extra credit for that.
Even if somebody else surpasses you in accolades, you got to, I mean, if you created it or you were the first to do so many,
so many, so many things and got Jordan was the first to do so many, so many great things. So
our next caller is Ashley from Iowa. Hi, Ashley. How can we help you?
Hi, guys. How are you guys doing? Good. Good. Hey, I the question I
want to run by you today is just more or less moving into a phase of life that I
hope to be kind of the final just what I end up doing for kind of the rest of
my life in the gym. And I was hoping you could give me some feedback on it. So I've
been in I've been in the gym for like 15 years now. So I'm super comfortable in the gym,
been using barbells and dumbbells.
So nothing, nothing like that is kind of out of the picture for me.
But I did have a baby about two years ago.
So I now have a toddler.
And so I'm kind of trying to figure out what I want to do now that
were my lifestyle as well as like continuing to build muscle and get benefits of that, it kind of meet in the middle
if that makes sense.
So my question for you is, I tend to eat around maintenance.
I do track calories for a while.
Right now I mostly focus on protein, but I would say I'm roughly around 22 to 2400 calories
for maintenance.
And I tend to stick there all year round.
But I would like to get the benefits of like a bulk
for muscle building.
And I was wondering if it would work to do that
without actually changing up my calories.
So because I live in Iowa,
there's like two to three months out of the year in the winter, where I'm definitely less active than I am the rest of the year.
And so I'm burning less calories in those months as opposed to like adding more calories in. I'm burning less, therefore my body essentially has more calories. And I was wondering if during those months, if I could run a program like strong
or powerlifting and get the same benefits of building muscle that you would get in a
bulk without having to like add calories into my diet.
What is your training look like typically leading up so before all that, right, before we
made this mental shift of what you want to do? How do you? For the past 15 years. Yeah.
Most while it's 50 50 it's I've been doing aesthetic for a while now. I was in I was in CrossFit
for probably seven or eight years. So it's about 50 50. Okay. But for the last sense COVID,
I switched over to using LCK and doing more aesthetic type stuff.
And then your guys' program since then. So for the past three or four years, it's been
mostly like aesthetic. So I think, and did you follow Maps aesthetic? Was that your choice of
our programs? Yeah, yep. And I do have anabolic. I do have strong, and 15. I thought like 15 when our daughter was born.
Yeah, I was, you'd be surprised, like getting to your original
question about, can I keep my calories the same,
but yet still kind of do a bulk?
Typically, I'd say no, but if somebody was really active,
say CrossFit, say, Maps aesthetic, high volume type of training,
moving to a Maps anabolic two times a week, you'd be surprised
what you could do with something like that.
The hardest part will be the mental shift from somebody who's got an athletic background
like you that's been probably hitting the weights pretty hard for a really long time, to
shift from that high volume training to something that's less volume and you'd be surprised
what you could do with that.
I think that you could do that without having
to add a bunch of calories.
So what do you, when do your calories sit at before?
22, these two months, you said 2200?
Yeah, I would say I only focus on my,
I mainly focus on my protein, which is about 170
because that's one for one.
And then the fats and carbs kind of fall in line,
but I would say I usually hit about 22 to 23.
When you get to these two months of less activity,
do you gain weight typically?
Not that I notice.
I mean, I don't step on a scale.
So nothing exaggerated.
You'd be surprised how the body adapts to movement
when it comes to calories.
So I would say you probably want to bump your calories also.
You would be surprised.
Now the benefit might be more recovery,
a little bit of rest, depending on how active you were.
I just said, you think if she's training
five days a week and she went to two days a week,
that wouldn't do it.
That might do it,
but that's mostly from the recovery aspect,
I would say more than the like I'm burning calories.
Like the amount of calories you burn
while you exercise.
Okay, that's a fair point.
Your body adapts really quickly, one way or the other, like I'm burning calories. Like the amount of calories you burn while you exercise. Okay, that's a fair point. Your body adapts really quickly one way or the other,
like really, really quickly.
So, there's a period of time where it does,
you do get some effects.
And she's so low, it's not a big deal.
Yeah, and you've been working out for so long,
you have a lot of muscle, you're probably really strong.
I would say go on a small calorie surplus
at the same time and see what happens.
I think if you made the switch though from, you know, if you're training
in the more like a five day a week program down to like a two day a week
program, it wouldn't take a lot extra calories.
You know, you know, 200 calorie bump and that's it.
Reduced. Yeah, that's what I would do.
You would see a good response from that.
Exactly. Perfect.
So I could just like through as my year goes on,
or as my years go on, just switch to more of like an anabolic within those winter months.
And then kind of to totally. Yep. Yeah. After that.
And you're really strong, probably. Yeah.
Who is he? That was really all I wanted to know.
Absolutely. I mean, and I love the idea that you've already incorporated map 15, because that's
the other thing you know, having a-year-old like the benefits of utilizing
That way of training too, which is in a sense. It's kind of like anabolic just split up over
Five days and broken up in 15 minutes when you really dissect like what we're doing in there
So it's like basically choosing should I lift two or three days a week or do I want to lift every day and just less time?
Very similar as far as I'm on there's a little bit more in anabolic if you're doing three days a week or do I want to lift every day and just less time, very similar as far as Vaughn. There's a little bit more in anabolic if you're doing three days a week.
Perfect. Perfect. That was really all I wanted to help with.
Thank you Ashley. Thanks for calling in.
Thanks guys.
You got it.
Yeah, the whole reducing, uh, she looks strong as fuck.
Yeah. Yeah.
You could always tell right?
Yeah.
The reducing calories or be calorie burn, the benefits often come from just the improved recovery,
right? You're just allowing your body to recover more and respond more to the muscle building
signal. There's a reduction in calorie burn, but that starts to, your body starts to adapt
to it pretty quickly. No, you make a good point. And when you're already kind of in the low
2200 calories, it's not a lot. And so when you're talking about what you're saying, it's not a huge
bum. Yeah, it's not a huge fluctuation Yeah, it's not a huge Flux, which not to mention if her body does respond and build some muscle her metabolism is gonna speed up a little bit
So she's gonna inevitably have to look she'll get a stronger is what's gonna happen
Right. Yeah, I shut that some calories
Our next color is Bridget from California. Hi Bridget. How can we help you?
Hey guys, how's it going? Good, good, good. Thanks
Thanks for having me. Super excited. This is really cool. I've been listening to the podcast for
years. So, I can't wait to ask you. Let's hear it. All right. So, my question is related to
quad dominance. I'll give you a little bit of background.
I played softball for about eight years when I was growing up,
which is kind of like, I self-diagnosed my quad dominance
from softball.
Basically, I just would like to know
if it's possible to permanently fix quad dominance.
What can I do in my workouts and or like everyday life to fix it or activate my glutes
more, hamstrings more?
Is it possible, can I do it?
What can I do if it is?
Yeah, just looking to really balance out my legs a lot more.
What makes you think you have quad dominance?
What are the things that you see?
Visibly, I think I do.
This front half of my upper leg is definitely more
protrude forward a lot more than the back,
as well as when I'm working out,
like if I'm doing squats,
my quads totally take over
when i'm deadlifting if i don't really prime beforehand then my quads tend to take over it's
really just kind of like doing any kind of exercises my quads just totally take over the movement
and i can't feel like my hamstrings or glutes or any other part of my leg working. Are you able to break parallel and get real good depth in your squat?
I can, however, if I go too low, then it's really just like on the way up, it's all quad.
Were you a catcher when you played a...
Yeah, I was just thinking something.
No, I wish I was cool like that. I
did. I bounced around. I wasn't that great of a player to be honest with you guys. I did
play for a while but I was that great. So I was out in like outfield or I did a little bit
of first base and third base. Well, I'm only asking because catchers in that that quad stretch
position, they're just their quads get so
Constantly developed in there. I would start all your lower body workouts with
Glute and hamstrings and then move to the other stuff. So it'd be like hip thrust
Stiff like a deadlift then I go to squats. Do you hip thrust right now?
Yeah, oh man. I just hit a PR doing that Santa Valle with hip-dress and oh my god, I love it
I'm so excited. It was awesome great feeling. Yeah every workout
I would start that that involve the lower body. I would start with the posterior chain
That's the best way to do it and then end your workout. Okay, you can't even do it like this if your quads are really developed you can even do
You know all the posterior chain exercises
then do your upper body exercises
and then finish with your quad exercises.
You could literally deprioritize it that much.
I mean, if you could deprioritize
where she's almost not even doing it.
If she's got that much dominance there,
you can add in an additional hamstring exercise
or a good morning or something that's another glute movement instead of the quads.
If you're happy with the development of your quads and the primary focus is to build the glutes and
the hamstrings, anywhere where we have programs say, you know, sissy squads or more quad-dominant
exercises, trade them out for post-ear chain. So trade them out for good mornings, deadlifts,
your chain. So trade them out for good mornings, deadlifts, you know, with a conventional or Romanian deadlifts, hip thrust movements like that. There's
nothing wrong with doing that. Okay, yeah. So that's exactly what I've been doing
over the past, I don't know, year or so. And it has to lowly work, but I still
feel like when I get up to higher reps on certain exercises,
like, I'll be great up until like a certain amount and then my quads take over.
But I've also, I'm not sure if this really matters or not, if it's really a concern.
I've noticed that my quads really aren't that strong to be honest with you.
They just take over.
I don't know if that makes any sense, but...
Sure.
Yeah, literally what I said.
Just recruitment patterns.
Yeah.
And literally what I said, we'll do it.
I would start every lower body exercise
with all posterior chain stuff.
And even avoid quad exercises for a lot of different workouts.
And then you'll slowly start to see things catch up.
And really take your time in the beginning
to have that isometric sort of firing and allow yourself to get into like a hip bridge position, really squeeze those
glutes and hold that for a substantial amount of time until you actually can feel that connection
of firmly established and then kind of move your way through and do what they're saying
in terms of like really, you know, highlighting the posterior chain and then work your way
through the rest of the legs or even avoid, you know, more of the quad type of exercises. But I mean,
that's really, you just have to like deliberately program that in and it's going to take some time,
like a year versus what you've done years before. Your body has to learn that this is like the
new go to program. Have you ever tried to get really good at single leg deadlifts to?
No, I've done it, but yeah, they're pretty tough, but I can, I can try that.
That's a good movement to add in there. So we talked about maybe, you know, if you were to
eliminate, let's say, leg extensions or a, or a quad dominant exercise, put some single
leg deadlifts in there and try and
get good at those.
Try and get strong at single-A deadlifts.
Start off with your mechanics getting good form and technique.
It's great about that exercise when you first slide the hips out.
It'll put everything back in those glutes and hamstrings and then the stabilization in the
hips, you'll get a lot of benefits from that.
Work on getting strong in single-aid deadlifts
in addition to all the other stuff that we said,
I think that would benefit you a lot.
Cool, okay.
What program are you running right now?
Matt Santa Ballet, but I swapped out the squats
for hip stress.
Oh good, yeah, that's great.
You're on point, yeah, that's a great call.
I loved that program.
I did it earlier this year and then I did performance and now I'm back to
Antevolic because I liked it so much.
Excellent.
Yeah, and I think it's a good fit for it.
It is a good fit and it's a good call what you're doing.
So I liked that.
Okay, so then in my regular life or even in my trigger sessions,
should I be paying attention to like how I'm using my legs or is there anything like because you know working out is maybe an hour out of my day a couple hours out of the week.
Is there something that I can spend more time on maybe teaching my legs to use different muscles or single leg toe touch.
Yes. You can do frog pumper.
You can body weight hip thrusters.
All those trigger sessions. Build your trigger sessions around that.
All the examples.
Single leg toe touch, which is basically helping you get good
at the single leg deadlift, right?
So if you get really good at that movement pattern,
you could do lateral two walks,
you could do the frog pumps,
you can just do hip bridges
versus your body weight and your squeezing
and getting like an isometric contraction
where you just hold your hips to top and squeeze your butt.
Like, yeah, those would be exactly what I would do for trigger sessions since you're not calling and saying,
hey, I want to build my shoulders more because we kind of teach trigger sessions as it's like touch
every body part, but for someone like you who has a very specific goal you're trying to develop
the backside, I would do a lot of trigger sessions around that.
Awesome. Cool. Well, thank you so much, guys. It's super helpful. I'll do all of those things.
Awesome. You've got to bridge it.
Perfect. I'll bridge it. Take care.
I love it.
Yeah, really, this, for anybody who's listening who notices a body part is overdeveloped in comparison
to the other body parts. So she's talking about quad dominance, which,
either from a functional standpoint, you can have quad dominance, meaning the strength ratio from the hamstrings of the quads is off,
this can cause in athletes, lots of hamstring pulls, or just a development standpoint,
like you look at your body and like, you know, my, you know, my steps are way more developed
on my triceps, you know, losing balance. Easiest way to address that is to prioritize the body part you want to get the most results
out of in the workout.
And even the second thing you could do is cut the volume and sets from the dominant body
part.
And over time you start to see things balance out.
I think the most challenging thing for that is when it is specifically the butt versus
squads because the exercises like a squat
could be an excellent exercise for the glutes, right?
So in your head, you go,
I'm gonna prioritize that because it's a great glute builder,
and but because you're quad dominant,
it's a little bit different than saying,
like, hey, I wanna build big biceps,
because I have small biceps compared to my triceps.
I'm gonna start every workout with my croubles.
You're not gonna get like the tricep kicking in
and also doing that, that's gonna work for that.
But for someone specifically trying to build the glutes
and they're trying to prioritize it,
you just need to have some that's way more
posterior chain focus, which would be like a deadlift.
Or have you been able to do that?
The only thing I would add is if like there's a limiting factor
for range of motion, like you can't get into the depth.
Really, you know really gain that benefit
of your glutes kind of kicking in at that point.
And that's where we would need to mobilize the hips,
we'd need to mobilize the ankles
and whatnot to be able to produce the stability required
for you to gain that.
Which by the way is really common
with my female athletes that wanna build their butt.
They are so quad dominant because a lot of sports require a lot of quad dominance because
you're sprinting and running and jumping all the time, right?
And you're not jumping through full range of motion.
So less glued activation, more quad dominant in that.
And then they go to start training.
They know that squats are good for building the butt, but then their quads are so, they can only get to 90 degrees.
They can't even break the plane,
which is when you break that 90 degrees,
so much more that glutes have to activate
to get you out of the hole.
But even with someone with quad dominance,
like the knees could go forward
and it could become a quad exercise
if you go over the head.
Yeah, that's what I'm doing.
You know, it's so lean, play a side.
This is why some people are like,
oh my god, hip thrust are the best
but building an exercise because they don't have trouble have trouble really activating glutes with the squat.
That's right.
Look, you can find all of us on social media.
Justin is on Instagram at Mind Pump Justin.
I'm on Instagram at Mind Pump to Stefano and Adam is on Instagram at Mind Pump Adam.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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