Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2219: What to Do When Body Fat Doesn’t Drop Even When Cutting Calories, How to Break a Squat Plateau, Ways to Fix an Anterior Pelvic Tilt & More (Listener Live Coaching)
Episode Date: December 2, 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: Why... Big Food wants you to eat less protein. (1:53) Why is Sal cutting ALL artificial sweeteners? (13:42) Justin’s Christmas tree fiasco. (16:36) The Di Stefano’s chaotic family gathering. (28:48) Changing traditions. (41:22) Inflation is still here. (46:05) Justin’s hamstring snafu. (53:42) Shout out to Mind Pump’s Cyber Monday Special! (59:02) #ListenerLive question #1 - For someone who works out early in the morning, is it better to feed your body the day before with the higher calories, or better to feed after your workout? (1:00:08) #ListenerLive question #2 - Any advice on how to fix my anterior pelvic tilt? (1:09:01) #ListenerLive question #3 - Suggestions for ways to bust through a plateau on a specific lift? (1:17:38) #ListenerLive question #4 – An update with a former live caller, Rachel Laber (Ep. 2106), and her online coach, Christina Hathaway. (1:25:32) Related Links/Products Mentioned CYBER MONDAY SPECIAL: ALL MAPS Fitness Products & Bundles 60% off! **Promo code CYBERMONDAY at checkout** (Code expires Friday, Dec. 1st) Ask a question to Mind Pump, live! Email: live@mindpumpmedia.com Visit Paleo Valley for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! ** LAST DAY for Black Friday/Cyber Monday deals! Up to 35% OFF + FREE GIFT! ** Visit Vuori Clothing for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Calgon Bath Powder Commercial--"Calgon, Take Me Away!" (1978) Visit ZBiotics for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! ** Promo code MINDPUMP23 at checkout for 15% off your first order! ** McDonald’s Prices Mind Pump #2125: Heal Like Wolverine: BPC 157 With Dr. William Seeds Visit Entera Skincare for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! ** Promo code MPM at checkout for 10% off their order or 10% off their first month of a subscribe-and-save. ** How to Undulate Your Calories for Faster Weight Loss & an Improved Metabolism – Mind Pump TV Mind Pump #2160: Macro Counting Master Class Mind Pump #1952: How To Bulk The Right Way FIX LOWER BACK PAIN By Deactivating Your Hip Flexors! | Mind Pump How To Do A Barbell Hip Thrust The RIGHT Way! (FIX THIS!!!) The Active Plank- An 6-Pack Building Powerhouse - YouTube Mind Pump #1630: Ten Ways To Break Through A Plateau How to Break Through a Squat Plateau – Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump #2106: How Gaining Weight Can Help You Get Leaner, What To Do If Your Gym Gains Have Stalled, Ways To Overcome An Unhealthy Relationship With Exercise & More (Listener Live Coaching) Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Christina Hathaway (@mindsetofmattercoaching) Instagram
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mind, pop, mind, pop with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the most downloaded Fitness Health and Entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump right real quick, Cyber Monday Now.
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going on right now, this promotion ends December 1st.
Okay, so it's Cyber Monday.
So here's what you gotta do.
You go to mapsfitinistproducts.com
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All right, in today's episode, we answered live,
callers, questions, but this was after an intro portion. Today was 58 minutes long.
That's what we talk about like current events, family life, studies, and much more.
If you want to skip around to your favorite parts, check the show notes for
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All right, here comes the show. If you're wondering why there's so much anti-protein propaganda
out there, well, here's maybe an explanation. Protein is not very profitable. It's expensive to produce.
In fact, food manufacturers love carbs and fats.
They can often make lots of processed foods with those things that are hyperpalatable.
They make you eat more.
That's right.
Protein is satiety producing.
In other words, food manufacturers know protein makes them less money.
So maybe there is a motivation.
Just to why they seem to be demonizing this essential
macronutrient.
Do you know to that point, this is also why,
like certain protein powders and foods
that are higher in protein tend to be more expensive.
It used to be a work one of the things
I used to get so frustrated trying to explain
to somebody who would be like,
that's so expensive for protein powder.
That's ridiculous.
It's like you can't compare a 15 gram of protein
that you can get at CVS to a 50 gram way protein
that you get and be like, oh, it's half the price.
Yeah, it's less than half the protein.
That's what you're paying for.
I mean, that is the most expensive part of the protein powder
is the actual way protein that's in there, or whatever source you're paying for. I mean, that is the most expensive part of the protein powder is the
actual way protein that's in there or whatever source you're using.
Protein is just, if you were to look at the three macronutrients, right? Proteins, fats,
and carbs, it's the least palatable by far. Go to any grocery store and get a legit
high protein food, process food, even. It's not going to be as tasty or engaging or
addicting as foods that are high in carbohydrates fats and of course they'll
throw salt in there, right? So it's just not as enticing. Number two, the margins
aren't very good. Lots of, obviously most of the proteins come from animal
sources. Now there are plant sources as well, but the majority come from animal sources. They're not patented. Till today, we don't have GMO cows that are
patented that we can, you know, crush the margins on. So it's low margin. It makes it eat less.
Like it makes no sense for them to invest in this. In fact, it makes a lot of sense to
move people away from protein. And by the way, for people who are like,
why would they do that?
That's too conspiratorial or whatever.
Right now, food manufacturers are literally meeting
to discuss the rise of peptides that make people eat less
like some of the foodtides.
They literally are meeting and they're like,
we got to figure this out because people are at least less food.
We're losing people.
Yeah, you're talking about billions and billions of dollars
and carbohydrates, high margins, fats, very high, not all fats, but a lot of fats
are, right?
Because you could produce, you know, oils and have just incredible margins on those.
And again, when you look at like classic palatability, of course, processed foods includes
lots of chemicals, and they hijack this and really just turbocharges these Frankenstein
foods.
But the classic formula for palatability, every chef will tell you is salt, sugar, and fat, right?
So salt, carbohydrates, and fats.
Protein is not on there.
Add protein to anything and you reduce its palatability, increase the satiability, meaning
you'll eat less of it.
And of course, now we can go even further and say,
fit healthy people and then don't like that.
You know, type of deal.
I don't even think it goes that far.
I think they're just like, look at our profits.
People eat less of it.
Let's, yeah, let's not, let's not glorify protein
or let's downplay it a little bit.
So people eat more of the substance.
In order to make profits, they got to reduce substantially
the quality and like where they're sourcing
and getting the protein from it.
I was like reminded of this when I was in Palm Desert, my kids were in sports basement, I believe.
They have all the regular stuff, and then they have protein that's there.
I wonder what kind of protein they're going to have in a place like this.
Of course, it's like a company
that I thought didn't exist anymore.
Like it's basically shreds that convert over
to like Ryzen or whatever.
Oh, Ryzen.
And so you see all these like flashy colors
and you see like Jolly Rancher flavors and ghosts
and like, you know, the prime and all these things.
Like all the stuff that the kids are like really attracted to
and like trying to describe to them
why you're probably not even gonna get very much protein
or this if anything and you're just gonna get
a bunch of carbon sugar and fillers and all this other crap.
And so it's not even worth your time
because they're really interested in right now
and consuming protein and building muscle and all that.
And this is like what is still out there
is just like a total shitshow.
Yeah, totally.
That's crazy.
Yeah, it's, when it comes to protein,
we know what it does for the,
well, here's the angle that I like to go with, right?
So when you look at palatability in satiety,
satiety refers to the feeling of being full. I don't want any more.
Palatability is how enjoyable something is to eat. And both of those are, we evolved to
develop satiety reading, I don't know, signals or systems in the body, we evolved to develop palatability to kind of drive us in our behaviors.
This is the main theory as to why some foods
produce more satiety, why some things are more palatable.
So for most of human history, obviously,
we didn't have heavily processed foods.
And for most of human history, we didn't even farm.
We didn't have agriculture.
We were hunter-gatherers.
So why would protein, number one, be the most satiety producing second being fat, but
why protein, right?
Because if you ate a lot of protein in nature, you probably consumed a lot of nutrients.
So your body didn't need to keep the hunger signal on, right?
If you're eating lots of carbs, carbohydrates in nature, you're getting some nutrients,
but not a lot.
So your body cranks up hunger and keeps it there to keep you searching
from more food.
Natural protein-containing foods tend to be very high in nutrients and those tend to be
Sass wise your needs for nutrients. I mean again, this is not ideal
but if you had to eat just one food and be okay, not ideal, but just be okay, not die.
It would be animal.
It would be literally just buffalo or cow or gazelle,
those do you know available food source we got?
Or just fish, right?
So this is why that exists in the body.
In protein, people know this.
One of the tricks that we all learned as trainers,
it took me a long time to learn this.
If I wanted to get my clients to eat less, all I had to do was get them to do two things,
avoid heavily processed foods, hit the protein targets.
It was so effective, in fact, so effective that the vast majority of my clients, when
they would actually do this, would come back to me and they would almost all of them,
like clockwork would say the same thing.
I can't eat this much.
They would literally come to me and be like,
I know you're telling me to eat 130 grams of protein.
I'm trying to lose weight.
I just can't eat that much.
I feel like I'm stuffing myself.
I'm going to gain weight.
I'm like, no, you're not.
You're actually eating less calories
and sure enough they would all lose weight.
That's how powerful it is on the appetite.
If you've never tried to eat your body weight in protein
and grams of protein or target body weight
if you're overweight, try it, do it consistently,
see if you can do it for more than two weeks.
And I guarantee what you'll find when you prioritize it,
you just can't eat as much, just period, end of story.
It just kills your appetite.
Food companies don't want people to eat less.
Why would any market want you to consume less of their product?
That doesn't make it counter business, that doesn't make any sense, they're going to
make less money.
They want you to consume more.
They also like margins.
Look at the margins.
By the way, it's just true for all-whole natural foods.
All-whole natural foods have a tiny margin compared to processed foods.
Because I can grow a bunch of things
Sell those things tiny margins or I can put them all together
Make you know, you know, you know, just in frudios or something like that, right?
Delicious and I can slam the more I can I can raise the margins and I can patent it. It's my product nobody could copy me and
There's there's the money. So the
incentives, I think it's more clear, I think there's a better way to say it. The incentives are not
to promote the consumption of protein, even though all the data, all the data shows a diet that's
I am protein is better for muscle, it's better for fat loss, and as a result, better for your health.
You know, speaking of margins or any of you familiar, maybe Doug
is a question for Doug to look up, because I'm not familiar,
with the difference in the margins for all the different types of
proteins, so like if we were to compare a way to beef, to
pea protein, to...
The question.
Like, because when you think of it, when you see protein on
the market, it is, you know, if it's got third-party testing in it,
it's relatively similar in price, right?
Give or take, they're pretty competitive.
So I'm curious to which is the cheapest to process.
There's got to be one that's easier than the other.
So I would assume way has got to be,
have the smallest margins,
because there's the greatest supply,
most protein powders, if's the majority right or way.
Yeah.
It used to be, by the way, I don't know if you guys remember this, do you remember when
the first way protein powders were sold?
You should be thrown away, was it?
Well, way was thrown away from, like, from derries because it was in his desirable, but
then way protein became popular.
It was designer way was one of the first companies, I remember this.
And this is back in, I want to say mid 90s.
So 95.
I was like, yeah, stays.
Like when I started getting into it.
Oh, okay.
So a little later.
Yeah.
So I might have been 95.
Maybe that can look up.
It's a walled for sure.
It was 96, 97, 98, because I worked in the factory that mixed it.
That's right.
That's right.
So that was in high school.
Maybe Doug, you could look up designer way,
when designer way was founded,
but I remember it was like one of the first,
it was like the first kind of like big protein,
like way protein powder to hit the market before that.
It was like egg protein or just like milk, isolate,
and then add some soy.
That was the big way, right?
And then they made, you know,
ways the best, adjust the fastest, et cetera, et cetera.
It's like, okay, so 1988, ways the best that just the fastest, et cetera, et cetera.
1988. Okay. So 1988. So I remember mid 90s starting in popular. And it was expensive. I don't
know how big of a canister this is, but it's like 50 bucks. It's like, it was like the
tube can. So it wasn't even a big jug with like 40 servings. It was like 20 servings of
20 grams of protein per serving. Yeah. And it was in the mid 90s. It's like 50 bucks. Yeah, it was close to 50 bucks.
Yeah, I remember.
In the mid 90s, you could buy a bag of way
for like 50 bucks now.
Yeah.
So they have to, the margins have to be tiny now, right?
And then the question would be how does that compare
to like P and B and all the other way?
I think B would be one of the more expensive ones
I would think.
Probably.
I would think so.
I would think P would be.
I looked it up, but I couldn't find anything.
Oh, you couldn't find anything now.
I would think that vegetable would be like from P, peas and so that would be way cheaper, no?
Well, back in the day, when my dad would buy protein powders, milk,
isolate, or milk protein was a cheapest. And then the expensive one was egg.
I remember that. Egg was always a little bit more expensive.
They used to sell those back in the day.
Yeah, a lot of companies will actually break even
or take a loss on the way.
To bring you in.
Yeah, to bring you in and get you to,
because it's so competitive,
there's so many different companies
that provide all the different protein powders
that they'll take a hit or break.
Very similar to the Costco strategy with chicken, right?
It's like, we'll take a loss on the chicken
to get everybody in here, buying that,
because we know that they're not gonna come all the way to Costco
and just buy a chicken and then leave.
They're gonna buy much other stuff.
So I think the same concept with supplement companies.
The winners do that, right?
With movie tickets.
They don't have huge margins on movie tickets.
Oh yeah, they make it on the concession.
Yeah, for sure.
That's why I beg of popcorn so expensive.
You have to, speaking by the way, speaking of protein powders,
I've identified this with myself.
I want to communicate this to you guys
because you guys are both working with your gut health.
So I identified this for myself and I looked it up
and it's confirmed in some studies.
Artificial sweeteners for people with gut issues,
they tend to trigger symptoms.
So I went off all artificial sweeteners last week and I had significant improvements.
The past couple days I reintroduced them, sure enough I'm having issues.
So it's not food intolerance stuff, it's literally sucralose aspartame or other artificial
sweeteners.
Interesting.
Yeah, so we're I'm ready to cut, yeah, cut it off anyway, too.
Even with some energy drinks that have them in there.
Yes.
Like, dude, it adds up.
I'm sure that's going to contribute. It's a pretty sure.
It is for me, because I went on and off and then I looked it up.
What were some of your biggest offenders?
You're pretty good about that type of stuff.
What were your offenders?
So if I get...
They know Justin and I, we're guilty of the energy.
Yeah, we're guilty of the energy.
Energy drinks, sometimes number one, those are addicting.
And they're obviously the taste good and they're fun.
So energy drinks.
And then the occasional, if I'm out and about protein bar or something like that,
because they'll try and make protein bars low carb.
Yeah, that's all what you mean.
You're not consistently doing any of that stuff.
No, the energy drinks is the most consistent.
But even just one or two I noticed, what kind of bother me?
I couldn't figure out what was going on.
I thought was it just this process?
So I'm just sticking to my paleovali protein because that's no artificial sweeteners
and it's collagen protein, which is good for your gut. And no, I'm just going to go caffeine pills.
No more, no more. Yeah, I go kind of do that like them. Yeah, weird phases where I'm like
switching the caffeine source and so like it's been heavy on the energy drinks side.
I've been going back to like Nitro and, you know,
just pure black coffee, just to get back on in that mode.
Were you okay with beans on your intolerance test?
Not, well, there was like two different kinds of beans.
I was okay with the rest of them were like not on the list.
And then all of the nuts were like pretty much you know
because some people have been in tolerance and just let's just take all the
love away from my life. If Jesus coffee or I'm over it. At that point I just deal
with it. Yeah just deal with the crazy shit. Just get in there and just like staple stuff
to get on your effort.
I just, this is just who I am.
You accept me.
I come, there's not a, like there should be a movement.
I get how there's a movement for every damn thing now.
There should be a movement like bad gut health like a kid.
This is who I am.
Yeah, we should have marked it.
I'm gonna do it in a flag.
Yeah.
I think most people are just still unaware.
I mean, I think most people are just oblivious to any of their issues like that.
There is. I agree with you.
When you talk to people, so many people I've got issues.
Oh yeah, it's just don't even know.
Walk around, blow it and shit all the time.
How is Thanksgiving for you guys?
Oh, well, whatever one did just well.
I'll lose it.
Let's do this one. Kind of crazy.
Well, I mean, there's always like family stuff that's,
it causes like chaos a bit.
And then we kind of ride it out, have fun
and make them the most of it.
But like, one, so when we went after Thanksgiving,
we always cut the Christmas tree.
And so this is like kind of, you know, the most chaotic day
we've had as we've all been gone into our vacations.
But we went to go, just, I thought, hey, I'm gonna bring
the dogs because I haven't got them out of the house a lot
and they've been kind of sitting in there all
like depressed.
So I'll take them with me.
And so we kind of went to our usual spot
and actually ran into somebody that, like, listens to the show there and it was cool
Outcut in the tree. Outcut in the tree was totally random
You know, and I was like oh cool
And we started kind of walking in a different path. We haven't done before and
my
Weiner dog is like really low to the ground and just kind of like
You know dog is like really low to the ground and just kind of like, you know,
let me explore as everywhere goes through all the stuff in the holes. Apparently,
um, Courtney, like, she all of a sudden like had this like reaction was like,
oh, oh, something's biting me. And it's like something, it really hurts. And I need
you to look at it. And I'm like, oh, God, what, what's going on? Like, what is it?
Like, what do you think it is?
Like, I don't know, it could be like a spider,
it could be like a bee, it could be like an ant,
I don't know what kind of insect, something just bit me.
And like, you need to take a look at this.
And I'm like, okay, I'll take a look at it.
And, but we have to go over here,
because like, everybody around there's like,
kind of walking through and like trying to pick a tree
and stuff, and so it's hard to like find privacy.
And so it was in a very precarious spot. I was trying to flirt with you.
I was hoping.
Yeah.
Look at this.
Real good.
Was not the case.
Okay.
So definitely look like it because she had to take her pants like all the way off.
Oh.
And to wear it for a second.
Yeah.
It was like on like, you know, anyways, I won't reveal everything.
It was very keep going.
It was very, you know, in a sense of spot.
And so it's just like, you need to look at this
and make sure there's no like two like prong marks,
like, you know, it's not like a black widow
or like a brown rec loose or something crazy.
And I look and there's definitely like a sting mark
and it's puffing up and everything,
and I'm like, oh no, you got stung by something.
I don't know what.
What?
You know, because sometimes you'll be able to see
like the insect, the red or roll kind of like,
yeah, fall out, and so like, oh shit,
we need to take your pants off,
and say, can't take my pants off here, you know?
And so we're like, okay, well, let's go back to the truck,
and so we go back to the truck,
and take your pants off, and so we're in there, and there's people like, you, well, let's go back to the truck. And so we go back to the truck and take your pants off.
And so we're in there.
And there's people like, you know, with Coco and their kids
and they're all like walking around us.
And like, I'm like hiding and shooting.
And she's like, this, you know, in the truck
and I'm like examining, taking pictures.
And I'm like, trying to reference it, dude,
cause I don't know what insect this is.
You know, I'm like, I was worried. Like, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, normally't know what insect this is. You know, I'm like, I was worried.
I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like,
I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like,
I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like,
I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like,
I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, then is really resonating. And then like we went with the cousins and the rest of the family and everything.
And so they all of a sudden come kind of rushing back
and with the dogs and everything.
And one of the kids got like stung by a yellow jacket.
And so turns out there was a nest over there.
Oh.
And so and we know that they all got pissed off because Finn like like got them
all crazy because I think he he shoved his face in one of them because now you see Finn
his face is you got stuck all over his face. He's got like, and then he started to go
in high and he's got like bumps all over his body. And so, this is a before we even cut our treat, you know?
And so, like, they're all held in a giant,
I can't believe it.
Yeah, how did it be, get her vagina, bro?
Like through, like, it was into the vagina.
Oh, okay, you were.
Close to the vagina.
Okay, so we're interthought.
Sorry, Courtney, sorry.
Yeah, it's okay.
What you, you were probably,
it was like, you were hinting at it,
but it was like, it was like, it was like the butt, you think butt, if you're like, here? Yeah, it was like with him. He was like, he were hinting at you. But it was like, he was like the butt,
he'd think butt, if you're like here.
Yeah, it was like here.
Oh wow.
I don't know, like we have no idea.
Like if it was like through the pants,
can they do that?
Like I don't know.
Jeans, was she wearing jeans?
She was, but they're kind of like stretchy.
So I don't know if that like made a difference.
But it was, I had no idea like how this happened
or whatever,
just flew there. It just, it just penetrated and infiltrated. Yeah. Oh, it could have gone through
the pants if they were tight. I think so. Okay. I think that's probably what happened. But,
but either way, like my niece, she, she got bit two. And so they were kind of like tending to their
wounds. And we're like, well, we're here. We got to make the most of it. So we got to go cut the tree.
So I went with the kids and everybody to go, you know, cut our tree down, do our thing
and then like have Coco and them.
I'm, we finished it up and I'm kind of driving out to pay for it.
And they have tamales and all this stuff there.
And so I'm actually, I'm going to take the dogs home.
You guys go to my in-laws,
and then they were gonna have lunch and all that.
And so I basically have the dogs by myself and my truck,
and I'm getting out to pay this lady.
She's like, oh, he's cute, whatever.
And then Finn jumps up in his face and just,
she's like, oh my God, what happened to your dog?
He got stung by these yellow jacks.
Oh, I got Benadrill, she goes and gets Benadrill for him.
And they fully, but then like Finn just loses it,
pukes everywhere in the back seat.
Oh my god.
Arlo stops all in it, stops all over my freaking truck
like everywhere, dude.
Mike truck is a vomit comet oh and I get out
I'm saying no and like and so they're all in their car right behind me
I'm like waving them in like help you know like this craziness happening and
they get up to like help but they just bought some ma tamales with these like salsa, these cans of salsa
that are like the lids aren't on very well.
So it gets up, spills all their salsa all over their car.
So they're trying to clean their car.
I'm trying to clean it.
What a shit show dude.
Wow.
This is a lamp.
This is a national lampoon.
It is just like that.
And it didn't stop.
Like I saw, I went home and I like,
I took him back there and I, and I washed washed Finn and I'm trying to make sure he's
okay and hope the right dose of Benadrill wasn't a thing.
I don't know if you'll leave him, maybe you should bring him with me.
And he's just like, okay, it'd be all right.
So he's just kind of sleepy and chillin' and I drive back over and I'd get there, and this is like an hour and a half later
at that point where I'm like, I'd come back
and then I'm hanging out with them again.
I figure they ate, right?
Like, it's lunch.
It was lunch a long time ago.
I didn't eat all day.
Like I just had coffee,
and I was like, look forward to this big lunch.
And so I get there and like, they're all,
you know, kind of sitting around like,
oh, hey, you made it.
Like, I'll try and like excited that I'm there. And like of sitting around and I'm like, oh, hey, you made it. I'll try and get excited that I'm there
and I'm like, a lot of attention.
And I'm walking in and there's like jalapeno poppers
and all this stuff and like soup and all this.
And I eat, you're eating, they're handing me all this stuff.
Apparently that was just like the appetizers.
And so I'm just like, oh, great.
I start scooping like the chili in there
and all the put all the stuff in there
and they're all looking at me like,
oh, we haven't eaten yet.
And I'm just like, oh, oh, cool.
Well, why'd you tell me to eat this?
And like, like, it was just reasonable.
Like, I didn't put it together that like,
they were just eating or derves and like appetizers
and whatnot.
And I just went for the main course and so now,
now I'm the asshole that like did everything.
On top of everything.
Yeah, in front, and so, it was just a small thing,
but at that point I was like this,
where I literally almost lost it in front of everybody
and then my sister was like, here, here's an Irish coffee.
Like thank you, I go outside,
I just had like a moment to myself
and just like drink an Irish coffee.
Oh my god. It's trying to chill out.
Oh my God, dude.
And it just kept going.
There was a lot of other chaotic events
that happened after that.
But it was like, that was just the one day after Thanksgiving.
What? A nightmare.
Yeah. Wow.
So that's a commercial for Irish coffee.
Yeah. Do you guys remember?
Z-Batics.
Do you guys remember that commercial on TV
when we were kids?
It was like a bubble bath for moms.
Calgon, do you guys remember that?
No.
Yeah, where the mom would be like,
ah, my kids are driving me crazy.
And then it's like,
Calgon, take me away.
And then she's in the bath with the bubbles.
And she's like, ah, she's like relaxing.
I don't remember that one.
I remember that one.
I remember that one.
No, I don't remember that one.
Oh, yeah, dude. I don't remember that one dude. I remember that. Yeah
I was it always show the mom like losing her shit and then a bubble bath fix now in a situation like that is
Is Courtney bad like you to or she's getting all stressed out to or she like calm and so are you both were you both like?
Yeah, well, you know, thankfully she recognized like kind of the level I was at and was very conscious of when I get to that point,
she was kind of rubbing my shoulders
and trying to make things a bit easier for me
from then on out, but yeah, no,
because otherwise if we're both like that,
yeah, it's a bad day.
Wow.
You know what, it's one of those things that sucks,
oh, there's a commercial right there in 1978. Wow, look at that
She's 1978. I mean they would repeat them, you know, but
You are aging yourself on this one. Yes. I don't think I ever saw these. Yeah, she's like
Losing her shit and then apparently a bubble bath fixes everything
Wow, I don't know what they put in that bubble-a thing yeah bubble bath but bubble baths yeah I think
she's relaxing bring him back I
think she's relaxed still look at
that bubble bath to his friend
five bubble baths you still do
that right now that's five of
his right
right
why do you have bubbles in your
path I have a son dude I have a
son oh with him yeah I'm a
fuck I'll take it by myself too
why because I like it but what
is you do a bubble bath is lavender in the salt and all that stuff like in it so it's like it's not just bubbles
I don't do like mr. Bubble
It's like a spa like bubble but one of the games the versions like dish soap
Yeah, they brought grew up on that
You know so funny you say you know so funny you say that okay, so. You know it's so funny, you say, hey, you know it's so funny, you say that.
Okay, so I totally grew up on that, right?
And I remember, when we were kids,
my sister and I,
I was, see here, I gotta be fourth grade right here.
So my sister and I, we cleaned my,
we see here, my mom's,
the car that I told you guys is the ship brown one
that I drove for.
One of the other things I've never described about it
is that for the rest of,
from what I was fourth grade,
remember I drove this car when I was in high school,
okay, from fourth grade on,
any time it rained, the entire car would bubble.
And because my sister and I sat on the top of the roof
and emptied like a whole dish soap thing,
and like the shit got in all the crevices,
in the paint, or what would it rain to you just so?
You know the bubble bill?
So whatever it would rain, I'm talking like years later I'm not
fucking exaggerating that that I don't know what is in that that Don
Disso for whatever it's seeped into that car because we just I remember I never
forget her sitting on the top of the hood and hers just sitting there and I'm
spraying we like emptied like the whole thing on there. And forever that car, if it would rain,
like bubbles and suds would come out.
So it's so dirty.
That's how it's all dirty.
You know, Don, Don was saved a lot of,
I mean, there's a commercial enough
that's just the one for the oil spill.
Yeah, when they had the Exxon oil spill,
and then they, you know, Don.
Valdeez.
Yeah, they did the commercial with Don,
where they're like the ducks.
We cleaned the ducks with Don, and they're cool now, you We cleaned the ducks with Don and they're cool now. Yeah.
That was a good, as good as a pure move.
Very, very good.
So Thanksgiving for us was, we had 50 people, right?
Maybe more.
So I might be 60.
My grandmother's house, nobody's in there anymore, right?
My grandfather passed away.
My grandmother, she needs kind of full-time care.
So she goes between my mom and my aunt's house, okay?
So their house just sits there.
And my aunt's and my mom went in there,
maybe a few weeks ago and kind of started cleaning it out.
And you're talking about,
remember my grandparents were the original owners of this house.
So this house was built in 1960, something maybe,
and they bought it for like 20 grand, you know,
in San Jose, and they're just living there that long,
there's a lot of stuff that ends up,
so they went through the whole house,
very emotional time, whatever,
and they all said, hey, let's do Christmas here.
Let's have all the families come into Christmas here.
Now I have such a big family,
and I'm not talking like super extended family.
It's literally my grandparents, their kids,
their kids kids, okay.
So it's like my mom's side of the family.
Because we have a whole other side of family
that we can't possibly invite, just too many people.
So that's the people, but everybody has a lot of kids
and all that stuff.
So we said, let's have everybody at nunness house
for Thanksgiving.
And usually there's always a few people missing.
There's just a lot of people.
And people are married, so sometimes they go to
the rent and loss house.
But this was one of the few times
where everybody showed up, which was nice.
It was really nice, because my grandmother's getting old,
so it was like, this is gonna be nice to do that.
But remember, this is a San Jose track home.
Yes, a 2000 square feet.
Maybe.
Okay.
So, packing them in. San Jose track home. Yes, a two thousand square feet. Maybe okay, so pack it in well we had
The garage set up with tables. We had of course the dining room
Set up the kitchen set up the patio set up
I mean the the living room set up with tables so so anywhere you could kind of plop down
Yeah, like fold out tables folding chairs
everybody brought food.
And it was just, and there's a lot of babies now,
just because my brother has, you know, two kids now,
both of them under three.
I have mine under three plus my two older ones.
My cousin Alex has now two under three.
My cousin Gabriel has one but has one on the way.
So now we got all these babies on top of it,
plus the teenage kids and all that stuff.
So we all show up and it's just, it's a lot.
Pretty quiet and chill.
No, not at all.
So we get there and it's just, bro, it's in your face.
My little ones are not used to this.
When I was a kid, I was explaining this to Jessica
and I'll tell you why in a second,
why I explained this to her,
but when I was a kid,
I need to explain.
She's just like me, so I know exactly why you'd have to talk to her.
Well, we'll get into it, right?
We'll get into it.
When I was a kid, we were always,
we were together with a lot of people at least once a week.
So every week I grew up having Sunday dinners
and being around 20, 30 people, just every son.
And so we were just used to it, okay.
My little ones aren't used to it.
They do this once a year, twice a year at most.
And they're so young that they don't remember
the last ones.
This is like the first one they ever did
where there's so many people.
Soon as we walk in, my daughter,
clings onto my wife, and she could tell on her face,
she's like, because there's just a lot of people,
and a lot of people wanna give hugs and kisses,
and everybody wants to say,
Sure.
My son clings onto her leg, okay?
So she can't, and they don't even want to come with me.
I'm trying to like take them from her.
They don't even want to come with me.
They just want to be with mom.
So Jessica was like, I need, like at one point,
she's like, I'm leaving.
And I'm like, okay, let's go into the room.
Let's, kids, it's just, you can't do anything.
She, she, she, everywhere she goes, she's got both kids.
Wow, that's, yeah. Oh, so much, right? It's just crazy. That's kids is just you can't do anything. The kids she, ever she goes, she's got both kids. Wow, that's so much right.
It's just crazy.
That's a lot.
At some point I was able to kind of pull my son away,
then my daughter for a little bit.
You know, we were trying to eat in the garage with everybody.
So Jessica picks three, you know, three places to sit.
I go and get plates for everybody,
but my kids are just literally climbing on it.
They don't want her to let it go.
There's literally, I mean, I'm telling you,
I'll show you guys pictures.
You're sitting like butch-yke to butch-yke
and they were all like, pack, you can't get up and move.
So she's like, you know, freaking out.
So I'm like, let's go upstairs, we'll go sit by ourselves
in a room, we'll have our food there,
we'll try and do the thing.
So we did that, that helped a little bit.
But it was just, it was chaotic.
It was, now again, I still find myself getting a little anxious,
but because I grew up that way, not nearly as bad as when you show up
and this is not how you roll or what you did or whatever.
So Jessica had a tough time, the kids had a tough time.
At one point, we were going to do a family picture
where everybody was supposed to fit in the living room.
Wow.
Okay. Okay.
Yeah.
Now, this is, now the reasoning is my grandmother's,
you know, she's, her health isn't good.
Right, right.
She's older and every time we all get together,
it's not, you want to capture it.
We want to capture it because who knows, right?
So imagine organizing everybody in a room this size.
No, smaller than this. Now, who does that? Is there like a point person or is there a few? So imagine organizing everybody in a room this size.
No, smaller than this.
Now who does that?
Is there like a point person or is there a few?
Oh, it's my sister and my aunts are trying to organize this.
So we're trying to squeeze everybody including babies.
So you're trying to hold kids.
Oh my God.
People are up against you.
The kids are freaking out.
And my sister's yelling,
everybody go away, go out one more time.
All right, one more picture.
Wait, you guys look at it.
It's just like, oh my God, I hear my cousin Alex,
he's got his little girl.
He's like, I'm gonna leave, I'm gonna leave, I'm gonna leave.
But we got some pictures, it was good.
And now here's what's funny, this always happens.
The last 15 minutes, my son warms up,
wants to play with everybody, and then we're gonna go.
I don't wanna leave, sorry buddy.
We'll get never gonna leave.
Kids are sorry.
Now, so that was Thanksgiving and it was a bit much,
but we're organizing these Sunday dinners
to try to just get more people together more often.
Cause I mean, you can't do that to little kids especially.
Where they just, once a year you show up
and there's a million people that they aren't necessarily familiar with.
Familiarize. And they're just in their face.
Because my family's very in your face.
Very much like that. So you, yeah, I know. You understand that.
Well, so I can't, so so funny with the audience doesn't know is off air. I was, I came in this
morning venting about my, my Thanksgiving, right? And you, Sal just kind of sitting there
quiet. And I can't help but think. So has it, has hearing me vent about how it is for me
and Katrina's family helped you with that perspective
with Jessica, or did you already kind of see it anyways?
Or has it helped?
And the beginning it was hard to understand
because I, you grew up in it.
Just like Katrina.
Yeah, it's not.
Katrina is very disconnected.
It's not my awareness. Yeah. Because in it. Just like Katrina. Yeah, it's not. It's very disconnected.
It's not my awareness.
Yeah.
Because if you brought me around, your big family, it wouldn't bother, I wouldn't have the
same experience because I have it on my side.
Try it.
You would adapt right to it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So, but yes, it does help to hear kind of what you go through and understand.
I understand Katrina's, you know, what she probably gets from it and how you guys have to,
you have to compromise. you just have to.
That's been the, I mean,
God, this were 13 years, right?
That's probably been one of the greatest times
because it's tough.
And I understand from your perspective
and her perspective because,
man, you guys love that.
And it is just how you erase.
So part of the chaos is just part of the process.
You know what I'm saying?
And we're all together.
And so we embrace it and we love it.
And so I see that from her family.
And inside I'm like, my skin's crawling.
I'm like, oh my God, get me the fuck out of here.
Like I can't do it.
But over years I've become more and more patient with it.
And I think the, the, the, the, the, the, the,
like I would say this is probably one of the most
successful Thanksgiving holiday big events that we've had as far as like you know no there was
no fighting there was everybody was good. And I think a lot of that is just really truly understanding
each other like Katrina knows that you know I'm on day four in a row of you know loud music
two in the morning.
You're next level because you guys,
it's not just a party you go to and go home.
You guys spend the night and do four days a week.
And that's like every, the Christmas is like that,
Thanksgiving is like that.
And there, I mean, people on couches
and blow up mattresses and rooms,
like, I mean, it's three, four to a room.
Like it's, you're stepping over each other.
There's no big deal. I don't know if the jazz code would be able to do that. I mean, luckily, luckily, four to a room. Like, it's, you're stepping over each other. There's no big deal.
I don't know if the Jessica would be able to do that.
Cool.
I mean, luckily, I'm at the trucky house,
and so that place is a good size place,
and so I could kind of disappear.
And what's great about my wife is that she understands me now
that I can, and what also has helped me,
because in the past, I would look like such a bad guy,
but what's great is my son is me.
Like, he fucking is too atti att by about the third or four day,
he's over it.
Yeah.
He's just like, you could tell and he wants to,
and you know how much my son is like loving and what,
like he doesn't ever get in at it.
Like he all sudden gets fussy.
He doesn't want to be around.
He doesn't want to play with his cousin who he loves to play with.
Like he's like over it.
Dad, I just want to go watch cartoons with you.
And so I can kind of disappear with him
and go off in a room where we set up
by the fire for hours, just him and I.
Why the house is like,
wow, loud music and drinks and their shots
and everything like that.
And we're like over in a corner
for hours by ourself.
And in the past, if that was just me, it would be an issue.
Cause then I look like the outsider
who just doesn't wanna be with everybody.
And so that was really hard.
He'll take a personal.
They do.
So Katrina's brothers and family.
Of course I get it.
Would be, would be take a personal.
Would the matter doesn't like that?
Yeah.
And then Katrina's in this, like we're particularly,
why are you like this?
And it's like, why can't you do it?
And it's like, oh my God, I just wanna break.
At least with Max, it's like this nice excuse.
Everybody sees the way he's acting and he doesn't want.
And so they're like, oh, Adam's taking care of Max.
And so it's like, so it's accepted.
So it's like this beautiful thing that's happened
where it's like, oh, cool.
My son needs a break, I need a break.
Like we just kind of disappear for a little bit.
It's over stimulation.
It's a lot of everything.
Well, the other thing too is that,
like so when you come from like you and her,
you'd like, you guys have this abundance of love
and energy and everyone together.
And it seems so obvious like why wouldn't someone love that.
And then the other side where I come from
where it's just like, oh, dysfunctional,
we really got together, we did all,
but because I grew up that way,
I've also learned to love some of those things.
So like man
I actually love just like we got back it was me Katrina Max and the fire was lit
We may popcorn. We watched the movie house was silent like man. I was like I love this and so there's a part of me that
That's loves that even though I appreciate the the love and energy and everything that comes with the big family
and all that stuff like that.
And I tell you, I mean, my thinks we go around the table
and we say what we're thankful for.
And this big chaotic family is what I said I was thankful for
because now having a son, boy, do I really appreciate,
I mean, I truly believe it takes a village
to raise a good kid and having a lot of family
that's that close, that in itself is worth at all.
Yeah, I don't look, I don't deny the work.
There's a lot of work that goes into it.
There's a lot of noise, chaos, stimulation.
You don't have space necessarily to go kind of gather yourself
or whatever.
I get all that, I do.
I just grew up in it.
So I'm, can be more tolerant, I guess I guess maybe the right word or or I don't know
I know there was one moment where I was sitting there and I was just the whole time
I was feeling extreme gratitude the whole time and I'm looking around at one point my
Uncle's doing the prayer before we eat and I'm looking in the room and there's the garage is packed and there's people in the hallways
And everybody fits in the garage, right? And I'm looking back and forth
and I'm thinking, if I were on my deathbed,
these were the people that would probably be sitting next to me,
what, you know, as I, you know, slipped off or whatever.
Yeah, yeah.
So it was just, it was a lot of gratitude.
It really is.
And, you know, I think it's, it's,
but I do get it, I get it.
It's over stimulating because, look,
there was a, when I went to Arkansas
to visit Jessica's family, we had to stay in those, what were they called? They're like
mobile units or whatever, they parked them out there. I'm, we, when I was humid, there's
mosquitoes everywhere, there's pets everywhere. That's totally overstimulation for me. That's
told, I wasn't comfortable. I could, I knew I could feel it. Like, oh, this is anxiety inducing.
So I mean, I get it.
And I appreciate us doing it.
But there's compromise.
In other words, maybe not every holiday.
Maybe there's some holidays where we have the client.
You know, when we just spend the time just with us,
we do something small.
And then the other ones where we have, you know.
Yeah, were you in here when I don't know if you heard,
I was talking to Doug,
I think so, I think you overheard of, so this was the year I brought up that I'm going
to disrupt the tradition a little bit and change things with Max.
And it didn't bother me until last year, in last year was a little crazy.
We had I think 25 or 30 people opening presents.
There was a fire.
The house almost burnt down.
We had to move the Christmas from one party to the other
and one house to the house.
Yeah, right.
You know, and my son's at three, right, at that point,
right, he's three years old.
He's now into presents and stuff like that.
And it was just, and we fit in Katrina's mom's house,
which is 2,000 square feet, 30 people,
plus 400 Christmas presents, right,
all in one little living room, right?
And when you have that many people with that many presents, right, all in one little living room, right? And when you have that many people with that many presents, uh, and most
all are adults, but two kids, it's like this, like, you know, system, you know,
busing through, there's wrapping paper everywhere.
I know exactly what that's like.
Yeah, yeah, of course, right?
So you get it.
And go, no, you go.
I, yeah, and I'm like, man, I got, and I don't know, maybe because I just had
this weird vision when I was a younger, when I was younger way before I ever
had a kid or he settled down,
that I wanted to surprise my son with the Santa gift
and wait downstairs till he came down.
Yeah, watch, see, videotape it from behind the couch
and see him see his bike for the first time.
And oh my God, and then capture that moment,
let him ride it, put it together with him.
So I kind of always had that in my mind.
And like, as I started to watch the way
how this family does everything, I was like,
oh wow, I'm not gonna get that.
And I'm like, man, that's a big deal.
And I remember I first started communicating with the Katrina,
and there was like, that was like blasphemy,
dude, to break that kind of tradition of how we do things.
And over time, she's starting to understand that part
and that, like, man, there's got to be compromise
because it's not fair for her to rob that completely of me.
And I'm like, I'm not saying we won't do that still,
but I want to be able to have that moment.
So Katrina thought she was gonna try and get the whole family
to like agree to like changing the tradition
so that she didn't have to really fully compromise.
Yeah, everyone do.
Yeah, yeah, right?
And so it was like, bro, it was literally, and have to really fully compromise. Yeah, everyone do. Yeah, yeah. Right.
And so it was like, bro, it was literally,
I felt like I insulted everybody by saying, like, listen,
it was just too much, man, I said, and I told them,
I think just like I just told you guys,
I desire that.
And so I want that moment with my son,
and then we'll come over and we'll come do everything
with you guys.
And so this come this year will be like the first time that Katrina and I will do
like an intimate, just me, her and Max will open presents
that we got each other,
and then we'll go do the whole family thing.
And you could see, like, have to family understood,
like have the family have other married people.
Like Jerry, yeah, Jerry has a husband who doesn't,
who's like me, you know what I'm saying?
So she like totally, Jerry gets it, you know what I'm saying?
And then Katrina's mom totally gets it
because her husband was like that too.
But then the other siblings are like,
you could just see the look on their face.
It's like I literally just offended everybody.
So I said to, I don't wanna do it though.
And they're like explaining to me that their kids,
our kids grew up this way, you know?
And they're fine, look at them.
You know, like, okay, great.
Don't get caught in that art.
Can I just give you a piece of advice?
Yeah.
Don't get caught up in that conversation.
You can't. Your kids are fine.
Then you do the whole line.
Oh, really?
Cause John.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
No, totally.
It's crazy alcohol.
Yeah, so, yeah,
I'm just fine.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, you don't want to get in that, in that conversation.
Yeah. But I mean, it's so funny.
You hear so like, I know my, my, it's just, it's just, it's just, yeah, you don't want to get in that in that conversation. Yeah, I mean, it's so funny. You hear so like I know my
It's just it's just it's just look if you grow up a particular way, I think you get used to
certain things and they just you just become
Either tolerant of it or it doesn't affect you as much like I remember going to Sicily at the age of 12 before that
I was two when I went there so I 12 I went there and
It was such a it was such a,
it was such a assault on the senses to go there.
Like we go to my dad's town,
my dad's family's not well off at all.
So we're like in the middle of like, you know,
the city that, you know, kind of whatever.
And there's cars honking everywhere and people are yelling.
Everyone's on top of each other and every house.
We go to this aunt's house and we're just stacked on top of each other and every house, we go to this aunt's house,
and we're just stacked on top of each other
and just cigarettes, people are smoking them and drinking,
and in the morning, there's cars that drive through
the neighborhood, that honk can tell you to get your bread
and get your fish, it's at 6 a.m.,
it's, you know, the windows are open
because there's no AC and you hear the neighbor
across the street snoring, because the sound, and I was like, I 12 years old I was like this is crazy I can't do this
right yeah and my dad is like yikes at the most piece he's ever you know he's like so like oh yeah
it's my childhood this is really like wait yeah oh he was so relaxed and I was just like oh my god
what's wrong with this so fun yeah so but I can is too much. That's so funny. I can't do this.
Hey, speaking of too much, who was it?
Was it you, Sal?
Who was talking about the prices for Black Friday and stuff like that?
Like some of the, oh yeah, there's a lot of viral stuff going around where people are
going to like big department stores and they're like, Black Friday sale and they'll reach
behind the tag and pull the tag out behind it.
And it was like the same price.
I saw that like, Courtney showed me,
actually like one of those deals,
and then you did the math,
and it literally just like took away the tax
and like the shipping,
and then like had the same exact price
that it was like normally like retail.
And I'm like, okay.
I didn't realize that.
There's a viral video, a McDonald's viral video.
Maybe that could find it where a guy buys a meal and it's
$16 at McDonald's Wow and people are like up and arms. Did you hear Andrew? He went to
Costco and saw the Ori and
Yes, they're at Costco and at first he saw the price and he's like, oh, I didn't think it was that much of a deal
Then he went on the website and realized oh wow their prices had gone up from what it was before.
And then he went back to go completely sold out.
They sold out all the, all the veering, right?
You said it was the Meta joggers you were looking for over there?
Yeah, the Meta jogger pants.
Those are my, those are my favorite ones.
Wow.
And I was there, like you said, I wanted them,
but I was like, ah, maybe not now, come back for them.
And then I double checked to see this price online,
they went up, so I went back to check literally the next day
and they were sold out.
And there was hundreds of them.
Wow.
Speaking of Yuri, so you know, every year I do the day
after Thanksgiving workout, with like my cousins,
that's the best.
Yeah, we did it at my house.
Yeah.
So we did it at my house in the garage,
and you know, we're having a great, great time,
great discussion, as usual, great workout. A a lot of father talk which was kind of cool.
And we talk about like you know inevitably there's always like some business idea that comes
up right.
I don't remember what the business was.
The reason why viewer reminds me of this is because my cousins were debating over the name
of the fictional business that they would build and why one name is better than the other
and I was explaining to them, like, guys,
the name of your business plays almost zero role.
This is the very bottom of the network.
In your success.
Now, you can make a name so bad
that it crushes your business.
Sure, sure.
But aside from that, it makes no,
and then I use Viori as an example.
I was like, what does Viori mean?
Yeah, and look at that.
Like, Viori, who does Viori mean?
Yeah, well, it's even mean, like, it's hard to say,
it's hard to spell. Yeah, I mean, it works. I mean, who knows what, yeah. It was even mean, like, it's hard to say, it's hard to spell.
Yeah.
I mean, almost every brand, I mean, Pepsi and Coke.
Yeah, nobody can think about it with that Kleenex.
I mean, these are things that like are now,
they're iconic brands, but they met nothing before they were,
before they were a thing.
The name of your business means almost nothing.
Yeah.
You know, I remember wearing that as an entrepreneur.
What does that say, Doug, about the McDonald's thing?
Yeah, so, uh, $16 McDonald's meal leaves fans fuming,
beloved fast food chain no longer affordable.
What did he buy for 16 bucks?
So yeah, so it's a big Mac,
let me see where that is, yeah, burger,
a large fry and a drink.
16 bucks?
Yep.
What?
I don't understand,
is that all I've noticed that with your balls too?
Is that on the value meal?
Like they're all, I've been spending a long time
so I went to McDonald's, but aren't they all like 499, 599, 699 or something?
They used to be.
I don't know now.
Wow.
Haven't been there forever, so I don't know.
I mean, that's what's a big Mac is a number one, right?
That's a number one, right?
I would think so.
I don't know.
Oh, I can, oh see if you can remember. Number one is the big Mac meal. I think the number four is number two. Number four is number four. Number four's a number one, right? I would think so. I don't know. You don't know. Oh, I can, oh, see if you can remember.
Number one is the big Mac.
I think the number four is double quarter pound or cheese.
Number four is a quarter pound.
Yeah, yeah.
Number two is the,
I like the,
the number two, the two double cheeseburgers or the two cheeseburgers.
Oh,
Andrew, I feel like you should know this.
I get the chicken nuggets there.
You don't know.
You don't,
I literally have everything else.
I'll just have a 20 piece chicken big nugget. Yeah, I'm proud. Lots of barbecue. I'll take it and handle it. You don't know. You don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you don't, you It used to be like cheap 299 3949 4959 that I remember 99 cent cheeseburgers.
No, do you remember do you remember Wednesdays and Sundays?
What was that 29 cents and 29 cents and 39.
Yeah, hamburgers were 29 cents and cheeseburgers were 39 cents on Wednesdays and Sundays.
I remember well 50 cent night at the boardwalk, you get like burgers and hot dogs and corn dogs.
There's no way they can do that now.
So McDonald's and Chipotle to raise prices in California.
And Chipotle was raising their prices.
As minimum wage increases, that's how they're going to justify it.
Well, I mean, that's just that's.
Just that.
No, it's not mean.
It's like, well, I remember I told you guys I have a client
who owns like nine of these McDonald's and
They're gonna go all AI. They're all gonna be automated. I should the franchise owners have like really slim margins
They don't have big margins not at all fast food is tiny margins and every she's like every time they do minimum wage
I tell it's like it completely eats into the franchise and they and they and McDonald's is when it makes out on all that right
Because they're not only they making their little franchise fee and the little bit of that
I forget what top line they make,
but then they're really a real estate company.
So they're paying down properties
while also making a revenue stream.
Dude, that 20 now, I remember now that 29,
you know what I mean, in that sense, that was...
Wednesdays and Sundays.
That was a bulking door.
You're like kid.
High school, I was mean.
That was a bulking dream.
In high school, I live off.
Can I go buy tan a little? I live off of that. Did you? In high school, I was like a that was a bulking dream in high school. I go by 10 I live out lived off of that did you? Uh-huh in high school. I was like a go to every Wednesday
I'll have a minute issues now
Yeah, because of that I go feel like the colossus burger. What is that right there Doug? So this was apparently out of
Restop that had a McDonald's but big Mac meal $70.59 quarter pounder meal
1799 that used to be a big ass gourmet burger at a restaurant.
And now that's McDonald's.
Wow.
Wow.
I mean, I know I'm paying like,
I doored Ash food a lot and I know I pay extra because of that,
but I've been talking to Trinon.
Like this is like, if there's one thing I want to solve
this next coming year, it's like eliminating this
because the meals for my family of three is like 80 to 100 dollars.
Easy. Yeah. Easy. For fast food. I got four kids, bro. So you just, yeah.
I'm sure you're a couple of. If Dordash is, if Dordash is going up in value in the stock market,
it's probably because of me. It's three. And I think I, I only pay like a three buck fee.
So it can't be all Dordash that I'm getting crushed by more than that. There's a delivery
fee plus that I pay the membership. So I already by it. There's more than that. There's a delivery fee plus that.
I don't know if it's a- Why pay the membership? So I already have the-
So do I.
Oh okay, sure.
But I think that you still pay more than just-
You-
You must, because it doesn't make sense to me. I'm like, unless everybody has just gone
up significantly.
By the way, can I tell you guys- you know what they do? By the way, if you-
I don't know if you've noticed this.
Areas where there's lots of like small restaurants like those centers with lots of little
restaurants. Really double up. No, there's people parked there. And like those centers with lots of little restaurants.
They double up.
No, there's people parked there.
And that's all they do.
Oh, just wait.
They literally just wait with their phones.
And I saw them the other day.
And then they double up.
So did you notice that DoorDash has the option for express for an extra two nights?
Which means you don't get, you don't get, so deliveries on yours.
Yes, right.
Otherwise, almost every one now, if you don't pay for that $299 extra express Express then you're getting to have to wait because yours is probably your your orders coming with another order
Can I just say that the most the the one thing that will almost set me off to the point where I want to punch
Some of the face is when I get a door dash delivery. That's wrong
That has to be the most annoying thing in the world
Cuz you're waiting in your hungry and then you get it and you're like oh great. Yeah, got all the stuff
I didn't want.
I can't eat this.
Oh boy, that happened to me.
Well, I imagine that happens to you quite a bit
because I know you have special orders.
And so that's not like ordering online
or ordering like a takeout type of stuff like that.
And it's never good for like somebody who has like,
I don't want this, I need that because they're just,
I want to hear about Justin's injury.
So what happened to you, what happened to you, dude?
I heard you pulled your bontress,
something like that.
I came in, I saw Kyle, I was like,
hey, were you working with, were you,
what just, you guys hear about?
I came in and saw Kyle.
I came in and saw Kyle.
And I saw that he had posted you in the story.
Yeah.
And so I was like, oh, dude,
did you work with Justin this weekend?
He goes, yeah, yeah, I know. I said, oh, I didn't know. He's like, I know, I'm tired.
He's like, I had, I had to, I had to sub inform him. Just so Justin couldn't handle the workout.
That's why that was my first thought. He goes, no, dude. He heard his hamstring. I was like,
why do you pull the hammy? Do it. What are you doing? This is the first time, bro. Okay. So,
I mean, we're doing a shoot for a creator. Content., you know, I'm not gonna reveal exactly what it is yet, but
So I'm doing like sprints and everything and I'm like dude, okay, I just don't run like okay
And hanging out with you guys doesn't help right like sitting in these seats all the time and like I've you know
No key just blamed us for just that. I just did blame you.
Take that for what it is.
But yeah, and I don't move fast anymore.
And so it was like, I was prepping myself.
I started getting back into moitime,
like trying to get a condition,
because I knew I was gonna have to like,
at least move explosively and like do all this stuff.
Well, that didn't really translate well
to sprinting on a field.
But really, what did it for me was like,
I was doing, like, I was backpedaling,
and then I went to, like, kind of twist and rotate and tend to a sprint,
and my hamstring just cramped up so hard,
just like, literally, like, I started just immediately,
like, gimpin' around, like like I had a hitch in my gate.
So I was trying to work through it
and muscle my way through,
like this looks terrible.
Did you have Kyle Rubin out for me to make sure?
I tried.
Did you try and dress Kyle to look as much like Kyle?
So it's you.
So I was like, okay, look, I got you here, Kyle.
You look the closest to me.
This is what we're gonna do.
And I had like special shoes and everything I bought
for this shoot and I'm like, what's the shoe you got?
And I was like, oh, like 11, like 10,
like all this is gonna work.
I got 11s right here.
He's like, you're gonna wear these.
You're gonna wear my shorts.
You're gonna wear my shirt.
You're gonna be my body double.
I only had four more exercises to go. I went through the whole thing.
That works.
And then had like, you know what your issue is, Justin?
Is you don't know how to not go as hard as you can.
You just don't.
When we used to do YouTube video exercise videos,
when you're demoing an exercise, grab a light weight,
show you're good for them.
No, Justin's got to load the bar.
I don't want people to think I'm lifting weights too light.
Okay, I can demo it. So this. So this is shoot number two. That first shoot was
in here where I had to do all the exercise with the weights there. And to your point, I was
debilitated for three days. Yeah, it's a demo. And it's like four workouts a week is just shooting
all the videos. I am very aware of this program. I am very much, I know what's going into that.
I did the whole thing.
It's great.
Yeah, so yeah, I mean, we got what was cool
was I got to shoot a lot of it at my high school
in like the field and everything there.
And so we have really like the,
I guess cinematography background,
all that looks really cool.
Pro, you have the BPC?
Yes.
Did you put it straight in the hamstring?
I'm gonna tell you right now, it feels great.
Bro, I was like, hey, you're gonna sell me out.
I told you that.
I told you that.
Did you put it straight in the hamstring?
Yeah, it's legit.
Yeah, like, cause I was in pain last night.
Like, you know how long an injury takes the heel
for you, cause you know your body.
Yeah, and honestly, like, I don't know, and I'm like, I have like a bit of an ego about it,
because I went through like my entire sports career, like with one injury, like one legit
injury, and like, that was at the very end, like my senior year, where I like tore my MCL.
But even then, I went back the next game and had a knee brace and still plate.
And so for me, it's like, I don't know,
it just sticks to me.
Like I mean, every practice, I was Iron Man every year.
You know, and it's just like,
like I don't, I don't know.
I had this like sort of chip on my shoulder
about that kind of, so that really irritated me
that I couldn't like finish four exercises.
I was like, oh, but I thought it was hilarious
that I could like body double tile in there.
So you get an Easter egg this one.
And you weren't gonna be so cool
as if you could barely tell.
You don't think it's because Eli shooted
a little different to try.
Oh, so good.
So like we go to the sprint.
Like so one of them like you do like a track start, right?
And so I'm like in the track start like this.
I just posed it and then we're like,
oh man.
I can't wait to watch it out. I'm like in the track start like this, I just posed it and then we were like, I can't wait to watch it out.
I'm so glad you guys did the extra effort
to kind of make it look as good as this.
We leaned into it hard, dude.
Like we're trying to create like a Hollywood movie.
We're doing something.
Yeah, you're gonna get the camera.
Don't turn to the camera as you're running back,
you know, make sure you're like,
Oh, my brother, when he came to the workout,
he had tennis elbow so bad that he's been wearing a brace and he let me put BPC right in it.
And it was gone like literally right there.
Oh, right there.
He started working out and he's like, oh, I don't feel it.
I know.
I know.
Because I literally was like, and I can't run today, but like I don't have any pain.
Like I'm fine.
Weird.
Yeah.
It's crazy.
Yeah, I know.
By far, it's the best one for sure.
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All right, back to the show.
Our first caller is Colin from Alberta.
Colin, what's happening?
How can we help you?
Hey, guys, first I mean to say this is quite an honor to be able to talk to you guys.
I've been following the show for a few years and you've really changed my outlook
on fitness and programming, especially especially so thanks for that.
You're good.
So let's get to my question a little bit of background not too much.
I guess I'm 38 years old, 5.11, we're on to 198 pounds of boat now and I've been an early
morning riser.
I've been working out about 4.30 in the morning, Monday, Wednesday, Friday,
following MAP Santa Ballac. I've done it two times now. I'm just about done phase three for the second time.
And I've noticed a lot of strength and muscle gains, but I'm still having an issue with the fat around the midsection.
And I remember hearing you guys talk a couple of weeks ago
about undulating calories.
I was just wondering for someone who works out early in the morning
like that, is it better to feed your body
the day before with the higher calories
or is it better to feed after your workout
on the day of the workout?
I don't think it makes that big of a- this is like a splitting hairs type of thing.
Individual variance.
Yeah, so I mean, you can play with either one, see what seems to feel better for you.
But in my experience, it doesn't really make a difference either way.
I mean, we've talked about this before about Sal, you like being less fat going into it
and you end up, because you're up early. I've talked about that I prefer, Sal, you like being less fat going into it and you're in them because you're up early.
I've talked about that I prefer being loaded up
before I go in.
So it's really gonna be a personal preference
like as far as building muscle or body fat percentage,
things like that, it's not gonna make it.
It's really about how you feel in the workout
and I would play with the two and see what you're doing.
Of the things that you're gonna be looking at
to help you with the body fat,
that one right there is not, it's
probably I wouldn't make the list, right, in terms of what's going to impact, give you
the biggest impact for fat loss. When it comes to the fat loss, if you're consistent with
your workouts, you're seeing a strength gain, so the workout's appropriate, you know, all
the other stuff, you know, checks off, good sleep, that whole deal, then really what you want
to do is, you really, you want to track your calories and see where
you're actually at, really track them, see where you're at, and then decide if you want
to cut or if you want to reverse diet and get your metabolism up a little more.
And that's after you track because your estimations are going to always be off.
Nobody ever guesses properly where their calories are at.
Yeah, and I did track for a while there,
and I kind of figured out my maintenance
was around 24 to 2500 calories.
I just kind of based that on tracking
and then just not really gaining any weight.
So I did try dropping down to like 2200
and I wasn't really noticing anything.
So I went down to 2000.
Still not really seeing any movement.
So I don't know, maybe I'm just,
it's hard, I got three kids.
So sometimes I may not be sticking exactly
to the best eating habits, but I think I'm the best.
Consistency with that's important.
And also how long did you stay at the 2000 calories
and how consistent was that?
So I was at the 2200 for probably a month or so and then I dropped on the
2000 a couple weeks ago and I've been pretty consistent
Okay, and are you noticing any changes in your performance?
Any changes in where your clothes feel or fit because sometimes you can do a little trade where you build. If you're getting stronger on a deficit like that
or what you think might be a deficit, that's a pretty good sign. The other thing too is,
it's really easy to almost erase a deficit by going off a day.
Yes, especially when it's only 200 to 500 calories. You figure 200 to 500 calories, and let's get figure you're already off by 100 or so give or take,
that's not precise, and then you have a day where you move a little less,
and then you have a Saturday where you eat ice cream with the kids,
and it's like literally you just erase that deficit in one day.
Or it's such a small deficit now that it would take a month to notice
and write any type of progress.
Okay. or it's such a small deficit now that it would take a month to right? Right. Right. Any type of progress.
So, yeah. Now, now, I forgot your size, you know, 2000 calories, 2500 guys, kind of low, in my opinion. Yeah. How did that, how does it feel
leading 2000 cars? You feel hungry? Well, I, I, you know, I said
that same thing. I, I thought that was low, but I wasn't seeing any
movement. And I guess the guess my other point too,
like I have been seeing lots of strength gains
and muscle gains.
Even at 2000, even at the...
My calories don't make sense to me.
Even at 2,200 calories in 2000, you saw strength gains?
Well, I'm seeing it, yeah.
Like I can't have been pretty consistent workout programming
there for me guys.
And I have put on weight in the last little bit.
If you're getting stronger while trying to cut and you are,
you are indeed accurate with your calories.
That's a big, that's a big if.
Okay. But if you are indeed accurate and you are getting stronger and your
weight's not changing on the scale, you're
probably building and losing a little bit at the same time because you wouldn't get,
if you get stronger, that's going to point to muscle game.
Yeah.
Are you, what's your job look like?
Are you sedentary or are you moving a lot through the...
I work out in natural gas industry, so I'm electrician, so you're pretty visible,
not all everyday, but.
So I would be a little concerned about how low calories are.
You're a 193 pound, dude.
You're up by 4.30 in the morning.
You have a physical job.
I would think you would be eating a lot more.
I would probably want to put you at 25 to 2800 at least and try and go on like a little bulk.
Yeah. I just think that that's really low calorie for a guy your size who's working out and has
a physical job and is up by 430 in the morning. I mean that's by the way, a bulk done properly,
what I should not properly, a bulk can sometimes make you leaner in the
sense that let's say you went up to 27 her calories, okay, and you ended up gaining four
pounds of muscle, but you didn't gain any body fat, okay? Your leaner, you now have a lower
body fat percentage because it's a smaller percentage. And a faster metabolism. That's right.
So that might be where I would go, I would try and get it to where you can maintain
even closer to 3000 cars.
Agreed.
Okay.
And I should, I guess, add at this point in the year
I am playing men's league hockey as well.
So that probably doesn't help.
Dude, for sure, you're not high.
I would go higher.
Yeah, for sure.
A good goal.
I mean, someone as active as you are,
you should be up 3500 calories.
I mean, that's kind of where you're strength training.
You're also playing hockey and you're a physical,
you got a physical laborer's job, even though your body's probably adapted to all your work,
you're still moving a lot.
Like, you can support a lot more calories.
So personally, a good goal for you if your client of mine would be,
let's try and keep increasing calories.
Let's try and get, you know, 3500 would be like a really good target,
but incrementally work your way up there.
Start at 20, 2700, give it like two weeks of training there.
See how you feel and look.
What's going on with strength?
So long as you don't look like you're or feel like you're putting on a bunch of body fat,
you're not getting weaker at another 200 calories and just keep step flattering that
until you get more like a place like 3500.
Then I feel like if you go from 35,500 down to 2,500, you should see yourself lean out pretty fast if we did that right.
Okay, cool.
All right, man.
Thanks for calling in.
Oh, thank you guys.
You got it.
With this seems to me like, just because I've been doing this for what?
It seems like he's not tracking right? seems like he's not tracking, right?
Yeah, and he's not accurate, right?
He's like tracking sometimes and eyeballing it.
And that's, that has really common, super common.
I would get people like this all the time.
And then we really nailed down the tracking
and they were just off.
They were off by, you know, a few hundred calories.
It's easy to do while they don't throw out the whole day.
And next thing you know, you're averaging a deficit
of 50 calories.
Well, now it's gonna take you seven months
to see any fat loss.
It could also be a combination of tracking accurately
when you're good, and then that's so good.
That's right.
So it's like, maybe he is around 24, 12500
when he's tracking, he's watching on a fuel day.
Yeah, then he has Saturday with the kids
and kind of eats off and is like, oh yeah,
that wasn't great.
But then that one day is over a thousand calorie surplus.
And so it's canceling up.
Yeah, well the way a lot of people will track
is they'll track for a few days.
They'll say, oh no, I have a good idea.
I pretty much eat like that all the time.
And then that's their new number,
which is, no, you got to track every single day
if you want, something accurate.
Our next caller is Stephen from Australia.
Stephen, what's happening?
How can we help you?
Hey, how's it going guys?
It's good.
Awesome to be here.
I'm a huge fan.
Thanks so much for having me.
All right.
I've been listening to you guys for about five years.
You guys definitely changed my life with fitness.
Like I would still be that guy running
on a treadmill trying to lose weight if it wasn't for you guys. So thank you. So my question, I suppose the easiest way to put it is,
I have a butt problem. We all do. Let's just stop right there. Justin, Justin's your guy.
I know all the buttons. So I just finished Maps aesthetic.
I had a blast doing it.
One of the problems though, I seem to be having even though I've had a lot of improvements
in my mobility and stuff is I still have a pelvic tilt.
So the one where it makes your butt looks like it sticks out really well.
And I have no idea how I fixed that. I had a couple
injuries in the past lifting. Pretty sure it was due to bad form and ego lifting. It was
definitely to my back. So I had to spend a lot of time working on some, you know, my
hip mobility with 90-90s and stuff really finally starting to feel good with it, but still can't quite fix this tilt.
All right, well, good question. So this actually brings up a good conversation because, you know, when you're looking at what would be referred to as posture deviations, they are not be all end all. They're really just clues and direction. Okay, you all you have to add
that on top of other things to really get a good idea of what may be going on or maybe
nothing's going on. So in anterior pelvic tilt, by itself, with no pain, if you have good
strength, good stability, good control, no problems, it's probably not an issue. Now, if
you're also noticing back pain,
if you're noticing hip pain or anything like that,
and then you also have an anterior pelvic tilt,
well, that starts to point us in a direction of,
maybe what muscles to look at and to test
and to see if there's some stability or strength issues.
But unless you have like pain and stuff right now,
when you're deadlifting and squatting
and overhead pressing and stuff like that, if you don deadlifting and squatting and overhead pressing stuff like that,
if you don't have those issues or lots of low back pain when you walk or whatever, it's probably not an issue.
So that's the question I have for you.
Do you noticing any of these problems?
Do you have like lower back pain quite substantially?
I don't have substantial pain.
I definitely noticed it feeling tight when I get into a lot of lifts.
Like I got to do a lot of stretching and stuff beforehand when I go in to do my squats and stuff.
I definitely feel it tight.
I don't know if I feel it right now to the point where I feel a lot of pain though.
Okay.
What we would try to do is offset that position with muscles that pull you in the other direction
just to offer a little bit more balance.
So really good core exercises that don't involve the hip flexors are good for this.
So like hip flexor deactivator crunches, we actually have a video on YouTube.
Yeah, I see that one.
So I would do something like that maybe three days a week and really work on strengthening the core
independent of the hip flexors
because in an anterior pelvic tilt,
you often see, not always,
but we often see our overactive,
what it would refer to as overactive hip flexors.
And a communication between the core,
the abs and the obliques and the hip flexors,
that's not necessarily ideal.
I like running a cycle of hip thrust here too.
So like if you're doing core training like Sal saying
and maybe I sub out my squats for a while
and I replace them with hip thrust,
I think that'll help too.
So, but the real key is, and the point that boys made is
that if we're not dealing with a lot of issue like pain and stuff like that
And you have a strong core you squat you deadlift
You're probably okay, but if you do notice your low back gets achy and you know that you don't really address the core that much
Okay, there's definitely room for us to improve and address that
But I also if you're not I wouldn't be stressing too much about it
Yeah, cuz even in the kinetic chain, you might find the ankles, you know, could be
a contributor to this and the stiffness in your lower back. So really, it's sometimes
it's obvious and it's like, well, I feel this pain direct result of me having this kind
of anterior pelvic tilt, but you know, it sometimes could be a little more elusive than that.
It could be just the way your body's compensating from the ground up.
So to just keep with your mobility practices and to see kind of like test your way through
that, I think strengthening your core obviously is going to help regardless of that, just
to create that kind of bracing effect that you want.
So when you're doing anything loaded, you know, you got that extra bit of support.
So working your way through that and really like, you know, if you're doing floor bridges, you're doing hip, hip bridges in any sense of it, like making sure like the first thing you do is
like correct that tilt and you can get that flat back and get your core engaged. And then from there,
you know, just keep honing in on that recruitment process.
What core exercises do you do? What app exercises do you do? Most often. Right now it's just like the
decline setups and I can't do the full leg raises. I go to the knee raises right now and then
don't, yeah, that's most of the ones.
Oh, cool.
I was right then.
There's a lot of room here.
Those are two exercises that require a lot of hip flexor
activation, at the very least as very, very strong stabilizers.
At most, they become your prime moveers.
I would imagine if I saw you do a leg raise,
it's probably a hip flexor leg raise because of what you're talking about.
So hip flexor de-activator crunches,
physio ball crunches done properly,
and-
Plank,
active planks like you do.
Yes, and active planks done properly.
We all have, we have videos for all of those.
All those, yeah, I would not do any more declines
setups or leg raises in your core exercises.
Yeah, and actually it's just cool because, I mean, if you were telling me,
you had lots of pain now, then it would take a lot longer.
But based on what you're saying, honestly, after a couple
of weeks, you should notice that it should be a difference.
There's a sure of doing that.
That'd be sweet.
Thank you.
Yeah, you got it.
You got it.
Are you running any of our programs right now?
What are you running right now?
So, like I said, I just finished the aesthetic. I'm not running anything right now? What are you running right now? So like I said, I just finished the aesthetic.
I'm not running anything right now. Mostly from the fact that I know that my gym time's a
little limited. My wife and I just had our baby girl yesterday. Whoa. I wonder you're so happy.
This guy is really happy. So my gym time's going to be a little limited for a few weeks, but
15, that's 15, bro. We're going to send you massive team. That's the new dad program right there
Sweet, thank you, man. Congratulations. Yeah, thank you so much guys. Thank you so much for having me
He's got damn he was happy. Oh, I'm like happy as dude. I've ever seen
He's just had a baby. Yeah, that's
Yeah, I was gonna say, some of his Instagram pictures
might decline a bit in terms of his posture,
selling it, but yeah, it'd be good to address it.
No, it was good you guys went the morphology route first
because I know there's, there's like two,
I feel like there's extremes in our space
as there is in almost everything.
It's either your pro, corrective exercise,
and everything that's gonna kill you,
and everything you do is bad and wrong,
and we need to fix it, and there's that extreme.
And then there's the other camp where it's just like,
you know, there's nothing you can do.
This is how the way your body is.
And it's like, well, no, well, that gives us a sign
that okay, there is, there is, could be an imbalance here.
You have an anterior pelvic,
but if you squat, you deadlift, you do all these movements, and you don't have any issues, then, I mean, there is, could be an imbalance here. You have an anterior pelvic, but if you squat,
you deadlift, you do all these movements
and you don't have any issues, then I mean, I did.
So I used to have to, I had such a bad anterior pelvic tilt
that by set three of squats, I would be laying on my back
on the floor because my low back was free.
So obviously, and that's what, that's what,
okay, there's something there.
Once I worked on the ankle and hip mobility
Got to a place where I could get into full range of deep good controlled squats
What it did for my core my hip strength is stability eliminated the low back pain completely never came back
Our next color is Matt from Texas Matt. What's up, man? How can we help you? Hey? What's going on? How you doing? What's that?
Thanks for asking Texas Matt, what's up, man? How can we help you? Hey, what's going on? How you doing? What's up?
Thanks for asking.
First of all, I just want to say that I appreciate everything you guys do, the wealth information you guys provide.
I recommend your podcast to everyone who is even has like a slight interest
in fitness, saying the altum is so much in just the single year that I've been listening.
Thank you. Appreciate that.
Yeah. Of course. So I'll just launch into things a I've been listening. Thank you. Appreciate that fee. Yeah, of course.
So I'll just launch into things, a little background on me
and I'll get to my question.
I am 41 years old.
I'm 5 foot 11, 185-ish and I float somewhere
between 15 and 18% body fat.
I've been lifting since I was in college at 18.
It started as a weight loss journey as I left for college
at about 325 pounds and I started to lose weight immediately without all the food from my childhood home in my dorm
pantry.
I got into the gym with some friends who encouraged me to go with them after a holiday
break and I've been addicted to lifting ever since.
So over those 23 years I've run a handful of programs.
I don't need to go through all of them, but I've done cardio in conjunction with all of
those, usually 15 to 30 minutes, either the start or the end of my workouts.
I've seen strength gains using all those programs.
I feel like I'm in a great spot physically.
I'm also trying to hit 170 grams of protein per day.
I'm taking creatin, BCA powder, and I've asked what's gone to supplements, but I'm not
really tracking my calories since it's in the past.
It's led me to some disordered eating habits when I'm not really tracking my calories since it's in the past. It's led me to some disorder eating habits when I'm cutting. So hitting the protein goal has just like drastically
improved my mental health because I'm a lot of you basically anything that contributes to my
protein goals that day, at least you're pretty stated. An educated guest though put me around
2700 to 3000 calories per day. I'm currently running maps in a ball at them in phase three
week three. I don't have any reason to stop that since I'm still seeing string
cranes. I also have a Peloton bike. Hope it's cool to use that name brand.
That's my last form of competitive sport. I allow myself to do I tend to do 30
minutes per day on that with some longer 60-minute sessions on the weekend in
conjunction with trigger sessions. I know it sounds like
overtraining, but I have significantly cut back the amount of cardio and listing that I do
from five days per week just to two to three times per week. I'm sorry, with trigger sessions
and my daily cardio went from 60 minutes to about 30 minutes a day. Okay, so that's a pretty clear
picture of what you're dealing with. My question is that I've been lifting so long and I've dedicated the past two years to really
adding muscle to my legs.
I've been squatting heavy for me, hip thrusting, and have done bi-weight leg circuits.
They include various forms of squats and lunges.
Also, I like to take spin classes that are specifically built around strength, such as
climb rides or hit and hills rides that are mimicking going uphill for a long duration or just sprinting up hills for bursts. What I haven't been able to do though
is give my squat above 275 pounds and every time I get to that range I can get the bar up one time
but if I tap on anything additional after that it's a failure. So I'll get up, like let's say I'll
go all the way down, I'll get up about third of the way and I have to bail on the lift. From there
I'll take a few days off and get back to training, but I've still never been
able to get past that mark after a lifting for however many years.
So for comparison, I was able to get my deadlift to 350 pounds, bench to 255, overhead press
to 185, and I don't max bench or overhead pressing more due to labral tears, but those numbers
were always good enough for me.
So anyway, my guess is that this is just a mental block
and a physical one.
However, I would like to hear your suggestions on ways
to bust through a plateau on a specific lift.
And I am trying to incorporate some novel stimulus
and dial back my cardio as a starting point.
I have a theory.
I think that your legs are pretty endurance trained.
And I think cutting back even more on the Peloton
and the rides like that and purely focusing on getting.
Doing some ones.
Yep.
And you can do in adding some singles, doubles,
and triples in my training or following
like a MAP's power lift type of protocol,
you'll watch that squawk.
That's my speculation.
I bet if you cut the circuit out and the Peloton riding out you'll you're old just gonna get stronger just by doing that
But both of those are not contributing to your leg strength. They're both taking away from
Which is okay if that's what you like like here's a deal
I want people listening to understand this. There's nothing wrong with doing all that if you're okay with a mix bag of results
But if you want specifically to get your squat
above 275,
the hill rides and the legs circuits
are not only not helping,
they're taking away from your strength gains.
So I would just cut them out.
In fact, I bet if you just cut them out,
and just follow and just strength trained like you are,
I bet you'll see it go above 275.
But what Sal said is so important for the audience to understand that I think you're doing a I think we all agree
You're doing a great job right now, and you're probably really and you're in a healthy place your healthy place body
Fabric image you're relatively strong. You got good some cardiovascular endurance
But you're asking a specific exactly, but you're asking I want my squad to go up
Why is it not going up and I think we all agreed that if you were there is not the limiting factor like you know to be able to do more anaerobic just
Pacific strength focused activity. That's that's really where you get the most total
assess
It's as simple as that. I can do that. Yeah, I appreciate it. I'll help you got it man
And listen if you don't have mass power, lift it, send that to you.
Yeah, that's a good program for you.
And then the other thing is, I do.
OK, we'll send that to you.
And follow up with us in what's your squat right now?
What's your one right max?
One right max.
Oh, one right max.
I don't know.
But the last time I max was 275, I'm
wrapping 4 to 6 times 2.25.
So it's probably going to be still.
I wouldn't be surprised if in thirty days in thirty days you
you broke yeah you broke two seventy five so I would love for you to email us
back in thirty days let us know what happens yeah yeah
especially if you follow power lift
yeah yeah I'll do it all right Matt thanks for calling in man crush it
thanks I'll pick it. You got it.
Yeah, so it even row, and this is good,
because I'll read, maybe Doug, you could scroll down a little bit,
because I want to read a lot of information for a very simple answer.
Yeah, but you know what, though, because he gave us all that information,
to me, I felt like I knew right away.
I was just like, oh, he's doing a bunch of endurance stuff for his life.
Yeah, so I want to be clear.
It says, this is what says in the question,
I also like to take spin classes
that specifically are built around strength
such as climb rides or hit hill rides
that mimic going up a hill for a long duration.
It is not strength.
Yeah, if you're doing long durations,
no, we crossed over.
Strength training with us bike
would literally be a 15 second high rate
by the 15 seconds max.
And even then, if you're doing it in conjunction
with a already great straight training program,
they need to have the rest.
That's right, substantially.
That's right.
And to make it clear to the audience again,
it's just, we're not telling this guy that he should just stop doing cardio, but it's not good for you, because I know that's what with you. That's right. And to make it clear to the audience again, it's just, we're not telling this guy
that he should just stop doing cardio,
it's not good for you,
because I know that's what people think.
That is it's like,
you ask a specific question,
I wanna get my squad up.
This is not helping that.
And if we get away from that, I will.
If you ask me, I wanna be healthy,
you're doing a great job.
Yeah, that's what I'm gonna do.
I'm gonna do it, but you gotta understand
that you're gonna give up a little bit
if you want to do all these other things and you want to be very specific about it.
By the way, you know, if you look at the top cyclist, sprint cyclist, they have massive
legs.
So you might be thinking, I thought you said that's not muscle building.
If you, first off, there's a, there's a self selection bias.
These are genetically gifted monsters whose legs will build almost with nothing.
That's what makes them good at it.
And if you took them off of the sprint cycling and just had them lift,
their massive legs would look even more massive.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
Our next color is Rachel with Christina.
Oh, all right.
Yeah.
For people who don't know, we had Rachel on the show a while ago.
Yes.
At the end of that conversation with you, we figured, man,
she would be, this would be so good if we could set her up with a really good online
coach. And the first person we thought of was Christina. So you guys have been working
together for a little bit now, right? Yeah. All right. How's it going?
About our months now.
Four months. All right. How's it going? What's going on? Give us an update.
Who do you want to talk to first? You're the star of this. So you go ahead. I'm no star.
You're the star here. Tell us what's going on, Rachel.
Okay. So I want to go back to why I called you guys, right? I had originally, it was a
fitness-related question because I had developed a fitness routine
that I used as a coping mechanism throughout, you know,
tough times in my life and it wasn't serving me anymore
and I was confused and didn't know how to, you know,
move forward.
And so you guys are the fitness moguls and so I called you.
You very graciously sent me up with Christina
and I'll be honest, like I thought,
all right, she's gonna give me a diet,
she's gonna give me a workout plan
and every day she's gonna want me to log what I eat
and you know, great, right?
But it was free, right?
And so, hey, I'm a Jew.
So.
So.
So.
Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh.
Oh.
Oh, very good, Jillis.
So, okay.
When we started the program, you know, originally she had explained the concept of, we called it,
you know, we kind of termed it the mold.
And I want her to explain this because she does a great job.
But she taught me that I've got so many voices going on in my head and so many thoughts.
Most of the thoughts are not me.
Most of the thoughts are from my past and I'm conditioned to think that way.
And I guess, you know, it's considered ego or whatnot.
And then there are true authentic thoughts that we all feel. And at the time,
I was conflicted because I knew I felt something authentically, right? I knew that this wasn't serving
me. I wanted control of my life. And I felt that I couldn't, right? It was, I know that I was
able to do hard work and I was able to get through hard things and I couldn't understand why I couldn't do this.
Right.
We discussed the why. Why do I want to do this? The why essentially was I want to control my life.
And we started the work. And the work, I'll be honest with you, it sucked. It wasn't easy, right?
It's, there were so many times that I called Christina and I'm, you know, I'm crying. I'm on the floor
in my garage and, you know, I was so, it was a real breakthrough for me. Like it really, really was. But, sorry, I'm going to get emotional right now.
I think what I was experiencing, you know, when I went through my divorce was that this
is hard work that came to me.
And at that point, I wasn't able to run from it anymore and I had to make a change.
Right. And this was something that it wasn't bad enough where I knew I needed to make a change,
but I didn't want anything else controlling me. Right. And so what Christina gave me was number one
identifying what was going on.
The tools to kind of go through it, right? Understanding, all right, this isn't me, right?
This is the mold talking and really processing, what's the mold?
What's me?
So over the course of three months, I feel like I become so good at identifying
who's talking, right?
If it's the mold, I know how to talk back to it now.
I have the tools to be able to process, you know, what I'm feeling instead of turning
to exercise immediately because that's, you know, that was my vice.
But I mean, more so than that, like there are so many things in my personal life that
immediately, like upon identifying, hey, that's the mold, right?
I was able to make a change like right away, instead of waiting the months and the years.
It's like yesterday I made a really big change in my life that if I didn't do that, I would be staying in a situation
that would probably cost 10, 15, 20 years of my life
that I feel like I got back.
And so what she's done,
and I mean, she's gonna be working with me probably
for the rest of my life, I'm sorry, Christina,
but you're stuck with me.
I mean, the work is incredible.
It taught me number one that just because something is uncomfortable and you don't want to go
through it doesn't mean that it's wrong.
It kind of means that you probably should.
We run from uncomfortable feelings because we don't want to feel that, right?
We want to turn to whatever is certainty for us, whatever provides like safety and security
and even though working out for me did provide that, you know, it was maybe in a moment, but
it started turning into something that like no longer was serving me, it was controlling
me, right?
So I've become good at talking back to it.
I've become resolute in this is my life and I'm going to make choices and my own choices.
And I also feel like I am never, ever going to let anybody pass parents, siblings, teachers,
lifestyle experiences, addictions.
None of that's ever going to control me again. The moment that I was able to
identify what was my past controlling me and not serving me and what is an
authentic choice that I'm making is when I was able to take control of my life.
Like my authentic life started it. June, it down June 14 June 14 2023 I'm 36
years old and I feel like I have a shot of the second chance in life. Wow. Wow that's great.
Christina if it's okay if you don't mind me asking a few questions and I know it's okay
so you can come out here but you know from our, when we had Rachel on asking us questions, it became
clear to us that she had developed a really abusive relationship with exercise, which
a lot of people who are fitness fanatics have experience with, where the exercise becomes
like a drug and it starts to harm you and it starts to add to the quality of your life,
starts to take away from the quality of life.
Were we accurate with that?
And so what were the things, because she said it was hard, what were the things that you
did were identified with Rachel that helped you guys move forward?
What does this look like as a coach for someone like you?
What would you do with her?
Yeah.
Well, first and foremost, you guys were spot on I think you
know in the conversation there was this kind of light bulb moment of wait a minute
we're giving her the advice that we normally would but now as she
continues to talk we're seeing that this relationship with exercise is one
that's not healthy for her and I remember in the conversation too you know
there was kind of that do we pull her out of it completely?
Do we titrate her down from it?
And so when we began to work together, it was very clear to me that Rachel was, I do these workouts because it's the only thing in my day
that gives me that rush.
It gives me a sense of something.
Because throughout her life, everything's been decided for her.
She has not had an opportunity to share her wants and needs,
to be seen or heard, whether it was her,
the community that she grew
up in and kind of those rigid conform, you know, that conformity that that that community
expects to being the eldest in her family and like being a caretaker for her siblings to also
her position in the community. Everything was decided for her. She didn't understand how to feel.
And so exercise provided that feeling, right? That dopamine hit, those endorphins, everything you
guys talk about was that drug. But just like any other drug, every time we get that dopamine hit,
we need more and more and more. And I can't take credit for this.
I don't take credit for any of this because in, you know, in all reality,
she was the one who did all of this work, right?
But I also want to say that when she came to me,
she'd already began chipping away at this.
And so she was ready for it.
So that's for coaches listening or someone who is struggling with this.
Like, just realizing like she said, this work is difficult. but if you can make this promise to yourself and trust the process,
that's number one for the person coming in. But for me, I needed her to begin to listen to herself.
For most of us, we don't have an opportunity to just hear or even think that what is going on
internally is worth it, right? So we set up these little emotional check-ins that she would do throughout the day to just listen and witness her experience inside, right?
Because I've never, if I've always been told by everything outside of me of how to sink, fill and do,
I probably don't know what's going on.
So I need to just sit and witness it as if I'm witnessing a TV show, right?
And so that was one of the activities or tasks that we did.
Then as I'm witnessing, now I'm aware of this thinking pattern,
right?
This thinking pattern that is continuing to tell me,
do more, do more, you're not good enough.
If you don't, all of the intercredit messages and voices,
right?
And through that, we did the externalization of saying,
okay, I want you to personify.
Like, what does that feel that thinking powder feel like to you?
If it was standing outside of you, what would it look like?
And she says, it looks like mold.
It feels like mold, right?
So this externalization, not only helped her start disconnecting this thinking pattern from herself
But also it makes it a little bit more tangible to say like oh, this isn't me
This is something that I've adapted to or that has been conditioned in my life and just like it's been conditioned
I can recondition it my I can relearn it and
So then we go into okay, we're where we know when it's like it's been conditioned, I can recondition it, right? I can relearn it. And so then we go into, okay, we're aware, we know when it's happening, now what do we do
with it?
And this is where the discomfort comes in.
Sometimes we literally just have to sit with discomfort because if we are not getting
uncomfortable, we are not creating change, right?
And sitting through discomfort also requires tools to help you get on the other side.
All of our emotions are transient.
They're at the beginning, the middle and end, and we need to kind of ride that wave of
the discomfort.
And so teaching her skills to sit with herself, and no, I survived, I survived it again.
And eventually over time, those big, you know, hills that you would go over,
became smaller and smaller, more tangible and easier for her to witness and experience.
And then through that little voice, her authentic self, became louder and louder and louder.
So those are some of the techniques that I used with RayJay.
No, Kristina, I know that we're highlighting Rachel right now,
but in your experience, how common is this with the general population
that's using exercise?
How common is it and is it like a spectrum of, you know,
most all people have it and it's just in some end of that spectrum.
Like how often do you see this in people's behaviors around exercise?
I would say 99% of people struggle with this.
You know, you guys have been running out of lane smith educational theories.
And if we look at that, we look at attachment.
And so many of us can see how we had struggles in our upbringing that taught us we're
only good enough if we please others if we are perfect or we perform in a certain way if we
over achieve or if we're invisible right. So if I'm learning that and then I watch TV I watch
media and it says oh but look at this person on, they're fronking on the beach and they're hydroxy-cut commercial, happy and smiling.
And everyone around me is congratulating people
because they are looking good or they work out
or whatever it is.
If I have been conditioned to externally validate,
I'm going to turn to exercise and diet
and hope to fill that void in my life. and I say it all the time this mindset piece is
So important, but we haven't been focusing on it at all
It says if people are the headless horseman their heads out here in their bodies here
And we haven't been connecting the two so for me and obviously I
I have a population that comes to me for this reason, but it's
incredibly common.
Yeah.
So can I add one thing to that?
Yes, go ahead.
To the amount of people that have contacted me from this MindPump episode, from the Facebook
group saying, Rachel, I'm going through the exact same thing.
Tell me what Christine is telling you.
Can we do this together?
Can we hold each other accountable?
So many people are experiencing the same thing.
Yeah.
We had an influx of folks reach out to us.
And I will tell you guys a good majority of them
are saying very similar results because we provide the
opportunity to take to keep space for them.
Well, Christina, you mentioned these check-ins,
these emotional check-ins.
It really sounds like,
because I don't think a lot of people realize that
that's a skill that if you don't develop, you don't have.
And so like any skill that you develop,
you have to consciously practice it first
because someone listening might be like,
oh my God, what a pain in the butt.
Four or five times a day, I gotta sit down,
think about how I feel.
And yeah, you do until it becomes automatic.
But in order for it to become automatic,
you have to consciously practice it,
just like anything else.
The other thing I wanna add is you have a background
in therapy as well.
So you don't just do fitness and your tristle
for coaches listening right now.
Christina's, she's educated in this.
Now what I used to do as a trainer,
I did not have a background like you did Christina.
I would work with my clients alongside a therapist
and we would work together.
And I think, and I wanted to say that
because I don't want coaches to listen to you
and be like, oh, that's what I'm gonna do my clients.
This is a specific scale that you have
that you bring to the table.
Now, Rachel, I wanna ask you, you had mentioned
how your relationship to exercise was affecting
your relationship with your kids, how you were feeling.
Has any of that changed?
Has it changed for the better?
What's that like now?
So what's interesting is that when she and I first started,
she was asking me, you know, what's interesting is that when she and I first started she was asking me, you know,
What's your motivation? What's your why? And so my why was yes to have control of my life
But I specifically said the words I want to be able to go on vacation with my kids and not feel this pressure to work out every single day
And I think I said it to you guys too on our first episode
We started working together in June. My brother at the time, single guy, started dating a girl, two literally three months to the day. He got married. His wedding
was in Israel. We had a family vacation, we're like 30, and we had a two week vacation
in Israel where all the family was together, and I remember leading up to it, and I was getting
nervous. I'm like, Christina, I'm going to Israel. I'm not going to be able to work out every day,
and she worked with me. She said, you're going to be feeling this.
If you feel this, hear everything exercises.
Here's Mindful.
I still have not done Yen yoga yet.
I don't know if I ever felt it.
But she told me what was going to happen.
She prepared me for it.
And I went to Israel, and I did not work out once.
And it was incredible. Wow. And I was to Israel and I did not work out once and it was incredible. And I was
literally able to enjoy my family, give my kids an experience that they will never forget.
And I can't, I can't believe I did it. I really can't believe I did it.
Great. Great job. Now, now here's the salesman in me. Okay. I'm going to sell this to people
watching right now because here's the fear with someone watching who is in the same boat that you were. They're going
to hear this and be like, oh my God, if I stop all this working out, I'm going to gain
all this body fat. I'm going to look terrible. We're looking at you right now. You look amazing.
You look very healthy. Any physical changes. I mean, you look healthier to me, but any
physical changes. Like what's what's happened since you've broken the chains of this addiction?
Um, honestly, my body got a lot better. There it is. There it is.
Uh, I'm resting a lot more. I'm seeing so much more definition in my muscles than I've
ever seen the comments that I'm getting from people of like, what have you been doing?
I'm like, honestly, working out a lot less. But my energy, right?
I've got so much more energy now.
Also, just the fact of like removing myself
from the gym for that hour, two hours
and giving it to my children or to anything other than that
psychologically, it gives me so much fuel and self-worth and meaning and purpose.
And I think that ties into all of this too.
It's really, I feel fulfilled.
That's the only word I can really use right now.
Excellent.
Well, this is amazing to hear.
I knew this would happen.
I'm so glad we sent you up with the best. Steena, thank you so much for for for doing this. I'm glad it worked out. I'm glad other people got to hear this, especially that last part because
that's the biggest roadblock is people are afraid. If they change, oh, that means I'm going to sacrifice, you know, whatever gains
I've made, you will look better if you do it right. Guys, I just, I want to say a huge thank you to you guys.
I really, really do.
And this is not something that has just affected me.
It's affected my kids.
It's affected my friends.
It's affected my relationships.
I mean, you know, you guys did something to help me out,
but you've got no idea how this affected so many other people besides me.
So thank you from the bottom of my heart. Thank you very much. Thank you both. Thank you so much.
Great job. Bye. We'll see you guys. See you. You know, one thing I want to comment on for coaches and
trainers listening right now. And she kind of said it quickly and you might not even have noticed what a
big deal is. But if you're a trainer or coach,
one of the most effective things you could do
to build trust and adherence and consistency
with your client is to tell them what they're going to feel
before it happens.
Two reasons.
One, when it happens, they're gonna look at you like,
oh my god, you know what you're talking about?
You're a wizard, yeah.
Number two, they're prepared. Because you like, oh my god, you know what you're talking about? You're a wizard, yeah. Number two, they're prepared.
Because one of the most challenging things for somebody
is when they go into a new challenge,
and they're not prepared, so they automatically,
typically will default into their impulsive behaviors.
But what Christina did, she set her up.
She said, look, you're gonna go on this trip.
You're not gonna work out.
You, this is what's gonna happen.
You're gonna feel like this.
And when that happens, I want you to do these tools.
That's right.
And so it only solidified their bond.
It built more trust than her coach, which is everything.
And she set her up for success.
And I think that we really need to, coaches and trainers, this is something that you need
to do with your clients.
It will make you so much more.
Oh, this is so, this isn't just important for somebody who has,
some sort of disordered eating or bad relationship.
This is every client.
That doesn't matter.
Every client comes in with expectations of what they think
and most of them are wildly skewed.
And if you're gonna be successful at what you do,
learning to forecast that for them
from the very beginning will set. We'll set you up
I mean, we cover this in our core so we're get that we've been doing and this is something that I can't stress enough on
For someone who's trying to build their business how important it is that you you set the expectations correctly from the gates
You'll see a huge difference not only in their adherence to it
But the success in your business too. Totally. By the way, where do they find Christine? It's mind over matter
Is that the name of her business?. Totally. By the way, where do they find Christine? It's mind over matter. Is that the name of her business?
I think that was the name of her coaching business.
Something like that.
I'll look it up.
Make sure we have that up when she's talking
for people on a contact or find someone like her.
Look, if you like the show, head over to mindpumpfree.com
and check out all of our free fitness guides.
If you have any fitness goals, you want some free help,
go check those out.
Also, you can find us on Instagram. justin' is that Mind Pump Justin.
I'm at Mind Pump to Stefano, and Adam is at Mind Pump Adam.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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