Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2179: How to Fix Left & Right Side Muscle Imbalances, Signs to Stop Reverse Dieting & Start Cutting, What Do Do if You Are in a Caloric Deficit but Are Gaining Weight & More (Listener Live Coaching)
Episode Date: October 7, 2023In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin coach four Pump Heads via Zoom. Email live@mindpumpmedia.com if you want to be considered to ask your question on the show. Mind Pump Fit Tip: Use... red-light therapy to TURBO-CHARGE your mitochondria! (2:31) How NCI continues to level up its live events for all coaches and trainers. (13:03) Sal’s embarrassing moment at the gym. (21:13) How to not be an idiot at the gym. (26:08) Sal’s gym nemesis. (28:53) Adam’s ‘gym membership’ karma. (33:01) Shady business practices. (35:04) The four terrible business ideas in fitness. (41:07) Fascinating statistics of OnlyFans creators. (43:52) Shout out to Zayn Sofuoğlu. (51:01) #ListenerLive question #1 - If you already work a job that is hyper-physical are trigger sessions necessary, or will the day-to-day activities take over for them? (58:13) #ListenerLive question #2 - How far should I keep pushing the calories in pursuit of strength goals before I start doing mini cuts? (1:10:09) #ListenerLive question #3 - What is the best way to help fix left-to-right imbalances? (1:23:58) #ListenerLive question #4 - Why am I unable to lose weight when I find I’m very consistent with my diet and in a calorie deficit? (1:39:20) Related Links/Products Mentioned Ask a question to Mind Pump, live! Email: live@mindpumpmedia.com Visit Joovv for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! NCI’s Nutrition Coaching Summit is BACK this October 17th through the 21st. Exclusively for Mind Pump listeners, they are giving an exclusive 20% off! **Code MP20 at checkout** October Promotion: MAPS Bands | The Skinny Guy 'hardgainer' Bundle 50% off! **Code OCTOBER50 at checkout** Optical stimulation of mitochondria reduces blood glucose levels | Research Square Mind Pump #1862: How NOT To Be An Idiot In The Gym OnlyFans Creators Are Revealing How Much They Make - BuzzFeed Visit Eight Sleep for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump Listeners! **Save $150 on the Pod Cover.** The Most Overlooked Muscle Building Principle – Mind Pump Blog MAPS Prime Pro Webinar Reverse Dieting: What Is It and Should YOU Try It?? | MIND PUMP Mind Pump #1790: The Secret To An Attractive & Functional Body Visit Kreatures of Habit: Meal One for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code MP25 at checkout** Mind Pump #2160: Macro Counting Master Class Mind Pump #2165: How To Address Your Food Sensitivities With Dr. Stephen Cabral Visit Seed for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code MINDPUMP at checkout for 30% off your first month’s supply of Seed’s DS-01® Daily Synbiotic** MP Holistic Health Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Jordan Shallow D.C (@the_muscle_doc) Instagram Jason Phillips (@nci_ceo_jason) Instagram Dr. Gabrielle Lyon (@drgabriellelyon) Instagram Zayn Sofuoğlu (@zaynsofuoglu) Instagram Dr. Stephen Cabral (@stephencabral) Instagram
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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 most downloaded fitness health entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump, right? In today's episode, we had live callers call in and we help them with their health and fitness was really fun. That was after though an intro portion.
So the intro portion today was 55 minutes long.
That's where we talk about current events and scientific studies fitness our lives and
just have a lot of fun.
If you want to fast forward or skip around to some of your favorite parts, check the show
notes.
There's timestamps there that you can click on.
Also if you want to be on an episode like this where you call in, email us your question at live
at mindpumpmedia.com.
This episode is brought to you by some sponsors.
The first one is Juve.
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and then use the code October 50 for that discount. All right, back to the show. Red light therapy,
you might have heard about it. Sounds like magic. Is it snake oil? No, it's actually effective
at quite a few things. In fact, a study just came out showing that red light therapy used on the back of the neck
reduced blood sugar levels by, get this, 28%.
The practitioners did nothing else.
They just used red light therapy and it literally turbocharged their mitochondria to suck blood
sugar out of their blood to be used as fuel.
Pretty remarkable stuff.
You can just add that to the amazing list of things
that red light therapy does.
Do you think in the future,
we're gonna have like sugar vampires,
beds that are designed or like rooms that like houses
are started like it,
it makes sense to me with all the positive effects
of red light therapy.
I haven't read anything with any sort of adverse effects
from it.
Why would you not start to make like bathrooms
or like some rooms in your, or the bed,
or like above the bed, like we just,
has-
Has the weight though the cost goes substantially down?
Right, like some people are like,
wow, there's so much value to it that like,
there's more market demand or-
I mean, come on, we do things in houses now
that heat the tile floors at It costs thousands of dollars.
Like it can't be that crazy to run red light in the ceiling or something like that.
It's just because you have to do it for like 10, 15 minutes.
So maybe that's why a bath, that's why a bathroom makes sense.
Imagine it, which how long do you spend in the shower brushing your teeth and everything?
Like, yeah, I mean, that's perfect.
That's where I put the juice.
That's what I would do.
I'm really running in my bathroom lights and like imagine coming in, you switch and it's
all red light in your shower
And brush it like every morning you're getting it like that. I remember when we first met with jive
They were one that they have I'll skeptically were the super
I was too like regrow hair makes your skin
You know, I was like this wrinkle wizardry speeds up recovery helps you raise testosterone like you know
It's like the list of things. It's like, oh, it does everything.
Yeah, no thanks, right?
And then they sent me all these studies.
Some of them going back to the 70s.
I was like, what?
This is wild.
And some of the studies were done by NASA.
In fact, yeah.
And the studies just keep coming out.
This is the latest one.
Reduces blood sugar.
Yeah.
This is crazy. Like, yeah, for people who have insulin resistance
or issues with that, now, exercise is the best yeah for people who have like insulin resistance or issues with that
Now exercises the best possible thing you could do obviously building muscle
But how many you know imagine the average person they don't want to work out when you get up
Would be pretty easy be like hey look when you sit down the morning for your coffee just put this on the back of your neck
This will make a big difference. Why why the back of the neck?
That's just what they did in the study. It could be anywhere. I think it doesn't matter. I really don't
Why the back of the neck? That's just what they did in the study.
It could be anywhere.
I think it doesn't matter.
I really don't.
Oh, yes, I know.
Because what it does, so for people who don't know,
there's a particular wavelength of light
that literally turns on the mitochondria.
It literally, it's like, so you mitochondria,
think of them, I know people say this,
this is super general.
It's obviously more complex than this,
but think of the mitochondria as like energy producing
engines of every cell. So it's basically think of the mitochondria as like energy producing engines of every cell.
So it's basically like telling the mitochondria
create more energy, burn more energy, uptake more glucose,
utilize more energy.
So a turbocharges them.
So what does that mean?
That means that all the cells that are powered
by mitochondria now become kind of turbocharged, right?
So skin cells regenerate faster, muscle cells recover faster, hair
regros and because mitochondria use glucose and ATP and all this stuff, it's going to uptake more of it
by using it. In the past, you used to have to go to expensive, like you have to go to
dermatologist's office or like really high-end skincare places to get it.
And it just wasn't feasible because it was expensive.
You have to use it on a semi-regular basis,
four days a week or so.
And if you wanted to get an actual home unit,
that was legit, like the ones that,
there were just so many snake oil salesmen out there
selling you just painted red bulbs.
Yeah, well, it has to be the right wavelength,
but in Juve does this.
But before you would, you would cost you like $10,000 to get like a legit
panel, like the ones you use in studies. Now, of course, Juve, much less expensive, but
if you go on Amazon, you'll see all these red light devices, and I know this because
I'll tell my family members about this, uh, cousins and stuff.
And I thought this was like, oh, I bought this. Oh, I got this. It was like half price
and I got this hat with like red lights in it. Like, look at the wavelength, bro.
It's the wrong one.
I'm doing anything for you.
So okay, is it, does it have a systemic effect?
Yep.
So then, is it, why isn't, well, it's not necessary then, obviously.
Why, why would I get the huge panel and stand in front of it naked versus...
We're gonna affect more mitochondria.
Okay.
There's a local effect and a systemic effect that
happened. So most of it would happen locally when it comes to
depending on the wavelength, some red light. So
Jew has panels that'll that'll penetrate deeper and some
that are more on the surface. So the surface one's more for
skin, the deeper ones. Yeah, I know they have the little ones
they have a option. One of the other and then the big panel
has a combination of both.
Yeah, I know that.
So if you want muscle recovery, get the deeper one.
If you want skin care, then you get the one
that's a little more surface.
Nonetheless, they all stimulate mitochondria.
I still like the idea if, like,
we're getting rid of the need for cars and your garage
and everything that we were talking about a while back,
like we turn that into like gym slash recovery space.
You know, and then like have those all over the walls and over the ceilings and, you know,
just being there and turn it on.
It's, it is one of those things.
Like if it's that effective and valuable, like it should start like making its way into
actually like, structure the house.
Yeah, I feel like if you were, if you were building, like let's say a new home right now,
the same way you have an option,
a lot of times to put solar,
or in fact, California you have to know.
But I mean, if you had that option,
you know, oh, for 20,000 more,
I can do this, oh, for 20,000 more,
I can have my garage completely outfitted in red light,
or my bathroom completely outfitted in red light.
It's interesting that they haven't moved in that,
is you think it's just lack of awareness still?
I think it's just because it's now you can buy the panels
and hang them up yourself maybe,
but I don't know.
I bet you some people already have done what you're saying.
I wouldn't, I would imagine, like high end homes,
some people are like custom.
That would be cool.
Maybe you look dead up.
Andrew, see if you can find some custom red light homes.
Red light therapy rooms or something like that.
Yeah, I
This is the longest I've this is the longest I've consistently used the juice. Yeah, so I've used it now I don't know maybe three four days a week for months now and
My my skin is it makes a huge difference on my face. It's so weird. Yeah, it's really in fact
We saw who do we rent we ran to Jordan shallow yesterday, right? And he walks up to me, oh man, you look like you're getting younger and I'm getting older. Nobody ever tells me that
Nobody ever tells me that yeah, so I was like, all right
You know, that's good for that's good for you know one point for for red light therapy
No, this is the most consistent. I've seen you with it
I think I probably used it the most I did yeah
I'm and I've actually been inconsistent with it lately, which I need to get back into that.
But it's just one of those things.
This is my panel.
That's why this is normally at my house.
I brought it in to the boys when they were doing that
competition, and I haven't taken it back.
Well, think about it.
Like, name one non-exercise thing,
and non-pharmaceutical, that will immediately,
like in that short period of time,
take use of, I don't know how long they do in the study.
I think it's like 10, 50 minutes.
That will lower your blood glucose by over 25%.
Name something.
Okay, now let's,
let's, let's, let's,
there's not a supplement.
There's nothing that'll do that.
Let's role play a scenario though.
Okay, now you're,
you're talking to your average client that we used to get.
First time you're kind of meeting them or what are we at that
in their sitting in front of you.
And they've got chronic pain.
They are 40, 50 pounds overweight, terrible diet.
They don't exercise yet.
And they're buying training from you.
Where in that situation, and they ask you about, I know you're not recommending.
I'm not you're going to go get a red light terrible.
Like I know you would never exercise.
Well, let's say someone says, like, hey, and I read a lot about the red light therapy.
And I heard a lot of benefits from it.
My husband and I were thinking about buying it.
What do you think?
And I'm buying training from you.
Yeah, so what do you say to them?
And that's a true.
I'm gonna say you're gonna notice a lot of benefits
on your skin.
And so this study didn't exist before.
So now I would say it will lower your blood sugar.
It'll help with your blood sugar,
help with insulin sensitivity.
If you're thinking about getting it,
I think it's a good idea.
Three days a week while you're doing something,
reading, having your coffee, whatever,
just shine it on yourself.
And I guess that's a significant, that's crazy.
You can't buy a supplement.
There's nothing that'll do that
besides exercise and pharmaceuticals.
So I feel like I would probably say it a little different.
Like I would say to my client that asked that like,
if you have the expendable income, absolutely.
Yeah.
Because it has lots of benefits to it.
Of course, yeah, of course.
But if you're telling me I have, you know, a thousand something dollars
to invest in myself for my health and stuff like that,
and that's all you have.
I spend on personal training.
That's right.
Training or putting together like meal prepping, good food, good health. Yeah. So I them if I'm on but I mean that's kind of how I fill with a lot of supplements
Even too same thing. It's like if you have the money diet son all those things are
Beneficial and only going to help the process, but you're always gonna
I'm always gonna tackle the big rocks with my people first before I'm like hey
Let's slap this on because if because if you default to that,
as you think that's what's gonna get you healthy and in shape,
like,
So here's a study I would like to see.
We've speculated on this.
I would like to see, yeah, that's a,
I think those are the Juve panels.
They put on their wall.
Yeah, that's a big round.
Here's what I would like to see.
I would like to see a study where people use the red light,
they take crating and people use the red light, they take creating and then they use the red light
to see if it increases the uptake in utilization.
Because creating obviously turns ATP to that.
I did that for quite a while.
So did I, but I don't know if I could,
I know, I can.
I want to look at a study.
I want to see what the numbers show.
I think it would be really fucking cool,
because it's like, first off, Crating, just a better assimilated or...
Yeah, it's, it's turning on the mitochondria. They're going to burn more ATP too.
Give them that Crating, you know, make it, make it, I think there would be a...
Supercharge it. I think they'll be a cumulative effect. I think it would be...
That would be interesting.
Yeah, kind of like a, you know, one plus one equals three type of thing, where they,
where they work better together than they do synergistic, right?
I'd like to see that because Crateene by itself is turning out to be
probably the best longevity supplement period in a story that you take,
add something like this to it.
I would speculate, we would see some pretty cool.
I'm gonna add a little motsy in there.
Well, at the peptide, yeah.
Are you guys getting excited at all about London?
I mean, it's around the corner for us now.
I haven't put a lot of thought into it yet,
but yeah, I mean, it's gonna be cool, dude.
I think, and you've never been there before, right?
No, I've never been there at all.
I mean, anytime in opportunity to talk about it,
or what's going on here?
Yeah, we can talk about it.
Why can't we talk about it, right?
We can't talk about it.
Can we not talk about it?
I have no idea.
Yeah, we can talk about it.
That means Doug doesn't want you to talk about it.
No, I don't know. No, we can talk about it? I have no idea. Yeah, that means Doug doesn't want you to talk about it. No, I don't know.
No, we can talk about it.
Oh, we can.
Well, I mean, what made me think about is I realized that we were going to miss out on
the NCI event because the NCI event is the same time that will be out in London.
So which is going to, I mean, he's got the lineup Jason has of speakers.
I feel like every time he does one of these events, he just keeps leveling up the speakers
that he has on it. You know what they do really well? I'm always thinking
of the right words to describe things because it's so effective, right? Just how you explain
things and the words you use makes such a big difference and how people understand it.
What NCI does really well is they try to influence the culture around trainers and coaches,
more than other certificates, more than just teaching you, this is good
nutrition, this is whatever, they're trying to develop a
culture to where the trainers and coaches that come out
of their certifications approach things with a mindset, they
approach things with a particular philosophy, and one that
we align very strongly with, that's what they do really
well, better than anybody else.
Well, no, I think that's realistic information,
relatable things, like how to communicate.
How to communicate.
How do I apply this right away?
How do I get my clients to buy into these ideas?
Well, that's what really matters anyway.
Well, I mean, I think that's what originally connected us
so much to Jason was that that was one of the things
that we wanted to do with creating this business was we wanted to take
all this high level information, all the science, all the studies, all the certifications
and degrees and experience that we have accumulated over all these years, and how do you take all
that and distill that down to the average person or trainer so that they actually Makes impact in their life and they make and they make behavioral changes not
Let's put a show together and like teach everybody how smart we all are and let them know that like oh
We're an authority in this base because we know this much and we've been doing this much. No, it's like okay
Let's take a break actually works in applications. Yeah, we're communication and and in its simplest form too
I mean, and I think that's really
It's interesting how challenging that is for really smart coaches and trainers.
Like when the, it's like the smarter they get sometimes the more difficult it is for them to do that.
I mean, example, that's our good buddy, shallow.
That guy is like a walking encyclopedia.
One of the most like, I learned something new from every time I hang out.
He's one of the few people and we have doctors on here all the time and very brilliant people
Jordan when Jordan talks I
Find myself like hanging on every word because I'm like trying to like processing it
Yeah, I'm trying to process it and then like and then also break it down like okay
What okay, I get what you also as a pro and he just has a profound
Vocabulary well no besides has a profound vocabulary.
Well, no, besides that,
a profound understanding of how the human body works.
Yes, like on the deepest level,
and then he has a crazy vocabulary,
and you combine all that, and it's like, it is,
I think he's the thing about Jordan is,
he's really good at teaching coaches and trainers, had to understand these concepts,
program design, I think that he's phenomenal at that.
I mean, I learned, like you said, when I talked to him for 15 minutes, I never don't learn
something.
I've always learned something.
But I also think, and then, so at the same time, I know Doug had him do like an elevator
pitch for his certification for us, So we had the video of that.
And Doug was just like,
talk to me like I'm a four-year-old.
And he's like, you could just see how hard that is for him to do that.
And I do, I think you get that high of a level of education.
A lot of people, once they get there,
have a really hard time coming back the other direction.
This is something that I think Jason and NCI
have done really well.
I mean, Jason's brilliant in his own right.
That's right.
Very, especially when it comes to community.
Yeah, nutrition and helping athletes and the average person,
like he's got a very, very high level understanding of that.
But then when you talk to him, he drops F-bombs,
he's like relatable, like he does a really good job of simplifying it.
Look, historically Carl Sagan, Carl Sagan,
I think astrophysicist, right?
He turned an entire generation of kids
into wanting to learn about space.
The cosmos.
Into wanting to learn about the cosmos.
Carl Sagan, there was lots of astrophysic, all brilliant.
But what he did very well was he communicated in a way
that resonated with the average person.
Milton Friedman, economist, Nobel Prize winning.
Now, when's the last time an economist was interesting?
Never, the most boring people in the world.
Milton Friedman, he really impacted the world
and the average person.
I mean, he was on talk shows,
this is back in the 70s and 80s.
He would speak at colleges because he understood how to communicate so effectively
that the average person became interested in economics.
That's what got me interested was listening to Milton Friedman.
So this is like how you make real impact as a coach or trainer.
It's, the knowledge has to be there.
You got to know your stuff, but can you convey it?
And does it really resonate?
You think both are necessary for the world or do you think one could do without the other?
Or do you think that you don't? I think you need the brilliant people.
I think both. And then you need, of course, you need average people, but you need the brilliant
people to come up with the ideas and concepts, hit their fringe stuff. And then you need the
person to take that and go, okay, here's what, here's what, here's what,
somebody always be on the cutting edge.
Totally.
Somebody out there that's like always just buried in the research
and like really, you know, high level.
And then, you know, people in between to distill it now.
The rest of us, like communicated.
I remember when, like, I like to think we're the people
in between, that's what I think.
I hope so.
I hope so. I really, when Jordan Salo explained how chiropractic adjustments, why they feel good.
And he, he explained, nobody ever explained to me.
Well, nobody ever explained to me.
They're like, oh, it's aligning this, aligning that.
And it's not really, that's not really what's happening or I don't know.
And he said there are certain, like, joints and small tight muscles that are holding
things together.
And now he said in his words, so I'm kind of taking it down, right?
That, like, when a muscle's tight, it's tight because the CNS tells it to be tight.
One of the ways you can get a muscle loosened up is to stretch it, okay?
There are going to be parts in your body, the spine or small joints where you're not
going to be able to do that.
It's just tight, it's not happening, it's not moving. And when a good chiropractor knows how to pop the joint,
really the pop is not the important part.
The part is that that's important is that
they're articulating the joint and causing a small stretch
in that muscle and that muscle then finally relaxes.
And that's why after you get into chiropractic,
adjusts me like, oh, that feels so much better.
So it makes you sense from muscular.
Totally. So you would are since from muscular totally
So you would categorize even the popping of a carpenter as a stretch
That's what's happening the pop is just gas being released between the you know suction of the two joints
I mean, I could pop my knuckles. Yeah, but what they can do is they can go in and they can get a rib to move just slightly
Or a vertebrate to move just slightly so So the tight muscles around it, get that.
Just like if you stretch your bicep out
because it's too tight, now it releases.
Funny is the person that will associate that, right?
Of course.
Because I hear the noise and then it's sort of like
triggers over spots.
It's more like proof that you were able
to get the joint to move, but it's not necessary.
Good car practice tell you that.
The pop doesn't mean.
You had other stuff in that conversation yesterday too
that I was blowing my mind.
I want to go back and listen to it again
because I was like, oh, I need to go back and listen to it again because I was like, oh, I need to go back
and listen to that again on like how he explained
the communication from like the receiving end
versus like just communicating from one direction
and then doing things differently.
How that will like, oh, that changes the communication process
and like I was like, blown, I'm always blown away.
There's always something that he drops that I'm like,
I know.
I've never thought of it that way.
And that's like, and I know that,
like that's actually the true way.
We've all heard it in different ways, communicated,
and I always appreciate listening to him.
Dude, I gotta tell you something embarrassing happened
this morning at the gym.
It was kind of more, more I felt bad than anything.
So I'm, I'm training and, you know,
I have my headphones on, I'm in my own world, right?
And I'm doing my thing, and I'm resting between sets and about,
I don't know, three or four benches over.
This woman is working out, doing her thing.
And I notice her or whatever,
because there's people around me.
Anyway, I finish my set, put my weights down,
I sit kind of facing forward, just kind of resting.
And she racks her dumbbells,
I'm catching her through a corner of my eye.
She turns to walk back and trips over one of the feet
of the bench and kind of stumbles, catches up, but she's okay.
Now, I saw that.
She's too far from me to help.
I saw she was okay, but I kind of giggled
because the way she did it.
Oh, God, you did it right.
Bro, she made eye contact with me right when I giggled.
Oh, God.
Like, then she looked at me and I'm like,
Oh, I'm so sorry.
Oh, bro.
What an asshole.
Yes.
What an asshole, bro. Oh my gosh. She almost fell and I'm so sorry. Oh, bro. What an asshole. What an asshole, bro.
Oh my gosh.
She almost fell and I laughed.
Oh, you know what I mean?
Oh.
You know what I'm like,
hey, I'm so sorry,
she's like, I told you she like walked away.
Oh, you apologize.
I did.
Oh yeah, of course I apologize.
I just laughed at you falling.
I know, at least you did that.
Well, some people would do that
and not do anything, you know what I'm saying?
So at least you did that.
It means shit.
That's rough,
because that's my first response if I even hurt myself to try and laugh it off, but then like, you know what I'm saying? So at least you did that. It's, I mean shit. That's rough, because that's my first response
if I even hurt myself to try and laugh it off,
but then like, you know, well in the pain.
But she immediately looked, she immediately looked,
she's like, oh, she should look.
That's like, what's the point?
I think it's a crazy story.
Like if something like really bad
that happened to him and it's kind of funny,
but then you think about,
then after you laugh, you go like,
God, if I was in that situation,
that would be terrifying.
Or that would, you know, it's like a natural reaction, right?
Someone tells you something like that, that's so crazy or. Or that would, you know, it's like a natural reaction, right? Someone tells you something like that,
that's so crazy or so ironic, and then you laugh,
well, then you have this moment after the fact
where you go like, oh shit, that would be devastating, right?
If that happened to me, right?
So I hate those moments.
So they live with you forever.
I mean, like for the rent, for, I know for a long time,
I don't think about that poorly.
Oh, yeah, but I feel like you solved it by saying something,
because that would trust me.
I have embarrassing moments that I just can't.
That would torture me if I did that
and then I didn't say anything
and I just left it alone
because then I'm like, oh, that lady just thinks
I'm gonna ask her off.
She's too golf, yeah, dude.
Yeah.
Oh, sorry.
How old was she approximately?
Uh, probably in her 50s.
Okay, so, you know, older than me.
It doesn't matter though, it's this poor lady
that she almost fell.
She looks over the guy. Do you mean helper? I mean, older than me. It doesn't matter though, it's this poor lady, you know, she almost fell. She looks over the guy.
It didn't even help her.
It's kind of like an asshole.
I mean, if it was a jacked young dude and he fell,
I mean, would you say anything?
I'd still feel bad.
You know, I still would say.
But you would say, you would say,
you could still have said sorry.
I don't know.
I came from a round of applause, dude.
I feel like for sure Justin would.
No, Justin was like a bodybuilder guy.
It was just done looking at himself in the mirror.
And he turned around and he tripped over the thing,
just will be
And like it's actually make eye Oh, it's like you need functional fitness
Do some stability with
Those muscles
Way to go blue in animal
Just replace this up now, wow
I'm gonna ask over, I keep it to myself. I can only imagine, because you've worked out
with Justin and Bodybuilder James, right?
Yeah.
Is he just the whole time, like, oh, he's f***ing.
It's just like, I think it depends.
It depends the level of it, right?
Yeah, because I actually, I don't mind it.
I like the bro vibes, you know?
I feel like if he's with, like me, I feel like
he's the buffer.
Yeah, yeah, which is probably how I feel like
when we're doing all this weird functional shit
or in a gym. Yeah, I'm just like, I'm just like, I'm just like, I'm just like, I'm't mind, I like the bro vibes, you know? I feel like if he's with me, I feel like he's the thing I'm like the buffer.
Yeah, yeah, which is probably how I feel
like when we're doing all this weird functional shit
or in a gym, yeah, but you don't go,
push sled and shit.
Yeah, but you don't go to a functional gym.
I don't know, I wouldn't, and look around,
be like, what a bunch of, I don't think that, right?
But bodybuildings invite that, don't they?
When you get the dudes doing that sideways chest press
and the weird, I don't mind it if they're serious, you know?
Like if it's like a gold gym, everybody's like really,
I'm like, oh, this guy goes on stage.
It's the half-ass kids that are just in front of the mirror
and they're doing it all for the gram
and they're into themselves.
Okay, so that's how I triple.
I feel that too.
So it's to me and that's kind of like the,
we talked to the day about the affliction
and the tap out shirt.
You just start.
But if you're a fucking black belt or you're like an MMA champion and you rocked shirt. So you're like, you just start. Yeah.
But if, hey, if you're a fucking black belt
or you're like an MMA champion and you rocked it,
like cool, you know what I'm saying?
Like, I feel like that's the same thing in bodybuilding.
Like if you are at that level, like,
if I'm looking at your physique and I'm admiring it
because it's like on that level, like,
fucking, use the mirror, bro.
I'm gonna watch you for a while too.
I'm saying like, I'm impressed.
Like, you know, if you take yourself that serious,
but if it's like, you know, if you're just that guy, that's like, I know exactly what you for a while too. I'm impressed, if you take yourself that serious, but if you're just that guy that's like,
I know exactly what you're doing.
And it makes sense, by the way,
because one of the most awkward
or most difficult things for me was
the presenting my physique on stage.
I did not like that.
I was not that guy who stood from the most,
but I was supposed to practice that.
And I just didn't like doing that at all. but I was supposed to practice that, you know, and I just didn't
like doing that at all. And so, you know, you get used to that, okay, I need to learn how to do this,
like, how do I present my shoulders from this angle? And so you're now I also going to become this
guy who's obsessed staring myself in the mirror. And I know that I feel like, oh my god, who's,
but the only thing that I feel that it saves me is like, okay, I'm put together right now. I'm saying
like, if I wasn't, like, that would be, I would feel really weird. Which, there's those guys all the time.
There's a guy, I was like, you know what I'm saying?
You know, the most annoying person to me,
the only person type of person I've ever really said,
you say, I don't ever say anything,
fine do your thing, whatever.
Is the dude that sits on the machine or the bench
and texts forever?
Does it, is that even working out?
I've actually gone up to someone say,
hey, would you mind resting over there?
Or can you text over there so I can use it?
So there's three for me.
Oh, what's that one?
The other one is the guy that has all of the stuff
like for a circuit.
The cross for you.
That's the one.
Oh yeah.
Yeah, that's the most annoying thing.
Do you ever go for that one of the machine?
Like what?
Oh yeah, I use it and especially, I go right to the one
that is going to go next.
I'm not even like supposed to.
And I'm like, oh, just a minute, bro.
I take like an hour.
But yeah, or it's the guy that's got the leg machine
that takes all of the weights.
And it's all walked by me like, oh, you need some more weights?
What about the shadow boxer?
I mean, if you're a real boxer, they're never a real boxer. I mean, I can do real boxer.
They're never real boxer.
I mean, Josh does that, right?
So he's in here.
I know.
And you can tell he knows how.
I'm talking about the regular dude.
Well, that's funny.
He said it's a curl.
He wouldn't do that in front of like the dumbbells or something.
I don't know.
I ought to ask Josh and we would do that.
What do you think, Andrew?
You think Josh would do that in front of the dumbbells?
A big gym?
Oh, yeah, it's a yes, bro.
He's trying to be nice right now
as a boy.
He's like, he's a young kid.
But Josh actually, you guys did a list of what I,
so one of my thing, and like, my bodybuilder friends
are the ones that are guilty of this,
is the leaning over the dumbbell rack to do rows.
I fucking hate.
Oh, I'm so stupid.
What, you know why?
Cause they saw some pro bodybuilder do it.
Do you know what else you could do?
You could put your hand on a bench, that's like,
you can carry it out of the way,
so you're not taking up all that space.
Yeah, it's very good for you to learn how to carry
that heavy dumbbell over there and do that.
And you can create that same angle, same everything.
And you just look silly because it's like,
you're being lazy cause you don't wanna take it five feet
over to your bench and do that.
And now you're not in the way of everybody walk. That bothers me.
My favorite, I'll tell you my favorite people are, but 100% favorite favorite people in the gym
are the consistent elderly people that, because I go early in the morning, and there's like the same
10 people who are probably, I would say late 60s, early 70s. There's a woman that looks like she's
in her 80s. She, and they always go in there, they always work out,
they always smile, they always do the thing.
And I'm always like, oh man, I love that, absolutely love that.
I'll get out of the way for you,
I'll do whatever you need, do your thing, like it's so.
I would say that's actually the most inspiring thing for me
is actually not a jack bodybuilder.
No, with the most amazing physique.
It's the 60 year old that looks super healthy and fit still.
Like that, I see that in my dude.
That's what I want to be at that age,
still looking put together, still looking healthy,
still strong.
I will tell you guys, I have a nemesis though at this gym.
Did I take it?
Another one?
It's not the Sonic guy.
It's not the Sonic guy.
You look my ass, so I give up on that.
No, no, no, no, I'm talking, there's a dude in there.
So it's like a nice country club-ish type, Jeff.
Is it your over at the country club, right?
Yeah, so it's not like there's no bodybuilders
really working out in there.
I'm like the most jack guy in there by far, right?
But now there's another guy, bro.
That's the movie.
And he looks like, you know, he lifts and stuff.
You know, we work out around the same time
and I can feel the vibe.
I wonder if I know, is he like, is he around 50?
Uh, he looks like he's all time. I could feel the vibe. I wonder if I know is he like, is he around 50? Uh, he looks like he might, he wears a tank top.
He looks like his my age.
Yeah, yeah, I don't think he trains his legs.
That's what I'm telling myself.
Oh, maybe he's not.
This guy was actually this guy.
No, he's not.
Okay.
Jesse, it's me.
It's the mirror.
It's you.
Do you go squat every day that he's there?
No, I never lift heavy there.
I never lift heavy there.
I go here, I come here when I lift heavy, but we just, I could tell,
we walk by each other, it's almost like, there's not a knot.
We never knot each other, I hate what's up, bro.
It's more like a squint.
Yeah, it's more like a, I'm the guy.
I'm the killer guy.
I'm the guy.
This is my, this is my, well, I'm the first time you gotta come
an hour later, dude.
I never, I never felt comfortable lifting heavy at that gym.
Yeah, really?
Yeah, because it is so kind.
It just doesn't feel right.
Especially upstairs where you're on the opposite.
Yeah, I don't lift heavy there because I hear the floor.
Well, just heavy lifting for me, I like to be alone,
I like to do my thing, I don't want my ego getting out of control,
I don't want it whatever.
There, I train like a bodybuilder.
I agree.
You know, it's funny, I used to train this place called
like Total Fitness and there was a couple.
Total.
Yeah.
Real clever.
And there was this couple there that literally looked just like me and Courtney.
And we would go in.
This is when I used to train a lot because they had a kids club and so like, you know, the
kids were younger.
And so we'd put them in there and then we could do our thing.
And every time they come in, we'd be like,
and they were like, we would just,
we'd face off with them all the time.
It was so weird.
Bro, I don't think I've ever met
so a couple who I think Katrina and I look like.
That's kind of, that's really right.
They looked like exactly like us too.
And it was like, and we never really like said higher.
Where they have a bizzarel version. In other words, you're the better looking version. Or we never really like set higher. Were they a bizarro version?
In other words, you're the better looking version.
Or were they pretty good?
I think they're a little better looking.
Oh, you were a bizarro.
Yeah.
No.
I think it's not so stanker-native for them.
Yeah, I was a bizarro guy the whole time.
I was stronger than that pussy.
Anyways. When that couple comes in.
There's the ugly version of it.
Yeah, yeah.
We're talking about you guys in Ditoro.
Like I never slam weights or nothing.
I just I caught myself, dude.
I just be like, you know, that's the every time they're
there.
That's the best dude.
That's the best.
No, that's the real.
No, where I go, it's perfect,
because my ego's not,
except for the frickin' my nemesis,
but other than that, nobody cares, I do my thing,
except if I leave a little past,
sometimes I gotta get out of there real quick
and I don't have time to do this theme room.
And it's right around eight, like 10, eight, 10 at 15,
these, these, these like 50 year old, this is the average age of these women,
like 50s, right?
Line up for this, I don't know what class is about to happen, but they all line up outside
the class, they all get ready to go to the gym.
This is that kind of 50 year old woman.
You ever been, you know, in the gym, does that, there's a 50 year old woman that what comes
to work out, she don't go fuck.
Yeah.
There's a one that shows up and they're like, I'm going to dress nice.
Oh, yeah.
I'm going to put on some makeup. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So it's literally. There's a one that shows up and they're like, I'm gonna dress nice. I'm gonna put on some makeup.
I'm gonna do my, so it's literally,
there's a lot of them, right?
And I have to walk by them at the end of my workout,
which typically I'm, you know,
I love you.
Down to your tank top, bro.
Oh boy.
Bro, Fiend's popping the, the smiles.
You know, you're the talk of the Steve Ruminin.
Oh my God.
Here comes Gladys.
Yeah. Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh're like, Oh my god. Here he comes, Gladys. Yeah.
Oh, no.
That's the swam of the show.
Oh my gosh.
Oh my gosh.
Actually, there's actually a couple of women in there.
I swore to God they wear like fitness heels.
They look like almost sneakers for heels, bro.
What are you wearing?
That's actually a great business opportunity
to fitness the fitness heels.
Yeah, like all kinds of fun.
So, okay, I've talked about this before,
you guys know this, right?
Like, I'm paying for, I don't know
how many gym memberships right now.
I think I have like four or five.
And so, and this has been year, right?
You just like to donate to gym.
That, okay, well, that's, by the way,
I tell you justify it.
Seriously, I literally, like,
I literally go like my part to support fitness.
It is, right?
I kind of like, that's how I,
I totally justify it in my head.
Really, it's not being lazy,
because I don't wanna go in, have to cancel,
because canceling gym sometimes sometimes is a headache dude.
They're they always trying to close.
You have the right of five pages.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
The lazy made you like facts.
And I'm like, who even owns a fax?
They made you have to go to my parents.
Bro, you have to go.
A lot of times you go in person.
They want to know why.
It's like, we go, because I want to cancel.
I'm saying like, but Jim's are funny like that, right?
And I remember that, right?
Yeah, I remember when we used to do it, we'd be like, oh, you got to talk to the GM and then GM but gyms are funny like that, right? And I remember that, right? Yeah, I remember when we used to do it,
we'd be like, oh, you got to talk to the GM
and then GM, you guys did that shit.
Oh yeah, you make it difficult for,
but it's so, so bad.
So I have part of this karma, right?
So anyways, the irony of this,
I mean, well before COVID,
I had stopped going to a handful of these gyms.
You know, and I was, went on one of my kicks,
I think I've talked about this too, like every, like, I don't know, six months or a year,
I try and like recalibrate my expenses and like, where am I, like, blowing money and should
I be more fiscally responsible and, you know, of course, the gym thing always comes up.
I really should go over there and cancel that.
I'm like, 100 bucks a month and I'm just literally lighting on fire.
I'm saying.
And so, so literally I go, I'm going to do this one day.
I was on my way back from here, I'm heading home.
I had some time and I'm like, I went to all the gyms, right?
So I went to the three gyms that I never use
and canceled these memberships.
Now here's the fucking ironic part about this.
Literally two days later, I'm trying to get on my Netflix
and my Spotify and my ATM card that's attached
to all of my accounts just expired.
So you don't have to. So it auto-fucking. Oh, you did it for no reason. and my ATM card that's attached to all of my accounts just expired.
So you just have to.
So it auto-fuckin'
You did it for no reason.
I waited exactly.
I waited a year, like really like four years or whatever it is
and that do actually go at finally cancel these things.
Two days later, now I'm back trying to set up my Netflix,
my Spotify, I'm like auto and I'm like,
oh my god, I could have just not showed up to the,
and the gym would have just,
you know, you brought some up interesting just not showed up to the gym would have just all that roll off.
You just brought some up interesting.
Do you know that the gym industry,
you know what, you know how there's a three day cancel policy?
Remember we sell membership?
Yeah, yeah, it's always three day cancellation.
Do you guys realize why?
There was a lawsuit over that.
California law.
Yeah, really?
Bro, the gym industry, when it first became a business,
was so shady, it was so shady.
It would sell people,
memberships knowing they're gonna go out of business
in like a month or two.
When they knew they were going out of business,
people paying monthly.
They would offer them,
like this was a classic thing that they do.
They'd say, hey, for,
I know you're paying 30 bucks a month.
This is in the 1980s to say,
they'd say, hey, for 200 bucks,
you'll have a lifetime membership.
You never have to pay again.
And they would get all kinds of people giving $200.
Then they show up next month, chains on the door.
They also had another, they had another.
So you can't sell, this is why you can't sell
lifetime memberships anymore.
There has to be a renewal fee.
So there also was this other lawsuit that happened.
I believe, I want to say, I should check this,
so I don't want to like shame a gym that's not true.
I think it was in shape city in the valley.
I think it was that.
Oh, they had a great reputation.
So, and what they were doing was,
they had like in your contract, if you cancel,
there was like massive fees.
Yeah.
And so you would go to cancel like say after six months,
you know, he's like,
yeah, it was like literally more than what the gym members
would cost you for like the year.
So then people would be like, what?
And then, so they were doing that to so many people.
And then the way they get away with it was like,
oh, it's in the contract.
You know, you sign that if you cancel within
X amount of time, you have all these crazy fees.
And so they hustled so many people
to just keep the contract, keep it going
because the cancellation would cost more than paying the year.
From one of the largest gym,
this is actually brilliant, but also slamming.
One of the largest gym chains from the East Coast
back used to compete with 24 back in the day.
I don't know if I should say the name.
You guys know I'm talking about. Yeah. They used to compete with 24 back in the day. I don't know if I should say the name.
You guys know I'm talking about.
They used to sell, no, not from that crunch.
They used to sell gym memberships
and they were all three or every membership
was a three-year membership, okay?
Now here's how you paid monthly, right for this.
Let's say it cost you nine-hundred bucks for three years.
And you'd say, what I want to pay monthly,
they had a separate company that would finance your membership.
It's no different than financing a car.
There'd be an interest rate attached to your monthly payment.
And if you missed gym memberships,
it would fuck with your credit
and you'd come on kinds of crazy shit.
They actually did that.
So everything was free paid.
They were smart and horrible.
They made money on the financing.
So now, did you buy the membership?
But you made money on the financing. So now, did you buy the members? What are the, but you made money on the financing?
What are those companies called?
There's, those are, like, we could do that technically.
Like, if we had like our,
you could hire a company to find it.
Yeah, we could hire a company.
Like, let's say we don't have a product that's like a thousand
or two thousand dollars, we could hire a company
that we, that somebody can make payments on it,
but we get the money upfront.
That's right.
And then they, and we pay a little bit of interest on it.
That's right. So they carry it. That bit of interest on it. That's right.
So they carry it.
What are those called?
Trying to find it.
See here.
Finance company, I don't know.
But I remember people coming in.
So this is how, so 24 fitness back then was not a list.
It was, I don't know if it was the first,
but it was definitely one of the first
that did a month to month cancel whenever you want.
Membership.
And it was because of this,
because people were like,
it messed up my credit, it screwed up my whatever,
I couldn't get a home loan because of this.
So, mask off, it's like month to month
and you cancel whenever,
which was brilliant back in the day.
It was, nobody did that.
Yeah, it was definitely,
and getting it down to a price where people would be like,
ah, it's like,
people have no idea though.
Back in those days,
like when the gym industry was taken off,
it was so crazy.
There were general managers, this is for other companies.
I think it was Ray Wilson's family fitness,
where the way they got paid was they would get a budget,
something like this, right?
They would get a budget for the gym,
and they made whatever they saved.
I love that.
So literally, that's like teaching you
had to be a true operator.
Oh, they were. So literally general managers would have like like they would work the front
ass. They were trained people. They do, you know, they'd bust their ass. And you had
general managers, you're talking about the 90s, we're making quarter million dollars a year
running a gym. Yeah. Yeah. Because of it. And that's why so many even quit when the merger
happened. So they were like, I'm not so crazy to not do that, I think. I know. I mean,
I mean, that would instead of eyes me to do all that stuff, I would, I'm that guy for sure,
they'll be like, I'll do that, I'll do that.
I'll do the trash out.
I'll do that.
You had a budget.
So I could spend money on advertising
or I could spend money here, I could save money here,
and do all that stuff.
I think the reason why they stopped doing that
is because they were attached to the gym
that they were making money off of,
and they would run it to a point where they were making, you know, $1,000,000,000,000,000, like no, I'm staying nobody else gonna be able to do it. Yeah, which you want that mobility and I bet there was a lot of
Probably shady stuff happening too, where you're just like I'll just not pay for that. I'll do that
I don't like there's probably things that like they want you to spend money on
You then you have things slide on some of the maintenance
That's unfortunate right? There's probably a like usual a few people that ruined it for everybody else because that would be a way that
I mean, I would love to do that. I mean, that's like the coolest that's like the closest thing to it being your gym
You know, and then but you have the backing of this big first off if all of us bought a gym today
It none of us would want to run it. No, it's too much work. It's just too much work
But we would want it right if we put someone in charge that we trusted we know lots of people
That's probably what we would do we We would probably tie them to the budget.
To the budget.
We would give a model.
I 100% we will eventually do a, you know,
a Maps gym model out there.
And what will happen though is when we,
like we're done, I feel like building everything with this.
I think that that would be a fun project.
It's not, maybe then you'll let me start a supplement company.
I will. In the actual care of a gym only. I don't care. I'll be in the house. I'll be in the house.
Do you know I give all my ideas to everyone else? I was, I give my ideas to all of our partners.
They get all my brain stuff. I want you to know that Dr. Gabriel Lyon called me after that
and actually thanked me for that conversation. She's like, I want you, I want to know like I just,
I had no idea about supplements. When Sal said that and you made that comment,
and I appreciate it, I 100% would have went that direction.
Oh, and start a company?
Yes.
And she's like, I had, I had,
I thought you were talking about the brilliant idea I gave her.
No.
Remember I told him to start doing the self-assumption?
I'm not gonna say.
The reality of the margins.
I thought that's what it was.
It was what we were trying to do supplements.
And I said, don't do that.
She's so, and then she was like, what?
And I'm like, yeah, no, absolutely not.
She's sad.
We want to do it forever.
And I'm like, no way.
I mean, that's, it's so funny too, because in the space,
you know, I don't know.
There's something about when people hear gross,
like you say, oh, I got a, I got a $20 million company.
That's all they talk about though.
They people that end so,
you're in the red.
Yeah, it's like, would you rather have a 20 million gross company that profits 10 to 15
15 percent margin or a two million dollar company that gets 80 percent more. Yeah, you know, I'm saying it's like think about the headaches a little brainer
Yeah, exactly and then you add in the facts who something that's grossing that much
There's so many different moving parts. There's probably a lot more employees
You just write a number 10 to 15 percent margin. That's a supplement company that's run. That's very well.
Yeah.
Run very well.
I think it's also important to note
that those are companies that have good products.
Yeah.
Because you have huge margins if you have a guard.
Well, and that's the other way.
Well, that's what I mean.
It's run very well.
So if you point.
So a $20 million company will profit you $2 million?
Yeah.
Or $2.5 million, right?
That's a lot of staff, warehouse, purchasing, he will profit you $2 million or $2.5 million, right?
That's a lot of staff, warehouse, purchasing, suppliers.
And the more people, the more moving parts,
to the more headaches, just period.
You know what I'm saying?
So I would take significantly less money,
I would let that take quite a bit less money
with 90% less of the moving parts.
Because you have to factor that in.
Like at a certain point of making millions of dollars,
the difference between you making more...
That's a lot of stress, more profit.
Two million dollars or four million dollars, it's double.
But it's really...
Plus you guys lifestyle is in changing that month.
Plus you guys know I push the limits anyway.
My supplement company would have,
who would definitely...
But that would definitely push the limits.
But do you think of supplements and gym
is like to two go-to moves.
And then the third one, which is hard to get a gym
in my money, it no.
Well, actually, the four most popular,
you just made me list all the worst business.
That's crazy.
A peril.
Those are the ones that I think they're gonna kill it with.
Gym and then membership training.
The 999 a month app.
The app, you know what I'm saying?
999, like I'm gonna get big as a trainer, I'm gonna get famous, and I'm gonna charge everybody 999 a month app. The app, you know, say 999, like I'm gonna get big as a trainer,
I'm gonna get famous, and I'm gonna charge everybody 999 a month.
Subscription model.
Subscription model for personal training.
All terrible ideas.
All terrible ideas.
Yeah, it's a brutal model.
It's not, and for some reason, and you know, we always,
we glom on to the next.
You know, we've talked about it right now.
And we just talk people into doing it.
Well, I'm different.
Yeah. Hey, if'm different. Yeah.
Hey, if you're hearing what we're saying,
if you're saying you still want to do it,
maybe it is for you.
I mean, we compare things to like the Netflix model
or the example, there's a handful of companies
that have proven that model to work and they did it.
And it's like, you know, it's just, it's,
okay, I guess if you really believe
you're gonna be the one in a hundred thousand that's gonna make that happy. You are. But there's a lot better,
there's a lot better. It reminds me of like, what was that data? I think I brought it up on a previous
episode, the only fans. The most, the average, actually, the large, huge percent. I remember I was like
90 something percent of people on there make like less than 50 bucks a month. Yeah. You know, but they hear these stories of these
girls. Meanwhile, the kids get access to those like their friends are going to see your
pictures. Yeah, but you're posting naked. Yeah, weird stuff. Yeah, what was just that? I know
I've heard that stat too. I don't remember exactly. But it's like the vast majority make very
nothing almost nothing. Yeah, it's a it's a really small percentage that are or I mean, I mean,
think about that when you have that many,
that many girls that are competing on there,
like you've gotta be literally,
really, really unique, especially otherwise,
even if someone like, let's say like,
they're dudes making money, I'd be curious.
Of course they're.
I mean, like, look up, highest paid male only for my model.
I wanna see the difference though.
By the way, you guys wanna bet,
do you think that his number one consumer is women or men?
Man, of course. Yeah. No way.
No way. No way. Why? Yeah. Why would they? Yeah.
Yeah. Dick is free. You can get it. Anyway, the market's flooded. Dick has always been
free. Yeah, dude. So they're not. They're not.
They're not. They're not. They're not. They're not.
We're really dumb girl if you're paying for that. Just gonna put it out there, by the way.
Now, hi, is there any male in only fans? is hip-hop artists and TV personality, Tyga.
Okay, so what some of these, so not every,
you're already famous.
Not everybody uses only fans.
I think you're for new, but even though that's like
80% of the business, it's not all of the business.
So a lot of people can use it just because they want to be,
what is the top 20?
Top 20 mail only fans models.
Let's try that.
Okay.
Cause you're right, because you're famous.
Because famous, I guess.
People will pay to have access to rock if he's doing things that, that Cause you're right, cause you're famous. Yeah, because famous, I guess.
Yeah, people will pay to have access to rock if he's doing things that could just be just,
yeah, to see what he's up to, to lifestyle.
Yeah.
Not necessarily.
What was Tyga's pay?
Did he say his income from it?
Uh, yeah, 7.69 million a month.
Oh my God.
Oh my God.
Oh my God.
Oh my God.
What's he doing?
I know, that's not like, sure he's showing news.
Seven million a month, he is making off of only fans. Well, let me double check. I wonder, that's not like, you sure you're showing news? Seven million a month,
he is making off of only fans.
Well, let me double check.
I wonder if it's like all of these.
But when I hear stuff like this,
it just really highlights like this.
Also, why I don't think we're gonna see this big crash
and which is just the wealth gap is getting crazy.
Yeah, 7.69 million.
Wow, dude.
Black China has 20 million a month.
She's a female, obviously.
Bella Thorne 11 million
So Cardi B 9.3 million yeah
So anyway, mainly women and I forget what the ratio Andrew you know what it is
I know your big. I only fans guy is it like 80% the the creator makes is what
He's acting like he doesn't know.
He's like, I have no idea.
Stop.
Stop, man.
Yeah.
He's not on the internet, you guys.
I thought you said, I think he said only fans
was editing software.
So we're paying every month.
500 bucks.
We hit everybody in trouble.
Oh my gosh, like we've got that, right?
There's some guy out there that it's coming on the credit card bill like that. And my God, I knew it. I knew it. I knew it. I knew it. I knew it.
I knew it.
I knew it.
I knew it.
I knew it.
I knew it.
I knew it.
I knew it.
I knew it.
I knew it.
I knew it.
I knew it.
I knew it.
I knew it.
I knew it.
I knew it.
I knew it.
I knew it.
I knew it.
I knew it.
I knew it. I knew it. I knew it. I knew it. I knew it. What if we didn't only fans? Yeah, I think we're missing the mark here. Yeah, what would we do on an only fans? What's the possibility? No, nothing
Nothing
I know we're I can juggle yeah
Maybe people would pay us just to play the guitar with you know with what?
Chaps on oh
With you chaps. Yeah, there's a slush chaps
You can play the guitar with no hands chaps. We should try that actually. Let's see if we can we can get some money on
Okay, I mean we'll do a reverse only fans. I need it in the comments pay how many would you pay money to make Justin stop?
Okay, yeah, well, is that that mean?
I mean, I wonder how many people maybe get to play harmonica with my how many people make?
Seven figures or more
Anually and only fans I wonder what the pull of people, how big the pull is?
I think it was really a graph that showed what percentage
maybe you're right about that, that's for sure.
But I mean, if there's millions people on there
that's still like tens of thousands.
Remember when they floated the idea
they were gonna stop like doing this?
Yes, yes.
They were trying to do a public, right?
That was why.
I think, yeah, that was 300 plus, make a million or more.
Only 300, like 300? People. Yeah, 16,000 plus creators earn 50, million or more. Only 300, like 300 people.
Yeah, 16,000 plus creators earn 50,000 or more.
Okay. How many total, yeah, break that down to,
I wanna hear those numbers again.
So 300 plus creators, so around 300 creators
make more than a million.
That's a year.
Yeah, and 16,000 make over 50,000.
So somewhere around 50 or above.
Right, okay. Yeah, that's okay. So that's not, I mean, that's, that just showed you, you're,
highlights your point. Yeah. Yeah. So not, and then how many total free there.
That's a good question. Let me see. Yeah. How many there are? Yeah. Cause, I mean, you know,
only 300 are in that crazy number. So that, that number with Tyga is like, he's one of the 300.
Yeah. Most of them are famous people already. Yeah, so okay, so hardly anybody's been making it. Yeah, they have 187 million users.
Oh.
What's that for?
Less users though.
I don't know what that means.
So 2.1 million were content creators.
So two million creators, 16,000 of which make 50,000 a year.
Yeah, and 300 make a million.
Yeah, so what are your odds of making?
Not good.
Nothing.
Yeah, what is 16,000 of?
Plus it ain't random.
It's like your odds are there because the numbers are there
because of those three or people,
they're all famous, probably,
or can do something weird, like what Justin said.
Yeah.
Yeah, I bet you're right.
I bet the 300 are all already famous people
that are just putting a whole content on that.
So your chance is, it looks like about 0.0015.
0.0015?
No, 0.00.
I think that works out to be 0.015% chance of making a million.
A million.
Yeah.
So what are your odds of getting the NFL?
They might even be better than that.
Yeah.
That's actually, I don't know how to get questions.
We have to compare it to other things so people can understand how ridiculous it is to
find the way.
What is winning the lottery?
That's going to be pretty close to winning the lottery.
Something like that.
No, a lot of it's way worse, bro.
Yeah, probably.
Yeah, you could get struck by lightning while, you know, playing chess with a shark.
And that's the odds are higher.
Yeah, tens of millions by lottery tickets. And sometimes there's not even a winner, right?
I mean, but it's in that same category I would say.
I mean, obviously lottery is way crazier.
But I mean, it's up there in the like the 10, but the differences you buy a dollar ticket,
your, you know, your boobies aren't on the internet.
Well, that's the point.
I think that really sucks is how many people are trying to do that
in hopes that they're gonna do that.
And then you'd never do,
but yet you put all this stuff out there.
Like I mean, if I was guaranteed, right,
that I was gonna be one of those 300 or 16,000,
or whatever the big ones, right, the 16,000.
That was 50,000 dollars a year.
Oh, that's what, yeah, fuck that.
I wouldn't do that.
For 50 grams?
Yeah, no, it'd be needing the million.
What is for me? The AI body. You know what I that. For 50 grand. Yeah, no, it'd be needing the million. What is it for me to eat?
A.I. body. You know what I mean? Like you just construct it
and you put it out there. Yeah, but it's not for you.
It's like, but what about your face though?
It's still you. Well, let's say somebody does that anyways, like in the future.
Yeah. Wow. A.I. people are going to make only fans.
It's getting weird. It's going to happen. You know what else is weird?
It's just took a left turn. You know what else is weird?
The kid, the three-year-old driving the f-
Oh, the one that you were arguing with me about?
How is that real? I do not, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, driver. No, no, his dad is a professional race car driver. Yeah. Well, that's the, I mean, I can see what he's doing.
He's obviously, he's a talent.
What do you do with the three-hole?
You're like, I know.
It's crazy.
Drive fast in a car.
Yeah.
What are you doing?
He's three years old.
He's three years old.
That's so crazy.
I mean, he obviously is showing skills.
Good, though.
He's really good.
I don't know.
He had him and his dad and they're obviously,
they're filthy rich.
You can see their house.
Yeah. He's, his dad is driving. That they're filthy rich. You can see their house. Yeah, he's he's his dad is driving
That's a private track and the whole deal right? Yeah, yeah, of course. No, I read about it. Oh, yeah
So he's driving he's driving in a TV his dad is on two wheels two wheels on the side like this and his son's doing it on his little 50
Same thing. Yeah, they're just around and circle. You know, I can't do that. I've been riding since I was a kid
That's crazy. Oh, did you ride a bike when you were three?
I don't remember.
Yeah, let alone a fucking
18B.
I know, this kid has like
his dad has to make a custom car seat
so he can reach the pedals of the Ferrari.
So it's DNA, dude.
That's my son's age.
That is wild.
That's really crazy.
I think he set this kid up for failure.
I think that's something that's just eating his burger.
Why do you, bro?
What do I do?
You do?
Yeah, what if the kid never becomes like the best race car?
Like, you, you, I don't know.
I think it's so dangerous.
First off, you're so interesting.
We're so different here.
I would so do that.
I would totally do that.
If my son, because you got to think that.
Well, if he crashes, he's dead.
Okay, so I always have max around when I'm doing any of this.
And I'm back to the very young age.
I would drive my truck and when I was parking it,
he would stand and grab the steering wheel.
And if I saw that he had this natural kind of ability
to do it all on his own, how do you do that, though,
at three?
How do you know that they have now?
They can't reach the pedals.
I'm sure he's got video game simulators and things like that.
Yeah, it's crazy.
Yeah, he's got some things.
So I'm sure he shows those signs.
And then I, and then if I, like my son would be terrified to get out on the,
like he has him on a wakeboard too.
Did you know how to surf?
Max wouldn't even get in the water and even attempt that.
So I would never force him to do it.
But if he got up there and want, bro, I would, all about it.
I would so practice for hours with him.
If he's showing that he's, and obviously you can see the kids
not tortured. He's enjoying what he's doing. And obviously you can see the kids not tortured.
He's enjoying what he's doing with his dad.
He's got big smile on his face
and having all kinds of fun.
So my son was doing that.
I would, oh yes, yes I would.
I would totally do.
And if you pull up to stop light,
yeah, you can see,
you're not gonna race that pretty much.
He's got a car seat.
I mean, he's a little hit a car seat.
I would think like this is a Cippy cap.
Yeah, I'd be like,
this is an adult with a really strange condition.
There's a video of him.
There's a video of him.
He's in one of those TRX, you know, a TV's you know those little TRX ones
And he's pulling a little mini size like custom made boat and he he's trailing it and he drives it
He backs it in okay, first of all, you know how hard it is to back a full to put it down into the
smaller a vehicle is okay, And the smaller a trailer is,
the more difficult it is to back up straight.
So if you've ever driven like an ATV
and like a trailer, a small trailer behind you,
it takes a lot of skill to keep that straight
because it does just a little bit of play
and it should track nice.
This kid literally backs up a small trailer like that,
which is already hard, gets the boat in,
climbs in his boat, takes his boat off,
and he's driving the boat,
he's drinking the sippy cup,
but he's driving hilarious.
Hey, speaking of real, I just read an article where these two
kids, they weren't nearly this young, but a 10 and 11 year old
got mad at their mom because she took away their devices,
their electronics. So they were pulled over on the freeway, they
had already driven 200 miles. They were driving to California,
run away from mom. They were, I'm 10 in the 11 year old.
10 in the 11 year old.
Got pulled over.
They had already gone 200 miles away from mom.
What?
Because she took away their electronics.
You want to talk about, first of all,
epic story for the rest of your life.
Yeah.
I remember that time I ran away and I drove 200 miles.
Yeah.
But they, yeah, got pulled them over.
Wow.
10 year old.
I feel like some kids have that idea,
but they would never actually execute.
You know, like that's insane.
So I tell you guys, when I tried to run away once,
my parents, have you ever tell you that?
I was a little, I was a smart ass as a kid.
How old would you be?
I was a kid, I was a kid.
I was probably four.
And I was like arguing with my parents,
and I'm like, I'm gonna run away.
I remember I said something like that.
You make when I was a little hobo, sax.
So, hey, so I'm gonna run away.
And so my mom's like, I'm gonna call your butt, your bluff, right? She's like, okay, you know, I'm gonna run away. I remember I said something like that. She made one of those little hobo sacks. So, hey, so I'm gonna run away. And so my mom's like, I'm gonna call your butt,
your bluff, right?
She was like, okay, you know, I'll help you pack.
So I'm like, okay, so now it's like, who's gonna win?
So she gave me a little suitcase,
and I put toys in my shit, closed it up,
and went to the front door,
and my mom opened the front, my dad was there too.
And they're like, all right, see you later, buddy.
They opened the front door,
and then I walked out and they closed the front door,
and then they looked through the people, right?
And I, my parents love telling the story.
I stood there for like 10 minutes,
just staying in the front door.
I was probably thinking of myself like,
fuck, what do I do now?
Yeah, where do I go?
Yeah.
So then I turned around, rang the doorbell again.
My mom answered the door, she's like,
oh, what is it?
And I'm like, I forgot my jacket.
I did the same thing.
I didn't even know my jacket. I did the same thing. I didn't even know my jacket.
I did the same thing, but I was like,
I would say I have more like eight, eight or nine,
and what I did was, I said the same thing
and my parents, very similar, I was like, go ahead.
And we lived out in the country
and we had one of these flat, flat roofs,
it was actually like a mobile home that we built
that someone built custom house or attached in around it.
And so it was like this shitty flat roof.
And if you went around the back, you could climb up on it.
So me running away was climbing up on the roof.
And I made it all the way till dinner.
You know, and then I got really hungry.
So I think about like, how am I gonna eat you?
I gotta come back to that.
So logistics.
Yeah, that's the hard part.
I'm never coming back home.
And there's like, oh my stomach, I'm so hungry right now. You imagine you have a kid that's hard-headed
and it's like, oh, I'm actually gonna leave.
You're like, all right, we're gonna play,
we're gonna scale this up.
When you dress up as a robber, scare him off.
Ah!
Somebody tried to get me.
Yeah, that's what happens out there, you know?
Hey, let's shut that kid out.
What's his handle, Doug?
Yeah, Zayn's O-Fuoglu.
It's Z-A-Y-N-S-O-F-U-O-G-L-U.
That must be, it's gotta be his name,
because that's weird.
Check this kid out.
This kid's amazing.
Yeah.
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All right, back to the show.
Our first colors, Chris from Missouri.
Chris, what's happening, man?
How can we help you?
Yo, what is up guys?
This is wild.
Did I expect to start my morning like this?
It's very cool.
You didn't have an appointment to call it?
Yeah.
So, my main question is in regards to maps and a ballic,
Sal, I've heard you say in the past that in regards
to trigger sessions, your kind of inspiration behind that
was noticing people that worked like physical labor jobs,
such as mailman having developed calves or mechanics with the forearms.
So that was kind of your inspiration
for incorporating trigger sessions.
So my question was, if you already work a job
that's hyper physical like that,
are trigger sessions necessary
or is the day-to-day activity of the job
actually kind of taking the place of those?
That was a good question.
Yeah, that's a really good question.
So here's the other thing that I noticed.
What's your job that we'll click?
Yeah, what do you do?
I'm a truck driver, deliver driver specifically.
So we'll do like food delivery to restaurants.
So on a given day, I'll have between 500 to 700 boxes
on my truck in various ways from like 10 pounds
to up to 70, 80 pounds.
All every box on the truck is unloaded by hand, throw it on a dolly, up and down a ramp into
the store back to the trailer until it's empty. So yeah, okay, so how long have you been doing that?
Two years at this specific job, but I've been in this industry for probably like six years
between doing this. I worked for a beverage before that, FedEx, so a lot of physical
stuff.
Chris, do you remember how you felt the day of after work and the day after work when you
first started?
I would say maybe the first six months to a year.
Do you remember how your body felt?
The main thing I remember specifically is like sort joints, like elbows, knee pain, stuff
like that, acclimating into it, but now on a day to day basis, I don't really notice it.
That's the point.
So, you're still sending somewhat of a low level signal.
I noticed that for someone your size, your biceps seemed to be pretty well developed.
That's probably from loading and carrying boxes. Okay. Trigger sessions
provide a low-level muscle building signal, but they don't compare to traditional strength
training. Really what they do is they kind of turbo charge or add a little extra. Now,
for someone like yourself, here's what ends up happening. Use the right word, acclimate.
You know, I noticed with blue-collar workers that they, after doing it for years and years
and years, it becomes just their day to day. They're no longer sore. They don't hurt. Whereas if I go
and try and help somebody, if I go with some movers, for example, and help them move a house,
people have been doing this for 10 years, I'm going to be really sore after helping them work.
And they feel like nothing because their bodies are totally acclimated.
So adding additional trigger sessions to your maps and a ballacroutine,
probably is going to still have some benefit because your body so acclimated and adapted to
what you do. That being said, there's some other things that we want to consider that I think
are more important. Because you have a physical job, even though your body does acclimate, you're still
under a little more stress than the average person in terms of your physical stress.
Yeah, how's your restaurant going?
Now, there's a, I mean, of course stress encompasses a lot of different things, so, you know, somebody could the amount of activity you do, recovery,
how you feel, if adding trigger sessions or doing too many days of strength training starts
to make you feel like too sore, tired, you start to notice your strength gains aren't
coming or maybe even going backwards, you're just doing too much.
That would be the main thing to consider, but someone like you who's been doing it for
so long, I mean, you can would be the main thing to consider. But someone like you who's been doing it for so long,
I mean, your body's used to it.
It's not really, I mean, it's definitely work still,
but it's not stressing your body at all,
nowhere near like it was when you first started.
I think the way I would make this decision on
would I do trigger sessions or not,
would actually be more on the aesthetic side, right?
I think that you have enough stress, you have enough activity, you're moving the body
around, so you're going to facilitate and speed up recovery.
So that's all good.
Blood flow, oxygen, getting the muscles, nutrients, it's just going to help that because you're
moving around so much.
You're getting the benefits from that than the average person wouldn't get because they're
sitting maybe at a desk job.
The only other thing that would make me go, hey, should I add in trigger sessions is if
I had specific areas that I didn't want to target. So let's say you're
carrying boxes. So you are probably getting a lot of like bicep and forearm and maybe even
a little bit of shoulder stuff. But you know, maybe my back is a little underdeveloped
or you know, maybe my chest, you know, so I might do trigger sessions that are just focused
on chest flies and back rows. You know, a lot of leg, you're moving up and down
with legs, so maybe your legs aren't really underdeveloped.
But if they are, then maybe that's,
so I would look at specific body parts
that you care about, that you would want.
And then that would be the only thing
I'm probably triggering throughout the day,
because you are getting enough activity
that you don't necessarily have to do it,
but you still, to Salis Point,
you would still see benefit from incorporating them, especially in areas that you want't necessarily have to do it, but you still, to Salis Point, you would still see benefit from incorporating them,
especially in areas that you want to develop.
That was, yeah, that was exactly the direction I was thinking,
but mainly from a corrective perspective
of you continuously kind of reaching in front
and having a lot of positional, postural kind of positions
where, you know, to counter that with rows and with, you know, let pull downs and get more posterior chain kind of focused, exercise
to kind of help complement what you're doing every day, just on a low level intensity.
So you get that kind of volume to sort of balance and equate.
But yeah, you definitely have to see
because you're already so physically active, I would definitely monitor that in terms of
how it's it's overstressing you or you're finding that kind of sweet spot how to compliment.
Yeah, the point that Justin's making reminds me of like all the hairdressers or engineers,
you know, computer tech people that I would train. They're so rounded forward all day
long.
So I wouldn't do any trigger stuff on their delts or their packs
or anything like that because I already,
I would have them do band pull-aparts and rows
to complement all this activity on the full list.
There is some definitely value to address that.
So those are kind of the, I guess that would be the two things
I would look at if I'm used.
I'm going, okay, is there things I can do to address,
you know, post-rolling balances?
Because what I do all day that I could do
is my trigger sessions or are there muscles
that I want to bring up and develop more?
I'm going to focus on those two main areas.
That's how I'm going to develop my trigger sessions.
Chris, just for fun, if you wouldn't mind,
if you could just stand up and go sideways,
so I could look at the side profile of your arm,
because I want to point something out.
Okay now, so yeah, okay good.
Now stand facing forward and flex your bicep for a second.
I want to look at something here.
This is getting weird.
No, it's not.
No, not here like this.
I'll hear like this.
Take your shirt off.
So what you're going to notice going to put your arm down.
What you'll notice is so for the average guy, so typically the tricep is about two thirds of the size of the upper arm.
Notice in your arm. It's about one to one or maybe even bicep overpowers a little bit.
Also, when you're standing and moving around, for the average person, I don't think this is disproportionate.
I think this is the way an arm is supposed to look. But compared to the average person, your forearms are really large compared to your upper arms.
So biceps and forearms, that's a direct result of you moving boxes, 100%.
You'll almost never see a bicep overpower a tricep on an individual, except for maybe
a gymnast or people who carry a lot of things like boxes and stuff like that.
So that's a direct result of the work that you're doing.
Now, you know, to back to what they were saying.
I mean, you could, if you want from an aesthetic standpoint,
you could do more tricep work,
more maybe mid back work, you know,
areas that you may be not working so much.
And then to adjust them as saying,
if you do notice certain nagging injuries
from the work you do, correctional type exercises would be great trigger sessions.
Yeah, do you have?
I do want to point out just the development
you've already got from the work that you do.
And in fact, if I didn't know you,
and I were to look at you and kind of guess
what kind of work you did, or if you did physical work,
I would guess you did something where you were.
There's a reflection.
Carrying things, yeah.
Do you have maps prime pro?
I do not.
I got the summer bundle with like aesthetic, hit, symmetry, and then an abolish.
So you're set there.
I think those are all great programs to have.
I think prime pro for some of the points that Justin was making.
So if you start to notice shoulder nagging or elbow stuff that you mentioned
before, anything like that, using the movements that are in there like trigger sessions would
be very valuable to you. So we're going to send that over to you. So you have that. I
think you've got the right. Thank you for lifting and stuff. But you can use that as like
a great reference tool if you have any sort of any of those issues. But really what we
talked about the two main things is what I would focus on if I'm
you with my trigger sessions.
Totally.
Okay.
So a quick question in regards like, so I have aesthetic would would your recommendation
be to kind of treat my trigger sessions similar to those off days on aesthetic.
I don't remember the term for him but target those weakened body parts.
Yeah.
Or you could do them trigger sessions style. So lower intensity with that. parts. Yeah, you can, or you could do them trigger session style.
So lower intensity with that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, three times a day, right?
Exactly.
Yeah, no, I love the idea of your focus sessions.
Like, I would, if I'm knowing you already from what we've talked,
like, I wouldn't be doing biceps and probably, like,
my front of my delts is like focus.
I might do like rear delts and triceps as my main foot,
and foot more upper mid-back.
Yeah, so like, yeah, I would pick like stuff like that.
Probably core, just to stabilize,
help you stabilize with your work.
Those are all good, good suggestions.
Awesome, I appreciate it, guys.
You got it, man.
All right, Chris, we're calling in.
Thank you.
You got it.
Isn't that funny though?
You could see, like,
oh yeah, rarely do you see a tricep and bicep
one-to-one or even larger bicep, but you'll see that with people like that. And then you could see, like, rarely do you see a tricep and bicep, one to one or even larger bicep,
but you'll see that with people like that.
And then even blue collar, pay attention.
If you have a family member who swings a hammer all the time,
look at the size of their hands and forearms.
I think the mucus are so much there.
To their upper arms.
I've seen so many carpenters with like,
almost skinny looking upper arms,
wire re, right?
And then it's like massive form.
Oh, yeah, it's like,
it's a puppy arms.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's super crying construction.
I mean, that was like my stepdad.
My stepdad's forms were the size of his upper arm.
Yeah, you got from,
it's like a panic.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, it's funny though,
someone like that, I bet he doesn't feel that way.
He sees himself every day,
it's like low level, he's seen over, over.
So you don't look at yourself and go like,
oh, I got great biceps.
He probably thinks that it's not that way.
It takes another person from the outside looking in to go like,
I can tell by your structure, the development in your biceps is more than it.
We're just working on his triceps.
His arms are going to look huge.
Yes.
That would be in comparison to that.
Yeah.
When I first started dating Jessica years ago, she was at that time,
very into climbing the silks.
And so I mean, she was really, I mean, she could pull herself up with just her hands.
You're welcome.
And she had a bicep that overpowered her tricep. Her arm had that look to it. And now her obviously is more balanced out because she's, she's trained on balancing
it. But you rarely see that, right? Tricep's typically overpower the rest of the arms, like
two thirds of the size of the arm. And that's kind of a tell-tale, like, oh, you carry
things for a living. Yeah, if it was me it comes from. If it was me in seeing his physique already,
and he, if he was running,
I'd go chest, triceps.
I would do literally triceps or adults, that's it.
Yeah.
That would be like triceps and rear delts
is going to address a little bit of the posture stuff.
It's gonna build his shoulders up more.
It's pretty symmetrical, yeah.
Yes, it'll bring his physique really, really together.
If he cares about that, if that's something he cares about,
those are the two like muscle groups, I would pretty much focus really, really together. If he cares about that, if that's something he cares about, those are the two, like,
muscle groups I would pretty much focus on on focus days and or trigger.
Our next caller is Justin from Texas.
Hey, what's up, man?
How can we help you?
Hey, guys, how's it going?
Uh, thank you for taking the call.
I really appreciate it.
Um, before I get into my question, Adam, uh, I just wanted to point out, hey, don't let
these guys clown your right.
There's nothing wrong with getting up through your four times in the middle
The night sit down on the toilet
My guy, but you know what your wife probably loves you two bro. Oh, she does
The mess. Yeah, that's a difference between guys like you and I that their wives don't even like
He's I can see how they're only with them for the money. I can see how it's convenient because Adam sleeps in a night
I have accuracy. It's absolutely easy to pull up the night.
Don't that out there guys. Don't that out there.
You got it. What you got? What else to get?
So my question, so a little backstory real quick before I really get into the question.
So grown up in high school and whatnot, I was kind of a heavy-set kid, wasn't fit in a certain thing like that, but wasn't until I was
around 20 years old. Never saw myself doing anything physical. The job I wanted to do,
both physical and activity, I had to lose a lot of weight, I was 230 pounds,
5 foot 8 back then, at 20 years old old sub 35% BMI or whatever
So I ran lost a lot of weight in about a four month period got down to like 165
Started doing this job got into weight lifting
Bolt up to about 180 5 or so wasn't really paying attention to diet or anything
So fitness has been a part of my life now since,
you know, I was 20 now. I've been lifting. I kind of considered myself, uh, kind of, I guess,
bodybuilder style. Like I didn't care about strength as far as like, I didn't want to be able to
bench 300 pounds. I just wanted to look like I could, you know. So I never really cared about that.
I didn't really pay attention to diet or anything. Flashboard, COVID, right?
Like many of us happened.
Things changed a little bit.
I was still working out pretty consistently during that time,
but I wasn't paying as much attention to diet
and as you get older, I'm 35 now, right?
So it kind of seeks up on you.
Social drinking turned into more.
Well, I'm not social.
We going out anymore.
So turn into more. Let, I'm not social. We going out anymore. So turn into more, uh, less social drinking by myself.
Yeah.
I'm like, and after a couple of years of that, I kind of snuck up on me.
It wasn't until, um, probably, uh, six months ago or so, whereas I got, I need to kind
of get the center control, um, discovered you guys.
I thought I had a pretty good understanding of working out.
You guys completely changed my outlook on that
as far as pursuing strength goals
and progressive overload.
So since then, so I had a metabolic testing done.
A few months back, they had me at around 2,700 calories
for maintenance.
I was found myself eating around 2300 calories,
so I slowly worked my way up going through anabolic.
I got up to, I think by the time I ended anabolic,
I was at around 2600 calories,
went into performance, got up to 3,000 calories.
But notice my waistline was starting to grow.
During that time also, we do the bod pod.
So I had my body fat percentage check.
So just to update, I'm five foot eight.
I'm about 230 pounds or those 220 pounds
when I did this bod pod and they had me at 33% body fat.
So I guess my main question is, so taking diet and stuff into control, so I completely
cut alcohol out of my diet over the last couple months, which was more challenging than
I care to admit.
And so since then, I'm paying attention to my diet.
I've been, my lives have gone up exponentially.
I guess I'm just curious, how far should I keep
pushing the calories and stuff and pursuing these
strength goals before I start taking body fat things
into a town as far as like cutting,
like doing mini cuts or whatever.
Let's address that first.
Yeah, it's a guy.
You know, I got to address your,
I don't think you're 30% body fat.
That doesn't seem right at all.
That doesn't sound right.
No, you stand up for me and I'm doing this again, but
it's just so we're gonna make it every last color.
I don't think you're 30%.
You look Mike, you might be in the 20s,
but you ain't 30%. That's strange.
Anyway, okay, so how long should you go on this kind of reverse?
Typically, what we say is you want to get to a point
where you feel like you can come from.
Okay, so you say so get it.
It's hard to eat more food.
Yeah, we like okay.
I think I could cut 500 calories or 800 calories and I think I could sustain that.
That's where you typically want to get.
I have a couple questions before you give.
Where do you think you're at steps wise?
Have you tracked like I'm curious which your movement throughout the day looks like?
Do you have a sedentary job?
Are you active?
No, so it's a mix between sedent.
So I teach.
So when I'm teaching, I'm very engaged in moving around.
I purposely get at least 10,000 steps today,
but on average, especially on days when I'm teaching,
which is at least four to five days a week,
I'm averaging
around 16,000 steps.
That's what I want.
That's what I want.
Okay, so that gives me a little bit more information.
So based off of that, your size, your lifting, I actually would want you definitely get up your
calories to a higher point before we cut.
That's a good amount of movement.
You're a good size, dude.
We should be at least getting up to like 3,500 calories before we come back the other direction.
So that's a good generic number, but really the way to look at it is how you feel, right?
Like what Sal was kind of alluding to, which is let's keep trying to build strength, build
your metabolism up, add calories.
So you get to a place where you're kind of like, man, this is, this is a lot of food.
This is, I don't even like eating this much food.
Now that's a natural time to come back the other
direction. So I, or you could also interrupt these, you know, reverse dieting with many cuts. So
let's say you've been slowly creeping the calories up and you've been doing that for the last
say two months and you haven't, even though you're not to 3500 calories yet, you haven't interrupted
it with like a week or two week cut and do that for a week or two and then go right back to
Trying to get back up again and just kind of playing that game is every four to six weeks interrupt with like a two-week
Cut then go four to six weeks and then cut and just kind of keep doing that until
You've reached a place where you're eating probably 3500 calories or so or reach you a place where you're like
That's a lot of food now. I want to go the other direction.
And along the way, if we do this correctly, you should actually be able to slowly increase
calories and feel like you're leaning out a little bit because you're interrupting with
this cut.
That would be my prediction if we did this right.
That's exactly how I would do it.
I mean, if you haven't done like a cut or a shortcut in a little while, I think that's
a good idea to do something like that.
And so what Adam's essentially telling you to do is a step ladder kind of approach where you bump
calories, maintain for a little bit, drop down for a bit, and then do it again, bump, maintain for
a bit. I like a two to one or three to one ratio of slow reverse to cut. So you could do four weeks, six weeks,
and then like a week or two, two weeks of a mini cut.
And a mini cut is literally a few hundred calories
below maintenance.
You don't need to do anything more than that.
And I think that would be the best strategy at this point.
So if I get it up to like, say, 3300 calories
and my maintenance is like 27, so if I'm bulking
and I get up to 33 when I go to do my mini cut, just dropping down is like 27. So, if I'm bulking and I get up to 33
when I go to view my mini cut,
just dropping down to like 25.
Your maintenance, if you're at 3300 calories,
and you're not gaining any weight.
That's your maintenance.
So, let's say you're at 3300,
and you're doing it for three, four weeks,
and the weight is not changing on the scale.
That's your new maintenance.
Yeah, remember, your maintenance is changes all the time.
Yeah, and you only need to go,
so when you're in a quote, unquote bulk,
and by the way, I think you said
that you got that number from the bod pot
or one of those things,
I care more about you tracking consistently
than I give a shit about those machines.
Those things are fucking never really that accurate.
They're a good place to start and give you an idea,
like, okay, so I should be around 27 or 2800 calories.
That's fine.
The real thing I want to see is what calories can you eat and not gain or lose weight?
That's, and it should be somewhere around that numbers between 26 and 3000 based off of
where you're at.
So I'd want to find that first.
And then a bulk for you is only reversing 250 to 500 calories at most higher than that. And then a cut would
be 250 to 500 below that. And that's kind of how you would toggle between them when you're
when you're in a bulk, you're 250 to 500 above, when you're in a cut, you're 250 to 500 below.
And you're just kind of doing that ladder approach like sourcing. And I love the like like
six weeks than two, six weeks than two and kind of go that way, but four and one is fine also
Okay, and then as far as training so I'm like at the this is like my second time running through in a ball
I'm at the end of I'm about to finish space three right now the last week and then I was planning on jumping into powerlifting after that
I like and then maybe
Deadic after that or maybe symmetry to interrupt one of those. I like all those choices.
You did say you've ran performance, so you've addressed some mobility stuff.
I would consider doing symmetry to go, I love PowerLift Necks and then maybe
symmetry after that to interrupt it, then go to aesthetic.
I think that would be a good choice.
What do you think, Justin?
Yeah, I think symmetry after PowerLift.
Do you have symmetry?
I don't have symmetry.
That's why I was going to go into a static after that
because I got the maps.
Well, we'll send you symmetry.
So we'll send symmetry on us.
But I like the idea of the power lift
staying focused on the building strength.
Yeah.
Because you just went through the mobility
and I'm sure you got some value out of that.
And getting back to just
ramping up your your your force output. I think it's gonna do you a lot of good for building muscle. Yeah
To me, I love I love Anna-Balk in Powerlift when I'm trying to like build a metabolism with a client
Yeah, just a really those are really good strength-based programs and that's a great place to be mentally when you're trying to reverse diet
And that's a great place to be mentally when you're trying to reverse diet. So I love that strategy.
And then after that, I like the idea of running like a symmetry between aesthetic.
Yeah, I will say so performance.
It wasn't my favorite.
I need to do more of it, right?
But I will say after doing performance, I kind of got through that.
And then when I started Annabelle, I began phase one.
We talked, I heard you guys
talking to this before, but there's some days you go out of the gym and I threw the
weight on to deadlift. And I was like, Oh, more, oh, more. And I added like, damn near
50 pounds, just a brief break. So that's awesome. Don't sleep performance for the listeners
up there.
Keep that in mind. Since you have the self awareness to know that about yourself, like
that's, I'm like you
I mean sounds like we have some things in common where that's not my style lifting
But that I'm always like aware of like okay. I've been away from that for a while. Make sure you cycle back there
You know at least once a year you're getting back into a program like that because it will always benefit you
I appreciate that one last thing before I before I go. I just I appreciate your guys's content
And I know you guys are always trying to push out like ways of
correlating information how fitness is a journey so something that was taught to me back when I first got into the field that I work in
Mentor explained to me once. He's like going to school and stuff
You kind of learn that there's an alphabet and then if you these alphabet makes sounds and you can put these letters together to create words and
You can put words together to create sentences, right?
And then as you go on through your journey and you start learning more, you realize, I go,
I can put sentences together to create thought and paragraphs.
And then as I learn more, I can create an entire book worth of knowledge.
And I know that was something that always stuck to me as I've gone through my career and
sounds like you guys kind of fitness. I never really gave much credit to being something like
that, but definitely the more I've learned, the more I've realized that that
tends to be the case. So I appreciate what you guys do up there.
Oh, great analogy. Yeah, thanks Justin. Yeah, thanks guys.
Take it easy. All us justins with the analogies.
Yeah, this is better than mine. I don't know.
Sometimes those body fat readings are so weird, you know,
like 40% body like that.
In both directions too, like I've never been able
to wrap my brain around why Katrina always tests
abnormally weirdly low, like so low always.
Like I've, she's always tested, I've told you guys this,
like 10 to 12% body fat, and I've done like every method with her.
And like, and controlled all these things.
So just sometimes they're just for some people.
Well, the calculations, I don't know,
I think underwater wing might be different,
but the calculation, I mean, I've done that too with her.
I know, it's weird.
That's why it's, I'm like,
the calculations on calipers, for example,
are based off of cadavers.
So they know what a general body fat percentage is on a human
whose bicep, triceps, sub scapula can actually scoop
and out like weigh it.
They literally remove the fat from the cadaver.
Well, that's what they say.
They're the most accurate way is to do that, right?
But you're not that strong.
Plus, remember what Dr. Gabriel Lyon told us?
He's the quality of muscle.
You know, the biggest takeaway from something like that
to me, though, is like, this is why the number doesn't matter.
Doesn't matter if it is 35.
What matters is, did he go from 35 down to 30 now?
Or did he go from 30, a downward trend?
Yeah, it really, it does not matter.
People get hung up so much on what these machines
and things are telling them, and everybody wants to argue with it.
Like, they're very, very valuable tools.
So I think the thing is, you don't just throw them out
because it's inaccurate to you
because what they are good is measuring the difference
of change based off of the variable.
And that's how you use that.
100%.
Our next caller is Aaron from Texas.
Aaron, what's happening, man?
How can we help you?
Oh, guys, I appreciate it.
Well, first, I've already helped me a whole bunch.
I mean, pretty much saved my life almost.
So growing up, I've been playing sports since I was two,
baseball, basketball, football, tennis, pretty much.
I mean, just nonstop outside.
But since then, the one thing that was kind of never,
I guess, relate to me, was the importance of strength training
and kind of just like having muscle to do stuff.
And so over time, it's gotten me super bad imbalances
between my ride and left side, I'm right side dominant.
I was a pitcher in baseball so super forward
shoulders, but my imbalances got so bad that my left side, my jaw would lock. I
couldn't open my mouth for probably more than an inch at times. I'd have to like,
like push the bottom of my jaw just to be able to open it to eat food at some points.
Never really like used my left side for anything so I didn't have like too much mobility.
So I go from right side, I feel like it's super forward, left side, kind of nothing.
My, I guess obliques right side, you can kind of feel, I have, you know, muscle
definition. Left side is like super squishy. It doesn't help that I clean pools now,
so I've been cleaning pools for about three years. That probably doesn't help it.
I've also lost, I lost over 100 pounds from I got really sedimentary. I worked at a Jimmy Don's for about nine years and
Kind of slowly gained weight gain weight. I was always the person to I could eat a lot
But I didn't ever really feel like I would gain weight, you know
Until I was actually like not moving and then it hit me. I still play competitive softball and
So I would just constantly be getting hurt, be getting
hurt.
It's my lower back mainly, lower left side.
And until I actually, I listened to you guys for about a year now and I actually like,
I don't know, clicked.
They're like, maybe I should start work now.
Like, actually hitting everything.
I feel like my CNS is never, everything I do, I feel like I just couldn't
get the form, like, you know, at the beginning to go through and really connect everything.
So I would slightly work out, then I'd take some time off, slightly work out, take some time off
until actually just recently, I actually started too. I went through anabolic,
kind of ran it through almost all the way through,
but it was super lightweight because, you know,
like I said, left and right side.
And when I would do dead hangs, I'd hang for a bit
and I'd kind of get to just opening everything up.
I'd kind of do some twist, I'd do some like, you know,
flopping, just kind of listening everything up.
And when I'd come down, my left side just, it's opened up.
But man, there would be so much like pain to just try to stand up.
Like I'd want to like, I don't know, fall down.
So for the longest time, I feel like everything was so closed in until I've
really started to put an emphasis on, you know, getting my shoulders open,
opening my chest when I do everything.
And that's helped a whole bunch.
I think that's helped with a lot of my,
I've had constant sinus issues since I was little,
just feels like nothing could drain on my head,
has always had so much pressure.
So now that I've started to kind of moving this,
you know, kind of more so know what to do,
but it's kind of the
Where to go now
I was Wondering about symmetry, but actually just the last day of the sale. I purchased it
And I I did I think one day of it just to see kind of how it was, but I guess the main question is is I'm trying to figure out
bands I guess the main question is, is I'm trying to figure out bands, I guess bands suspension or symmetry,
I feel like for me to get started
would be the way to go,
just to try to help get my CNS and everything
kind of more together to then be able to go
and, you know, lift, be able to lift heavy weights,
I guess without hurting,
is where I'm trying to get out.
Aaron, you're going to live in map symmetry and the not the last face for like a year.
And skip the last phase.
Yeah.
I figure.
Okay.
So literally follow map symmetry, follow all the phases, except
for the last one and cycle through it and cycle through it.
And it's going to be at least a year, at least of that kind of
training for you to balance yourself out.
I mean, we're talking about years and years and years
and years.
So you got to unpack.
So yeah, so I've been going,
before I started listening to you guys,
I have a really bad habit,
but I think for me it's a super good habit.
A whole bunch throughout the day,
I'm constantly, like I would sit in my truck,
so I'm in my truck working right now.
But sit here and push, try to like, you know, get everything straightened, push, but also have my
shoulders back. I used to not be able to do it with my left side. It would, I, so I can feel,
I want to say I have a wing scapula on my left side because I can get it to, I guess, click back in.
And I'll do this, like at home, everything.
I'll, you know, get everything, post your right shoulders back.
And I'll do, like, you know, these just to open everything up.
And I'll go through and like, get, like the clipping,
not, I guess, not clipping.
That's not the right word.
But it feels like it's kind of going back into place.
And so I'll do that and kind of do some isometric holds. And so I think that has already helped a whole bunch of been doing that for probably about a year,
year and a half now. Every time I go home and I'm kind of in the living room, I'm doing like
something, you know, to just work on getting my posture open because I mean, I think we should,
I think we should give you help me. Prime pro also. Absolutely. So I think we should, I think we should give you, obviously help me.
Prime pro also.
Yeah, absolutely.
So I think you should live in symmetry, like Sal said,
and sense it,
and your idea of what you're doing,
you're on the right track.
I think we're gonna give you things
that are more specific though.
Like so you're, you're a concept of like doing it
in the top kind of, and being aware of it
and kind of, and doing this all the time.
So I want you to go through Prime Pro and assess all,
and we're obviously mainly focusing
on the upper body stuff with you.
I'm sure you're hips and some of that,
but I would, with what you got going on,
being a baseball player, tennis, all those things,
and so dominant on the right,
I would focus on all the upper body type of Prime Pro exercises.
And a lot of those you can, you can do those,
you know, outside or when you're between jobs
or stopping it against the wall and do some things,
like a lot of those things that you can just
practice.
That is what I do.
Yeah, brother, that's good.
That's good, that's good that you do that.
And so between that and symmetry, you're gonna,
and, you know, we did say stay out of the last phase.
I would allow you if you were my client,
a workout or a week of bilateral stuff,
meaning like the final phase of,
just so you could feel how you're progressing.
Like, oh wow, that, like,
every round that you go through symmetry.
Just moderate intensity.
Yeah, just go do a light round,
or the light week of those exercises,
just to see like, oh wow, this is feeling better or I'm getting better at this.
I think there's some value in just testing so you can see your progress.
And that way it's motivating to like keep coming back and working on it.
I think a good goal for you to like, so yeah, obviously going through symmetry and then
prime pro really addressing like your overall functionality of your shoulder.
Like there's a lot there that you need to teach your shoulder again to be able to function properly
and reconnect to a lot of those muscles to be able to stabilize it and pack it and all
that kind of stuff.
A good goal in terms of throwing one exercise I want you to work on exclusively is the windmill.
And it's going to be insanely difficult on one side.
Oh, that one.
Yeah, it's so just because of everything you're describing.
Yeah, I've started to do that.
So I go to the gym fairly often.
It used to be a 24, and then it turned into a Texans
Fade, and then a EOS.
And so I like to go three to four times a week,
at least I try, I've been so busy lately.
My clean pools and I go coach gymnastics in the evenings.
So when I have time, I like to go,
but I do strictly, like, you know, kind of this stuff,
more like, corrective exercises instead of going in
and like, lifting weights.
But every now and then I'll go in and mainly I'll do some,
if I lift, compound lifts lifts it's some bench press some squats and some
Overhead presses, but really it and it finally clicked honestly like two two days ago. I finally got
Try the best I've ever had my kind of my
I guess range of motion because I feel like my my ribs on my left side is a little bit flared and I'm assuming that's from my
I call it a wing scapula
I don't I'm never actually going to see if that's what it actually is
But so then I'm you know, and I can finally like actually feel like I'm doing like all the exercises the right way
So I know I'm just I'm in the right
There ain't any progression it's I guess figuring out
There's a few there's a few steps here. So well first thing I want to say when you do symmetry
Let your weaker side dictate the weight in the reps. Okay, so always always start with the weaker side
If you're only doing 15 pounds for 10 reps with perfect form on your left
Then that's what you do on the right even though it's easy. And you're going to keep training in symmetry for, like I said, for a year, because what's going to
happen, the steps are better control and connection. That's, you're starting to notice that now.
And then, then the muscle development comes. Okay, so you can have to stay there for a little while,
even if it feels connected. Keep train, because look, we're
trying to undo decades of unilateral or, you know, one, you know, one-sided type of training
or exercise or movement. And then the windmills are good for the QL, like you're mentioning
pain in your right under your, what's called the sacrily act joint. So you can look that
up, SI joint, that's probably where you're feeling it. And I agree with Justin, it's probably has to do with yeah, probably has to do with your QL right your your QL muscle is probably a weakness and instability there
So map symmetry
Live in there. That's it. Don't do anything else for at least a year and you should see significant
All of us will be solved with strength and that's what we're trying to build and develop on that size. You have to exclusively just surrender and be 100% in on working on that
side and that's dictating what your other side does. It's also probably a good
strategy. It's also probably a good strategy to not be doing this in a major cut
or anything and to be more focused on maintenance to a slight surplus because
we're trying to build muscle. You don't want to be on the massive level.
That's another thing too.
I'm not, after I lost, so I guess I lost the hundred and so pounds, not so, not fully
healthy, kind of healthy, but not really healthy.
I would never like trying to lose it, but I started working at Amazon.
Some constantly, you know, delivering packages all day, wasn't eating very much.
And then that actually clipped to, then I would start eating more.
My main go- my my go-to's were like chipotle twice a day.
But now I've actually, I guess, kind of cut down.
I don't know if I'm in a cut, but I've got my protein
actually up.
I've been shedding a whole bunch recently, so I'm down
a whole bunch of body fat already, but now I'm aiming,
I guess I still eat like, intuitively.
I have the creatures I have in the morning,
and then I mainly do ground beef, rice, and veggies,
or steak, veggies veggies and rice.
There's no way for us to have those.
Well, there's no way for us to know.
Are you made?
There's no way for us to know if,
you know, your calories and stuff are just,
you know, based off what you're saying,
but I think what Adam's saying is,
don't try it either.
Yeah, try not to intentionally lose weight
is the goal here.
That's the main thing.
So if you're,
don't try to lose weight or cut.
Just eat the way you are,
hit your protein targets, live in symmetry, the first few phases, skip
the last phase, and by the end of the year you should see a significant improvement.
I mean, the answer is simple.
It's not easy though, because it's going to take some time.
It's tough, but it's going to work.
100% will work as long as you're consistent.
Yeah. And I'm, I guess the other thing too is certain body parts.
I guess I'm not so sure which side is more dominant because through, obviously I'd assume
my right side is, but then I went into quite a bit of a phase where things were scary,
you know, all this equipment to the back guards. So I would switch over to my using kind of my left arm to do it.
But maybe that is I'm assuming why my oblique on my right side is so much more dominant
than my left side because I wasn't using my right hand because then I didn't want to
if it even makes sense.
Don't overthink your left kind of my assumption of why I'm not.
Start with the left. Start with the left oblique, isn't it? Yeah, start with assumption of why I don't know. Start with the left. Start with the left. Oh, bleak, isn't it? Yeah, start with the left. That's
your weaker side. Yep. Yeah. Start with the left. Yeah. Okay. All right. All right.
Okay. Thanks for calling in brother. Appreciate it. Thank you. Thank you. Appreciate it.
You got it, man. Bro, have you guys ever worked with someone? I've had this client a dozen times.
It's super. I mean, he's a great person for the audience
to hear us talk to live because he's an extreme version of what kind of happens to so many
people. You know, he's a very extreme and so it's very obvious. But this is going on
with a lot of clients where they just have a dominant side and they have little nagging
pains here and there they can never figure out. It's just a very.
But for athletes
pictures sports pictures. So I trained I trained a senior in high school to throw 90 miles an hour It was he threw heat. Wow. Never did any strength trainer any balancing and was pitching forever
And I mean you could look at him and see the structure to the point where I think even his bones on his right side
We're thicker and more dense And I had almost exclusively trained,
trained him unilaterally, focusing on the weaker side,
using that to dictate things,
because it was profound.
Well, the hard part is addressing someone,
like if he was like in like 20,
and he's in the middle of playing his sports,
well, that's a different subject.
Yeah, you know, like,
there's start to impact,
because you can't really,
you can't impede on his actual performance because he's
mastered this pattern, right?
And so, yeah.
So for him, he's interested in health and not feeling
pain and being able to carry on with his work, you know,
without being affected too much.
Yeah, it's a good message for parents though with kids who
play sports is, you know, try to balance them out
because if they do the same thing over and over again
Especially a sport where that dominates one side
It results problems later. Yeah, that's why it's it's I mean every world-class coach of talk to is like you know
It in terms of like young kids need to play multiple sports
So it definitely has a way of kind of working that way out our next colors Luke from Michigan look what's happening man?
How can we help you? Hey guys how we doing? Thanks for having me on. Good man. What's that man?
Man, well first off, I've got to say, thanks for all that you guys do. I've been listening for
probably five or six years now. Wow. So I've been listening to you guys a long time. Yeah,
it's crazy. I'm like seeing you guys right here. So yeah, thanks. But yeah, just give you guys a quick background.
Former athlete played a small college over here in Michigan,
ended two years because of too many concussions,
but ended up transferring,
going into pre-physical therapy,
decided to do some training on the side
to paper college all that kind of stuff.
But I've been training ever since.
I ended up taking that as a full-time position.
Or I guess it was a full-time trainer for about six,
seven years, nutrition coach, whole nine yards.
So, you know, helped a lot of people.
I guess my question is, you know, I've tried bulk cuts, the whole nine yards.
Obviously I'm training, I've helped a lot of people, like I know the whole deal with
all of that.
I just can never seem to figure it out for myself.
You know, I'm 27 now. I got a
seven month old, got a new house coming up here. So I know like the stress and everything can add
to that. But right now I'm at 207 probably around 16% body fat. I probably have to say,
and just want to get under 200. if not, you know, 190,
loose some body fat and just kind of get underneath those numbers a little bit.
So I guess that would be, I guess my official question would be, because again,
I've done the calculator.
I've done a couple calculators now where it says about 3000 cows,
you know, Adam, I know that you touch on,
you know, way in the food and whole night
and all that kind of stuff.
So I've weighed the food.
I know what I'm eating and usually I'm not about 27, 28.
I'm still lifting, you know, at least three,
if not five times a week.
I'm usually full body.
And yeah, I just can't, if anything, I'm gaining weight. So just wanted to kind of ask you guys, you know, your opinion on
that.
Yeah. So this is, um, when you get to a certain body fat, 16% 15% is not bad. That's an
athletic body fat percentage. It's a healthy body fat percentage.
Now to start to get below that, genetics aside, right?
Cause some people can maintain the leader of body fat
than others.
But for most guys, when they start to try to get below
around 15, they overshoot or they start to under-shoot.
Okay, so what you need to do is really be consistent
with your tracking.
Cause you gave us an idea, but you need to do is really be consistent with your tracking, because you gave us an idea,
but you need to be really consistent for like two weeks
to get exact numbers, and then literally hit macros
on a regular consistent seven day basis,
and then see what ends up happening,
because my guess is, and this happens very common,
where you'll be like, okay, I'm gonna start eating
a little bit less, I'm gonna eat in this range, and there might be a day or two where you'll be like, okay, I'm gonna start eating a little bit less, I'm gonna eat in this range.
And there might be a day or two where you're the loft
and not realizing how much that makes an impact
on the whole thing.
I mean, a 15% body fat or so,
if you're off for a day or two, you're just gonna maintain.
To get leaner at this point,
you gotta be very consistent with the calories.
So do you know that the story you're sharing,
it's actually almost identical, like,
except for, let's see here, how much,
how much you weigh right now?
You're about 207.
Okay, so you're a little bit thicker than I was,
but right around this time is about 25
when it happened for me.
I had this exact issue,
and I've told the story on the podcast before, where I could not wrap my brain around,
why can't I get like, and I literally,
this is actually what drove me to using steroids
because at that point in my life and career,
I really thought this has to be the only difference
between me and those covers of magazines
because I got all the...
I have to eat it.
That's crossed my mind.
Well, I mean, I'm gonna go that far, but do you think?
I mean, that's totally what I thought.
I really believed at that time that all these guys on covers of magazines, the only difference
between them and me is they've taken steroids.
I haven't taken steroids.
And so it's got to be that.
What happened though was this is around the time when the body bug came out and it was
a tracker.
So I was now getting back feedback data, day to day, every
single day consistently. And it really blew my mind. The difference of my calorie expenditure
and my calorie intake on my off days compared to workers as a trainer, you know, you're pretty
damn active. You're lifting, you know, barbells, dumbbells all day, helping clients, you're
moving. Man, my my calorie burn on work days versus my off days,
well, there was a massive discrepancy.
And I in my head, I'm like, I'm 95% dialed on my diet and training.
Why am I not seeing it?
But what I thought was like a 5% was a much bigger number than I realized
until I started to track that diligently.
And then the next thing to South's point,
then it was really about stringing consistency together
of like, okay, now I have a better understanding of,
I was not burning as much.
And if I was falling off the diet
or not being perfect on that one or two days,
it was like the worst day I could do it.
And it would make up the difference.
And it would be just enough to keep me at that 15 to 17 percent. Like I could stay again like you healthy, healthy, finish, but I couldn't get shredded. I
couldn't get jacked looking and it was like driving me crazy. And it was I had never
figured out to that level like, oh my god, this is what every day looks like consistently for me.
And then it was literally about stringing days together. I've told this story too, like something that worked for me was,
okay, I'm gonna have as many perfect days of eating in a row.
And then let's say,
I strung nine of those together
and then I had a little mishap
where I was off a little bit.
Okay, start over.
Now the new goal is can I get 10 or more days
and then I got to 13 fell off.
So, and then I just kept doing that until I could say,
hey, I just strong three months of perfection.
And of course, that's when I started to see myself get
leaner and leaner and leaner and more shredded.
And then I had the tools.
And then I figured out, okay, now I know how to do this.
Just to give you an example, Luke,
like let's say you're at a calorie deficit
Monday through Friday of 300 calories, okay?
You're very consistent.
You brought your meals to work.
You're eating the same thing.
300 calorie deficit Monday through Friday and then Saturday and Sunday, you know, you're
a little looser.
You try to pay attention to your protein, but you're not really tracking anything.
Very, very easily, very easily got your size.
Could go 700 to 800 calories above maintenance.
Easy, super easy.
The point where you won't even notice
unless you're tracking.
Well, now what you're at is zero for the week.
You literally just made up the difference.
And what will happen is you'll maintain.
And for most people, most guys, if they're healthy
and fit and they strengthen training
and they don't eat terribly and they eat good protein
and they generally avoid heavily processed foods.
They're going to naturally, which is what's happening to you, sit at around 15%.
That's a great place to be to maintain, live your life. You're probably enjoying your life.
You're still consistent with your workouts. You eat mostly healthy. You do your job.
It's not a big deal. But now you want to drop down another 4% or 5%,
you want to get a 6% pack, get down to 10%.
It's a lot harder than a lot of people realize, not necessarily the steps, but the consistency.
10% body fat, which is probably what you're aiming for, where you see your abs and you
have a 6 pack or whatever.
10% body fat is seven days a week consistent, which is this.
It's literally one day, it's probably one day a month where you're off to be at 10% to maintain that
That's this for most people. So that's that's probably what's happening
You also mentioned you had some gut stuff some gut issue stuff going on. Yeah, yeah, I wanted to touch on that too
But before I get to that I I feel like I have honestly been pretty consistent like even throughout the weekend
You know, I don't drink anymore.
I'm still tracking on the weekend, eating clean, rice,
quinoa, sweet potatoes, you know, meat, whole nine yards.
And now granted, again, probably to your eyes point,
you know, or to the south where you just said,
you know, it takes kind of that one day, right?
And obviously, you know, life hits and we all kind of have that one day.
So yeah, I could probably clean up in that area.
But yeah, to go back to the gut stuff, man, I've been, you know, I found out, and this is from a previous episode that you guys did.
You're macro, I think it was actually the macro masterclass where you have to figure out kind of what
works for your body.
And I know for me, if I load up on carbs, like if I'm trying to do like, you know, super
heavy lifts or whatever, and I want to, man, does it pay?
Now I have done seed.
I've been seeding now for probably three, four months.
And I actually just started doing AG1. I heard that
on Cuberman's podcast. So I've been doing that kind of at night just to get
some of those greens in as well. And that's helped. I just I was curious to see
especially listening to Dr. Cobraa's podcast as well to see if that has to do
with with any sort of like body fat loss or anything like that as well, to see if that has to do with any sort of like body fat loss or anything like that
as well, like anything is off in that regard.
Yeah, I don't make it harder for you.
You're not going to simulate the same.
You'll be a little more inflamed.
Think about this too.
Maybe we have that one day here and there off, then you're in your deficit, but sometimes
you're in too much of a deficit in relation to how much stress you have in your life.
So even when you lose three to five pounds in the scale,
you lose a ratio of 50-50.
You lose just as much muscle as you lose fat
so the body fat percentage doesn't really change for you.
And you add in the fact that maybe I have some
underlining gut issues that are going on
and so that just compounds the stress issue.
So then when my body should be building muscle,
it's not, it's being prioritized to trying to heal and fix what's going on in my gut. So it could
literally be just a handful of these little things that are compounding enough to just keep
you from getting to that next level because we got to keep in mind. Again, you're in this
kind of healthy place, but also know what it's like to be here, but want more. I want
to get to the next level. What is it? And it could be these little things.
It's like when you cut, you cut too much and it's too much stress and you're losing as much
muscles fat. When you, when you over consume, you weigh over consume and it's enough to cancel your
deficit out. You have underlining little gut issues that are going on and so you add that with
having a kid and building a house and work life. And so then your body's not recovering the way it should.
So then when you're in a surplus and trying to build muscle,
it's not building it like it should.
And so you could have a whole bunch of little things
that are just keeping you from breaking through
to that next level.
And that's really, really good.
What does your training look like these days?
Like what are you doing for weight training?
Yeah, so I never, guys, I never got into like the bros splits,
like just day and back day and all that kind of stuff.
I I pretty much started doing full body from day one.
So typically how I like to split it up is, um, you know, full body push,
I'm like day one where it's maybe more of an upper body focus. That's where I'm hitting
You know shoulder press bench press and maybe like some lunges and then next day would be full body pulled
Kind of more of a leg focus from hitting my deadlifts, but maybe I'm doing
You know some pullovers or something as an accessory.
And then Wednesday is more of like a mobility,
honestly, probably skip day, let my body recover.
Third day is then my full body push again,
but maybe a little bit more leg heavy again,
where it squats and you know, things of that nature
and then you know, some dumbbell work for the upper body.
And then Friday would be my full body pull, upper
where I'm doing my pull ups, things of that nature.
So I feel like I'm hitting everything throughout the week,
but that's kind of another thing.
I got so desperate, well actually,
so I'm not trained anymore.
I'm in MedSales now, so my steps are non-existent anymore. So that's kind of where I went from
like that 3,000 to like maybe like that 2700, trying to aim for that every day. But I got pretty
desperate. Well, I kind of got everybody else like when I talk to my clients, it's like,
hey, you know, just come train with me. I'll just tell you what to do. You know, it's that easy use,
right? And so one of my buddies I play football with, he was a coach at a CrossFit gym down the
road. So I'm like, dude, you guys are shredding. I'm sending it, screw it. I take CrossFit for like
but I did crossfit for like nine months. And I tell you what, that beat me up.
I have never been so sore and in pain
my entire life.
So honestly, these are the say,
ever since we got the house, we moved.
I got my gym in there an hour or getting there.
I'll build it here soon.
And yeah, I'll probably start doing my gym workouts again
and maybe going there for like an aerobic day.
I got a punch card or something, so we'll do that.
Yeah, I don't think your workouts are the issue.
I think the workouts are probably fine.
When you said about eating carbs and how you pay for it
with your gastro issues, that's a huge.
Yeah, that's a sign of some dysbiosis.
I would definitely, if I were you,
I would work with a functional medicine practitioner
and treat the underlying root issue with your gut
because seed is a really good probiotic.
That'll only help so much.
Age you one will only help so much.
But if there's a dysbiosis going on, if there's an overgrowth that's happening, they'll help
they'll help with the symptoms, but they often don't really solve the
problem. You might need to go on a SIBO protocol or something like that to
to kind of reset and then go and rebuild the and repopulate the guy and heal
the gut from that standpoint. But I would work with a functional medicine
practitioner.
Luke, are you still training clients? Are you still training clients? I got two clients I trained
in the morning. I've been training them for five, six years. I only ask because I didn't know how
much you're still pursuing training people or if you ever have a desire to rebuild or focus on that
being a full-time career because there's a lot of value
in going through Dr. Cabral's certification.
And actually, you can figure out your own stuff
and then at the same time, that's going to give you knowledge.
And then this type of stuff, I think of like,
corrective exercise and knowledge around, like, gut,
like what you would get with Cabral, probably has to be two of the
most powerful things that a coach or a trainer could have in the tool belt to help clients because
so many clients suffer from those two things. So worthwhile investment just from that perspective.
Yeah, I will say like my mobility and my corrective exercise part of things probably ain't the greatest.
I mean, even with like full range of motion, everything, but I feel like CrossFit did a number on me.
Like my shoulders, dude, and my knees, my back,
has like, I've never had back issues.
And then all of a sudden, I walk in,
and it's one rat max deadlift day.
And I'm like, they're like, oh, what are you gonna do?
Oh, vice-price.
I don't know.
405, who knows? They're like, no, what are you gonna do? I'm like, I don't know. 405, who knows?
They're like, no, you're gonna go more than that.
Ended up ripping.
Ended up ripping 420 for 3.
And yeah, I couldn't feel my back for two weeks. I honestly thought I had to polish this.
I'm not even kidding.
Perfect form by the way, boys.
So,
If only somebody worked me that way. Perfect form by the way boys. So, if only somebody were, yeah, that was,
yeah, fully there were signs.
But fully there were, yeah, some warning
from some podcast.
Yeah, right.
We just talked.
No, I would focus, I would focus number one on the gut.
That's, that's gonna be the priority.
And then number two, be very consistent, like,
every seven days a week, you know, with your tracking.
But I'll be honest with you Luke, I think you gotta work on your gut stuff and just be, look, you're at, you know, with your tracking. But I'll be honest with you, Luke, I think you got to work on your gut stuff.
And just be, look, you're at, you know, 15, 16%.
You're good.
You're good.
And honestly, trying to cut with an underlying gut issue
is gonna be really, it's gonna be a pain the butt,
no pun intended, it's gonna be tough.
So I would, I'll do the, I would do the gut health testing.
Start with that.
It'll make the cut or the bulk or whatever you decide to do later,
a lot easier if you address that.
You're not in lock a whole lot for you.
I mean, I'm going to do that right now.
If you're not in our holistic health forum on Facebook,
you need to be in there because that's where we have Dr. Cabral
and his team.
If you're in there now, that's great.
And see if you can work with them.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, it's free.
Get in there.
Get in there for sure because then you can ask questions. And if you think work with them. Oh yeah, I'm not. Yeah, it's free. Get in there. It's free.
Get in there for sure,
because then you can ask questions.
And if you think you have SIBO,
I don't recommend this.
I think you should always test,
but if you think you do,
there's really effective over the counterways
of treating it.
You know, it used to be done with just antibiotics,
but they've done a lot of studies now
on natural antimicrobials,
and there's different formulas out there
that have been shown in studies to be as effective as antibiotics. I think they're more effective
though because they also work on fungulum you know any fungal overgrowth or
anything like that whereas antibiotics can actually cause that to be worse so
but definitely get in that form Luke. Okay yeah we'll do. Do you guys think the
macros are good to about 2700? That's so good. That seems like it's your maintenance
if that's where you're keeping it.
And you know, like I said, what I would do
if I were you is I would look at my gut,
address that, then when I'm done with addressing that,
I would do a slow reverse diet, really slow,
which will probably get you a little leaner
if everything's working out well, even on its own.
And then once I got up to, let's say, 32,
3,300 calories, that's just where I tend to stop,
then I would do a cut from there.
I like that.
Sweet. Yeah. Yeah.
Sounds good boys. Thank you.
You got it. Thanks for calling in brother.
All right. Thanks for having me.
Appreciate it. Yeah.
With the with the gut being off, it does make things.
I mean, for me, yeah.
And when mine was so mine, we get real off.
So I wasn't like when mine is off.
It's not like I'm just talking like this guy.
No, I think it's a lot of it's like off.
Yeah, it makes it, you think he pounds
a lean body mass for me at least.
Well, yeah, just keep factor in the things I was saying.
Like he could have like, he when he does do his deficit
that he says like thousand calorie,
he could be cutting too hard with the relative
to the amount of training and stress
that he has in his life.
So his body's not responding the way it should be from it.
The days that he does kind of fall off the wagon,
he over consumes calories enough,
maybe even under eats protein,
like what happened to me all the time.
And so then that's enough to cancel out his deficit,
add in the fact that he might be also battling
some gut issues.
So then it's just adding to that stress level,
body's not recovering the weight,
should be not building muscle the weight, should be. And so you could literally
be perfect in all these other things and have those three things off a little bit. And
that's enough to, it's enough to, you know, keep him at this body fat range, which is
not a bad place to be.
Oh, it's a athletic range. Look, I want to be very clear. If you hit your protein targets,
avoid heavily processed foods and lift weights or do some kind of strength training nothing crazy
But something consistently you're gonna naturally fall in a nice healthy body fat percentage
But you probably won't get shredded. You're probably not gonna have a six-pack
That's gonna take all kinds of levers being perfect that takes tracking and that takes very very good consistency
No, most people don't walk around
Doing the other things I just said
and then get down to 10.
Some people do, but most people won't.
Can not stress the consistency thing.
It's a slow-ass process.
It's a very slow process to drop body fat.
Dropping weight, this is why the whole thing
is such a bad representation of the biggest loser
and she'll get 10 pounds in these these people make these radical body transformations. It's like,
it's such a terrible representation of what it should look like. It's a very slow gradual process
that takes a lot of consistency to get down to the end. By the way, as you, it doesn't get easier,
it gets harder. The leaner you get,
you mess up just a little bit.
The less room for air you have.
You remember being in, when you're in single-digit body fat?
You have like one meal.
One day could mess up my body fat percentage.
That's what, like people don't understand,
when you're hovering around four, five percent body fat,
a day, one day of overeating,
and everything else perfection
could put me up now to seven percent body fat.
Like that's how crazy.
Well, here's what, here's the, here's the math.
If you're 200 pounds and you're at 5% body fat, that means you have what, what is that?
10 pounds of body fat on your body?
Is that what that is?
10 pounds.
Go up a pound of body fat.
It's going to register in body fat percentage.
Yeah.
It makes a big impact.
That's what I mean.
That's why it's like, so as it gets, as you get lower, the discipline and the consistency just gets greater.
Now, what gets easier over time is one,
if you've built a lot of muscle,
the body responds, it gets it back to,
when you've done this enough times
where you've gotten down to that,
like you start to figure out,
like, oh, these are the levers I pull from my body.
Because that's where we're all so unique.
Like, he may be missing on the stressing.
It could be a big thing for him.
It's like, oh, fuck, you know what?
I was training too many days.
I scale back to three days a week.
I focused on a more recovery stuff.
Didn't do such a hard cut.
Boom, his body, you have to figure that out.
Once you figure that out, what gets easier is knowing what the answer is.
Still takes that same consistency though.
Totally.
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