Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2231: The Negative Effects of Protein Shakes, How to Train to Improve Golf Performance, the Truth About the “Butt Wink” & More
Episode Date: December 20, 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: BE ...the example! (3:07) The genius of Spotify’s Wrapped. (24:57) Market updates and office vacancies in San Francisco. (29:40) Have creators lost their artistry in what they do? (35:26) Playgrounds were different back in the day. (40:12) Updating the audience on the guy's treatments done in Mexico. (44:01) The latest fitness trend to avoid. (52:27) Highlighting the coaching aspect of working with NutriSense. (57:42) Shout out to The New Gold Standard book. (59:11) #ListenerLive question #1 - What program can I do to gain muscle? (1:02:17) #ListenerLive question #2 - What are the negative effects of getting as much protein from shakes as I do? (1:14:32) #ListenerLive question #3 - How would you recommend getting the most out of training to build the athlete while maintaining my golf practice? (1:28:40) #ListenerLive question #4 - What is the best way to stop the “butt wink”, and is it as bad as some people put it out to be? (1:38:50) Related Links/Products Mentioned Ask a question to Mind Pump, live! Email: live@mindpumpmedia.com Visit Legion Athletics for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code MINDPUMP at checkout for 20% off** Visit NutriSense for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code MINDPUMP at checkout** Special Launch: MAPS 40+ ** Code 40LAUNCH at checkout ** Promotion ends December 24th, act now for $80 off + 2 FREE eBooks! December Promotion: MAPS Old Time Strength | MAPS OCR 50% off! ** Code DECEMBER50 at checkout ** Mind Pump #2152: How To Convince Friends & Family To Work Out Mind Pump #1165: Bishop Robert Barron On Physical Fitness, Satan, Evolution, Psychedelics & Much More Mind Pump #2092: How To Cultivate Amazing Relationships With Adam Lane Smith Spotify Wrapped is the streaming giant's secret growth hack Not at the bottom yet: SF office vacancy hits record high China-Affiliated Hackers Hit Critical U.S. Infrastructure Leave the World Behind - Netflix 8-Bit Christmas (2021) Eterna Health – Refer a Patient Redditor banned after claiming he shoved an energy drink popsicle up his butt The New Gold Standard: 5 Leadership Principles for Creating a Legendary Customer Experience Courtesy of the Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company Visit NED for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Mind Pump #2112: Is 15 Minutes Enough Time For An Effective Workout? MAPS 15 Minutes Mind Pump #1860: Fourteen Of The Best Foods For An Amazing Physique Mobility and Core Exercises For An Optimal Golf Swing - Mind Pump 4 Best Golf Exercises - How to Increase Your Driver Distance! Mind Pump #440: Dr. Bhrett McCabe- Crush Mental Barriers & Dominate The Game Of Life MAPS Prime Pro Webinar Mind Pump #2135: Barbell Squat Masterclass Personal Trainer 3-Day Training – Starting Jan. 15, 2024 Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Bishop Robert Barron (@bishopbarron) Instagram Adam | Relationship Psychology (@attachmentadam) Instagram Teddy Swims (@teddyswims) Instagram Oliver Anthony (@oliver_anthony_music_) Instagram Adeel Khan, MD (@dr.akhan) Instagram Dr. Stephen Cabral (@stephencabral) Instagram Brandon Harris (@higher__human) Instagram Bhrett McCabe, PhD (@drbhrettmccabe) Instagram
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mind, hop, mind, hop with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the most downloaded fitness health and entertainment podcast in the history of the universe.
That's right, this is Mind Pump.
In today's episode, we answered live caller's questions.
So we helped them out on air, but this was after an intro portion.
Today's intro was 60 minutes long.
This will be cover current events,
new studies, family life,
and we talk about new fitness trends like boofing.
You'll figure that out in today's episode.
By the way, if you want to skip around to your favorite parts,
check the show notes.
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You can click on one of them,
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Also, if you wanna be on an episode like this one, email us your question at live at
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This episode is brought to you by some sponsors.
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This episode is also brought to you by Nutris Sense.
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It's the most effective way to individualize your diet for your body and work with a coach
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Look, everybody knows the fail rate with diets is super high, neutral sense, their success
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Anyway, check them out, get a discount, go to Nutrisense.io, forward slash mind pump,
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also lifestyle guidelines, dietary guidelines, supplement guides, like the whole thing, right?
We talk about everything to get your body to feel like it felt when you were younger, maybe
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teacher time and it's teacher time
Shit Doug you know it's my favorite time of the week.
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The most effective way to get the people around you that you care about to improve their
health through fitness and nutrition is the following.
Simply be the example.
It almost never works to harp on somebody or preach to somebody on how they need to change
things.
But being the example often works when you do it in a very calm, confident way.
Literally, be the way you want them to be.
Be the example.
Become about it.
And then watch people come around.
Isn't it funny how long it takes anybody who has been getting that has been bitten by
the fitness bug,
it takes them a long time to figure this out.
Oh yeah.
And I always compare it to religion.
Because I feel like it's real similar.
If you were in your mid 30s or 40s or older
and you never really took care of your health,
never exercise, never strain train,
never really ate a proper diet,
and you do it for the first time consistently
and committed and committed to it.
Changes your life.
Changes your life.
And it reminds me a lot of people
that have been wandering through life with no purpose
and no belief in anything,
and you're just here, and then they find religion,
and it changes their life.
You want to scream from the rooftop?
Yeah, and then everybody you see,
you wanna tell them about your religion
or you wanna tell them about their,
and it's like, it turns everybody off.
I won't.
It turned, I've never,
and by the way, I'm speaking from, you know,
I'm guilty too.
I'm guilty of being that guy who,
fact, I've told a story a long time ago to you guys
where I like, I got in a fight with one of my good friends because I, mine was more about
talking about how much I love the working in a gym and being a trainer and like I was so
passionate and excited about my job and it rubbed him the wrong way because I was always
talking about it.
And it's like, but to me it highlights that, like, you know, people don't always want to
receive that information. It's like they have to, people don't always want to receive that information.
It's like they have to, they have to first want that
before you give it to them.
And I don't care how much, how many of the answers
you have for them, it's like, if they're not in a position,
they're not in a place in their life
where they want to receive that or they're asking you,
then it comes off horrible.
It totally, well, with health and fitness in particular,
because, you know, what's the implication,
right?
What's the potential implication?
Somebody comes up to you, a friend of yours, they just started working out, they just
lost 20 pounds.
And they're feeling a lot better and they come to you and they're like, hey, hey, John,
dude, you got to do this thing, man, you got to do this diet thing, you got to work out.
I mean, you might be thinking to yourself, like, screw you, man, like, we're trying to
say I'm fat, like, you just started doing this yourself, you know, and, and, you know, I'll do it myself.
I figured out what I'm immediate, like defensive. Yes.
Response. Yeah. What do you mean I'm not good enough? I said, I could see how religion can do that as
well, right? Oh, now you think you're better. You know, that's like the, the natural and clean
hands. Yeah. Oh, this is just another thing that he's on right now. Yeah. Go talk to me in six
months or a year. Right. So this, this is, it's an interesting one because the most effective ways I've
ever been evangelized into anything was never because somebody came and, you know, hit
me with it in my face.
Clearly by observation. It was always because I was around.
They're observing. And I, something about what they were doing or how they were. I
really liked or I could see what they were doing. And I could say, man, the way that that person operates
their business or while the way that person's a father
or whatever.
Yeah, like, what is that, you know?
And then you true influence.
100%.
It's not that fake projected like, I'm telling you
to do this because I'm so passionate about you just
watching what I'm doing and you want to know
what that is because it's contagious.
Look, all of us have been doing this for a long time.
I've been training people professionally for a long, long time, like 25 years, okay?
Do you know how many times I sat my parents down or like, like, aunts and uncles and cousins
and grandparents?
Yeah. We're going to do grandparents. We're gonna do this.
We're gonna do that, you know, one time I remember
as, you know, embarrassing to talk about,
but like I went to my parents house and I threw away
a bunch of the food that they bought,
because it was bad for them, like I'm the kid, right?
And I'm the parent, like, you're not gonna do,
you know, you're gonna walk and whatever.
And you're gonna do this stuff.
And it never works, it never, never.
And if you're gonna call the health nuts,
oh god, yeah, I call everything.
I've been called that a few times.
Yeah, it just doesn't work.
The most effective thing I ever did, though,
was just be cool, calm, confident about it.
And then people tend to come up to me and go,
man, you got a lot of energy or, you know, wow.
Not, I'm not gonna say tend to.
They all do eventually.
Everybody does eventually.
If you, if you put your head down, you stay consistent
with your eating, your training, you just live the example,
then almost everybody at one point in their life
will cross the time when they desire something about that.
They wanna be better about their diet.
I've never met a person one that hasn't set thought
to themselves, I need to eat a little bit better or take care of myself a little more.
Or maybe I should actually, and if you are never thumping them over the head with it,
and you're just living the example, and you're the best example in their life of that,
they will make them feel the least judge.
That's right.
You will be the one.
They come out to you and say, you know,
so I've been thinking about trying to be better about my diet.
I've watched you for years the way you are.
So like that, what are you guys should do?
Yes.
100% it'll happen that way, but you gotta be patient.
Well, and it's not just that, like,
because I think that what happens we get impatient,
especially if there's someone you care about
and you see their health going down
or you see the mobility have issues or whatever,
you could become impatient, but the bottom bottom line is there is no other way.
So in other words, you're not making the choice
of I'll be patient, be the example,
and that'll take longer, or I could kind of force it to happen.
You just, it won't happen otherwise.
So even if it doesn't happen,
it would never happen anyway.
That's right.
You can't sit and force somebody.
And even if you do, they'll never stick with it.
So like you might be able to...
The fail rate is terrible.
Yeah, you might be able, if you have a child or somebody who,
you're an authority to,
or you can pressure somebody or guilt somebody into, you know, making some
issue, but they'll never stick to it. Yeah, because they didn't they didn't ask for it. You know,
the I'll here's all your evidence you need. People I think rely on epiphanies. It's like, oh,
I'm just, you know, they'll just get it. Something's going to happen. Do you know how many people?
Yeah. You know, this is, this is just rhetorical, right? I mean, I don't need to answer,
because we, I think we all know the answer.
But you know how many people have heart attacks
or survive cancer or get diagnosed with diabetes
or high blood pressure or have some mobility issue
that becomes obvious and still do nothing about it?
Most people.
So, and the reason why I'm saying that is
because then this may happen. Like, oh the reason why I'm saying that is because, or, because then this may happen like,
oh my dad just had, he just got diagnosed with diabetes.
So I had to go sit down with him and hammer him
and preach him, preach to him, whatever.
Still won't work.
They, if they come to you, you'd be the calm example
and you help and you can coach them and do all that,
but it just doesn't work. It also makes fitness people
you know can make us appear, it were easy targets as hypocrites when you're seeing their preaching all the time
because you know real balance isn't perfect so you're oh you're a fitness person but I saw you
eat pizza last Friday or I've seen you miss a workout, or maybe you're just young, you have good genetic, and that happens when you're the preachy person,
because I always gonna look for the faults, right?
I think too, I understand,
because I've been in this position too,
when you have a family member that say has cancer,
or you're watching them just kind of eat their life away,
and there's somebody you love.
And so I get the pull, right,
to wanna try and say their lives,
but when I'm facing those situations,
I just take that on as a personal challenge
of I've gotta be even better.
I've gotta be so good about what I do
that it becomes contagious.
And if they haven't asked me yet,
then there's room for me to continue to be better.
I'm not good enough, right? I'm not doing it well enough for them to, you know, and be there. Be there
for them when they need it. Yeah. You know, that's the other side of it. Not to be like the,
I'm going to go work out and just kind of disconnect from the sky. You know, I think this is a
put, this is actually a part of our resistance. So, you know, off air that we talk more about this,
and we've mentioned it on air before, that we all hate to be called influencers.
And I think that's because we never sought out to do that.
Like the mission was to go out and help people
and share all this information and knowledge.
It wasn't to influence people to doing something.
It was like, let's go out and let's give, let's show,
let's be, let's be the example,
let's help others by showing others like that.
But by no means we want to beat you overhead and shame you or guilt you in anything
like that. We've never attempted to try and influence people.
So when people call you an influencer, I just, I know some people embrace it.
And they're like, all about it. I hate it.
It's fine if it's like it's who you are. It's authentic.
And it's just magnified, right?
Like I think that's the ideal situation,
but it's when it's like you start being influenced by,
you know, the people are falling,
you're trying to portray something that's really not,
you know, what you normally do,
or like you're overly trying to create this persona
for people to buy into.
It's just like, it just doesn't work.
It's because influencer to me,
when someone says influencer,
it smells like fame seeker.
Like, oh, I do this because it gives me followers.
It makes me feel important, you know?
So that's why I hate it.
Cause I've met, obviously, you know,
we've met a lot of influencers.
And I mean, I know people know this,
but maybe they do, maybe they don't,
but most of them are fake.
Like most of them are not real.
Well, most of them are doing what Justin said.
Most of them are, you know, reading the algorithm, right?
Or reading the feedback and the metrics,
and they're going, oh, when I say these things,
or when I act this way, you know, it gets me all the way.
Yeah. Oh, I hate that.
And so that's why I think none of us, like,
I think, I mean, it's all kind of in the same vein, right?
The stuff that we're talking about.
I'm not, I'm not.
I'll give you, I have a personal example.
Okay. You brought up religion.
You know, if you've listened to show long enough,
you've heard my spiritual journey, but I used to be a very stout atheist.
And I mean, a real atheist, not like, you know,
some people say, oh, I don't know.
I like, literally was searching.
I was searching.
Like I was searching, and that was the conclusion I came to,
and I was ready to defend it, okay.
But I was always searching.
I was a real, I was an atheist.
At some point, it became more agnostic,
and there was, you know, stuff that led to that.
And then that's kind of where I sat for a while.
And then we, we interviewed Bishop Baron.
Now the point of interviewing Bishop Baron,
the first interview,
because we had him on this way I think twice.
The first one was really because,
it was kind of my own curiosity.
He was so open to being questioned on the internet,
you watch him on YouTube, he was very intelligent.
So I said, this will be a great episode.
And what's interesting, by the way, looking back, this kind of little side note, there were
a lot of people that were like, you're crazy for having a bishop on your podcast, it's
going to crash your podcast.
You're like, nobody wants to talk here about that on your show.
We all decided, we're like, screw you, we do what we want, type of deal.
And so we went down to Santa Barbara to interview him.
And it was really, I was asking questions
that I wanted to answer to.
Anyway, while I'm there,
his staff and his team were literally
what I'm talking about.
They were just the way that they were.
It opened me up so much.
They were just such good people.
Nobody was like preaching to me or saying,
it was just these really, it was just incredible experience.
And that opened me up to asking more questions
and that kind of stuff.
That experience is exactly what I'm talking about
with fitness when people around you,
they don't feel like you feel like you're better than them
or they feel like they're worse than you.
They're just like, man, you know,
God, that guy's so energetic, he's so,
he looks good, he looks like he feels good,
like I wanna know what he's doing, you know?
And that is the most effective way to,
I guess, influence to use that word effectively, you know?
You know, bringing up the Bishop Aaron,
I actually have forgotten about that kind of moment
and time for us.
We were really nervous about doing that.
I know.
I remember, you know, we're still on the rise, right?
And we weren't as big as we are now
as far as listening to our ship.
And there was this fear of, you know, oh my God,
are we gonna jump the shark by doing this?
And it was like, I remember all of us agreeing that,
now this is a conversation that we genuinely all want to have.
And we should do it for that reason.
And it ended up being one of the most viral and biggest bumps we had ever felt in the
business to date.
And so it was massive.
And we didn't do it for that at all.
No, no, that was fact.
We thought we thought we were going to get hurt.
And we agreed.
Fuck it.
Who cares?
Who cares?
If we get hurt at this point, this
is what we want to do. And this reminds me of, I just was, this is just in the last week,
I've been going back and forth and our forum. And there's a thread going about, you know,
the people that were that didn't like the Adam Lane Smith episode. I remember we had
that same conversation, like, you know, do we take this chance and, you know, basically
allows, give somebody our platform by themselves, no interview, but
to present their information, that they're providing and we all, we all just agreed like,
you know, this could hurt the business, whatever, but I just, we think that we value this information
so much.
And originally the feedback in our form, I'd say was about 50-50, I felt like,
oh, wow, there's a lot of people that spoke up that said, like, oh, I didn't like it, or
I didn't, I skipped it, boys aren't there. And so I was like, man, that's really interesting.
And then right after that comes out the Spotify updates for the year, right? And Spotify has this
thing every year that's their viral social media thing that everybody posts, where they,
by the way, have you heard like how much that's
what that's done for Spotify?
I'll get to that after this little side.
I think it's brilliant,
but you know,
it's so marketing for them for sure.
Well, just brilliant because nobody's tracking podcasts
and showing stats on it.
But anyway,
I can't go and add on what I take you off from.
And so on the forum, you know, sometimes too,
this can be a little bit deceiving for us, right?
So we have this community of people.
And I'd argue that some of those people
are very responsible for the early growth of this business
and the support and everything.
So we value their opinion a lot.
And having 50% of the people be like,
nah, about it was like, oh, fuck, maybe it was a bad decision.
Well, then out roles, the the Spotify thing and low and behold,
the single, most shared episode that we had ever done
in the previous year was the Adam Lane Smith episode.
And it felt so good to get that because I'm guilty
of allowing sometimes the loud minority
to steer the direction of the business
when our heart and gut tells us how to do it.
Can I just give you guys,
I'm gonna give you guys just a nice pat on the back.
I really appreciate this about all you guys is that,
because here's what happens, you have a business,
and we all lead in different ways,
but Adam definitely leads the business side the most.
And so the struggle is always,
do we do what we wanna do, what we think is right, and what's gonna grow the business? Because if you can't grow the business, then, do we do what we want to do, what we think is right?
And what's going to grow the business? Because if you can't grow the business, then you can't do
what you want to do. And you can't help people. That's just the fact, right? So if you're a trainer
in your coach, you want to help people. If you can't reach people and nobody wants to hire you,
you get to help no one. So there's a side of it that's always the business side. And you got to
juggle that. And you don't want to make stupid decisions that could crush your business,
because then you lose the ability to help people. But you also, if you have integrity,
want to make decisions that are not just based off of, here's what's going to make us popular,
because it's not who we are or maybe it doesn't really align with our values and, you know,
you could, and trust me, you could always twist and find a way to make it align with
your values or trick yourself.
And so the kudos that, what I want to say is that you, we don't do that, you guys don't
do that at all.
I know you don't at all, Adam.
So with something like that, I mean, that's awesome because here's a deal.
We didn't do it to get more shares.
None of us sat in here said, we're gonna put these Adam Lane Smith episodes up
because he's gonna get shared.
Like crazy.
No, definitely not.
It was literally like, this is good stuff.
No, I'm not gonna try to.
I still remember the moment where Doug was warning us.
He was, hey, this may not be a good idea.
Maybe we should really think about this
and he was thinking, Doug too,
I was always thinking of protecting the podcast of business.
Of course, always thinking that way.
And I remember, I don't care.
Like, I don't care if it hurts the business.
I think it's the right thing to do.
And it was so nice that it was not only, not only did it end up being shared, but it
got shared the most because it wasn't shared the most.
It was the second most.
I wouldn't see it. I wouldn't know because we don't have those.
Oh, because the stats come in just like that.
Yeah, the stats, the analytics on those things are not easy to obtain and figure out.
And so if it was the second most shared, it wouldn't have been populated.
So you know what this reminds me of, and then I want to circle back to the Spotify stats.
I don't want you to forget about that.
But you know what this reminds me of.
Do you guys remember the moment as a trainer?
Because it's a very natural thing to feel. to the Spotify stats. I don't want you to forget about that. But you know what this reminds me of? Do you guys remember the moment as a trainer?
Because it's a very natural thing to feel.
And I don't think it was obvious
when we were trainers two decades ago.
It's a very natural thing to not want to send your clients
to other providers because you're afraid
that they're not going to have the funds
to continue to hire you.
Personal training is not cheap.
Even in the late 90s, when I was doing it,
you know, it was 50 bucks an hour back then
So even now for a lot of people that's a lot of money back then that was a ton of money and so the fear was
This person just bought 20 sessions for me
They want to go see a chiropractor or they want to go see an acupuncture so they want to go see a physical therapist
Holy cow if they take their money and spend it with them, they're gonna have less to hire me.
So I'd rather they not see anybody else.
There's a like this battle, right?
And I remember there was a moment in my career
where I just said, I don't, whatever, fine.
If they don't have enough money to help me,
that person is gonna do a better job
at this specific thing.
And it's best for the client.
What's best for the client, right?
And then do you guys remember this moment doing that?
And realizing your business grew because of it?
Yeah.
How, was that a crazy moment for you guys?
Yeah, it was.
And I actually learned that lesson pretty early on in my career.
And I think in my experience, the fitness space is plagued by some of the most people that
have that scarcity mindset.
Awesome.
I don't know if I've met or been introduced to an industry
that has it worse than we do.
I just feel like it's so common.
You get systhical.
Especially since there's like, you labeled something, right?
There's so many different avenues to pursue health
for people like as far as...
Just pain alone.
You have acupuncture, chiropractic, physical therapy,
personal training, massage therapy,
Western medicine, all of which are valid and have valid methods of dealing with pain.
You talk to a professional, each one of those, and they'll tell you the best at it.
Right?
So, and they're going to fight, and they're going to try and compete with each other.
No, don't go see that guy.
See me instead or whatever.
And what's crazy is the clients that I had that saw multiple providers that I worked with personally
were the ones that stayed with me the longest.
And they were the ones that referred the most people.
It only grew my business.
But the crazy thing is that's not the reason why I did it.
The retention is crazy.
But yeah, if you're just solely focused on providing
the best care, the best service,
like eventually that's gonna get out.
And that's really what separates you, especially to your point of it being a very rare thing
to find in our space, you stick out like just this beacon.
And it's like people can understand that if they go to you, maybe you don't have all of
the answers, but you have people around you that do.
And it's like you're going to refer them and they know that you're gonna be accounted for.
And it's not just gonna be this garnering.
It's like, I gotta keep you to myself
and make sure that I do all the things.
I always tell my trainers that you're stop thinking
that the customer is so naive and dumb.
Like, they feel that, they know that.
And if you lose out on them as a client because they only have a budget
That's this big and they now have the allocated to that budget over to a referral that you gave them
That's a chiropractor acumen or something and that solves their problem
That one person who may never be able to afford to buy training from you or come back to you will refer you more people
You get the credit.
You will, they will, they will send you so much business because you're responsible for
them helping solve that problem.
Even if you initially lose that business up front, the, what you get on the back end
is normally 10 fold that.
So always keep that in mind when you're making that decision on whether you should outsource
or send them somewhere else, even if it temporarily hurts your business because it'll eventually actually build your business.
You know, you know, the irony of that is, is if you do it for that reason, it doesn't work as well.
You have to literally do it because you just want to, you really care about the person.
Then this stuff tends to come back because sometimes it doesn't come back.
And if you're always looking for that, damn it, I referred that person and they did get better.
And they didn't refer to anybody to me. You know what, it doesn't work. I heard Adam say it on my pump. That's bullshit. It doesn't work. What are you? Yeah. You can't do it for that. Damn, and I referred that person, and they did get better, and they didn't refer to anybody to me.
You know what, it doesn't work.
I heard Adam say it on my pump.
That's bullshit, it doesn't work.
What are you doing?
You can't do it for that reason.
Right, or they ask for it, right?
Well, I'm gonna go send you over there.
If it gets him, go do this for me.
You have to do it with expecting nothing.
Tell me about the stats now with the pump.
Oh, so I just, I just, you know, maybe that maybe Andrew
or Doug could look up, maybe the actual numbers
and Alex on it, but they rolled that
out a year or two ago, I think it was two years ago now, so they rolled that out.
And they saw this crazy, massive bump in subscriptions to Spotify just by sharing that
stuff.
It was such a brilliant marketing strategy on their part to just give that to people
because people just want, they wanted to share it.
And the amount of ads and subscribers
that Spotify got from that campaign,
which is why you noticed they've bolstered it.
Right, so it originally started off with like,
yeah, it started off with like,
oh, your top five music or your number one thing
that you listen to,
there would be like three or five things
where this year they had like all kinds of data that came out.
Oh yeah, you could see how many of your,
as a podcast business, you could see how many of your listeners
listen to you more than any other podcast,
how many listeners are, you're in their top five,
how many listeners, you're in their top 10,
how many new listeners you got.
Yeah. Like there's only how many new listeners you got? Yeah.
Like there's always.
How many minutes, you know, it's really cool.
Yeah, it's crazy.
Really cool because the podcast space lacked all that data.
It was like, and like you said, we're getting nothing.
Yeah, it's been so frustrating.
I mean, yeah, when it's like all on iTunes
or I guess Apple podcasts, it's been like just a mystery.
And it's like, we'll see waves, we'll see like,
you know, you know, we're just completely declines and just trying to figure out like where it's
coming from, pinpointing like kind of how the best target audience is, like it's been rough.
Look at their numbers there, annual Spotify users from 2017 to 2023, holy Toledo, look at that
growth. That's in the millions.
That, yeah.
So what's that top number there,
my eye says, it's getting pretty good.
551 million.
Wow, users.
So, and in 2022 was 433.
You guys saw, like, so it went up that much.
Joe Rogan's up for contract soon, right?
Yeah.
What's your speculation, do you think he's?
I thought for a second X would start competing,
but because all those advertisers pulled,
I don't know how much money they have.
Yeah, I don't know if it's a really interesting
to talk about and speculate because Spotify and the lot,
especially with all these companies like contracting,
I believe Spotify too, just had another massive layoff,
not that long ago with like 1500 employees.
Someone can fact check me on that,
but I'm pretty sure that just happened within the last
30 or 60 days.
So you have a lot of these big companies that are contracting and there, I mean, a lot of
the partners that I talked to that work with us, you know, were one of, if not the only
podcast that they continued advertising with and all of them had said the same thing,
it's just that we're completely pulling back on that.
Just they need to do things that they can track every dollar.
If we spend four, we get eight and be for sure about it, where, you know,
advertising on podcast, television, radio stuff like that is, it's hard to
measure to a T like that.
So that being said, and Joe Rogan being the biggest paid podcast that they've
ever worked with,
I don't know if they, I don't know if they offer them the same thing. And I think they would
have to offer the same thing or more for him to even consider it, you know what I mean?
It will reduce the number of its employees by 17%. Wow. Well, what's that? What do you,
what do you say? That's from Spotify. I know, but what's he sharing? What are you sharing?
It's about Spotify and how much they release people and they release about 17% of their
employees and the CFO.
Oh, recently.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I was, it was, when was it?
Was that right?
It was just recent.
Okay.
So scroll, zoom in again, Andrew and then the 17th.
The 17th.
Zoom in again and go to that paragraph underneath the one that you were just looking at
and zoom in right there so I could see that
because I saw something.
Yeah.
It says Spotify has embarked on an evolution
over the last two years to bring our spending
more in line with market expectations
while also funding the significant growth opportunities
we continue to identify.
There, it sounds like they're just being,
they're projecting and being smart.
So yeah, I mean, we've talked about this before.
You've all, in the last year, you've had all these company evaluations, like cut in half.
And so when you're, when you're a company like them that is taking on money from investors
and you're saying things like you're, you know, you're worth a hundred X of what they're
doing like that. People just keep throwing money at you like crazy.
You're gonna make the runway longer
by cutting their spending.
Right, so the opposite happened last year.
You know, they, they,
most all these companies' valuations went down
by 50% some more than that.
And so now all the, all the money's being held
and tied up, right?
Which by the way, are you, are you current on all end right now?
No.
Yeah, the speculation by the way, are you are you current on all end right now? No. Yeah, the speculation on
the potential, both sacks and I think Freiburg both said this, believe that a rate drop is going
to happen in Q1 and of course he's saying it, I think we talked about this. To just provide
it. Yeah, of course. Because it'll take a little bit for that to actually. Yeah, because it's
hurting them right now. Yeah. And so it potentially is going to, and then if it does that,
it's going to set fire on the market.
It'll just take off again.
I know.
Housing market will go off.
And then, and then, Tramoth Chinden
and said, like, his prediction is if they do that,
that there's like trillions of dollars
that's tied up right now, that's there,
that isn't being invested in spent
because of the fear right now.
So a lot of people that are venture capitalists
or angel investors, the money is there.
Like we can track, like that there's a lot of money
in people's accounts and savings,
especially the Uber wealthy,
and they're holding on to it right now
in fear of like where the market's gonna go.
Any sign of the market getting even better, right?
And that we've already hit potential bottom.
And then the housing market taking off,
that'll drive the stock market up,
that'll drive the trillions of dollars
that's being tied up to go back into investing.
BlackRock just gonna buy everything.
And then we're gonna be on a rocket ship again.
Hey, you know, based on what you said.
Yeah.
Did you see the office vacancy in San Francisco
speaking of BlackRock?
Did you see what they're vacancy?
No, what is it? Oh my
I got to pull it up bro. I mean, you know they try to pass a mask says that they can't buy single-family homes
I saw that was that was on the dog. Oh, they're trying to they're trying to pass that to keep that from happening
So I mean someone
Well, look at this San Francisco for regulations, but that one makes sense
Listen, San Francisco's office vacancy percentage. What do you guys guess that's that right now?
Office vacancy.
San Francisco office.
So offices in San Francisco that are vacant.
Nobody's renting them.
They're just sitting there because nobody wants them.
Are you asking for the number?
Yeah, what percentage?
Oh, what percentage?
No, not that high.
40% on it.
No, no, no.
It's going to be over 50.
I think it's like 60.
35% which is the highest ever recorded, by the way.
Union Square, okay.
By the way, Union Square is like,
this was a great place to go shopping, busy,
like prime, prime, prime real estate.
No, it's a blessed, good place to get heroin.
Pre-past, that's true.
That's true.
I drove through there, it was turned into.
I know.
Crazy.
Pre-pandemic, they were at 3% vacancy,
and Union Square squares always like
Never a spot because right now 18 per almost 20% in union square
Vacant and so now what you're saying most all the retail stores. I like when I drove past had been well
Well, what you were what you were saying Justin was like I've heard that theory that that they're purposely
Crashing yeah, these these properties so that these big corporations
come in and hit you by a motherfucker.
It just doesn't seem like it was an accident.
I mean, it's too obvious.
It's too deliberate, like how terrible
everything is there.
You know, like it's just how broken everything,
and how much crime is allowed.
And like,'s just like
it just doesn't add up to me dude and so yes your your your mind can kind of spin and start connecting dots that aren't there but at the same time it's just it's such like
it's such a I guess for me like a bad
I guess for me like a bad,
it's just blatant handling of policy and like just completely in the opposite direction
of like what's benefiting businesses,
what's benefiting residents,
what's benefiting citizens for what?
You know, like you just gotta ask those questions.
Do you know what movie,
this is the how good you guys are at trivia here?
What movie that's the plot of,
where corporations organize with governments
to crash the property values,
so that the corporations come in and buy them up.
What movies are?
The movie in the 90s.
It's, yeah, so you probably won't remember the plot
because the movie was kinda cheesy,
but it's also iconic.
Robocop.
Oh, it's Robocop.
Robocop.
Oh, that happened in Robocop.
Yeah, they're trying to crash the property values
so they can go in and buy them up.
And Robocop is, you know, he ends up fighting the crime.
Oh, I didn't realize that.
I mean, obviously when you're a kid
and you're watching that, you're more, you know,
you're paying attention with the robot. do the robot and the white scenes are not
Didn't they try and re-made did you ever watch the remake of it with what's his name calling?
Farrell right or is it who was it?
I don't remember the remake.
They did do a remake.
They did do a remake and I never watched it.
I didn't think it got any.
Well, I was, were you guys being Robocop?
I like, I loved it when I was a kid.
I watched it a lot.
I was so violent.
So violent.
It was terribly violent.
Was it really?
Oh my God, bro.
If you watch it, it's so, I can't believe it.
I haven't seen it in decades. Well, when did it come out? We got to see watch it it's so I can't believe it haven't seen it in decades
So I don't want when did it come out? We got to see when it came out because I watch it
Ninjas gotta be the ninth right, but I think I was like 12 or a
There's no way that movie was appropriate for a kid that like it
It's so freaking violent. It's not even funny. Yeah, like he becomes robocop because they literally
Shoot him up so bad that his body sure is like in the movie 1987 80s
Listen to me I
Bro I feel like I watched that movie when I was 10 or you I just say I
Yeah, my parents now let me watch that
Oh I didn't realize that. I was standing there. I didn't realize that. That was terrible. Oh my God, dude.
Oh my God.
Speaking of robots and all that shit or whatever,
did you hear about this cyber attack that was,
they were trying to do, I guess,
there was a huge cyber attack.
Where was it targeted?
Like, was it?
You know, I'm not quite sure.
I know Rumble was down for a while.
I see people tweeting about that or whatever,
but it's like stirring up, I don't know if it's just the internet, right?
But stirring up like these fears of big cyber attack and what that could potentially do.
There's that movie that came out with Julia Roberts on,
when I just leave the world behind.
Yeah, I saw that.
I haven't watched that yet, but I've been hearing a lot of people tell me to watch.
I haven't watched it, but apparently that's what it's about.
It's a massive cyber attack.
By the way, you know the producers of that movie?
Don't you love these fear propaganda movies?
Barack Obama and Michelle Obama, the producers of that.
Interesting.
No, it's really?
They are.
No way.
Yes, they are.
And it's all about cyber attack.
And there's a scene where I haven't seen the movie.
I just saw the trailer, okay?
Everybody. So it's based off the trailer. But it's like a bunch of testless that are just
self-driving and crashing. I have to like dodge testless. So I'm like, why would they?
You know, I heard who's your guy? You like a lot. Rick Rubin talking on somebody's podcasts about
the the lost like artistry in in movie and music creation. And the way he defined it was that we've gone away
from artists selfishly creating
as if they were writing in their own diary
or journal for themselves.
And we're there.
But they honestly authentically love.
Yes.
And then they're creating the art
as an expression of their love, right?
Yes.
It is opposed to creating things for other people in mind,
for audiences in mind, for yeah.
And that's literally what all movies,
all books, all content on social media is all geared.
I totally felt he was so spot on with that.
Like it makes a lot of sense.
I said like that's a way you would describe,
like music and movies and television today,
is it's lost this
artistry and if someone goes, well, what do you mean by that?
There's art and all that.
No, it's that the way art was done was an artist puts out something that they love themselves
and they're not, they're doing it for themselves.
It's basically sharing you a part of their journal or their diary, right?
Like, this is what I'm passionate about.
This is why I love it. And then if it goes somewhere, it goes somewhere.
If it doesn't, it doesn't matter because it was.
Listen, I 100% agree.
Here's your evidence right here.
Watch any famous rocker or musician from the 60s and 70s
and tell me that they would,
they would never make it today with YouTube and shit like that.
You look at the Ramones or look at it.
Look at Janice Joplin. Like, that's just pure art and there's no way they would have made
it with YouTube because they weren't good looking. They looked and acted weird on stage
because they were awkward. It was all about their just what was coming out and they became
known because of the music. It's the way they look.
You know, I don't know. I feel like it's a double-edged sword because there's the other examples of someone
like an artist, like for example,
like Teddy Swims, who I've shared before,
that I really like.
And, you know, if it wasn't for things like YouTube,
that artist would have been like,
he didn't go sign with a big label.
You're right.
And they get no like that.
You're right.
And he was putting that out,
just putting it out on social media.
No, you're right.
And then because it was so good and powerful,
it got shared and then he became,
so there's like, I don't know, there's good and bad to it, right?
No, no, that's a hundred.
It's very bad.
That Oliver guy, the last one.
Oliver, what's his name?
Oh yeah.
Yeah, the one I forgot.
The fulx singer guy.
Yeah, so I mean, there's an example right there, right?
If someone just putting out something that's,
and he's in the, his what backyard playing with no production.
I guess you're, yeah, you're right. It's, yeah, that's, that's a very balanced thing. That his what backyard playing with no no production. I guess you're yeah you're right. That's that's a very
balanced. That's why it sticks out some stuff to your point is like and I think
people are starving for it and when you do see it it's like whoa it's you
remember like how you just not seen that anywhere and like how like it just
really pierces through because it's coming
It's exuding. There's always the artist. It's always gonna be processed food, right?
It's like it's like processed food hyper palatable hits your senses irresistible, but is it like a
Gorma meal? No, but what gets what gets purchased the most? Yeah, to your point, you know
There's that it's a process food of's that it's harder to find that stuff because
we're so inundated with the stuff that has been manufactured to get our attention. So
because it's been manufactured our attention, sometimes it's hard to see or we're back in
the days, you had to seek out all that stuff. I mean, I remember always like scouring and
looking for like what's, you know, who's the latest, whatever,
and listening to all their stuff,
and then being like, oh man, I'm the first one on this,
and then sharing it to your buddies.
That's how it used to go down, you know?
Yeah, I finally watched,
and I know the forum kind of posted.
We talked about Christmas movies,
not too long ago, and the post of one it was called,
eight-bit Christmas.
Oh, yeah, is it good?
So I watched it.
Yeah, I shared that last year with you guys.
You did?
That's the Nintendo one I shared with you guys last year.
I told you guys to watch that.
I remember.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's a year or two old.
It was good.
It was good.
Yeah, I was good.
I know.
I know.
Like, oh, it's funny.
The first time I heard of this,
it's so bad.
I remember it when I was posting the forum.
Yeah, yeah.
But yeah, no, I watched it with the kids.
It was a good one.
It's like a family good one to bring
with the kids to watch.
Because it's like, it's our genre. Yeah, it, I watch it with the kids. It's a good one. It's like a family good one to bring with the kids to watch because it's like, it's our genre.
Yeah, it's our generation.
It's, it's all our minds,
even like their interactions on the playground
and everything, like dude, you remember,
I remember like there was always a kid
that was like held back that was like huge.
No, yeah, total dickhead, really.
There was always that kid.
I don't know if that kid exists anymore.
You know, like people just have to hold them back. I don't know if that kid exists anymore. You know, like people just have to hold them back.
I don't know if they do that anymore.
When I was going to school, that was an actual strategy
by parents that were really like
wanting their kids to be great in sports.
So I was friends with a kid who was like,
super smart first class and he was,
and it was like, why did you get held back?
And he's like, no, my parents wanted me to be more physically mature at a younger age.
And so it is
now he was he like he dominated him in basketball because he was like two grades behind when he should have been in and he was
Killing it and all his classes and so I was like there was no reason for him to be hell back other than his parents
Wanted me to be held back other than his parents wanted me to be identified.
Well, yeah, that's before all that.
Yeah, before that.
Listen, I went to high school.
You see, there's sophomore junior and there was a dude in my class or whatever my year.
He was 18 or 19. I mean, he looked like a grown man because he went to jail for two years.
Went to Juve for two years came back and I remember like, I mean, because you went to jail for two years. Yeah. Went to Juve for two years, came back.
And I remember like, I mean, when you're 16, you know,
or 15, an 18 year old is like,
there's a big ass difference.
Yeah.
So he's like, hanging out with us and like,
look at this guy, like holy shit bro.
Yeah, six older brother are you?
Yeah, there's this guy had a beard, you know?
And like, he was like, uh, the gang and everything.
He just, I don't know why he was there, but it's like, you know. And like he was like, the gang and everything.
He's just, I don't know why he was there,
but it's like, I think it was some group home thing.
They're like, you know, and so he, he was there
and like we were kind of, he was kind of in our friend's circle,
but we were always just like, man, this guy,
and he was always getting in trouble.
And, and.
You know, playgrounds were very different back.
It was rough.
Back in the day, playgrounds, there wasn't a lot of parents.
I played, it just wasn't.
When I was a kid, when our parents would less play
at the playground, they would let us play
and the parents would go off.
And it was just the kids.
And we would just, we'd organize our own governments.
Basically, our own life.
This is the flies.
A lot more so.
Oh yeah, now parents are like on top shit.
But like literally, I tell this to my older kids,
they don't believe me.
Like when I was a kid, 11 years old, 10, 11,
and a playground, you get in a fist fight,
like you fight until the fights over.
Like nobody's breaking you up.
You're just gonna fight.
And it's gonna keep going.
Now it's like, hey Tommy pulls a shirt, boom.
Parents are on the top and right away.
So like, what do you mean?
Then they film it.
Yeah, they're like, what do you mean?
You would just fight, like, what would happen?
Like, somebody would win.
I'm like, you know, we get tired.
We give up.
That's, you get tired.
That's what happens.
Yeah, yeah, I could, I could, I could,
I could just look at a call a few fights where we were both,
both of us who were done just like are holding.
Oh, yeah.
The fatigue is just exhausting.
Yeah, you're in a position, nobody's doing anything.
No, I didn't think it's gonna happen.
You want to stop, if I make a gun, you hit me.
When you're younger, you don't have the power to knock somebody out.
You'll say, I think I punched a guy 30 some times.
And at the end of the fight, we're just gonna make sure,
you don't be laying on top of him.
There's laying there, that's breathing,
I'm just like, it's just,
and then there's always,
and then later it's always about who won.
I would know you hit me, I hit you more.
I would.
You're like, I have to turn this time.
Hey, you know, Dr. Khan broke the seal already, right?
Talk about what you did.
Yeah, I shared my video.
And so I wanted to, it was made as well, update and keep the audience on what's going
on with us.
I wanted to ask you guys what's, I know it's early, but are anything different with your
diet that you're allowing or you're able to eat or how you feel?
Are you, I know he told us it would be, it's early.
Yeah, I know. So what here's what we got we got
stem cell infusion. So through the whole body
fallestatin peptide
which was put in a matrix that means you do one injection and then the fallestatin is active for a year, two year and a half typically fallestatin
uh, you'd have to inject multiple times a day, two year and a half. Typically, fall, stanton, you'd have to inject it. That's how long.
Multiple times a day, right?
So here's, okay, so let's back up for a second.
So stem cells, these are blank stem cells,
they go to wherever your body apparently needs them,
inflammation, pain, regeneration, whatever,
and it's like the ultimate anti-aging therapy
they would say, okay.
Fall a stanton, when that goes up,
myostatin goes down.
Myostatin, you might have heard us talk
about in the podcast where...
It's the inhibitor.
Of muscle growth.
So they'll take animals and they'll knock out myostatin
and then there's like a picture of a whip-it,
which is a whip-it's a skinny little dog.
Yoke, just, right?
So now fallestatin's not gonna make us do that,
but...
That'd be awesome.
But according to anecdotes and some studies,
probably experience a 10 to 15 to 20% increase in strength,
which is a lot,
especially been working out for a long time.
So those are the things that we got,
and then Adam also, you got some stencils
put injected directly into your psoriasis,
plaques, and so for autoimmune issues in particular,
it's supposed to be pretty awesome stuff.
So it's too early for me to say if I notice anything,
I think I might have a little bit more energy,
but I can't necessarily tell.
So we all went in with different sort of hopes,
I guess, and for me, I was doing the Cabral protocol
for SIBO and for a lot of stuff going off my gut treatment.
And so I was basically up and done to that point and now we're doing the stem cell infusion
so now I'm hoping that that way.
Are you taking, are you on dairy, are you eating way, I say drinking a legion protein?
Yeah.
So I just started bringing it back not like in full force, but I definitely have
had like bits of cheese, of like, but it would just be like one thing a day or like every
other day.
So you've had the way protein.
So I had the way protein.
Again, before that, like it didn't really like affect my gut too much, even when before
any treatments or anything.
And I think it was because enzymes,
like there was additional, I don't know,
it was more receptive, like I could easily like assimilate it.
So I have a question about that itself for you,
just as a perfect example of this.
So if you had, previously you had like a dairy intolerance
and you've now potentially saw that,
I almost feel like the opposite advice would be true
in this situation.
Meaning we tend to always tell people,
oh, go whole foods.
Whole foods is the best way to go.
But something that is easily digestible,
would that be of smarter strategy
when you're trying to introduce something like dairy
for the first time?
So instead of him going out and having a block of cheese, having a easy, digestible way
shake.
Yeah, the answer to that is kind of complicated.
So first off, you can have an intolerance to casing, which is a type of protein found
in dairy.
You can have an intolerance to whey, which is another type of protein in dairy, or you
can have an issue with the lactose that's in dairy,
or the fats that are in dairy, or all of them.
So the benefit of going with the pure weight, and by the way, of all of those, let's just
stick the proteins of the ones you're most likely to be intolerant to, because proteins tend
to be the most active.
Casing people tend to have an issue with more often than way.
So oftentimes someone will get their test back
And it'll say oh casing is high, but way is low so you can still have way the value of a shake is that like
So legions way isolate there is nothing else in there. So he he can he knows if he knows that way is okay
He could just do way and not have anything else in control
Okay, oh, I think you can have cheese, which has way casing the fat.
Okay. So then it does kind of make sense for like teasing it out or trying to figure it out,
like it'll be a quick like, okay, yeah, this is okay or it's not.
So far, I mean, it's only been a few days. Like, the reaction has been non-existent.
So I'm happy.
You missed it yesterday, but I did say something to Sal.
And you know me, right?
I'm the one who teases this guy, right?
I'm being like,
Adam feels nothing.
He's always the guy that feels nothing.
Yeah.
Sal's got it feels everything.
Yeah, he feels immediately.
You feel nothing.
I'm like somewhere in the middle.
But I had this really interesting thing that happened.
So first of all, I've been really inconsistent
with my training.
So I'm like super weak right now.
And I expect that, right?
And I didn't go in there and go lift,
and I wasn't like abnormally super strong.
But what I did notice is,
you know, when I do incline bench,
one, first of all, I tend to always prime really well
before I get into it,
so I can get into the movement really good.
I've never been good at leg drive, right?
That was, in fact, I didn't even start to practice leg drive
with my bench press until you and I got reconnected later on with lifting and stuff like that.
And you would constantly preach to me that.
It's a power of things, fellow men.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I was totally guilty of relaxing my legs or doing, you doing stupids, whatever.
So I've never, and even to this day of planting my feet, I never feel like I'm getting the
benefit of it.
Like I'm like connecting to the ground, well, and driving. I just do it, but I don't feel like I've ever, benefit of it. Like I'm like connecting into the ground
really well in driving.
I just do it, but I don't feel like I've ever,
yesterday when I did incline bench for the first time,
I actually felt this like true connection
from my feet all the way through.
And I actually,
You know what it came in halfway through his workout?
Tell me that.
Yeah, yeah, which is not Adam.
How trippy.
And the only, and the reason why I bring that up
is because I did over here, Dr. Khan,
say that one of the things that we will feel is an improved neural drive.
That's from the false that false that yeah, from that increases in neural drive.
Yeah. And to me, that was the first example of that I being able to translate that into my workout or say that like, oh, I did feel something.
How has your story?
I just been. Have you noticed anything yet?
Cause I, it's supposed to take like six to eight days.
Yeah, no, it's, it's, again, I'm, I'm reserving my excitement
because I don't want to get overly excited about something
and then it did not pan out, but it's getting better every day.
Every day, it's getting better.
That's wild. Yeah.
It figures your sororiously.
And I don't think I've ever gone
48 hours and not had even a desire to itch and pick at it. Yeah, and
She said that I would scab over because I you know, she shot me 50 times in every spot and so you know
Basically, you're gonna have yeah, you're gonna heal and have a little bit of a scouting hole. And so I do see a little bit of that, right?
Because the initial I saw initial difference right away.
And then, but I mean, it it seems to be weird.
Yeah.
So now we also have to say that this is these are not inexpensive treatments.
Oh, yeah.
At all.
No, this is super expensive.
Super ridiculous.
But here's the thing though, I remember talking to Dr. Khan and him offering to do this
for me and so like that is like, you know,
we as a solid and a favor to me.
And I and I knew the expense of what it would cost.
Now anybody who's who's been riddled with this,
like I have and you've exhausted so many different possibilities,
right? And I love I don't have you guys watching my,
my post on Instagram. Yeah. So hilarious. Like I want to be like, did you try the possibilities, right? And I love, I don't know, have you guys watching my post on Instagram?
Yeah.
So hilarious.
Like, I want to people like,
did you try the Carnivore Doi?
Have you tried this?
Yeah, there's a post where I write,
and they're like, and I say it in the video.
I haven't told you that.
I've tried every diet that you can think of,
which I avoid in gluten.
Yeah, I know.
It says that there's tons of these
that are saying, oh, no way, right?
And so, yes, I've done it all.
I've done the tanning beds.
I've done the infrared.
I've done the steroids.
I've done the creams.
I've done the pills.
I've done the every every time I die from carnivore to vegan to paleo to avoid
just gluten to avoiding the seed oil.
So only I haven't got it.
It's like Justin piss on me.
So I'm not ready to go.
Hey, great transition to the poofing. I haven't got his let Justin piss on me. He's the one that I haven't done. I'm not ready to go. He's done. He's done.
Hey, great transition.
Doug, to the boofing.
Oh, great.
Yeah, to the boofing.
So glad you're going there.
Yes.
He was so happy.
He thought we were almost.
He thought we were going to, I would have missed it.
No, I can't miss this because it was sent to me
as a new fitness trend that's happening right now,
which is shoving caffeine popsicles up your butt. What?
Wait a minute.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Hold on.
Hold on.
Hold on.
Yes.
Okay.
So you know what this feels like?
Supposing it is working really well.
Yeah.
Of course.
You absorb shit through your body.
Listen.
Okay.
Everybody shot to your bloodstream.
And the fitness industry is calm to fuck down.
This is not smart, you guys.
Caffeine is perfectly.
I really wanted me to avoid this conversation,
but I just think it's too good to talk to you.
This is what, so this is like,
if you had to say,
hey, can you just say one thing that illustrates
what's wrong with that health industry?
This would be perfect.
First of all, caffeine is perfectly efficacious orally.
There's no fucking problem with the sorbic caffeine.
Orally.
Why do our peers immediately want to go
to something up your ass?
I feel like, you know?
It almost feels like they're singing around talking
to each other and they're like, bro, either A,
how can I be so weird and different?
Or B, you know like I want to excuse the
puts up my butt.
That's all it is.
That's all it is.
Andrew you find out there on the course on it in your I found I found it in a Reddit thread.
Yeah, yeah.
I don't know if that's where you some basically it's kind of funny how this came up.
So the guy originally was just wanting to know if the caffeine efficacy still works if
he freezes his monster
into a popsicle.
And the reddit thread is revolting too.
You have more of a biobeer ability.
That's real monster.
You know, I'm happy that you had Andrew look that up.
We're going to mess his search engine up.
Yeah.
He starts typing it already autopop.
Wait a minute, Doug.
Wait a minute, Doug.
Okay, so now it sounds more like... So that's how it started autopop. Wait a minute. Yeah. Wait a minute, jerk.
Okay.
So now it sounds more like.
So that's how it started.
I've actually I read this.
Okay.
So maybe it's not the fitness space.
Maybe it's literally, you guys have a friend like this in your group circle when you're
a kid, it's just like, we'll do any weird thing like broken, that cricket.
No, all snorkeling.
Well, like what Ganger's saying, the person who posted originally was just asking if the caffeine would still...
Of course. Yeah. You got to be like, listen, if you are attempting to do anything stupid like that,
understand that the absorption process, especially with alcohol, for example, you can kill yourself.
Well, you remember the example from the guy's, uh, Jackass did that. He took a beer bong and rectally.
Yeah, you remember that?
Listen, Jackass, two, one or two.
Yeah.
They called it the butt chug, I believe.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But I mean, it made him like puke.
I mean, it hit him so hard.
Oh, yeah, dangerous.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So it's like, I can't remember what someone said,
like the amount more you absorb by going that way
than the other end.
It's like, it's exponentially higher. So yeah, I'm 25 milligrams of caffeine,
rectally, is probably like 175 or 200. I don't know. Orally. I mean, you put a
pair of, like, inside from the inside of the, and I didn't, by the way, I learned a new boof.
I didn't know boof was a thing. So boof is keyster, basically. Yeah, I think so. I think, I think
so like people are using it correctly. So people in prison sneak things in by boof is keyster, basically. Yeah, I think so. I think so. It's like people are using it correctly. Some people are in prison,
sneak things in by boofing them.
By boofing.
Yeah, I don't know where,
I don't know the origin of that.
But you know what,
I sort of remember that.
Pull out the boofing part
and popsicles,
it hurts you to drink popsicles,
sound kind of good in the summertime.
Great.
Great.
Just make sure you're friend and boof it.
No?
Am I the only one?
Make sure the rapper is sealed properly. Am I the only one? Make sure the rapper is.
Am I the only one?
So it's so little properly.
Yeah.
Huh?
No, that's what you also do.
No one else would do an energy popschool in the summer.
I mean, I sure.
I'm going to be done it with like alcoholic drinks.
You know why they wouldn't do that?
I don't mind it as well.
Why?
Because it's too attractive to children.
So it would be dangerous.
Why they wouldn't sell it, you mean?
Yeah.
Oh, of course. Imagine having caffeine popsicles in your fridge.
Yeah, but they do otter pops, but they're like alcohol.
They are, but can you buy them?
Yeah, of course.
You can buy them in Costco.
But do they put them in, are they easy to open
or they have special?
What the fuck does that matter?
It's so easy.
Because the lawsuit, you go buy some vodka otter pops
that are easy to open, your kid gets them, eat some, die.
It's to find easy.
That's what I mean.
Pericizzers.
Maybe, I don't know, because you know how,
when you buy cannabis in California,
how all the containers for the head of holes
are all like child proofs?
Yeah, that's what I mean.
I'm wondering if they do that for the alcohol.
Yeah, I don't think that's the best.
I really don't think a lot of people have a lot of morals.
I don't really think they give a shit.
So it's like, if I went walked in on somebody
boofing a popsicle
Yeah, that would be so confused. You know what I mean? I'd be so first they're signing it then they're booping it and then
What's the other one they used to do where they do like a coffee that one at least has some origins some historical origins
It's still here coffee. Itema has historical origins. Yep.
Really?
What was it used for?
Was it to clean out your system?
Yeah.
That's what it was.
Yeah.
The caffeine hits you, it cleans out your system.
Coffee, I made Google coffee, Enema origins, Doug, or maybe Andrew?
Yeah, Andrew, go ahead.
Yeah.
But while he's doing that real quick, while he's doing that real quick, I wanna talk about a message that we got
from somebody who went and worked with one
of our partners, NutriSense.
So for people who don't know NutriSense,
you work with people, dieticians, on your diet,
but they also work with a continual glucose monitor.
So they can individualize your diet
based on how your body responds to food, different foods,
and everybody's a little different.
But the coaching is what's so important, so that's the message.
The message I got was, you were totally right.
The coaching made all the difference in the world because I can contact this person.
They let me know.
They talked to me.
And by reading my, you know, what the message said was, by reading my, my, you know, glucose
levels and stuff, I've been able to individualize my diet and I feel way better than I've ever felt.
But the coaching made the biggest difference.
That's the biggest value of that 100%.
Imagine your glucose spike if you actually boof stuff.
You know, it's gonna be way more.
It's gonna spike your boof.
Hey, hold on.
That's so mad, right?
A coffee animat is one of the ancient medical procedures
still in use today for detoxification since Dr. Max Gerson
introduced it for the purpose of cancer therapy
in the 1930s.
Cancer therapy.
Wait a minute.
Interesting.
Hold on a second.
Wait a minute.
What if it did?
What if the big pharma is trying to hide this from us?
Just to be...
Maybe this is the secret.
That is.
That's the cure.
Interesting. I know. I know. Oh is, that's the cure. Interesting.
I know, I know, I switch it to the next.
Shut things.
Oh, there's been around for a while.
Yeah, well, oh, 1930s.
Yeah.
All right, do we have a shout out for everybody?
I do.
Do you read it down, Doug?
I did.
Your book, The New Gold Standard.
Oh, yeah, The New Gold Standard, which is the rich one.
The author is, let me see the author really quick.
It's really been, what's the word I wanna use?
It's been spurring a lot of ideas.
It has, and I mean, there's things that,
I was texting you this morning, right?
That I feel like we can be much better on.
And I just think Joseph Michele,
really, really good.
And it really, really cool to,
I mean, for a brand to grow that big
and have started, you know, as early the 1900s and to remain consistent with that, like
the, imagine the, the buy-in and consistency that you have to have. I mean, like one hotel
could, could easily have 600 employees and you have over a hundred of that. So, you know,
60,000 employees.
But like, have you ever been,
like, have you ever been to a ritz
where they don't embody that?
I just think it's so cool.
And as I'm reading it,
what spurred all this was actually
when we just got back from there, right?
And I'm like,
this is so impressive.
Whenever I go to one of these, it's like this.
And as I'm reading the book,
now I'm going like, okay.
Now it makes sense.
It's like they literally,
like this is like a code that they all totally live by.
And they're the things that they did for us, right?
Like so the, the baths that you guys got drawn
or like that's not like someone saying,
like you need to go do this.
That's just like they've empowered them to,
and there's one of the, you know,
you know, one of their, what you can call it.
Yeah, credos, thank you, so,
that they believe or live by is like for them to try
and find things that even the customer
wouldn't expect they want it.
And to try and deliver on that, right?
It's like, you know,
so they can come up, so like,
example, they could show you like in the mornings,
hey, sir, we know you like coffee,
but we froze it for you.
Thank you.
In the popsicle form. We heard, we heard from your podcast. Oh it for you. That pops cool form.
We heard from your podcast.
Oh, here you have a two like this.
Hey, if they didn't really do that,
even though I wouldn't do it, I would be like,
whoa, that's impressive right now.
You did your homework right there.
You don't say it right here, if you didn't do that.
Imagine how much that would blow your mind.
Like, you would be like, I would actually almost consider it.
You don't say, be rude for me not to.
Yeah, I feel weird about this,
but a lot of thought that went into this. me, not to. Yeah, I feel weird about this, but I thought
that wouldn't into this.
Let's try this.
Hey, check this out.
There's a company called Ned that makes full spectrum
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All right, back to the show.
Our first caller is Laurie from Texas.
Hi Laurie.
How can we help you?
Hi guys.
Hi Laurie.
Hi.
I am so excited to be here. I just want to say thanks for putting out
the message to women how important straight training is just for a good quality of life.
And I think you're awesome. You have lots of fans, clubs out there. I have a girls' band club that
love you and shout out to my girls. So I just I
listened to all the podcast. I'm a little bit behind only
because of work that I'll get caught up this weekend.
Right on. Thank you. What can we do for you? Well, I emailed
you twice. It's like you didn't get it the first time. But I
guess here's I'll tell you a little bit about myself
and then I'll read my email.
So I've been lifting for about 11 years.
I started out as a runner just running for my mental health.
And then one of my friends introduced me
to lifting weights and I fell in love with that.
My starting weight was about 97, 98 pounds.
I was very underweight. I had to overcome all of that. So I have tracked macros over the
period of 11 years. And I have put on to this point, I think it looks about 25 pounds.
put on to this point. I think it looks about 25 pounds. Wow. That's just through eating, nutrition, tracking, lifting weights, cutting mic on cardio, all of that. I have done a lot of programs. You
all have shifted my mindset from women's specific training into it just, it's based on the individual.
it's based on the individual. So I've done a lot of your programs. I've done a static, strong,
I did a static twice actually, strong, own, antibiotic advance, and I most recently finished split, which I left. So here's what I
add my question that I asked you. Basically, I said I've been lifting weights for a long time.
I'm 47 years old.
My focus at this point is mobility,
but also building muscle because I've listened,
I've listened to you have many people on here
talk about how important it is for women to have muscle
as you age.
So, I really want to build muscle.
I am not currently tracking my macros, only because my work is pretty frantic.
I'm very busy.
I try to make sure I have enough protein with breakfast, lunch, dinner, and my snacks.
When I was tracking, I was always at about 140 grams
of protein a day.
It's really never been a problem.
I guess finishing up split, I guess my question is,
what can I do at this point to continue to build muscle?
Because I know my strength gains have gone up, but I don't feel like I've really put on muscle
without having it evaluated with
in body scan or anything like that.
Okay, very good question. So all right, let's go through the program
sequence. You finished split before that. You did strong rant or aesthetic?
you finished split before that, you did strong rant or aesthetic?
Esthetic was first. So aesthetic then you did aesthetic twice strong and then split, correct?
Yes. Okay, so you're gonna need to drop volume if you want to get your body to start responding in the way that you want because all the programs that you listed are great,
but they're all very high volume programs.
And when you've been training for a long time,
well two things, one, you can't perpetually build muscles.
So at some point, the progress,
no matter what, it's gonna slow down quite a bit.
And then it becomes a lot about working
on other aspects of performance, improving mobility,
maybe working on agility, control,
maybe working on stamina. So, maybe working on stamina.
So that'll happen as well.
However, the other side of this is,
we know about progressive resistance or progressive volume,
you gotta keep adding more to get your body to continue
to respond, but there's a point when that stops working
and when you need to actually take a step back
to get your body to respond again.
And what typically happens with people in this
situation, all things being equal, let's say you have good diet, good sleep, there's no other
factors, is you're going to take a step back in volume and start to see progress or you'll take
a step back in volume, see no change in progress, but then step to the volume back up and then you
see the progress again. Okay, but it's based off of what you're telling me, it's pretty clear that a drop in volume
is probably what's needed.
Maps and a ballad advance would not be the program,
would be maps and a ballad,
or maps performance.
Or maps performance, or even maps 15 with the advanced version.
All of those would be quite appropriate for you
for about a 90-day period.
Now within that 90-day period, you won for about a 90 day period. Now within that 90 day period,
you won't notice a drop in anything. You probably or likely, I would bet money will see yourself
get stronger and build little muscle. Or option three is you just start to feel better,
then you ramp things up again and then boom, you start to see results again. But it's pretty
clear, again, based on what you said, that we need to drop the volume down and do kind of those basics and stay there for a little bit.
I love performance because one, I think it's going to be a novel stimulus for it is going
to reduce the volume a little bit and it's going to address the mobility concern.
So it kind of hits everything that you would want.
I do think that even a little less volume like map 15 15 would be potentially ideal, but also want
to be able to address the mobility concern that she has.
And so I feel like that would be the, that would do it all.
Yeah.
It's two, two birds one stone with that because to like, you want to keep building muscle,
like you got to consider these different planes of motion that also, if you're not expressing
and moving in that direction, you're not going to be expressing the muscle the same way.
And so to, there might be in range,. And so, too, there might be end range potential there,
there might be other parts that you're going to be able
to build and develop muscles in a way that you wouldn't,
otherwise, if you're just strictly doing
a lot of like, sagittal plane movement.
Yeah, and look, just to give you just
some personal experience, Lord, now consider the source, right?
I don't typically miss days. I'm very, very
consistent to the point where it can be neurotic. Okay, so that's the context here. And I do tend
to move towards more than is necessary for my body. The best strength and muscle gains I ever
get is when I drop the volume. It's like clockwork with me, I'll reach a certain point where it becomes quite obvious
that I might be doing two sheets of recovery issue.
And I'll bring things down and then next thing I know,
wow, my body, I mean, the last time I hit a PR
and my deadlift was at 43 years old
and it was because I dropped the volume down,
I went back down, I went down to MAP 15,
style training and all of a sudden I hit a PR that I broke a previous PR I went down to Maps 15, style training. And all of a sudden, I
hit a PR that I broke a previous PR, I did in my early 30s. So, so that's and that's
that's the context. So if that's youth, that sounds like you, then the drop down, the
drop down is going to be what you need. And you'll know, once you get into it, you'll
start to feel like, wow, I feel good. I have one.
We've already expressed a busy your work is right now, right? And like all this added bit of
excess stress that you're bringing in throughout the week. So,
you know, that all that all factors in. So if you, you know,
if you realize that too, you kind of reduce your volume and you see
progress with that, that was the answer all along. Yeah. So I think
mass performance would be ideal for you, Laurie. How does that
sound? What we're saying? Is it, is it resonating with you?
Yeah, I was afraid that's what you were going to say.
I just needed someone to tell me that, I guess. I love going to the gym. It starts my day. I go
in the mornings before work. I have to be at work at seven. And so I get up at four. I do go to bed
early though. So just start my day.
So it may be that I just go and do some mobility or walk
or something like that.
Well, that's what's great about that program is still go to the gym five days a week.
Go to the gym five days a week, three of those days will be foundational lifting days,
which it's all program.
And then the other two, we have mobility sessions written for you.
So and I'm totally for you getting on the treadmill
or liptical and doing that for 30 minutes
of low intensity with some mobility.
So you go spend an hour still,
if you like, I like when I have clients that have a routine
where they go to the gym already,
and I don't like to disrupt that, right?
You've created those good habits.
I think that's good, you keep doing that.
We just switched what the focus is now.
So instead of it always being a full hour of lifting weights,
now you're doing something more where three of the days are like that.
And then two of the days, you're intensity.
Yeah, two of the days, you do some mobility stretching and maybe some elliptical
or walking on the treadmill type of work.
What was the fear?
Why did you fear we would say this?
Like what's the worry?
I just thought you would tell me to cut back on my training, because I knew that was
probably what I needed to do.
But why the fear behind that?
What's the worry or what is it that feels to you?
And I'm not trying to put you on the spot, but it's important to identify what it is.
Like, why is it that I don't want to cut the volume down?
Like what's the, it's obviously has nothing to do with results
because we're telling you you'll get better results
with less volume, which will happen.
So it's gotta be.
Yeah, I believe you.
I believe you.
Yeah, so what is it?
What is it for you?
I think it was just, that's just,
I'm consistent, I go every day, it's just my routine.
But I think as long as I'm doing something,
whether it's walking or mobility, I think I'm good.
You got it.
And I also put in my email, I asked about possibly
doing power lift at some time.
Do you think that would be okay
like after I go through performance?
Yeah, I love that.
That would be awesome.
I love that.
You would love that.
That'd be a great follow-up.
And it'd be really cool
Because hopefully the way this goes is that we reduce some of the volume I go into performance
You see strength gains from that alone from doing that and you now addressing mobility
You see the carry over and the benefits of that when you go into power lift. So you'll hit PR's and power left
Yeah, follow this. Yeah, I love that
Okay, that sounds good. Yeah. I love seeing the string games.
And I definitely have that. I just, it's just the muscle.
Do you, do you have either one of those programs? 15 maps, sorry,
mass performance or maps power lift?
I do not. Those are the two I don't have.
We'll send you performance. Okay.
Okay. Thank you so much.
You got it. Thanks for calling in and tell your, your friends. Thank you so much for the support. Oh, I sure will. Thank you. So thank you so much. You got it. Thanks for calling in and tell your friends.
Thank you so much for the support.
Oh, I sure will.
Thank you so much.
So much.
Thank you.
All right.
All right.
We got a fan club.
A fun.
Some Texas women.
Yeah.
Women that like to podcast, that's awesome.
Cool.
That's great.
It's so cool to, she doesn't sound like a female
that would gravitate towards a program like
power of it. I think it's so cool that you're seeing this, this trend. So awesome. Right?
Like this mom, sweet kind of South Boakin, like was in a running most of life and is like
interested and curious. And getting strong. Yeah. I think it's such a, once you feel
like, once a woman feels what it feels like
and sees what it looks like
from a healthy point of view,
then they're like,
it's like you pulled the wool off the rise and like,
oh my God, like this is amazing.
This feels so much better.
It's just way different than what I was doing before.
Now I can see why people talk about it the way they do.
This is amazing.
And I think that they're, they're the fear of like what having to,
and I'm all for like not breaking that routine, right?
I think there's something to say about.
You can still go.
Yeah, you should.
I actually think you should.
Sometimes what happens when someone disrupts that,
then they lose that consistency,
and now they're even more inconsistent or what that.
So I love the idea of still going there.
Just you just shift your focus on other things that your body needs attention.
And I think she's going to see incredible benefits.
Our next color is a dolphin from Arizona.
Dauphal, what's happening?
How can we help you?
How's it going, guys?
Man.
Hey, so I appreciate the time.
I promise, even though you guys are the Beatles of podcasts. I'm not gonna faint
Hold on keeping out. I'm totally John Lennon. Yeah, Adams Ringo
Well, I appreciate it. No, I'll jump right into my question. Pretty recent to discover in mind clump a little less than a year
I've been to a lot of your shows. Lifelong
struggling with weight. Am I heaviest? That was 362. Currently fluctuating as of
now about 206. I've been there around the last couple weeks since I started
in the Bolic. But I can blow it pretty fast. I've been tracking my food for only
about four weeks now, trying to hover around 1900 calories, but delta of about 200 calories,
so sometimes 2100. My other half who is kind of unfair, she has a great metabolism and she sabotages
my diet quite frequently. But right now I'm around 26 to 27% body fat. My goal would be to be sub 20s while maintaining or gaining strength.
Currently, my protein intake is around 190 to 195 grams,
but I get a lot of that through shakes.
About 100 to 150 grams, depending on how my day goes.
6.1, 39 years old.
Like I said, I just picked up anabolic,
I come on week two, phase one.
I currently take creatine, ZMA, pre-workout,
and a multivitamin, not all at once, obviously.
My goals are somewhat selfish,
because I wanna have more energy for my kids,
five and six years old, my five year old,
you might see your one read around here,
but I wanna look good while doing it,
wanna be able to take off my shirt,
not feel like I still weigh three and 62 pounds. But what can I really cut my calories to safely
to kind of achieve those goals? And then more importantly, my biggest question is what are the
negative effects of getting as much protein from shakes as I do? I've listened to so many of your
podcasts and I hear you guys say I should get a lot of it from natural foods
Unfortunately with how much I'm out of the house. I don't know or I can't really
Pre-pack a lot of my foods. I just get it through my protein shakes
So what are you know, what is the best way to?
Well actually more importantly what is the best way to keep my focus on that and not deter from the end results
Yeah, we need a we need a bulk first.
Yeah.
1900 calories for your size, unless you just sit on the couch all day and don't move,
is really, really low.
Yeah.
Okay.
You know, I'll say this with a little.
There's something here that seems a bit glaring to me.
You know, you asked about the protein shakes.
Okay.
So without getting into the whole,
like, you know, shakes are processed
and how much worse or better are they?
Then regular food, et cetera, et cetera.
We could go down that path, it'll be a long discussion.
There'll be a lot of like other studies
while we're not really blah, blah, blah.
One thing's for sure, a protein shake
is not gonna produce the same satiety effects as whole foods.
So 100 grams of protein from a protein shake
will provide a fraction of the appetite,
controlling, satisfying effects
that 100 grams of protein from whole foods will provide.
And the reason why I'm telling you that
is because you said you blow up quite easily,
you've been heavy before, that makes me believe that you can struggle with keeping your calories
where they're at and sometimes you go off and it makes a difficult type of deal.
So I think what the best things you can do is really make an effort to get your protein
from whole natural foods.
It'll feel completely different.
It'll feel very different.
1900 calories were half of the protein comes from shakes
versus 1900 calories, where all of the protein
comes from whole foods,
is gonna feel like you're eating another 700 calories
in your diet.
You're gonna feel much more satiated.
So that's the first place that I would start.
Now, to what Adam's saying, look, you have two options.
Either you cut your calories now,
and then get to the point where you lose some weight, and then you try to reverse diet from there. Good luck.
You're a big dude. You're already only at 1900 to
2100 calories. I think you said your delta was 200 makes me think you're in finance by the way. Do you work with money?
Is that what you do? No, no, no, no, okay. But anyway, if okay, so you could try that approach.
Which is everybody does that. They's almost lose the weight when I lose lose it then I'm gonna try and then I'm gonna figure it out.
That's a, I'm gonna tell you right now,
your fail rate with that is gonna be over 90%.
Or you could take the slower approach,
which was at Adam's said,
which is a slow reverse diet from where you're at,
get your calories to a point
that you feel comfortable cutting from.
But I'm gonna tell you right now,
half your protein from shakes,
I can't stress this enough when you're trying to get lean. The most important thing that you should pay attention to
is your cravings, your appetite, your satiety.
Nothing's gonna thwart your progress
like having to battle with cravings and feeling hungry.
There's nothing more challenging than that
when you're trying to get lean.
That's the biggest problem. So if you're getting your protein from shakes,
you're basically short-changing yourself there. You're basically doing, you know when I recommend
people take a lot of shakes, when they have a tough time getting enough calories because
they don't have a good appetite. That's how I encourage them to get more because I know it's
not, I know a 50 gram shakes not going to make them feel like full, like a 50 grams of, you know, chicken beef fish or whatever.
So my guess, my guess is he's using it right now to hit his protein intake and keep his
calories low.
It's like a protein shakes are an easy way to get high protein and low calories.
And so my guess, because I've trained a lot of clients in your exact shoes is you've
first of all, let's talk about what you did
That was incredible already. You went from 362 down. I mean, you've lost a hundred and fifty hundred sixty pounds
That's incredible. That's incredible
That's it's incredible that you still have it off very few people can do that
Now the greatest challenge that my clients would have where you're at now is the mental hurdle of
that my clients would have where you're at now is the mental hurdle of I need to actually bulk.
I need to actually increase calories
and I'm still not where I wanna be physically, right?
They normally when you get to where you're at,
you've made this huge, trying a huge accomplishment
but you're still not feeling the way you look.
You're like, I still wanna be tighter, leaner look in,
like I want more and the way you look. You're like, I still want to be tighter, leaner looking like I want more. And the truth is, you've already gone down so low that if you want that next level
to your physique, we're going to have to reverse out for a little bit, increase your calories.
Go on a bulk, try and add 10, 15 pounds of good lean mass to your body. That's the focus,
whether you get all 10 or 15, but that's the point possible is to build 10 to 15 pounds of muscle, really ramp that metabolism up to where
you're able to eat 2800 to 3,400 calories a day and not gain any weight on the scale. And then
now come back down again to that 19, you know, 1900 to 2000 and watch how much leaner you faster,
you get and how much better you look
because you've put on that lean mass.
But it's really tough mentally,
because I know what you just came from,
and I know that fear inside of, oh my God,
you start eating a little bit more,
and then also you feel like you're holding a little bit of water,
and in your head your head goes, oh my God, I'm getting fat.
I'm putting fat on, putting fat on.
This is going to be the biggest challenge right here is to trust the process that I got
you.
You can easily eat 2400 calories a day, especially if you're getting it through whole foods.
Now, and the easy way to do that and follow what Sal saying is cut out the shakes.
Go have some nice meats, man.
Go get yourself a try tip. Go get yourself some meat that's enjoyed. Get chicken thighs, get some
good rib-eye steak. You're literally able to do both of what we're saying.
Yes. Number one, you're gonna be able to get the protein from whole natural
sources. And because it's from food, it's gonna come with a little additional
calories. So you'll be able to reverse diet at the same time.
Yeah. If you literally replace the shakes with things like I just said,
rib eye steaks, chicken thighs, and some good meals like that,
it'll take care of both problems. That's right.
We'll switch over to whole natural foods and get more nutrient-dense
salt foods that will be satiety-producing. In addition to that,
we're going to bump your calories a few four, five hundred more calories a day.
And I guarantee you're going to feel better, you're gonna bump your calories a few four, five hundred more calories a day.
And I guarantee you're gonna feel better,
you're gonna look better.
Just the hard part is you gotta be okay
with your eating more calories.
You're probably gonna take into the little more sodium,
little more carbohydrates, that's okay.
Your body's gonna hold a little bit of water,
trust the process.
And watch your strength in the gym, Adolfo.
That's what's gonna happen if you do what we say.
You're gonna start to feel strong.
You're gonna get better pumps in the gym.
Focus on that, not this game.
What program are we following right now?
What do you got?
Just like I said, I just started anabolic.
I'm on phase one week two.
The best part for me is like I said,
I've only been tracking my calories and weight.
Like when I do whole foods weighing it,
though that passed about four weeks.
Really like to be regimented.
And this is the first program I've ever followed.
Okay, cool.
Perfect.
Losing the weight took 10 to three.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Finally, when I was like, all right, Biden Plum Nation, finally was just like everyone
that I listened to or everyone that comes on your show.
It's like, hey, you guys got a pick of a program.
And I was like, all right, I got to finally do it.
So I picked up at a ball.
The best part is, is, you know, now there's no excuse
to not go do dead lifts.
I don't get to just sit there.
Go, oh, do something else.
Like, no, I'm gonna go do dead lifts.
And what's great is just seeing the,
just in the two weeks of actually meeting phase one,
just overall the better strength gains.
Yeah, even though I'm not at the calories
that I would really want to be at,
but I guess sitting in around the 19 to 20 100 calories
Like is it okay to just jump immediately to 2400 calories?
Yeah, okay. Yeah, you're gonna feel you're gonna your strength gains you go through the roof and your stuff put muscle on
You're gonna tell you to do you're in a good place, bro. You really are you're in it. You're in a good place right now
It's literally I'm telling you the hardest part will be the mental part is to yeah, I know prep prep your prep your meals
I know protein powders convenient do a little prep the night before or once a week cook a bunch of chicken thighs
Are my favorite because they're on meat to get through it all yeah ground lean ground beef chicken thighs
You know those are all very they're inexpensive and they're easy and they store really well in the fridge
And then you can make you can just eat them with vegetables or rice or potato, and you're all set.
And you'll get, you're gonna literally be able to do both
of what we're saying, simply by switching out
those shakes with real food.
I like to, I like to get you into there.
Are you in our private forum yet or no?
I'm not.
Yeah, I'd like to put you in there,
because I'd like to be there as you, as you,
because I do know the
challenge. Yeah, the mental challenge. So you have somebody to voice your concerns or reach out to
as you go through this process and we can continue to encourage you that you're doing the right
things because you are in a good place. It is as simple as adding, getting rid of the shakes,
replacing it with good things like chicken thighs and rib eyes and things like that. And the hardest part is gonna be not getting in your own head.
So let me get you in the forum,
that way I can keep you out of your own way.
That'd be awesome, that's the biggest hurdle is,
as soon as I put on like a pound,
I'm just like, all right, there's,
totally, I'm just grabbing my size,
like there you, that is so.
I get it, boy.
Hey, don't, don't do this, stop weighing yourself.
And if you need to track anything in the morning
without eating or anything, measure your circumference
or your waist, that'll be a little bit better anyway.
Because if you gain five pounds of water and muscle,
your waist circumference probably won't change much at all.
But the scale would go up, right?
So stop weighing yourself,
because it's going to mess with your head for sure.
Okay, I'll throw it away.
I'll throw the scale away and I like that.
At the eels that go to a big box gym over here in Arizona and they have an evil. What's
nice about it is you can only use this measuring system once a month. So I'll kind of, I'll
just do that. Yeah, put it away. But still every day I'll do the once a month. That's
actually great. I would love that's and I'd love to hear from you like that once a month
check in with us. Check in what it what it said and what you had been and fill us in on what you've been doing and then we'll just keep an eye on you and hey stay the course or maybe we'll make a few changes based off of what you you give us as far as feedback but you got this bro you got you got you got you got some good good stuff ahead of you right here if you can just to get past the mental hurdles awesome what I appreciate it before appreciate it. I've looked forward to being in the forum.
And again, thanks for all you guys do.
I know you guys share it all the time,
but the stuff that you guys do,
it's pretty crazy how things come,
two-per-rition kind of spiritual guy myself.
So I'm always finding answers in places I don't expect
and you guys kind of fell in my lap.
And as one of those things where it's like,
God open my eyes to
Hey, there's there's people out there that'll have your best interest at heart
They might not be close to you, you know personally, but you guys have really opened up a lot of avenues for me
And so I do appreciate what you guys do for not just myself, but everyone that listens well. Thank you very much
I'm a huge problem. Thank you. Thank you, guys. How cute was his daughter trying to do it?
Hand his shoulders and stuff.
Yeah, a lot of years.
I mean, you know, what's cool is that the answer was, you know, the both things that we wanted
him to do, it was one thing that he had to do to be able to satisfy both.
Yeah, right?
Just I knew the shakes out.
He's a huge challenge.
Yeah, right? Just take the shakes out. He's the food. He's the challenge.
Yeah, totally.
I knew when I saw the breakdown of the shakes
and the grams.
Yeah, like how I said, I know what he's doing is he's just trying
to just protect.
Yeah, eating way, eating way shakes that are
hundred something calories and 20, 30 grams of protein.
There's another way he can manage it.
He goes skinless, boiled chicken, bruh.
Yeah, that's what I Yeah. That's literally like
it's an easy, easy way to get high protein, stay low calorie, but that's not what he needs
right now. He needs the bump is calories and what a better way to do it than cut the
shake out and have rib eye steak instead of some chicken thighs. So looking forward to
seeing his progress. Our next caller is Jason from Arizona. Jason, what's up, man? How can we help you?
Hey, guys, how's it going? So my question is, I'm a newly term professional golfer and
I have a deep passion and first-ranked training and then just building athleticism in the process
of trying to be a pro athlete anyway. Right now, I worked out five days a week and do mobility
pretty much every day and do cardio usually three or four evenings a week and do mobility pretty much every day in DuCardio,
usually three or four evenings a week, and I practiced six to eight hours a day.
It kind of sounds like a lot, but just kind of my process to becoming a pro golfer has
been pretty wild.
I had a pretty similar childhood to south, so just came from nothing, did Masonry since
I was 12 years old to pay for this and was lucky enough
12 years in the Beble to turn pro. So I was just calling to see like what do you guys
recommend I do to continue being able to grow and train as an athlete while also keeping my skills up.
Oh, I love it. Justin, who's the name of our guy over in Arizona? That's the golf, you were singing in,
Brandon, yes.
If, no, man, PFS,
is it a PFS, PFS Brandon?
Yeah, you follow those guys?
Yeah, I do follow them.
Okay, good, they're legit.
Like he's got a lot of really good content around golfing
and, Jason, I'm gonna tell you something though
that I've personally seen with athletes when
they achieve a new level of competition.
It's a very common mistake.
So I'm just gonna communicate this to you so you don't make that same mistake.
So what they'll do is they'll train really hard to get into a new division or go from
high school to college or college to pro or qualify for this marathon that I all of a sudden
qualify for.
What they do is they stop doing what they did that got them to improve and try to radically
change their training because now they're in some new category and that almost always
backfires.
And almost always backfires because what you were doing obviously got you to this point.
Now there's nothing wrong with fine tuning,
but one of the, it'll be a huge mistake for you to be like,
oh my God, I'm a pro now.
Now I gotta do all kinds of different stuff
because the odds are by throwing new things at yourself
so radically that you're going to change your biomechanics,
your movement, you're going to actually hamper
your, how well you perform.
It's a very common mistake with athletes at this level.
Your level is that now I need to make these massive athletic leaps in order to have that
edge on my competition.
And physically, I need to be stronger and I need to be bigger.
I need to have more power in my swing and all these kinds of things when this is such a high
skill sport and you're doing a lot of mobility.
And I think this is like an area that is overlooked a lot, but it seems to be that you're addressing
that right away.
But really, it's a lot of that, it's such a high skill thing that all the emphasis
is on aiding and benefiting the skill portion of it.
So that way your body moves in a fluid manner and it provides the kind of stability and
grounding that it needs.
My recommendation is you are already checking all the boxes as far as the training mobility and everything you should be doing.
My concern would be if you were my client is teaching you how to feel your body and know how sore you are or did you overreach and learning how to scale back on the intensity of your training, right? Like now golf is starting to ramp up and that's our, obviously our priority, right?
We're a pro, like you wanna be the best golfer
above all other things.
So everything we do is to compliment that
and we don't wanna get it in our own way.
So what I'm always would be checking with you is like,
hey, how'd you feel for Mr. Day's workout?
Are you feeling good?
You feel fluid?
You feel connected?
How was practice? You know, did it you feeling good? Do you feel fluid? You feel connected? How was practice?
Did it was as good or better than last time?
And I'm wanting to check in with you
on connecting the dots of when we train this intensely
in the gym, what happens to our golf swing and our practice
and make sure that it's always complementing that
and making us a better golfer.
And it's not impeding on it because I'm doing too much in the gym.
Like that would be our conversation.
Yeah, look at it this way, Jason.
If I had a magic wand and I were able to double your strength right now over this call,
boom, twice as much strength, your golf would be worse.
The second you would go out to the field to play with two,
because now it's going to change everything.
It's going to change your swing, the speed, but all of a sudden you're a terrible golfer even though you just
got twice as strong. Here's the thing to consider. This is going to be very general what
I'm saying, but it's roughly true. At early ages, the difference between the best athletes
and everyone else is talent. You go up a level and then it becomes a difference
between who has the, who's got talent
and who also works hard.
Then when you get to the top of the level,
do you know what break makes the difference?
Mindset.
Everybody works hard.
Everybody's got a lot of talent.
Now it's the people who can handle stress,
it's the people who can perform under pressure.
It's the people whose heart rate doesn't go up
and they get nervous and sweaty
when they're in, you know, under the spotlight
and oh, they're behind and what do I do?
And you consistently see this with studies across the board.
You see this with high level military individuals as well.
Like everybody gets into seal school for example,
it's got the physical fitness to be able to complete it.
The people that make it the ones with mental toughness.
So my point with that is,
I wouldn't change anything radically about your training.
I think Adam said it was beautiful.
I would look at recovery, mobility,
kind of honing things in, listening to my body,
and then you really wanna know
what's gonna make a difference is mindset training.
Into that point, Dr. Brett McAve is a resource for that,
and we've had on the show before,
and I haven't thought about it,
but he deals with a lot of pro golfers,
but it's very mindset-driven.
And I fully agree.
That's kind of where you're at now
and you're in your career of getting to this point
is now how can I really sharpen and fine tune?
So it's consistent.
It's the consistency of performing against
all the variables that come at you.
Can you consistently have the mindset that makes you as good as you could possibly be?
How do you hone that in? How do you train and develop that? That's now where the focus should be
because whatever you do with your training and practice to get you here is working. That doesn't
mean you can't get any better, but definitely don't radically change everything. I hope I'm hammering that.
Had you heard of Brett before? Do you know who Brett is? We were talking about.
Yeah, I've heard of that. I watched part of that episode.
Oh, okay. Bro, that makes a huge mindset is where at your level, at the pro level,
that's the difference right there. That's the big difference.
Yeah, yeah. I'm making it this far, man.
That's awesome.
Huge, you're conscious.
Thank you.
I appreciate it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
For sure, congratulations.
And then, uh, do you have any of our, you have our RGB bundle?
You're following that.
Do you have maps, prime pro, because I think the correctional exercise stuff in there would
be your beneficial.
Your back pocket.
Your back pocket.
Your symmetry with the isonatrix and you don't matter.
I'll work.
Do you have it?
Yes. Do you have those? I don't have either of those
I just have the RGB bundle at the moment. Okay, I like you know, here's symmetry is great prime pro
I think though you if you have that you'll always be able to go to that whenever you have
an issue. Yeah, you'll always be able to pull from it. So let me send that to you for free
Awesome. Thank you guys so much. You got it. Thank you. Keep us up to date on the journey, man.
We'd love to hear our ghosts. Yeah.
Thank you. Yeah. I'll let you guys know for sure.
All right, Jason. Awesome. Talk to you guys later.
You guys have you guys have any experiences, personal experiences where you
realized like, oh, God, this is all this mindset part is everything right now.
This is the why I'm performing good or bad or yeah.
Like I, I, when I competed in one of my first big tournament tournaments in Jiu Jitsu, I
remember in practice, like I would never gas, like you could throw, like I could go round
robin, 10 guys in a row, I felt like a machine fluid moving whatever.
Got to the trouble so amped up mentally, get to this tournament,
I'm so amped up, and one match, I was so gasped, I felt like I had no fitness whatsoever.
And I was like, what is wrong with me?
My sick, like what's going on?
I was nerd, my mindset, my mindset was totally off, it threw me off completely, my performance
sucked as a result of that.
Yeah, going into college, it was, my mindset was very much more on like I'm undersized and I'm not
Powerful enough. I'm not strong enough. I'm not fast enough. And so I put so much effort in that direction
That even when I was finally the you know a good size. I was
You know pretty quick and I could move quick. I didn't have that killer edge I used to have. And that was all like mindset driven.
What's I finally kind of came back and revisited that my my last year was like a completely
different performance I would have.
Well, I remember when they I shared this study a long time ago on the on the podcast of
all these super high performing athletes, like the Steph Curry's and stuff.
I mean, downhill skiers like the most fighter pilot. Yeah, the most elite of elite,
one of the things they all had in common
was extremely low heart rates
in extremely scary situations.
Like the more stressed pops up,
the more calmer they get.
Yeah, and that's not because they did a lot of cardio
and so their heart rate was low.
That's because of their mindset,
because if you trained it.
Yeah, they trained so well for those moments
that they were actually, oh, I've been here before.
I know what to do.
I got this, you know what I'm saying?
And that made such an impact on their level.
Yeah, this guy's doing, Jason's doing plenty already
as far as this.
Everything he lists, that's why I was like,
I don't really know what it goes.
And again, I've seen the right things.
I've seen so many people do this.
Like, okay, now I'm paying college,
so now I'm gonna double my volume.
I'm gonna radically change my workout.
And they hurt themselves or over do it. I don't know what you were
doing worked. Keep doing that. Our next color is Brendan from Missouri. Brendan, what's
happening? What's up, Brandon? I will help you. Not much. How about you guys? Thanks for
having me. Hey, then you got it, man. Like, we hope you're doing a big, big list and there
a huge fan. My main, my only question revolves around bloodwink.
I guess move the term while squatting.
Yeah, Adam wing set my butt all the time.
But we encourage us to stop looking.
No, we know what that is.
Yeah, Pel, a little bit of a pellet tilt at the bottom of squat.
Yeah.
So my question is, have you avoid that?
And also as bad as it comes off to be, because I think in my gym,
especially you walk in there
and probably 50% people's back squatting have it.
Okay.
First of all, does it bother you or low back to you?
Does it, does it like start burning while you're doing sets?
Does it hurt you later on the next day?
Is it, is it uncomfortable?
So I actually emailed you guys Saturday, right?
I worked out and it happened at my last
Saturday in ballad phase one and it hurt pretty bad so bad locked up something actually
what's the doctor yesterday you said my joints just inflamed get put me on some steroids
and muscle exercise should be a little bit in a week but so you usually know but every
once in a while.
Yeah so that's what made me reach out because actually was quite a bit.
That's what determines whether or not it's an issue for those part.
That's right.
Now, where does it, what joint was inflamed?
Is it your SI joint?
Where's the pain?
Is it on one side?
The SI joint and a little more on the right side.
Okay.
All right, so, okay, so there could be a few different,
couple, here's the most common reasons why somebody's pelvis will tilt
excessively at the bottom.
I say excessively because the movement in the low back
a little bit is probably not a bad thing.
It's natural.
Yeah, it's probably not a bad thing,
depends on the individual.
What it becomes an issue is when you start to hit
ranges of motion that are close to the end
of the range of motion.
So now what happens is your spine's ability to flex
or extend is supporting you. In other words, it's extending
or flexing in its deepest range of motion with that. Then you add load to it. Now, it's
holding you with your spine joint. That's when it becomes a problem. But if muscle's
supporting you, it's typically not an issue. The two areas that tend to be an issue are
stability in the hips. So mobility, stability in the hips and or,
and this is usually the one, is ankle mobility.
So, have you tried wearing squat shoes
or elevating your heels to see if it still happens?
I wear those no balls, the pre-flats and not squat shoes.
So here's how you might know.
You're gonna want to test this out.
Wear some squat shoes or stand on some like 10 pound plates
under your heels.
Squat like you normally do.
See if the butt week goes away.
If it goes away or gets a lot better,
you got to work on ankle mobility.
Okay.
If that doesn't change, then there's probably some
hip mobility issues and maybe some core stability type issues
that I would wanna focus on.
And we have a great program called Mass Prime Pro
that'll address all of those.
Yeah, send him Prime Pro
because I actually think that even if these are-
They're saying to ankles.
Yes, I think that I've yet to meet a client
where me teaching them 90, 90s
and combat stretch for your ankles has not benefited them.
Everybody's never been a detriment.
Exactly. I don't know anybody who I've trained.
I mean, I have people like you who this has solved
that issue and then I've had other people who are that's just,
oh man, I feel better in my squat now.
I feel so much more comfortable.
I feel more stable at the bottom.
Like, I'm so glad I do that.
So like, you're gonna benefit from that.
It's like it could be life changing
or game changing for you though.
Like, it was for me.
Like getting good at my 90 90s,
working on my combat stretch,
getting comfortable in a deep,
astergrass squat completely eliminated my low back pain.
So this, I know the guys were teasing about me at the beginning,
but that's because this was something I suffered from.
So I had excessive butt wink.
In fact, I was so bad that anytime that I did high rep squats,
if I did over eight squats, after that set,
I'd be laying on the ground because my low back was just on fire.
And I'd be like doing back presses and like having to take a break
because my low back was just,
and that's because I just had so much of an excessive wink back and forth.
And so once I worked on my hip mobility and my ankle mobility, it completely eliminated
that.
I was able to get all the way down, stay in control of my pelvis and then come out,
no problem and not have any problems.
So that's step one really.
It's like regaining that kind of stability in both ankles and hips.
And so to do that is to, you know, spend an excessive amount of time on these mobility
drills and also to prime
before you do your workouts with that.
But to spend that extra bit of time,
once you go back to squats with making sure
you're bracing your tempos very, very slow.
If anything, you're gonna be like pausing at the bottom
and making sure that you're connected still.
You're still like being able to have that kind of muscle contraction and tension
that you have supporting your hips and your lower back.
So to do that too, like the dumpy squat
is another good sort of drill to run.
So it helps you kind of focus on that specific fact
and only you need that kind of bracing
and you need that kind of tension
in order to support your spouse, you'll have problems.
Now just keep in mind, Brendan,
there's a lot of moving parts in a barbell squat,
but you're looking at the knee,
the ankle, the hips, and of course the low back
because it's attached to the hips right there.
And if one of those joints isn't doing what it's supposed to,
then the other joints are gonna move more
or compensate for that in order
to allow you to perform the movement.
So that's why we're telling you to look at those two things.
You might be thinking, what does that have to do with my ankles?
Why would you mean my hips?
They feel totally fine.
Well, if your ankles aren't able to allow for the range of motion under control that would
produce a good squat, well, the next thing that's going to take over or
have to do that is maybe your hips are low back. So that's why we're telling you to work
on those things. Now, can you do you go all the way down in your squat? Yeah, I try
to break 90. Okay. For the time being while working on those things, squat down until you
feel like you're about to do the bump wink and then don't go any lower.
So that's your limiting, that's your range of motion. Don't go beyond where you're going
to get the butt wink, work on that mobility and then as your mobility improves, start to
lower the squat, but I would stop squatting to the point where you get a butt wink. So
stop, stop just short of that. So if it's just the 90's, 90's squat, so be it.
So do that and stuff. Do it on. So what if I do it on the 10 pound plates and that I don't wink to it on 10 pound plates or without? I would prefer. Okay. So
I would like a bit of a crush. Yeah. I mean, I would prefer you work on your
ankle mobility and then be able to do it with your feet not being elevated. Now,
if you're just in a hurry, you're like almost quite heavy, and I don't care.
You can do that.
It's also a good,
the why Sal's giving you that too,
is actually just so you get that confirmation.
It's just a test.
Like that's like,
so if you go put your heels elevated,
and like it feels like one of the most comfortable squats
you've done.
There's your problem.
You know, that's it.
Like there you are.
Like you just doing that.
And to worry if like,
let's say you do some, you prime with some 90, 90s and elevate the hills
and you feel like you've had the best squat you've ever had, like there you go.
Like it's, you need to work on hip stability and mobility and address the ankle mobility
and just put the work in to do that and it's going to get rid of it.
And you ever go to a restaurant and you sit at one of those, you sit at a round table
and it like wobbles, you know?
Yeah. And so the waiter comes over, oh, I'll fix that
and he folds up a napkin and sticks it under one of the feet.
Okay, that's squad shoes.
So, I mean, you could do that,
but you could also get a table that's balanced,
and that's probably a better answer.
And fix the base.
That's right.
Awesome. It was very helpful.
Thanks, guys.
I want to give one shout out to a huge listener, Mark Gorman,
but once again, thank you guys, you're the best. All right. You got him, ma' guys. I want to give one shout out to a huge listener Mark Gorman, but
Once again, thank you guys the best. You got a man. Take it easy, man.
Have a good one
Looks like he sells insurance. Did he see Mark Norman? That's what I said to you. That's a awesome comedian. He said Gorman
Oh, Gorma. Yeah, I'm less excited. This is boy
Shout out to Mark. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah know, I got, I mean, I easily get cut up
and using the crutches because I get impatient.
So I'm like, okay, I work on my ankle mobility.
Or I could squat for plates.
Let's do that.
I get it.
I get the whole deal.
That's why that happens.
Yeah, so because you want to keep progressing
with the ego lifts.
I mean, it was, hands down one of the,
if not the best and most important things
I think I ever did in my in my training career. You did it while being a podcast on the
show. Yeah. We got to see that transformation. And and to this day, I have yet to ever
have low back pain ever again. It's not wild. Yeah. Your whole life. Yes. My whole life
I always just and you know, it's so funny because it runs the family. My sister, my uncle,
my cousin, like we all have like low back
and we all have that kind of shift like that.
And we also stop wearing heels.
Yeah, that's true.
The high heels definitely.
That'll do.
Like if you're a trainer and a coach
and you want to become a successful trainer coach
where your clients get results, they keep results
and you make more money
because now you've built an incredible business.
Here's what you do.
Go to mindpumptrainer.com, sign up.
There's a three day training course.
I will be hosting starting January 15th.
And it's free.
It's free.
Go sign up.
You can also find all of us on social media.
Justin is at Mind Pump Justin on Instagram.
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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