Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2236: Body Part Split Vs. Full Body Workouts, Building Muscle With the Windmill Exercise, Toubleshooting Low Energy, & More (Listener Live Coaching)
Episode Date: December 27, 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: Mot...ivation is bullshit, self-belief is EVERYTHING! (2:37) How Justin is using the Brain Blend from Ned for mental clarity and sharpness pre-podcast. (17:30) BPC-157 is the creatine of the peptide world. (19:40) Mind Pump gives back. (23:55) Fun Facts with Justin: Chlamydia in the Arctic. (33:11) Signs you need to add sodium. (34:25) Will we get to a place where we can engineer broccoli to taste like cake? (39:03) MAPS 40+ looks to be a sleeper hit. (43:13) Females kicking ass! (49:02) When mom’s away, dad holds down the fort. (50:55) Shout out to Josh Nickerson! (1:02:45) #ListenerLive question #1 - What direction do I need to go to keep pushing the dial toward being the athlete I can identify with again? (1:03:39) #ListenerLive question #2 - How do constant interruptions negatively impact sleep cycles? (1:23:30) #ListenerLive question #3 - What can I do to get my left side to match my ride side as far as mobility for the workout is concerned? (1:32:08) #ListenerLive question #4 - Do you think the full-body approach is still beneficial to an intermediate/advanced lifter? (1:42:09) Related Links/Products Mentioned Ask a question to Mind Pump, live! Email: live@mindpumpmedia.com Visit NED for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! For a limited time only, Mind Pump listeners get a free LMNT Sample Pack with any purchase: Visit DrinkLMNT.com/MindPump Personal Trainer 3-Day Training – Starting Jan. 15, 2024 December Promotion: MAPS Old Time Strength | MAPS OCR 50% off! ** Code DECEMBER50 at checkout ** UFC 296’s Tony Ferguson completes David Goggins’ ‘Hell Week’ training program, is ‘a changed man’ Eterna Health – Refer a Patient ** Mention MIND PUMP ** Mind Pump #2125: Heal Like Wolverine: BPC 157 With Dr. William Seeds New chlamydia species discovered deep under the Arctic Ocean Japan researchers develop electric chopsticks to enhance salty taste MAPS 40+ Visit Organifi for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code MINDPUMP at checkout** MP Holistic Health Mind Pump #1142: Nine Signs You Are Overtraining Mind Pump #2120: Signs Your Hormones Are Out Of Balance With Dr. Jolene Brighten Mind Pump #1345: 6 Ways To Optimize Sleep For Faster Muscle Gain And Fat Loss Visit Eight Sleep for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump Listeners! **Save $150 on the Pod Cover.** Add Windmills to Your Workout to Increase Your Deadlift Strength – Mind Pump TV Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned David Goggins (@davidgoggins) Instagram Tony Ferguson (@tonyfergusonxt) Instagram Kirk Parsley (@kirkparsley) Instagram Adeel Khan, MD (@dr.akhan) Instagram  Jay Campbell (@jaycampbell333) Instagram Dr. William Seeds (@williamseedsmd) Instagram DR. SHAQUILLE O'NEAL Ed.D. (@shaq) Instagram Josh Nickerson (@mindpumpjosh) Instagram Â
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mite, op, mite, op with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the most downloaded fitness health entertainment podcast in the history of the world.
This is Mind Pump, right?
Today's episode we answered live caller's questions, so people called in and we got to help them on air.
But this was after an intro portion.
Okay, so the intro today was 60 minutes long. That's where we talk about family life, current events, scientific studies, and more.
By the way, if you want to skip around your favorite parts, we have show notes. You can click on one of those timestamps.
Also, if you want to be on an episode like this one, email us your question at live at minepumpmedia.com
Now this episode is brought to you by some sponsors. The first one is Ned
They make hemp oil products full spectrum hemp oil including CBD
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Inflammation to help with gut health sleep and much more go check them out
This is the one CBD product you will feel when you take,
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User code mind pump get 15% off. This episode is also brought to you by LMNT. This is the world's
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Go to drinklmt.com forward slash mind pump.
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By the way, I'm doing a three part train, the trainer series in January.
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go sign yourself up, go to mindpumptrainer.com. Now, we're running a program sale this month.
Maps, old-time strength, and maps, obstacle course racing are both 50% off. If you're interested,
go to mapsfitinistproducts.com and then use the code December 50, so that's
December 50, no space for that discount. All right, here comes the show.
Teacher time! And it's teacher time. Oh, shit, Doug, you know, it's my favorite time of the week.
Two winners this week. One for Apple podcasts, one for Facebook, the Apple podcast winner is
Canadian Jewel in Florida.
And for Facebook, we have Nancy Nance.
Both of you are winners in the name I just read
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include your shirt size and your shipping address,
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Motivation is bullshit, self-belief is everything.
All right, what does that mean?
Well, look, if you wait for the right feeling to do things,
you're going to be waiting a long time and then when you get that feeling to do it, you'll do it,
and then the feeling goes away. This is true for motivation as well. Motivation is a feeling,
and if you tie everything you do to motivation, when it goes away, so well those things that are
important to you. So self-belief, discipline, that's what matters.
Do the things you should be doing
even when you don't feel like it.
That's a skill.
You know what's gonna happen?
That's gonna go viral with him saying that.
That's how it's going.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Adam said that, said that,
he said that, no,
it was on the shield.
He'll be opposed to it.
It doesn't even matter, I will give him.
I don't know.
That's all good.
Good.
But you know, it's this one. Yeah, it's spark matter. I will give. I don't know. It's all good. But you know, it's, um, uh, this one, yeah, it's sparking.
I learned, well, this one, oh, you don't want to know what sparked it.
Yeah.
Um, the UFC fights over the weekend.
Oh, uh, Tony Ferguson in, uh, David Goggle,
I was talking about, I know you were able to watch the fight.
You know, so, so let's, let's, let's circle back.
We talked about this.
What a two weeks ago.
We go. Okay. Episode 22 14.. What a two weeks ago. We go.
Episode 22 14. Oh, you had it. Oh nice. Yeah, 30 minutes and 43 seconds in. Oh, okay. So look at Doug. Look at Doug on his game today. Oh, so excuse me. David Goggins was a video of him training Tony Ferguson. Yeah. And it was
it was just what I saw what we saw. So we don't know anything else. Okay. So I want to be clear. But what we saw was terrible programming.
There's no
value to any kind of training that he was was terrible programming. There's no value to any
kind of training that he was doing for an athlete like, okay, and any coach or trainer who is worth
their salt will know that they'll see him like this ridiculous. Now, I had a lot of people commenting
because I did post about it underneath saying, well, he's training the mindset. He's just training
in his mindset. That's what David Goggins is good about. Yeah, like Tony Ferguson needs. Yeah,
and so then here we go. He gets, he has that fight. And the fact that he lost is not what I'm harping on.
It's the fact that Goggins was in his corner.
What was his advice?
Yeah.
You know, come on man, you could do it or whatever.
You know, like the hype, though, whatever.
And it's super frustrating because, I mean, this is true for everyone.
That feeling of hype and motivation is important.
It's very, very important.
But without the ability to continue to do what you need to do when it's gone, without that
ability, then you're just going to be on off, on off, on the wagon, off the wagon.
And Goggins just, I don't know the guy, actually likes some of the stuff he says, but
he represents those trainers in the industry that that's what they do.
What they're good at is trying to hype you up and excite you and get you going.
That was me the first five years of my career as well.
It just doesn't work for sustainability.
I mean, that's most like new trainers.
It's like you're excited and you want to convey that excitement to your clients and it
turns into a lot of that and also trying to wow them with like hard exercises and kind
of go through that process.
And then you realize like just steering them to create habits that are sustainable
is like, that's the move.
That's where, you know, the real work is going to kind of pay off.
I think this has always been a thing in the fitness space.
I think it's gotten worse because of social media.
Yeah.
And, you know, what that is is there's this like, you know,
endorphin dump that you get when you see that stuff.
Like I like it.
Who doesn't like to feel motivated?
Yeah.
So it's such a hard thing to try and tackle,
like communicating about it because, you know,
if we say anything at all that's negative about it,
then also I'm like, well, how dare you say that about him?
I love him and it's because of him that I did this and did that. And like, so it's like this area where it's negative about it, then also I'm like, well, how dare you say that about him? I love him. And it's because of him that I did this and did that.
And like, so it's like this area where it's like,
when we communicate and talk about it, it's like, you know,
it's not that it's bad.
It's like that, like if that is what got you off the couch
of your going, it's important.
But I also think that it also turns off as many people
as it turns on, meaning that it gets people going,
but then so many people think that they have to live up
to that level.
Or have that feeling all the time.
Oh yeah, or they're chasing that feeling all the time.
And the truth is, one, you'll probably,
you'll never live up to the day of God being little,
the guys of animal, right?
So like, you're already setting the bar so high
that most people are gonna fall short of that. And it is for sure a day, a week, a month, a year is going to come that you're not
motivated. You're not hyped to go do it. And then at that point you have nothing to lean on other
than the behaviors and the habits that you created. And if you didn't create those habits and
behaviors without the external motivation, then the likelihood
that you're going to maintain it or keep going or keep going down the path is just unlikely.
And it's also the opposite.
I feel like that I, and by the way, agree, I was the same trainer for the first, you know,
five to six years, whatever that.
But over time, learn that, oh, you know what's crazy is actually kind of taking away that a little bit
So when the clients all super hyped and motivated I'm gonna go seven days a week out
I'm gonna eat this diet. I'm gonna do that instead of me like piling on it
I'm gonna do this and getting hyped you know what let's let's rethink that a little bit like when was the last time
You actually did that consists me for a time. Why don't we do this? Why don't we set the bar lower?
Let's let's stack some winds and build some momentum
and create some habits, and then we'll build on those habits.
Because what I don't want to do is because you're all
hyped and motivated right now, is set you on this path,
and then in two weeks, you can't maintain that
or shit happens, and now you have this huge crash
of I'm a failure, I can't live up to that.
Let's rename motivation, and let's call it, I want to do that thing. Has anybody ever had to be
convinced to get back on their diet when they want to be on the diet? Or what about when they work
out or do anything else? So of course we like the feeling of motivation because it takes away all
the discomfort of doing things that we don't want to do because now we want to do them.
But the problem again is you're not going to want to do everything all the time, especially
not things that are hard or especially not things that require a lot of change in your life
and maybe how you view yourself and stuff like that.
So you can't, if you develop the skill of just falling in love with that feeling or you develop the relationship
with motivation where this is how I get things done,
this is how your routine's gonna look, okay?
You're gonna go all in or all out.
You're gonna be on or off.
There's not gonna be ever any balance.
So if you're listening right now, this is you.
Where it's like, man, when I'm on a diet, I'm on a diet.
And then when I go off, I'm like so far off.
Or yeah, I was on a kick and I was working out
super consistent.
And then I didn't just go last, I stopped.
Like I totally stopped and I dropped off the planet with it.
Then this is, this is usually the issue,
is this falling in love with this feeling of motivation.
So you have to understand that that is not,
and now here's why the fitness industry,
I wanna be clear by the way.
Here's why the industry of fitness focuses
so heavily on motivation.
If you capture motivated consumers,
they will buy your stuff.
Yeah.
So if I can create that feeling or feed into it
or just capture people when they have that feeling,
because when you feel motivated,
you're attracted to the hardcore stuff,
you're attracted to the big changes,
you're attracted to like these massive goals.
So the fitness industry is like, that's a great audience.
If I could capture those people, they're going to give me however much money I ask for for
my product.
So it just perpetuates the myth that this motivation is everything.
It's not.
By the way, here's what the data shows on this.
I love this part too.
If you develop the skill of discipline and do it the right way, which is kind of slow,
steady, grow with it, figure things out.
Okay, now it's a habit.
Now I can add a little more.
If you do that, consistently, the feeling of motivation actually comes by more often.
So, you actually create the conditions for motivation to happen more frequently anyway, which
is kind of like the, you know, that's like the cherry on top, you know, of what we're talking
about.
I think it's to get to the point where you can evolve past that where it's like the cherry on top, you know? A bowl of talking about it. I think it's to get to the point
where you can evolve past that where it's like,
this is just what I do.
Like I just, I take this on and I do this
and I'm pragmatic and I'm, you know, discipline.
Every day I'm doing this, it produces a result.
You just know that I just do this.
And these are the best athletes I've seen out there
that are not like super hyped up all the time.
They just go out there and they put pretty work
because they do the work all the time.
It's just not, that's just who they are.
You know, and it's hard to develop that, you know,
and that's something you do have to like train yourself
to become, and that's through consistent discipline,
and that's why you don't take it all on at once.
You don't wanna go with the super hype because it's just, you're not, you're going all the
way to the top, you're not building your way up and owning that.
Is there any scenario with an MMA fighter where you guys could have seen the value of hiring
someone like that, like Goggin's?
Yes, I think, I don't necessarily think at this level because at this level, I think you've already there's already self-selection bias for
mental toughness
So I don't know maybe but I think at more amateur levels
You may need to develop that mental toughness where you push past things then I could see maybe that up
So I saw a scenario that I could see that right. And I think it aligns with your
point you're making and because it's less likely in the professional level right. The professional
level they're most of you are dogs. Most of them got you there. Yeah, you got that dog in you.
But if you like, let's say your last three fights like you tapped, you know what I'm saying? Like you
tapped. Maybe it was a second. Yeah, psychological. Right, right. Or or or let's say like you,
you broke your someone broke your arm.
Got knocked in an arm bar like two years ago and you're coming back and then now you've
got almost career ending injuries.
Yeah.
And so and so if you're if you know yourself, which we don't know that about Tony, there's
a possibility, although he is his reputation in the UFC is he's one of the like that's
what he's known for is like he he never taps, he never gives up.
In fact, I don't know, Andrew would pull a stanza,
but he may be one of those guys who has never tapped out,
I think in a fight, like he's already known
as like one of the like, you know, toughest dudes in there.
So, I don't see that scenario with him,
but I could see it in a situation if you know,
if you know that where you're lacking is the mental
toughness or you're trying to get over this block, the psychological block, because then
that makes sense having somebody like that.
But to improve your sport, to have a motivation, mental toughness person, I don't know, it
had to be a very special scenario.
Well, I think there's a special scenario.
There are sports psychologists that are out there that are really good at that.
And it doesn't look like, you know,
come on, you know, you could do it.
Get up, type of deal.
It's a lot of visualization.
Yeah.
No, you know what that reminds me of.
So, you know, the sports that I've always been in were martial arts based.
It was really annoying being in the audience watching a Jitsu match or MMA fight, and hearing people say something like that.
Just hit him.
Yeah.
He's right there.
Just hit him, you know, kick, you know, whatever.
Hit him in the face.
Yeah, thank you.
It's like watching a basketball game and be like,
just make a shot.
Just make a shot.
Just make a shot.
Just make a shot.
Yeah, make a shot.
It's still already.
That's like what he was yelling at him in the corner.
It's like, what are you telling him?
You're not giving anything constructive. He's in the middle of a fight right now. You're telling him just toughen up. I need a shit. I'm already that's like what he was yelling at him in the corner. It's like what are you telling me not give him anything constructive is the middle of a fight right now?
I'm just tough enough like I've been no shit
Right, I are talking about it. I think like because I watched the fight live right and I think there was a point in his corner
When he's it I think he like realized it. I think he really felt like because you can see yeah
You see he's got two coaches and they're giving him my constructive
You know a criticism on his fight like oh, we need to you know slip you see he's got two coaches and they're giving him like constructive,
you know, a criticism on his fight.
Like, oh, we need to, you know,
slip the jab more this and that,
and you're like, they're giving him like,
technique stuff or, you know,
he's moving forward all the time,
and then you hear God was,
just be you, do more of you.
It's like not even looking over,
I'm just not, I was like,
fuck, what did I sign myself up for?
I love it. I got some stats on him's tapping. Oh yeah as like, what did I sign myself up for?
I love it. I got some stats on him. He's tapping. Oh, yeah, yeah. What's your stuff?
UFC fights. So basically, professional records, 26 and 10 in his last 23 fights in the UFC,
it only in his last three fights, two of them, he actually tapped and lost.
Oh, interesting. So most recently, you know, not tapping is interesting.
Not tapping is like, that's such a bad strategy.
Like if you're gonna get your arm broken,
you might as well just tap out so you can fight again.
You're also.
Yeah, yeah.
Choked out maybe, but I don't know.
Have you guys ever been, well, yeah,
you have been choked out because you guys,
yeah, I mean, I school played this.
Yeah, we did those dumb things.
Yeah, people who were,
people who were, things sometimes they get choked out.
I mean, people will like shake or talk.
When you were a dumb boy, you wanna feel things.. Now you want to experience it for yourself for some reason.
There was a fight on that car too where a guy got knocked out so bad that he was like,
that's not going to convulsion afterwards. Oh, super scary. Oh man. It was scary.
And then even when he finally came to and they got him up like you just know less.
You want to know what's funny? I was an avid MMA fan.
And of course, I love the grappling part
because that's what I did.
But I loved all MMA until I started training.
Lots of surgeons and doctors.
Oh yeah.
And they would tell me I would talk about the fights
and then they'd talk about the brain damage.
That was happening.
And it totally killed it for me.
Who did we just talk to that shared like all it takes
to Dr. Parsley? Oh, Dr. Parsley. That rule was really enlightening, right? Who did we just talk to that shared like all it takes to
Who would oh Dr. Parsley? Yeah, that rule was really enlightening right like that's a
The episode a little later, but that's he was talking about the
Little like what do you say what do you get you get a analogy of like a image?
Happens a bright sound like just even like a gunshot is enough to do, like that's crazy.
The vibration of it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like the cross sectional kind of like sheering of the brain.
Yeah.
I mean, it just confirmed how fucked up Justin is.
Yeah.
We all know this.
Yeah.
I've been on quite the sure.
Yeah, the journey of trying to kind of heal things in my brain
and you have no idea.
Yeah.
You know that they think that's the main theory now
as to why men have beards, and women don't,
is to protect us from the blow a little bit.
Yes, from getting from blows.
So one of the theories was a thick beard,
softens it, oh, like a,
fractional, no bro, listen.
No, I'm gonna tell you, I watched this whole thing,
I was pretty crazy.
So the original belief was a thick beard displays health
because you don't have like mites and lice and stuff like that.
But then some scientists were like,
you know, I wonder how much of an improvement
this would make over potentially getting knocked out
or injured.
So they took skulls and they put varying degrees of beards
on them and they would drop an object on like the face
or the chin.
And it was like a significant percentage of protection.
Imagine two of you are like a nice thick beard.
Imagine if you're like you were aiming to like
and if someone's got like a full beard here,
like try to miss their chin.
Yeah, you can like miss their chin completely
or not hit it right on the button you know what I'm saying?
You don't really see, yeah, yeah, cause it's like
you have to hit that sweet spot.
Yeah, you are the aim for that if you can't see a chin.
Yeah.
I mean, maybe, I know, I know.
I saw that.
So they showed that these skulls getting fractured and stuff.
But a nice thick beard protects your face.
Well, what do you know?
Well, I've been, I mean, even before the podcast,
I've been like trying to help with like any kind of inflammation
or brain cognition and all that stuff too.
So you used to do like, um, pure,
but I've been actually on a kick
doing Ned's brain blend.
Oh yeah.
Have you guys been doing the brain blend?
I would do.
It's amazing.
Yeah, that's the one I use.
I would say I probably use it the most
out of the all of the brain.
Which one's the brain?
That's the one I helped them put together.
Yeah, so it's higher.
It's got the CBD, but it's higher in my hands.
Mine's in there.
Yes, mine's main.
What's the bottle look on that one?
Pink.
Oh, I don't think I've even tried that one.
Yeah, you actually did.
You tested it.
Oh, the sample I tried.
You tested it.
Okay, yeah, I remember when we,
but I haven't since then.
Yeah, that's it right there, Justin.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it comes in like a pink, it comes in like a pink,
the pink, white and pink tube or whatever.
Oh, yeah, but it has, so it has compounds that improve blood flow to the brain that boost BDNF,
which is like fertilizer for neurons.
And then it's got, it's higher in some terpenes and cannabinoids that have been found to be
more anti-inflammatory for the brain.
So yeah.
It's good.
When we met with Dr. Khan,
did you talk about stuff that you could do peptide-wise
and did any of the stuff that we do that we just did recently
to that?
Yeah, like Cmax, the Selank, I believe, and then,
so that was sort of my move there.
And it also too, like a nasal spray
with like insulin.
Insulin nasal spray, which I thought was interesting.
So it's a very, very, very low dose of insulin.
He says it doesn't affect like plasma insulin levels, I guess, on the blood,
but you do it right either before you eat, I think it was before you eat.
Right after you eat. Or right after you eat. Yeah. And I haven't started it yet.
It improves insulin sensitivity in the brain. And so it's supposed to be really good for the brain
and cognition. Interesting. But it's such a small dose that he said there's no potential negative.
This was his words in terms of like,
hmm, interesting, right?
I didn't know that existed.
Yeah, I know you did.
And it's not for people diabetes, not people pre-diabetic, like average person.
Apparently could use it and get like this boost, this brain boost.
Yeah, wild stuff.
Yeah.
Yeah, so now I'm starting to notice, I think I can tell some of the stuff that he gave us, the peptides and the stem cells. Yeah, and now I'm starting to notice I think I can tell
Some of the stuff that he gave us the peptides and the yeah, and the stem so you do you too, huh? Yeah, I've been feeling like a quite
significantly better. I mean it's it's starting to gradually increase well
What happened to me was that I started getting these weirdos feeling inflamed and fatigued and I started to get a little paranoid
Which I have a tendency I don't know if you guys know this but I can get paranoid
and I started to get a little paranoid, which I have a tendency,
I don't know if you guys know this,
but I can get paranoid.
How about that?
I had no idea.
I don't think that could happen.
Yeah, so yeah.
So anyway, so I started to be like,
oh shit, did I get a bad reaction?
Of course, of course I got a bad reaction.
I've been having to be whatever.
Anyway, it turned out I was fighting something off.
Yeah.
Everybody around me.
It's going around, dude.
Yeah, everybody's sick around me too.
What's crazy about that is I never got sick.
Yeah, and so I just got a little bit of mild symptoms
and I don't want to wait.
Everyone around me is not just sick, they're like,
that's like direct contacts, like Courtney,
like my kids, like, but they're all through it.
But yeah, it was like right next to me,
like the last few days and nothing.
That's my house.
A lot of percent, like, and I,
anytime Katrina and Max get sick,
it is a 100% chance I'm getting it.
Because Katrina rarely ever gets sick.
She's never sick.
So her being sick is already odd,
and it's normally like for sure it's going around
and I'm going to catch it.
And what I felt was I delast weak since we've got back
from that, I felt like a little under the weather,
but not even enough to not work out.
And in the past, my immune system's so weak
that if I feel like I'm catching something,
I just don't work out because it almost always, if I train when I'm feeling I'm getting
sick, I get sick right afterwards for sure.
So this time I still train.
I kept training, kept doing everything normal, and I felt fine.
And I feel good, but I still, I mean, at night, I've got this runny nose, I'm congested,
I wake up, I feel super sick until I shower and get everything
all cleaned out.
Then I feel fine.
It's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's,
it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's,
it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's like I'm pretty close to obsessed mode. And so this is good. This will be good for the business when I get a second.
I'll learn about everything, right?
So I've been learning more and more and more,
reading more and more and just talking
to more people that are experts.
And it turned, I'm gonna say something that I think,
I think I can make this comparison.
And maybe I'll ask Jay Campbell or Dr. Seeds if they agree,
but I think BPC157 is the cretin of the peptide world.
That's a good analogy.
Because everybody I talk to,
if you not are truly helpful.
It doesn't matter what your symptom is,
it's gonna make every doctor we've talked to,
the ghost says,
in their stack of whatever they're gonna recommend,
because it's just like so helpful.
I think it's universally helpful.
And so what attributes about it,
do you say, because we've talked about why creatine is that way, right?
You get all these cognitive benefits from it.
So general health, it's great for building muscle, right?
So like ATP, ADP stuff, like, so what is it about the BPC157
that makes it kind of like that universal,
no matter what you have?
Well, it seems like anywhere you directly inject it to,
or apply it on,
because you can even take a pill or a capsule with it,
so it goes in the gut.
It seems to amplify regenerative capabilities.
That's it, just cross the board.
And if you inject it just systemically,
so just like under the skin,
it appears to do that for everything.
The liver, so I do, that's this weekend I was reading about the liver.
Oh really?
There seems to be protective effects, so the animal, they showed animal models where they reduced
like the damage to the liver that these animals had.
They had induced them with cirrhosis, they gave them BPC, took that away, they caused
alcohol damage to these livers while on BPC versus while not on it,
like significant difference.
It just generally seems to reduce its brain inflammation.
So it just seems to turn on the regenerative capabilities
of the body more so than the normal.
And it seems to have this crazy safety profile so far.
So, wow, so I think it's one of those peptides
that's like, you know, whatever your goal is
or if you're going to want peptide therapy,
it's probably,
probably, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, pretty cool.
Anyway, I want to talk about the school
that we went to today.
I want to bring that up.
First thing I want to say though,
and I know we're not, we don't have to go
to too much detail on there.
Here's why I'm saying it, Adam,
saying it because I want to give you public
like
Just something really nice about you Adam is very charitable never talks about it doesn't
You know boast or whatever about it, but he's organized now
This is like this. I this is a second year, but the third time I've seen you do something like this
We've organized something to wear you know, and we all chip in but you organize the whole thing
We've organized something to where, you know, and we all chip in, but you organize the whole thing.
Where we went to a school,
gave out some awards to some kids who were performing really well,
just kind of motivate these kids to do better.
So I just wanna say, that's freaking awesome.
Thank you, man.
Yeah, you know what I mean?
What am I, one of my favorite like celebrities is Shikiloneo.
And the reason why he's one of my favorite,
aside from his incredible personality,
it's hilarious for those things,
and he's a dominant basketball player.
But actually, the most inspiring thing about him to me
is that he's known for being extremely charitable
and not letting anybody know about it.
Like just, the only way people know about it
is because stories, he's done so much.
Buying kids bikes every time.
Yeah, I mean, he's that guy who goes Buying kids bikes every time you go home or anything.
He's that guy who goes and buys a whole family,
new set of cars, anytime he's in a Starbucks line,
he pays for every behind him.
And the only reason why it's got out is
because he's been doing this for decades now
and just doesn't ask,
you know what, and that's like what's that old saying?
You always say like,
Oh, it's a marketing saying.
Yeah, when they say like donate a,
donate 50 grams and then spend a hundred grand letting people know that you don't need to do anything. Yeah, I always say like donate a, donate 50 grams,
and then spend a hundred grand,
letting people know that you donate to the community.
Yeah, and I feel like there's a lot of that, right?
That makes the news and people,
or you see on social media people sharing them,
doing the charitable stuff.
And, you know, I don't, that's not how I work.
Like I, it's not really about that, right?
It's not about me at all.
It's about doing those things.
Well, it's really nice you could tell
there's something deep inside of that.
It makes you want to do it.
It's really, because it takes organization.
It takes planning.
You had to organize and do the whole thing.
You're not the most organized person.
So that's a lot of work.
This is very true.
I mean, I know it's like you didn't have our,
you know, it's like you're going out and you're doing this.
So anyways, really cool.
And then we go and we speak to the school
and you present this to warn these little kids
that light up and it's just so great.
Well, I thought you crushed it.
I thought, like I wasn't,
because you did the, you were late. Well, the thought you crushed it. I thought, I wasn't, cause you did the,
you were late.
Well, the kids, yeah.
And I was like, you know,
sounds really good.
Obviously was speaking to, you know,
doctors and other trainers and so that.
I'm like, let's see how he bring,
and you did a really good job of tying a great story
that the kids could relate to,
cause that was my kind of fear.
I was like, how are we gonna relate to these six graders,
you know, and fourth graders that, you know,
they don't pick up on it.
It was hilarious when you mentioned what we did,
and then when you got to the portion
of that we have a YouTube channel.
Yeah, everybody's like,
I was just so funny, like, you know,
all hands go, I knew YouTube.
I was surprised there, I heard quite a bit,
when you said podcasts, actually,
like that's neat to see, like,
I mean, remember when we started this,
but eight, nine years ago,
I was like, yeah, adults, most people, what do you do?
What's your real job?
People used to say stuff like that, right?
So to say that in a elementary middle school,
Andy here, most of the kids go know what the podcast was.
I thought that was really interesting.
Well, what a difference between that and YouTube.
Yeah, I know, then you said YouTube,
and all the kids were like,
now I said we had some street cred.
Yeah, yeah.
It's like, now we had some street cred. What? Yeah, yeah. Cause I said YouTube and all the kids are like now I said we had some street cred. Yeah Now we had some street yeah
They're told more subscribers
That's the currency that these kids totally you might as well be Tom Cruise
Yeah, yeah, I mean shooting that generation. It's my even bigger. I don't sound like if you're a YouTube star with a
Sixth grader
I would imagine you got more cloud than probably Tom
Crustus and that funny.. Oh yeah, it's bizarre.
I know, it's so weird.
So yeah, it was nice to see all these little kids
and in a past life or something, man, that's what I did.
I love it.
I love talking to kids and seeing that.
And it's a good age to like sixth, I think fifth and sixth
is a good age because I think, I feel like you can get a kid
right before they're about to do some shit.
Yeah, you can remember.
I remember a little in a city, if we're junior high, is just shit. Yeah, you remember a little innocent.
If we're junior high, it was so super real.
You know, shout out to Julie who helped support and put it together.
Right.
She's one of the teachers, long time front of mind, there.
And I know you said, I know you went to kind of a rougher school growing up.
And so you said, oh, yeah, you told it, but I was, I didn't.
I grew up in a very small town small
Hicktown and
There was not gangs. It was even gangs in high school much less. This is up to six great and she's like, oh, yeah
We have we have a lot of gang issues. Yeah, yeah, like six great. Yeah, dude. I mean, that's crazy. Yeah, even fourth grade
There's yeah, she's a certain I don't remember a fourth grade, but where I went to school
It was yeah, by the time I got into seventh and eighth because my junior high was seventh and eighth by the time I got there
It was gangland dude like you would see like like in the movies in the 90s like you'd see who would dress and all red
People over there and all blue. This was before
This was like right before the schools all started to do yeah, you can't wear I remember being it
I remember being in school when they started to do. Yeah, you couldn't wear any solid, like definitely not blue and red.
I think you could do black, you could do white,
but yeah, and if you had one of the red or blue in there,
it needed to be mixed with other stuff.
It could be fun.
I was telling a really, he loves it when I tell him stories.
So I just tell him stories about whatever,
either made up stories or real stories.
And so yesterday my parents were eating over
and I'm telling him a story about my dad.
And so he's super enthralled and you know,
he sits at the table with us.
So and I do this so he doesn't get up and you know,
not want to eat with us or whatever.
So then I'm telling the story about me
and I told the story about when I got in a fight
in junior high and I got jumped or whatever.
My parents there, I forgot my mom never knew the whole story.
So I'm telling the accurate story to a realist.
I did some stories like I haven't told my parents.
Yeah, dude.
Some of my mom's like,
she can jump in an hour.
What they did, what to you?
Why don't you tell, oh my God, that happened.
I'm like, yeah, sorry.
I never told you.
See, I had the opposite of my,
so I remember telling,
so when the whole cannabis business I did, right?
I remember having to talk with my mom,
so I'm like late 20s.
It's like her, me and my other sister
who's a year younger than Cassie.
And we're like, you know,
I think it was around the holiday time like this
and we were all together and we're like,
having drinks, talking, telling old stories and stuff like that.
And Cassie and I are like, Cassie's like sharing
the first time she smoked weed.
She was like a sophomore in high school with that.
And then I share and I'm like,
oh, I was like 22 or some of that.
And my mom's like, bullshit.
You were, I'm like, why would I lie?
I'm freaking 30 years old, right?
Like, why would I lie about that?
Like, my mom really believed like I was doing that stuff
and I was like, man, no wonder you're not hard
you guys are on me.
That I was doing drugs.
I had that somewhere.
I was like, bro, you see my dad, the drug test,
and me at work.
Yeah, I was like, dude, I was a good kid.
But all my friends were like degenerates.
Which is why I think my mom brought up that story
I've told before a long time ago on here,
where I threw it, so I threw this party.
So I obviously had parties.
I did drink a little bit when I was in high school.
And one week in when they were gone,
I threw this house party.
And like, house was immaculate when they got back.
So like totally was safe.
Nothing happened.
Week goes by, you know, got, I got off scot free.
I'm getting up to go to the dairy to work
at like four o'clock in the morning
and my mom walks into the bathroom and slams this glass bubbler.
Like countertub.
What the fuck is this?
And I'm like, and I actually am like, I have no idea.
I mean, I know what it is, but I'm like, it's not mine.
Yeah.
And my buddy, Raven, who you guys have met, he had left it up,
like above the oven or stove, and it was like weeks later,
or whatever, and pulled it out there,
and I had no idea he had left it in there.
And I got so grounded for that.
And so my mom just assumed that I was,
because of course you find a,
and that's the, that's the lie to you. The lie of mom just assumed that I was because of course you find a- And that's the line to live.
I don't know what that is.
I know, right?
It's like exactly.
It was like one of those scenarios,
like legitimately was not mine.
I had no idea.
And it's like, and I remember thinking too,
like afterwards, like, come on mom,
like would I be that stupid to leave it in the,
if I was doing that, like leave it in the kitchen cover.
I mean, that's like the biggest stoder move ever.
Yeah, right.
So I was an insane, I was an insane high school, but I did, this was how old is that? I don't know's like the biggest stoder move ever. Yeah, that's right. So I wasn't into any of that in high school, but I did.
This was how old is that?
I don't know.
I think it might have been 18.
So I think I was an adult at this point.
And my mom took my truck, because I had an owner truck.
She took it to drive somewhere, comes back, and I go in the house, and she's washing dishes,
hell of quiet.
Like, hey, mom, nothing.
I'm like, oh shit. She's something happened. What happened?
No, no, what happened? She's bad at me. Mom, what's the matter? Nothing. Finally, she puts the dishes down. She looks at me. She goes, you know,
Girls out there are daughters of mothers and fathers and sisters. I'm like, what?
What? What are you talking about?
Yeah, and she pulls out the condoms that were in my truck.
Yeah, I can't believe I was going to go.
Oh, it's fair.
I just want to see what they felt like, I don't know.
I'm trying to come over to this cute place.
They're my friends.
Let's make a wire balloon.
Yeah, that's a loudest thing.
I really speak to water balloons.
Yeah, you can buy Blue Joe.
Oh, yeah.
Anyway, that was the one time.
Oh, yeah.
That was a good time.
Speaking of that.
Okay, so I have some interesting information
that scientists found recently down in the Arctic waters.
That sounds clik-bitty, doesn't it?
Yeah, doesn't it?
Yeah, yeah.
Science here, let's hear your alien story.
Is it an alien story?
What?
They found climedia in the water,
in deep water in the Arctic.
What?
Wow.
How does that, yeah, like,
it must be some other kind of variant of it.
I don't know, but like they found it.
Well, it's complete.
Does chlamedia like only exist as an STD?
That's what I'm wondering.
I was, I was baffled by this.
He's the chlamydia.
I was baffled by this and also too I got to add for for the next movie coming out
Aquaman 2 and I was like oh it's perfect
That's how it got there, you know wow yeah, wow
But yeah, like you're not even safe. You're not even safe having sex no Arctic water. So they're having the sperm
Weird it's weird.
You know what else that has a lot of chlamydia?
I think it's koalas.
Didn't I say that once?
Yeah, they do.
They've been known as koalas apparently have
riddles.
Yeah, riddles of chlamydia.
That's what they say when I was at the zoo.
Did they say riddles?
Don't get bit by it.
I'm with chlamydia, like,
oh, you don't get it from a bite, I don't.
That's hilarious.
That's hilarious. Stop snuggling on me. Hey, so I'm gonna get a little media like, oh you don't get it from a bio, I don't. That's hilarious.
Stuff snuggling on you.
Hey so, I want to take you guys,
so introduce another family member to Elemente,
my sister.
So my sister has been doing Whole 30.
So you guys know the whole process, the Whole 30.
Yeah, yeah.
I like Whole 30, right?
It actually is, probably the most solid
if you're gonna do a diet.
Yeah, well the approach, right?
So anyway, she's doing it and you guys know,
it's like her carbs are way down,
and her sodium, excuse me, her processed food
and take is way down.
So her sodium take is way down.
So anyway, I didn't know any of this,
and she was, I was talking to her, her son's sick,
so I'm asking about her son.
And she's like, oh, I'm going through a detox right now.
I'm like detox, and I ran away, my alarm bells go off.
I'm like, what do you mean detox?
She's like, well, I'm doing whole 30.
And yesterday I was like getting dizzy
and it was really hard.
I got up real fast from the floor
and I kind of got dizzy and my workouts.
I'm like getting these cold sweats and stuff.
She goes, but I know it's just the detox
because I've cut all these foods out.
I'm like, no, you need sodium.
She's like, what do you mean?
And I'm like, okay, you low carb.
So you have way less water in your body,
and you're also not eating heavily processed foods
if you're phone, whole 30.
So your sodium intake is way down.
I said, your electrolyte balance is off.
So I said, go eat a teaspoon of sea salt,
see how you feel in the next five minutes.
And of course, sure enough, she's like,
whoa, I feel way better.
I'm like, all right, you need,
I said, don't worry, I got this company
that we work with them.
We'll send you a bunch. Obviously, there's like a spectrum of like how this affects people.
Do you think that if you were, if you were somebody who ate a lot of fast food or ate out a lot,
just in general, because anything, even good choice is like Chipotle, it's got a ton of sodium.
And you've done that for years or even decades. You think you're even more sensitive
to that extreme switch from eating out like that.
And then, I have the reason why-
It's not just the low sodium, it's also the contrast.
Because, okay, right, that's what I mean.
You get adapted to-
Well, what did you do?
What do you guys do when they go into shows?
And they compete?
Don't they do that now?
Were they a bump their sodium leading into it?
And then they cut it?
So, you know what's funny about that is,
that's what I used to do.
Yeah.
Because I thought it was ridiculous to cut sodium completely,
but most people don't do that.
It's so.
That's what you're supposed to do.
Yeah.
They just get rid of it.
Rid of it, right?
Like the last few weeks.
What they do that's so hilarious to me is that you have
these competitors that in the off season, they go bananas
that you whatever they want to get to get big, right?
So they're eating burgers, fries, everything.
So they're probably in taking a ton of sodium.
Then they go in there like 10 to 12 week prep time, immediately switch over to
it's already a slow sodium.
Yeah, I have to get it.
Yes.
And then, and then they eat that way for eight to 10 weeks, and then the final two weeks,
they cut to nothing.
Oh my God.
And it was like, not only they cut to not just still water too.
Yeah.
They'll stop drinking water and just, and it's weird because the flattens are muscles. It's funny. We're talking about don't know. I mean, I don't know. I mean, I don't know. I mean, I don't know.
I mean, I don't know.
I mean, I don't know.
I mean, I don't know.
I mean, I don't know.
I mean, I don't know.
I mean, I don't know.
I mean, I don't know.
I mean, I don't know.
I mean, I don't know.
I mean, I don't know.
I mean, I don't know.
I mean, I don't know.
I mean, I don't know.
I mean, I don't know.
I mean, I don't know.
I mean, I don't know.
I mean, I don't know.
I mean, I don't know.
I mean, I don't know.
I mean, I don't know. I mean, I don't know. I mean, I don't know. I mean, I don't know like the role of sodium or water even.
Like they would cut their water to nothing.
It's like dude, your muscles are 65% water.
Like why would you wanna pull all the water out?
So there's a range of sodium level you wanna intake
if you're active and there's a bit of an individual variance
but athletes typically need more sodium anyway,
okay, because you sweat more or whatever.
So there's that.
But there's also this hormone in the body, and I think it's called aldastorone, maybe
Doug could look it up for me, and that your body will boost or lower to help you retain
or excrete more water.
So if you go from high sodium to low sodium, there's this huge discrepancy.
Your body's already used to this much sodium,
so not only do you get rid of water,
you get rid of more water than you normally would,
and you get this crazy, it is undestroned.
It helps regulate your blood pressure
by managing levels of sodium.
Yeah.
So these extreme changes, when people go
from like eating a regular diet to keto,
and they call it keto flu.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, I have the keto flu.
No, no, no, you don't have a keto flu.
It's not your body transitioning to ketones that you're struggling with. and they call it keto flu. Oh, yeah. Oh, I have the keto flu. No, no, no, you don't have a keto flu.
It's not your body transitioning to ketones
that you're struggling with.
It's that your electrolyte bounces way the hell off.
How do you know?
You will know right away by literally taking a packet.
Take a packet of element tea, put it in your water,
pound it, wait 10 minutes.
Within 10 minutes to 30 minutes,
within 10 to 30 minutes,
you'll know.
You'll feel it.
Oh crap, what did I do?
I feel so much better.
It's that dramatic.
So that was her.
So I told her, so I said, because I'm sending her some element
tea.
And I said, until you get it, just use a teaspoon of sea salt.
Oh, I'm like, well, I got something better.
So yeah, do this for now or whatever.
Anyway, speaking of salt, did you know that there's this bowl
that scientists just invented that uses an electric current
so it's chopsticks and a bowl, this is real now,
uses an electric current to trick your body.
We've talked about this.
Did I tell you about this exact bowl?
Not the bowl, I brought this up a long time ago.
We did.
The chopsticks and it would, like, yes, you did.
Yeah, and it would change the like the flavor profile of some.
Yeah, so I just read literally an article where this author of the article went and tested
it.
He's like, it's so trippy.
He ate a soup with zero sodium.
And because of the current and the chopsticks, it tasted like it.
Yeah, it literally tricked his taste buds.
Yeah, yeah.
I forgot what I forgot where I where I saw that first, but it was a year or two ago.
I remember seeing that and then bringing it up,
but I had never seen it.
Like I never have tried it or know anybody
that has tried it before.
And this is a bowl, too?
It's like, yeah, it's a bowl with the chopsticks.
So there's like some sort of like a current,
that's like something.
Is that weird?
Yeah, that's so wild.
That's the point of it.
Like why are they promoting it for? I would imagine that you can make foods that are
less palatable, more palatable. You don't see the market potential with that.
Imagine that. Yeah. You can literally sell. You could be like, eat, you know,
eat whatever you want. Just to eat healthy and food to be. What? And you
add nothing to it except for, yeah. Yeah. But like, okay. I don't know.
I guess I'm always like worried about you,
you're tricking your body like it's,
it feels like it's receiving minerals and nutrients
that aren't there.
Of course, you know, but if they were doing it
for healthier reasons, I could,
I mean, do you think we get, okay,
okay, what we're doing with like the,
you know, what's freedberg, what's he,
what's he, he's getting ready,
I told you to get the CEO of this new company
and it's a food company and in fact, they about it again like he's they're already like lab grown
So yeah, yeah, so we're already doing like lab girl think like that and I was watching
Santa Claus too
Last night with Max and there's a there's a scene where Mrs. Claus has got the kids and she's feeding them all and
It's like it's dinner and it's all cake and ice cream. And also with that, and the kids are like,
this isn't dinner, okay, I have to say that.
And they're like, oh no, these are all healthy foods.
I've just prepared them in a way that tastes
like your favorite foods.
So the broccoli is like this green cake
and it tastes amazing.
So do you think we get to a place where we can engineer,
you know, foods like broccoli and trick the brain
into thinking you're eating chocolate cake.
I mean, I mean, it's totally within the realm of,
of course it is.
If we can, if we can lab grow a piece of meat, right?
And put together a piece of meat in the lab,
why would we not be able to make potentially broccoli taste
like something else that's really tasty?
I mean, it's totally within the realm of possibility,
100%.
I'm actually with many people in the brain.
Imagine that breakthrough.
What that, to get people to eat whole natural foods,
if they can get it.
You know what's crazy about that?
So what Justin said's interesting.
So how arrogant are we to think that our perception
of a flavor is an important?
This is somehow impact our body's physiology.
Right.
So it's not just what's in the food.
It's in motion.
Correct.
Like what's in the food, obviously,
impacts your body physiologically. Sodium nutrients minerals, vitamins in the food, obviously, impacts your body physiologically.
Yeah.
Sodium, nutrients, minerals, vitamins, macros,
proteins, fats, carbs, whatever.
But our body obviously perceives flavor
and perceives the experience.
That also is going to affect your physiology.
We know that.
Oh, this was also like my concern with CRISPR and things
about omitting certain genes that like,
you know, they think are problematic when in fact, we don't really know. They're probably certain genes that like, you know, they think are problematic.
When in fact, they're probably protecting us from some, you know, crazy virus in the future,
some crazy, you know, radiation or whatever, you know, we just don't have that kind of foresight.
We just want to like attack whatever we think is like this immediate problem. And, you know,
as a byproduct of that, who knows what it's gonna do?
Did you know sickle cell anemia,
which obviously it sucks, right?
It was an adaptation, evolutionary adaptation,
to fight against or prevent serious malaria.
Yeah.
So that's one of those things that also sickle cell anemia sucks,
but it might have saved a lot of people from malaria.
In areas like that, yeah, where malaria was rampant. I'm confirmed that by the it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like,
it's like, it's like, it's like,
it's like, it's like, it's like,
it's like, it's like, it's like,
it's like, it's like, it's like,
it's like, it's like, it's like,
it's like, it's like, it's like,
it's like, it's like, it's like,
it's like, it's like, it's like,
it's like, it's like, it's like,
it's like, it's like, it's like,
it's like, it's like, it's like,
it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like,
it's like, it's like, it's like,
it's like, it's like, it's like,
it's like, it's like, it's like,
it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like,
it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like,
it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like,
it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it so that, just looking like a sleeper program for us. So that would be underestimated
how many people were looking for something.
Yeah, sickle cell.
It's right.
The trait provides malaria protection,
but having sickle cell does not.
Right, right, right.
Interesting, okay.
So, yeah, back to mass,
so you know what's interesting about this is,
I think people in that age group,
well, number one, the program is more complete
than almost any other program because we put lifestyle stuff
in their diet stuff, in their supplement stuff,
which people always beg for.
So I think that's a pull.
Yeah, that's a good feature.
The other part though is I think people in the 40 plus age group
are more likely to follow instruction or want instruction
because they don't want to waste time.
And I think that they might identify with us
because we're over 40. So we're talking about the program.
And so we probably have listeners that are like,
yes, these guys are over 40, they understand.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But it's crushing.
Yeah, yeah, normally we talk about more
about the program leading up to it.
We had so much stuff going on with the other business
that's being built right now with the holidays,
the travel we had.
So I think we neglected too.
We shot this a long time ago.
Well yeah, and we did it.
We did it.
Sit on it.
Yeah, this is probably, yeah, that's another thing too, right?
Like we rarely are that far ahead on a program where we had like done and you had it shot
already.
So it wasn't top of mind for us.
And then all of a sudden we get a thing from our marketing team.
Oh, programs coming out next week.
We're like, oh shit.
Yeah.
We should talk about that like people know, right?
So, but it's taking off, it's flying right now.
So I definitely did not predict it to move as fast
as it's moving right now.
And then the feedback that I'm seeing in the form
already is awesome.
So I'm excited.
I mean, this is actually something that I know,
I talk a lot about, you know, pulling
from some of our programs, or I do kind of my own thing.
And I'm excited to actually do this,
because it's good timing for me right now, getting really back in the swing of things, and it really does speak to kind of my own thing and I'm excited to actually do this because it's good timing for me right now getting really back in the swing of things
And it really does speak to kind of where my mindset is with lifting and it's effective and it's less like joint impactful
You know, it's like it's it's just a nice
Consistent way to train. I it just makes so much sense
I think for a lot of people to you know in this sort of
Age where you're just like, dude, I just want
to like, I want all the benefits, but I don't want to feel like I'm in pain and I'm like
restricted and you know, I don't want to selfishly too.
I really, I'm really into the lifestyle portion of it, right?
Like I'm at a place in my lifting career where I've been lifting for so long that I've
built enough muscle mass on me.
I don't need necessarily more muscle.
No, I would like more muscle and I like looking better.
But I've done a pretty good job of doing that for such a long time now that I only need
a little bit of focus in that area to keep a lot of the stuff that I built over years.
What I'm more interested in is-
That's not the area of improvement for you.
That's right.
The area where I really want to improve
is just continuing to dial on the lifestyle stuff,
getting better about my night routine
and adding these stuff.
Not even eatles so much further.
Well, so I'm adding to our list, right?
We did something very general for the general population,
but I'm gonna build some things on there
with reading and stuff that I'm trying to do personally.
And so that part is like excited me
that I have kind of a blueprint of,
okay, how am I gonna integrate all these things? I also think that, you know, it gives you
something to be very positive about every day. Like so the inevitable happens, right? You
don't have a day of, you know, lifting, you miss a day at the gym or whatever. But when you have
all these lifestyle goals to, it still leaves this opportunity for me to win the day. So yeah, okay, maybe I didn't crush my workout
like I wanted to do today,
but there's all these other lifestyle things
that we built in there that's like,
oh, okay, I can still move the needle forward
and still improve even though I missed the gym.
And I like that, you know, I like that
because I think that that's an area
that the fitness space doesn't talk enough about, we tend to hyper focus on the macros
and the lifting portion.
And then all the other stuff is like,
you know, unless you're in the wellness woo-woo side,
we kind of don't talk about that.
Well, the truth is, the lifestyle stuff
of what you do every day, right?
You go to the gym, but that's the 80%.
That's the stuff that moves the needle.
The most, and it's what'll contribute
to your likelihood to be of being consistent and the gym as well.
So it's got this in longevity.
Like when I think of longevity like, you know, and some of the people that we highlight or we admire or aspire to be like the most on social media are just these like, you know, Greek God and goddesses that look amazing, but it's like, you know, I'm in a place
where I want longevity. I want to be healthy. I want to be playing with my kid when he's 13, 14
years old and like that matters more than looking like a Greek God right now. Well, there's also this
myth and there's some truth to this. So I understand where it comes from, but it's a myth when people
believe it to be 100% true, which is that you, you, the most effective is also always
going to be the high, the highest risk when it comes to exercises and workouts. Now,
there's some truth to that, the more complex exercises or more of it, beneficial than the
more simple ones. But there are ways to take a, like a squat, for example, a barbell squat. We could take a barbell squat, turn it into a box squat,
and take away almost none of the muscle building,
fat burning, performance enhancing benefits of the squat,
but significantly reduce the potential
for injury or for poor recruitment patterns.
So that's one example, and there's exercises
that are out there like that. So it's not just like, Oh,
I got to do the over 40 safe workout, but it's not effective.
Right. Because this over here, this dangerous one is way more
effective. No, that's not necessarily true. It took some, some
finagling, but that's, and that's just how we've been, that's how I've
been working out now for the last, I don't know, three or four
years. So along the lines of our, talking about our programming
and stuff.
Did you bring up the guy that you invited to the studio in his daughter?
His his daughter won.
What she get?
What was the what was a CCS or yeah, was that it?
So she, yeah, she won her CCS match.
It's pretty awesome. So by the way, when she came in, before he said she was was a wrestler So she's 17. So he brings it to 17 year old daughter
Real nice father daughter combo. You can tell they had a good relationship and she reaches out to shake my hand
First off very confidently. You don't get a lot of 17 year olds to do that really cool
But then when she grit my hand I was like she either rock climbs or
Something because she's got strong firm. It's a firm. it's a wrestler. Yeah, that's bad-ass dude.
No, I thought that was pretty nice.
One of the best sports you could have your girl do,
by the way, period in the story.
Unless they did you jitsu, here's why.
The self-defense that a girl can get from wrestling
is just, because if a guy is gonna try to assault her,
he's gonna grab her.
Yeah, just because of the assault of,
yeah, I've been able to get out.
She could at least get out if not, you know,
throw him on his head or whatever.
And then another female win of our listeners, I got a DM just the other day.
Ladies name it was Tiffany.
I don't know if Doug has her.
Yeah, it's right up here on the screen.
Tiffany Laramie.
Could you read that for me?
So, yeah.
Yeah, so she's been competing in her first powerlifting meet using only mapped power lift.
She is one of two without a coach
and felt super prepared and knew what to expect going in.
PRD on her squat and deadlift, her deadlift by almost 60 pounds.
So that's close to 300 pounds.
Wow.
And then she says, thank you for all the amazing programs.
You put out.
I've been listening for a little over six years
lifted through two pregnancies with your programs.
It built so much strength.
That's what you do.
One of the only, no coach.
No coach. Yeah, I love that.
Yeah, that's so sick.
Yeah.
Congratulations, sir.
Do you know what I tell you guys?
So this weekend, Jessica had the her first, like weekend away
from both kids.
So since Daly has been born or whatever,
she's never had time away.
She come back a new woman.
Yeah, well, so did she come back?
So she's still there.
She's a kid's point.
I haven't got a whole of her,
but I know there's a matter of section up there.
So who knows?
And whatever.
She left on Friday, we saw it.
Yeah.
No, so she took off.
So she took off, she went to St. Mary. So she was up said. No, she took off. So she took off during the sanctuary.
So she was up there.
Oh, nice.
Hanging out.
It was just me and the kids.
And it's funny.
It's like, you know, I spent a lot of time with my kids, but I obviously, you know, she's
mom and she's with them all the time.
So there was a little bit of separation anxiety a couple of times I had to like, you know,
get the shirt.
Yeah, my one year old who just really learned how to talk throughout the day. She was just randomly mama, mama, mama, sorry, mom's
out here. You just like, whatever, but I had a great time with
the little ones just being the whole day with just them. It's so
different when it's just you and them because you just, there's
a different dynamic and I was having so much fun with them
and connecting. Then my daughter, my teenage daughter was home,
so I got to hang out with her a little bit.
My mom came over, I get this is funny.
So my mom comes over and is telling my daughter
stories about how she met my dad.
And I guess my daughter didn't know how like,
they didn't date, how my dad had to propose,
and then they dated, and they can only go on dates
when people were with them.
And how they didn't sleep at the same room
until they got married by the church,
even though they're whatever. And I hear my daughter in there saying, what? Oh my God. Really?
That's how we're. That's pretty true. That's so great. She's like, they want to walk.
She goes out. She goes, did you know, no, not went on her first walks with no, no, they
would walk and they'd have all their aunts and uncles and cousins and everybody following
them walking through the town.
I'm like, oh yeah.
I said, watch the Godfather part two.
That scene is exactly what it was.
You know, it's so funny you bring that up
because you've made me think, I wanted to talk to you guys
about this before.
So Katrina's had the opportunity to do that several times,
where she takes off and then leaves the kids.
But anytime she does, like, what she'll do is this.
This she'll be like,
hey, let's just tell me like months in advance.
Like three months from now, I'm gonna do a girls' weekend.
We're gonna do this in that.
Are you okay with that?
I checked your account and I'm like,
yeah, that's fine, no worries.
No follow ups.
I don't think anything.
You've already forgot about it.
I already forgot about my personal feelings.
But here's the thing that I love about her,
what she does is so she will go and organize either her mom
or my mom or whatever
and book them to come or my aunt and uncle to come. She'll have laid out all the meals.
She'll have done everything to like make it so seamless. Now it feels like she's doing it to support
me, but I think it has more to do with her anxiety around like leaving the kids, like leaving the
kid all by herself me. And I'm always got to tell him an order.
Just to change.
It's like this is for breakfast.
And this is what you feel.
Now are you happy that she does that?
Or are you like, let me alone, I'll take a little.
No, I appreciate it because it does just make it
that much easier.
Bro, I'm a rookie.
Because you're really good at that too.
Well, here's a deal.
I'm with my kids a lot and I play with them and all that stuff
and I take care of them too.
But this is, I'm a rookie with the schedule stuff.
The schedules, the routines, the nap,
what time exactly they have to wake up.
And wait a minute, she had this much milk
and whatever, I'm a total rookie.
So as I'm doing it, I'm like,
she literally made a list for me to follow.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm a little bit more.
She does that and I appreciate it.
Like as much as I know that, like,
oh, I can handle it, just it's one lot.
And that's when she says me, she's like, listen,
I know how busy you are with work and everything else.
I thought I wanna make it as easy,
which is so smart because then it sets her up for being able to go do it again. Where I'm like, listen, I know how busy you are with work and everything else like that. I wanna make it as easy, which is so smart
because then it sets her up for being able to go do it again.
Where I'm like, no big deal.
I'm like, wow, that was easy.
Max and I just hung out.
I had everything already done for him.
So she set the table for herself to be able to do that
whenever she wants, right?
Cause then if it's easy like that,
and then I had the support of my mom or her mom
or my aunt and I'm sure that.
Now, do you, okay, well Max is young,
but like I use that opportunity to show my boys
like more crazier action movies.
And like, there's the,
the way past the threshold kind of stuff,
you know, like comedy.
You gotta make it exciting.
Yeah, we always break at least one rule.
Yeah, for sure.
There's something like this.
This is my dad's life.
He's just playing nightmare game too long.
We watch TV in the bathtub or we eat.
We popcorn before dinner.
You know what I'm saying?
We do something.
We do something we're not supposed to do.
This is my dad.
Yeah, that's a bad rap.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, it's my kids.
Yeah, his mom's complaining about it.
You've heard this right?
Oh, back down the stairs.
Yeah, you know, like,
that's like the little tussle in the house right now is that like Katrina's like getting on to me
But they're like listen, I can't I'm not gonna be the bad person all the time
So she's like go ask your father and your father's gonna tell you the same thing
I just told you that get like that look like like you just put it back on her. Yeah, I want to see
Yeah, yeah, mom really doesn't like it
She's a hard time. She tells me what to do
I don't know me and you together, bro.
We're the ones.
Oh, wait.
She's not around.
Good.
So good.
I don't know.
I had him a couple times he watched YouTube with me
because he was calling out for Jessica or whatever.
And I was like, ah, so I totally cheap, right?
Easy.
Here, watch this car racing video or whatever.
So anyway, she comes home.
And she knows, I told her, I give her updates or whatever.
But when she comes home, he's like,
Mom, put it on YouTube.
She's like, you know we don't watch YouTube.
She's like, oh, papa, I was letting me watch.
I'm like, listen, I know I already told her.
You know, so it's okay, but I look at him like,
you train her.
Yeah.
I'm like, bro, it's what you're trying to do.
Yeah.
I have to have that with Maxwell time, bro, come on.
I'm thinking, we missed this pack, you're not supposed to,
or I'll tell him like, listen, don't tell your mom.
And the first thing's, mom, dad told me not to tell you.
Bro, I defeat the purpose if you go tell her,
run away.
Oh, man.
That's good, though.
I've had this sense, so we took the kids
to get their haircut by Vicki.
And like, Ethan's at that age now,
or he's like really trying to assert his independence
of like his style on all this time.
Like, you know, I had a little bit of influence back where he's like really trying to assert his independence of like his style and all this time.
Like, you know, I had a little bit of influence back in the day and they would get a nice
fade and a nice clean cut, you know, young man.
What's you on now?
Dude.
And so he, we compromised, but he has this like sort of hyperdollet.
Oh, that's fine.
It's like, you know, right here in the side.
So you just have like the, the sideburns like right there and then it goes about to hear and then the rest of it is kind of like tapered off right there and
Just looking at him. He looks older already, and he looks like a punk
And I'm like I'm trying so hard not to like like roast him, you know like the whole car right?
Um, of course like he likes haircut for once. He likes his haircut
Like reminding me and I'm just like
He likes haircut for once. He likes his haircut.
He had a reminding me and I was like,
okay, okay, okay, okay.
Yeah.
I didn't say anything.
Tried so hard.
And like I'm still on a roll.
I'm like, it's gonna come out though.
I can't help it.
Did I ever tell you guys my uncle,
so my uncle Casey, who works for the company, right?
You guys know Casey, right?
Oh yeah.
He, I was, I don't remember what grade,
I had probably in like six grade or something like that
and I went and stayed with him for a weekend or whatever and back then was when you know
Ducktails were popular
And I had one like this long
He's fucking came and snipped it off
He straight cut it off I cried and was so I brought like six grades
Bro, I like six grades. I'm like, without you without saying anything.
Yeah, yeah, cuz it was teasing me calling.
What is that ugly thing?
Rob, Rob, Rob, Rob.
He was just razzing me and razzing me.
I'm like, leave me alone, leave me alone.
And son of a bitch cut it off.
Wow.
Travertize me, dude.
To this day.
This is it.
I can see him.
It's not a funny story.
Oh, yeah.
That's the worst thing.
I think it's a kid too.
Like I'm not talking about. Imagine how long it's going. It's going to be like years, though. I think you're probably going to go with. Oh, yeah. That's the worst thing. I think as a kid too, like I promise. I'll show you a long ass time.
To me like years, I think you probably
grow up that long, dude.
And then he just straightened one.
Get over here.
Get to it right off.
Take that ugly thing off.
I wish I could,
do you have a picture of that?
I could probably find one.
Oh, that's sad.
That just sounds like his MO.
I could 100% see that.
And then him that's like no remorse, too.
This is care.
I'm crying and he's like oh
Suck it up. That shit was ugly. I did you a problem favor. Yeah, all right. Come on. Let's go. Oh
Stop crying your trouble
I had that impulse like in me and I'm like I kept it at
Broken traumatized me forever. Not gonna do all the old styles are coming back
So there's the mullet today one of the kids, you know, we were at the school.
He had the lines trimmed into the side of it.
Yeah, that was like a 90s thing for a second.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm seeing the lines and the like blocks.
And I'm seeing the big pants.
I go all the way down.
That's actually hype, you know?
So I actually ordered a pair of
the jeans or things happening.
I ordered a pair of Nike.
You know what I'm gonna see me though.
I was actually wearing it yesterday
when the boys were over, but I have a pair of these, these Nike's I'm gonna see me though, I was actually wearing it yesterday when the boys were over,
but I have a pair of these Nike's.
They did a collab with Stucey.
I love Stucey, I love Nike.
And that's the, they're massive.
What?
They're like super big and baggy.
Like the way we used to wear them back in the days.
What they call it?
Didn't they have silver tabs?
Aren't those silver tabs?
Yeah, we used to buy silver tabs like a size 48 and cut the bottoms and then you have to
get a quarter-oiser right now. That's like a big thing. There's a
corduroy pants. I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'mray was the thing when in the 80s, when we were little, little, right?
Running in Cordray's terrible.
He's like,
he's like,
he's like,
he's starting to fire up.
He's like,
he's like,
he's like,
he's like,
he's like,
the generation now is this kind of interesting
because, and I think this has a lot to do
with the internet and just like that there can,
there's community,
it's easier to find your community of people that they're like, everything is acceptable. Like every, when we're kids there's community, it's easier to find your community of people
that everything is acceptable.
When we were kids, you were categorized.
If you had to be here or you're here,
we're now I think there's so much diversity
and there's so many ways to get access to someone
who's like you that it just offers a,
which is probably a healthy thing,
I think, for kids that there is a bit of this,
like be who you want to be and it's okay,
and everybody's gonna do it for any idea, really.
At this point, it's been honest.
Yeah, I was a, what were they?
Stoner's Jocks, there's like a Hater's, Rocker.
We had, okay, yeah, I was gonna,
actually we were talking about schools,
I was like thinking, and we had Cowboys. You guys had Cowboys? That's what mainly I was gonna, actually we were talking about schools. I was like thinking and like, we had cowboys.
You guys had cowboys?
We had cowboys.
That's what mainly I was.
That's what I was talking about.
We had no kid cowboys were hit.
We called them dirt, but they were like,
that's not sick.
They're like the Maryland so far.
I know, she was saying.
No, that's not the four kids.
It was like the Maryland Manson emo kids.
You know, that's the four kids.
Well, I mean, those are just emo kids. Yeah, they're like the emo kids. We call them the four kids. It's like the Maryland Manson emo kids. Oh, well, I mean, those are just emo kids.
Yeah, they're like for God's, we call them God's kids.
And then skaters, skate servers, yeah.
But so, I mean, if you're a jockey,
you kind of just embodied whatever version of that.
So you had like, jock goths, we had like, jock.
Really?
Yeah, like cowboys, like it was weird.
Yeah, so I'm in San Jose.
So we had for shirt cholos, the cholo crew, then you had
the skaters, stoners, rockers, and the jocs. Those were like the five. And then we're like,
it was like everybody had a uniform. That's how crazy. Oh, that's how it was for us, too.
It was like you had to dress like we had a fact. I have a corner of the picture. Yeah,
just devoted to you. I have a picture of us. So they had a quad, what we call the quad
area, right?
Which is where everybody like congregated for brunch
and like for like the recess and all of some of the
everybody hung out and everybody's in their click
and you can literally, there's like a uniform.
Like you knew.
It's not weird.
We make tribes.
Even when there's none exists, we have to make a tribe.
Oh yeah, that's fun.
I have friends and you know, each one,
hang out with the dirt's rule a bit.
Yeah.
So I was like, there's a kid, I had friends in every bit.
I floated.
Yeah, I floated too.
So I got along with everybody and every click
or whatever I thought.
We make fun of the other ones,
then I go over there and make fun of them.
But when you fit in all of them,
you kinda don't fit in any of them.
That's true.
That's true, that's true.
Was that, was that Confucius?
Yeah, I don't know.
Confucius. Shout out. Another was that? Was that Confucius? Yeah, I don't know. Confucius.
Shout out.
Another one?
Yeah.
Did we do a shout out?
Well, I shouted out.
You know who we should shout out, Josh?
Josh, when you catch, you are my pump Josh.
You're adding this, you're the man.
You got two gold medals.
You won, yeah. Yeah, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he He is, he's a component, it's not components. Yeah, not components.
Don't smoke your components.
Yeah, through.
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All right, back to the show.
Our first color is Maddie from Spain.
Maddie, how you doing? How can we help you?
Hey there, so excellent to meet you guys.
Wow, it's so exciting.
I'm actually from Miami, correction,
but I am in Spain right now playing water polo
my first professional season.
So I'm just a little frustrated as an athlete
and I've been listening to your podcast
since the beginning of this year actually found you
when I was in Barcelona, because my second love is definitely weightlifting apart from water polo and I
found you guys and I'm like wow I can really still enjoy listening to you guys
and yeah so anyway let me just get to it. I've played D1 for five years on the
type of athlete that always goes pretty above and beyond. And so it's pretty
regular for me to have two, two days, three days, and be grinding and feel good. I'm in
the gym, I'm swimming and I go to practice. But I transitioned over here. I'm entering
now my fourth month, we're midway through the season. And I am more injury prone and tired than I've ever been in my entire life.
And I just need to, need to figure out why.
Because I feel like I haven't really changed too much, like workout wise or programming wise, what I do.
And even the sessions, the practice sessions are more technical and not so much, you know, the work that I'm used to
and I was training in Miami and in college. So, yeah, I feel like I'm doing less than ever,
but I feel like worse than ever before. Okay. I need some guidance.
I'm really glad you gave us the right context because it would be a different conversation
if you became pro and then increase the intensity or
the volume, not where you used to, and then you would say something like this.
By the way, for people who don't know, some of the most insane volume and training sessions
ever.
They have a water pool of it.
Yeah.
You guys have it.
Yeah, and so, and you've been doing it for years, so your tolerance is very high.
Okay, so for the average person listening, like Maddie can take a lot, she's been training
for years at these ridiculous levels.
Okay, so the first thing I would do is make sure there's no nutrient deficiencies that
have started to occur.
One of the hallmarks of a nutrient deficiency is just all of a sudden you feel like your
body isn't recovering like it used to.
So I would get a nutrient test
and test the obvious ones, your iron levels
in a woman that's important to test,
especially for menstruating, vitamin D,
your electrolytes, you were gonna say something?
Yeah, but I actually just,
there's so many mixed factors
and I know I have all this external stress
on my body from moving to a different country,
time zones, different, everything,
but I had lost my period this past year
and then I got to Spain in the first month.
I got it back.
Okay, that's not a bad sign.
In fact, that's a good hormonal sign,
but I would test for nutrient efficiencies.
I would start to optimize sleep.
And in the meantime, the thing you have to consider,
and this is a challenge that a lot of people will run into, is they'll say, I should be able to do sleep. And in the meantime, the thing you have to consider, and this is a challenge that a lot of people will run into,
is they'll say, I should be able to do more.
I should be able to feel different.
But what that's denying is the reality of what's going on,
and if you continue to do that,
right now what you're doing is obviously inappropriate,
for whatever reason, we're gonna try and get to the root of it.
So as you're trying, as you are trying to figure that out,
maybe it has to do with optimizing sleep,
maybe it's about potential nutrient efficiency
or dietary adjustment.
It could also be cumulative stress just over time.
It could also be this, Maddie,
it could be that you maybe for so long have trained
and have brought yourself to the line
of what you can maximally
tolerate, that the move and the stress of the move was just enough to tip you over and
you haven't given yourself your body a break.
Still working through it.
Yeah, you just haven't given your body the space to go back to, you know, to be able to
heal from that because maybe you've been on the go as soon as you got there.
So I would definitely test for nutrient deficiencies.
I would look at my sleep.
And then in the meantime, I would reduce my volume
and intensity until you started to feel better.
Because injuries and feeling fatigue
are hallmark signs of doing too much
for what your body can handle at that moment.
Anything you've done different nutritionally in the last year?
The last year, I actually was working
with a bodybuilding coach for three months and I
in college I tracked my macros for five years, so I'm pretty practiced.
Now I don't track or anything like that, but when I came to Spain, you know, like everything
is pretty different.
I can't really find like a package of lean ground beef anymore.
So I kind of have to, there was like this month period of maneuvering my nutrition
I found my egg white I found things that work for me
But now I feel like I'm pretty much on track with exactly pretty much the same things. I was eating prior
Okay, and I still I brought over all my supplements and that I wasn't stopped in the airport
But I brought I have all my supplements still
I just started taking creatine because I'm thinking, you know, what can I add?
Yeah, it's a good choice.
There's also this possibility too,
that you've just, like, kind of what Sal was alluding to,
what we've been pushing the body to that limit,
or maybe even potentially over that limit for so many years.
And you've been young and resilient and you've been okay,
and just the added stress of traveling and moving now and also the body finally saying, hey enough is enough.
It's like it's time that you take care of me a little bit and scale back on what I'm
doing.
Like, there comes a time where all of us can't handle what we used to do to ourselves.
It's just, there was a time when I felt like I could play basketball for four hours, lift
weight seven days a week and wake up the next day on four hours of sleep
and feel fine.
And then eventually I couldn't do that.
And so that happens for some people at 24.
It happens to other people at 34.
It happens somewhere in the middle for some people.
And so, and the volume of training
and that you guys handle and intensity is crazy.
I've actually trained a couple water polo players
and they were actually one of the horror clients for me
because I felt like I had to just hammer them
for them to see results.
Like they, because they already punish themselves
so much at training.
That's four hours a day.
That the intensity and volume of training
that I was used to training on a normal client,
they just wouldn't respond because it was like too low of a level.
So it always blew my mind. You know, Maddie, here's the other part that I want to comment on.
Because you look, okay, from if I were to look at you and if you were sitting across from me,
it would not be obvious to me that you're that you've over trained for too long.
You look healthy. You're obviously still young.
I don't think you're past anywhere past the what would be considered prime.
You're obviously still young. I don't think you're past anywhere past the what would be considered a prime
But I want you to consider this as well
the stress is can be physical. It could also be mental and
You're probably the kind of person that train you that the level that you train that you probably ignore stress and you push yourself forward no matter what
But there could be the added stress of being a professional, right?
So you compete every time you move up a level, there's a new added like pressure on yourself, right? Like high school to college,
there probably was a transition. Now you're college to pro. So now you're getting paid
to play. This is now your career. You're competing with the world's best. That is an added
stress on you as well. And it also can take its toll.
And so if you've already been training at that limit,
you add the move, new country, new language,
new world on your own, and then I'm a pro.
Now you've overwhelmed your body
because you are already training at that limit.
That's why you see people like LeBron,
James spending and investing so much money
in recovery tools and interventions and things like that.
Like, how are you doing massages?
Are you looking at red light therapy?
Are you doing, you know, like looking at all the other options
in terms of like added resources to sort of bring in
to your recovery process?
Obviously, sleep's gonna be the biggest factor to that.
So I don't know how many hours consistently you get,
but I know the move has shifted that and you're circadian rhythms a bit off. So I mean, there's probably
a little bit of lag there to begin with in terms of how you're feeling. But really, like,
if this is like your career, this is something you're at such an intense to Salis Point position
now where you have to like think a little bit more exclusively. How can I bring that part up to meet the demands of me actually having to perform at a
more intensive level?
Yeah.
You know, the good news here, I'm going to sell this to you now, Maddie.
Here's the good news, right?
There's a level of training that you, an intensity, volume, and frequency that's required
to get your body to progress.
And then there's a level that is required to maintain.
The level that is required to maintain is a lot less.
So, and the reason why I'm telling you this is,
what I don't want you to have to struggle with,
which I know this is what it is,
is you're like, oh my God, if I cut back on my training,
my performance is gonna drop even more.
Like I can't cut back.
But what's happening, the reality is,
your performance is probably already dropping because it's too much.
So what will actually happen is,
if my guess is correct, if you cut back appropriately,
you'll notice an improvement in performance,
not a reduction.
So that's the first place that I would go
is I would cut back on some stuff,
for I would still show up to practice and stuff like that,
but maybe cut out the lifting for a little while,
or cut the intensity of the lifting down by 50%.
So you're literally in the gym just practicing the movement,
just to make things feel good.
And do that for like six weeks, eight weeks,
for however long it takes,
we just start to feel like, oh, I feel like my old self again.
There's also, I mean, I'd not have to turn this into
like a therapy session or anything,
but piggybacking off of what Sal or the direction he was going, there's also, I mean, not to turn this into like a therapy session or anything, but we do piggybacking off of what Sal or the direction he was going.
There's also factors too.
I mean, you moved to another country like how are things with family, how are things with
dating and relationships, how are, because if that is also become stressful for you and
you're kind of bearing it and you're not dealing with it and that will also surface as stress and complicate
everything that we're talking about now too.
So at a lot of times with professional athletes, it's funny that we're having this conversation.
My buddies and I are all big basketball fans and we follow the warriors like crazy and there's
an athlete on the warriors team Wiggins.
And last year he went out due to family issues and he's returning.
He's never been the same.
Like for a year of playing basketball,
he's just never returned to that all-star athlete.
And one of the things I was saying to them
was I met him, whatever he went through,
whether it's dad dying or some stuff happened with his wife,
like the lot of it's not public,
it seems like he hasn't worked through it
because it's manifesting in his performance on the court.
And so I don't know what potentially also could have happened
in the last year or so, personally with you,
with relationships or family or things like that
and with the move, but if you've got that
and you're kind of just pushing it down and bearing it,
it'll manifest itself in your performance in the gym
and in your sports.
Matti, when you, did you know anybody went to Spain
when you moved there, did you move there went to in Spain when you moved there?
Did you move there with family, friends,
or is like on your own?
Here's, here it is.
I actually, I know a couple professional players,
but they're in Barcelona and I'm in Valencia.
So I'm necessarily see my friends.
And the language barrier has been hard.
Like I'm Cuban and I'm from Miami,
but Spanish, like Spanish is different.
And Spanish people are very different. But to whatever God's grace, I met
somebody the first weekend. I'm actually like, yeah, I'm in a good place with my
relationships status right now. So that's been really helpful. I think that if
I didn't have that, I might have had to return home
because there's no way I can handle all these added pressures.
Like you guys are saying,
and my family is actually visiting,
again, by God's grace coming this week.
So I think in my case, for sure,
like I actually have been trying to dial back in the gym,
like I'll go, yesterday I just went in and like did a bunch of mobility stuff for an hour.
I swam 1,000 yards and I just did a bunch of mobility, which I added in just to sustain
going to the gym.
My mind is like, okay, hit your protein goal.
I get more than enough sleep.
I don't know if that's a problem, but I can't help.
Like I have to sleep because I have no energy throughout the day,
but for practice.
And then I walk into the gym and I get three quality lists,
like all squat deadlift and I'll do the leg press
and like, you know, push, do a double drop set on the last set
and like push myself there,
but I don't have energy for anything else.
And I used to be in there doing
anabolic three full-body days. And now I just don't have the energy for it. And on top of that, I'll go to the our process of workouts. And which when I arise, I thought they were so easy,
but now I'm here. I'm doing all the things I always did. And now I'm arriving to all of these workouts
and everything is so much harder.
And, um, Maddie, yeah. Maddie, if you're being honest with yourself, would you say that the, that the move, uh, has been,
a challenge, that's been a challenge, it's been a growth, a growth period for you.
Yeah. Okay.
For sure. Okay.
The environment for sure.
That's what that's what's doing it. Okay.
So here's what I want you to do. Okay.
I want your back way off for a while back way off
So go to the gym just do mobility
But by the way, here's the reality if you don't your performance is gonna drop as already is you're already noticing that so
So there's no you're not trading
You're not gonna trade performance for what I'm about to say or what I'm recommending you're actually gonna gain the odds
That you'll gain performance from a tire. So I want you to back away off.
When your family comes to visit,
I want you to do the bare minimum practice and training
during that week.
And the whole thing for you is replenish your soul.
Stay with your family, love your family,
hang out with them, rebuild that, okay?
And back off for a while until your body tells you,
huh, I think I'm starting to feel good. And then don't jump right back into what you used to do. back off for a while until your body tells you,
huh, I think I'm starting to feel good. And then don't jump right back into what you used to do.
Ease.
Ease back in.
But I need you, you're gonna have to back away off
and it's gonna have to be more than one workout.
You're probably gonna have to back away off
for like a month or two months or something like that,
where you're just kinda letting things catch up a little bit.
Okay, and you won't notice a drop in performance.
The odds are you're gonna notice an drop in performance. The odds are you're
going to notice an improvement in performance by doing what I'm saying. I don't think that you need
a program from us, but I would like Doug to put you in the private forum. So we have access to you
and I'd love to hear. Give us updates so we can keep coaching you. Yeah. Oh, so yeah.
Thank you. Yeah. I actually listened to one of an old podcast.
I don't remember the woman's name, but she came on.
And she had all of these gut issues.
And she couldn't use the restroom.
I don't know if you remember.
It was a long time ago, because I've been scrolling.
But I just knew you guys could just
push me in the right direction.
And maybe it's not nutrition
You know that I'm always stressing about the nutrition piece, but maybe it really is just the stress and
I think so man, and you sound like
You're pretty close with your family
And you move to another yeah, so you're Cuban. I'm Italian very similar culture. We're very very family-centric
You moved away new country. you don't know your family,
that's a massive stress, no matter how tough you are,
and you're tough to play at the level you do.
That's a huge stress, new place, living on your own,
new country, don't know anybody.
And now I'm a professional, I'm getting paid to play.
This is totally different.
Like, 100% that's gonna have an effect on you.
For sure.
So, and that's where I'm heading right now.
You don't look like you have a nutrient deficiency,
you look very healthy,
and the fact that your period came back
points to that it's probably not that.
You can still get attested,
there's nothing wrong with that,
but I think it's just too much.
You can't take your train nutrition's pretty much in tune
when you're getting sleep, so yeah,
I mean, this is kind of where it looks like is the biggest source.
It's just a lot of stress right now in this period of time.
And believe it or not, hardest thing to tell an athlete is believe it or not, pulling
back on some of the pulling back may actually result in you getting more.
Yeah.
And that's not going to get off from your coach.
That's why.
Yeah.
That's so counterintuitive for the athletic mindset to hear that
But you know when you when you're reading all these signs that you're reading that that's what your your body's trying to tell you that
It's trying to tell you that and whether we hit it on the head somewhere or we maybe there was something
We didn't even uncover but it doesn't matter your body's telling you that it it's, there's too much stress. I mean, there's too much.
Too much right now and pulling back
a little bit on everything is what's going to result
in actually more results for you.
So trust the process, I'm gonna have Doug put you
in the forum and then we'll stay in touch, all right?
Okay, thank you guys so much.
I'm so appreciative. Thank you.
You got a matty wanna shout out your team real quick?
Oh, shout out.
I'm a waterfall to the other,
but also Lestal water follow up to the
L.F.A.
Govards.
Thank you.
Hi guys.
Thanks.
The two most hardcore type athletes in terms of just the
training, the just the beat down that they take.
All in wrestling.
Water pulling wrestling.
Man, they beat the crap.
It's actually really interesting.
So I still help you know, oh my God,
I'm gonna draw a blank on her name right now,
but she's been in our program.
I still help her and she's with X water polo.
And so and she it's really, she is trained her body to handle.
Oh my God.
That's so much.
They're the pull twice a day.
Total four hours.
It's so hard for me to move the needle sometimes
with her physique because she's trained that way.
And it's almost like she needs that
to see any sort of movement.
But a lot of things that we've had to do
is I've had to tell her like,
hey, I'm gonna scale you all the way back
to three days a week.
We're gonna go on a bulk for a while.
You need to get comfortable
with putting a little bit of body weight on for a while.
Like, it's like I'm a great story.
No, no, I can't believe Alexis. Jesus Christ. Oh, right, right, right, right. She's while. Like, it's like I'm about grace, are you? No, no, I can't believe, Alexis.
Jesus.
Oh, right, right, right, right.
Oh, I don't know that.
Yeah, she's a water puller.
Oh, yeah.
And she has that mindset.
Everything makes sense.
Yeah, she's built, they're built almost identical.
I mean, they look a lot alike and she's got that same
mentality.
And so it's hard for me to get her to kind of pull back.
But she'll stall and she'll get in places where she's
stalling and it's like, there's no reason why our calories are low.
She's, and she's like, her body will stall out.
I mean, checking all the boxes from what we can hear is just like, that's the thing.
It's like, well, we look, we, we, for some reason, we don't consider, well,
maybe we do, but I think a lot of under estimate, the mental strength, yes.
Like, it's not, we don't consider we underestimate, yeah, underestimate that. That's why I was like, I don't want to get into a therapy session with you.
No, it's not as tangible, but listen, you you you break up with somebody or you move to another
country and you're very close to one of your family members and now you don't have that anymore
and you're into a new profession, a new team, a new everything. You get to perform because they
can fire you. I mean, it's just yeah, I mean, that's that's very stressful. Look, if you're about to do a lift, think about this way, you're about
to go hit a, hit a lift that you think you can hit. And you get really bad news. One minute before,
do you think you'll be able to perform as much? That's how much of an impact that mental stress.
We were literally just talk, so it's like the story I was sharing with you was last,
this true story. Like I was just talking to my buddies about this,
about Andrew Wiggins for the Warriors.
And there's something going on with it.
We're over here like speculating
because we don't know his personal life.
And it's like, but we know he went out last year
because of a very personal thing
that he disappeared for like a month and a half.
Yeah, dude.
And it's like, dude, if you don't recover from that
and that's still there,
I almost think it's worse than physical stress
beyond the body.
It can hit the bat body.
Well, you know why it is? Cause it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's think it's worse than physical stress beyond for the it can hit the back body well You know why it is cuz it's it's linger
Can't see it correct feel it. Yeah, and it just stays there. You get through it right right
Our next colors keen in from California. What's happening man? How can I help you?
Hey, what's up guys? I first want to say I've been a fan of your podcast for well over two years now
And I learned a lot both through your content and your programs. So thank you for that.
So I'll jump into my question. I am a first year college student at San Diego. So I sleep in the
dorms. So over the past three years, since I've been listening to you guys, I've really tried to
down in my sleep habits, like maintaining a consistent sleep schedule and using Gula blockers
two hours or four bedtime. and despite keeping these habits in college
I do find myself waking up periodically during the night due to roommates coming in and out of the room and like
Noise outside the door and stuff. So I understand this out of my control. So
I'm a very life sleeper. So I would do wake up easily to small noises
So I can still fall, I can sleep pretty easily.
I'm still curious about how these little interruptions can actually negatively impact my sleep cycles.
And shall I be concerned about this and are supplements like melatonin or magnesium even more considered?
No, I actually got some pretty, I think I might have some...
Yeah, I could couple things for you too.
First of all, by the way, I want to point out that you're already ahead of 99% of people. So the fact that you're
in that first year, yeah, first year calls in the dorms and you're actually trying to
get good sleep. You're already an anomaly, bro. You're already on the right track. I wasn't
doing that till two years ago. That's a. Yeah. Can you fall asleep to, um, can you fall asleep to white noise?
Have you ever used white noise before?
So I actually do that.
Um, I do have an air pod pro, so the noise cancellation does help a lot, but, um, I mean,
honestly, like in the middle of the night, I sometimes guys and I'll start hearing noises
outside of my whole way and stuff.
All right.
So look, Kenan, I don't want you to wear AirPods while you're sleeping because of the, if you, if that long of exposure
and radiation, probably not a good idea, probably,
okay, I know people are gonna hammer me for this,
but the data's not clear.
And I don't think it's gonna have a positive effect
on sleep as well.
So I would switch to ear plugs or like things that help
to help you.
Do you have those? I was very light sleeper. I switched to ear plugs or things that help you.
Do you have those?
I switched to ear plugs before college
and that was the only way I could sleep now.
So, I mean, that's the thing.
To have those little interruptions and everything,
it would totally disrupt the next day for me.
I would have a hard time groggy all day
until I started wearing ear plugs.
So, it definitely worked for me.
Yeah, and they sell some really, really, really nice ones
inexpensive that are really good on Amazon.
I know this because my wife uses them since I snore.
So earplugs, I mask, white noise machine
that you put next to your bed.
And they're really cheap.
And you literally like, people use this for their kids
and their babies and whatever.
And so you put a white noise machine next to your bed,
turn it on, it won't disturb anybody who's coming
to what, it's in the middle of the night anyway,
so your roommates approach, I'm sure they'll be cool with it.
Ear plugs, I'm ask, and that's it, supplement wise.
There's not really anything that'll help.
And unless, I mean, it could, but if they don't walk in and out,
if there's no noise, do you wake up on your own,
or is it just because you're here to noise?
Because I hear your noise.
So then yeah, I don't think it has anything to do with milk, anything like that.
So that's it, dude.
I'll go, I'm ask ear plugs get really good ones and a white noise machine.
And then if you're like, oh shit, am I going to wake up with an alarm clock?
I got one more thing for you.
They sell these little fabric wristbands that you can wear that you can connect to an app.
And it'll, the alarm will go off and it'll buzz on your wrist.
So because you have the ear plugs,
you might not be able to hear an alarm.
The buzzing on the wrist will wake you up.
I use that because my one-year-old daughter
sleeps in the same room with me
and I can't use an alarm because it'll wake her up.
But this little wristband thing buzzes
and then I wake up and it doesn't wake up
anybody else around me.
I think those would be kind of-
I mean, I would never push you towards melatonin,
but I definitely think there's some value
and at least trying out the magnesium
or mellow supplement just because that was a big game
changer for me.
And I actually feel like a sleeper-
You're a lot of people are deficient in those.
Yeah, if you're deficient in that,
I'm like, I am, I sleep deeper because of it. So those. Yeah, if you're deficient in that, like I am,
I sleep deeper because of it.
So it could, even though it's the noise waking you up,
if you're deficient at magnesium and then you take that,
it'll help you get into a deeper sleep, which-
Faster, maybe.
Yeah, and then the white noise thing,
so the way that the science on that's really fascinating to me,
like how that works, you might think that in your ears would necessarily be better, but what the white
noise does is it actually drowns out the other noise. I don't know if you ever heard me talk about
this, but I used it for my dogs during fireworks. It was the craziest thing ever. It's like I could
have the dogs in the house and fireworks should be going off crazy. And all I had to do was put the
white noise by the by the window because it would drown the fireworks out
within the white noise.
So then when it gets to them,
they don't hear it, they don't have to put the white noise.
The way it works is the wild hot work.
Yeah, it works for babies, it works for adults,
and the science, I mean, it's the abrupt change in noise.
So like if you fall asleep with the TV on,
you'll wake up when someone turns it off, right?
It's the abrupt change. And what white noise does is it gives you this constant kind of sound, you'll wake up when someone turns it off, right? It's the abrupt change.
And what white noise does, it gives you this constant kind
of sound, you can use waves, some people like the sound
of water, but something constant, then little noises
that happen in the background are less of a signal
that tell your brain to arouse, to wake.
So, so you wake up at all, to temperature,
like do you get hot and all that as well?
Because, I mean, obviously it's a bit more
of an investment,
but something like our eight sleep,
to be able to monitor your temperature for me,
if I stay cool, I could totally sleep through like a log.
I'll just, I'll be out.
And so a lot of the noises don't affect me quite as much
when I'm in that deep sleep.
Yes, I've been hearing you guys talk about the cooler
or the A sleep for a long hour now. So I've been actually thinking about it just down into the doors right
now. So I didn't feel like, you know, I should have that in my dorm. Yeah. So I
actually move into a carbon maybe. Okay. But yeah, I would definitely try
investing in that when I, I mean, it's Christmas time right now. Not a bad idea
to ask for something like that. It's kind of a big, it's like a big gift, but
kind of a cool one, dude. But I mean, like, that's a good flex to your roommates.
But I'm ask ear plugs, white noise machine, and then the wristband, like, buzzing the
lorum, I mean, literally, like, all of those are super inexpensive.
And then the other thing is, I mean, I'm assuming you listened to us, you probably
work out relatively consistent, but I'm a big, there's a big difference in a day
that I lifted, and I sleep versus a day that I don't so I mean stay on top of your
You're lifting too that makes a big difference if you haven't already. Yeah, I've been yeah, I've been working out like around five days a week
So I definitely do know the difference when I do have a good lifting. Yeah
I that's the host a lot. Yeah me too. Good deal. I'm sorry room needs to be more quiet
Hey, do just a fact that you're trying to fix this
right now is already your ahead of the game, dude, because it's yeah. Yeah. Thank you.
Scott. Thank you. Yeah.
You're from your programs. Also amazing to us. Thank you. Appreciate it, bro. Thank you. Good luck.
Yeah. I mean, uh, there's a college kid. We probably should have threw him something free. Yeah.
You know, we didn't talk about workouts. No, I didn't. I mean, when you can you email them right after I dug. Yeah, ask him a program. He wants to give
him some for a few of them already. But yeah, I mean, listen, okay, earplugs, they make
really good earplugs. They're comfortable. They really make a big difference. I have to
have those. Yeah, it's just and then the white noise machine and I'm if I slept, if I had
it, it's sleeping room room, it's it coming out. That's 100% what I would do. 100%. I mean,
I think it's cool that he's trying to do that
in college, you know what I'm saying?
I know.
You know, so I don't know why I'm this,
I dated this girl, I remember when we were dating,
she went off to Cal Poly and we were,
we tried, this is like my first attempt
in a long-distance relationship.
And I'm like, so what am I like a 17, 18 years older,
what are I thought, and you know, dating this,
you know, she's in a sorority, she's in the dorms.
And like, we'd be on the phone at like midnight or one.
And like, you'd hear dudes coming in and tackle
and tickle her on the bed and say,
Oh my God!
I remember just being a fucking young kid boy and being like,
yeah.
Stop it, John!
Yeah, yeah, dude, just,
what the fuck is going on in there?
Oh, it's my roommate's friend.
John, you know my inner silence is mess with me.
I don't know why that memory just came right now,
but I just thought it was just maybe think about that.
I'm a similar experience to John.
Oh, yeah.
It's co-ed dorms, dude.
It's like it's just weird.
Like, you know, they've never interacted before.
Kind of vibes.
Yeah, yeah, dude.
It's a red memory that's just here right now. Yeah, dude've never interacted before. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. That's a red memory that you sit right now.
Yeah.
That's hilarious.
Our next caller is Kyle in Oregon.
Kyle, what's up, ma'am?
How can we help you?
Wow.
How's it going, everyone?
Hey, hey.
Pretty good.
Pretty good.
I got to say, it's such an honor to be speaking with you three. I've been a fan since 2018. I've
been listening to you guys and you've helped me out so much on just my fitness and just
my outlook on life. Help me be like a better father and a better friend. So I just got
to say from the bottom of my heart, thank you to all three of you for everything
that you do and everything that you put out.
Thank you.
Appreciate that, Kyle.
Thank you, sweet man.
Of course.
So my question, I just got Maps Old Time.
Awesome program so far.
I'm loving it.
It's such so much fun, a lot different than
everything that I'm loving it. It's such so much fun, a lot different than everything
that I've been doing.
And I've been coming off of maps performance
and going into old time.
And so I'm having a little trouble with the windmills.
And specifically on my left side, I feel like my right side,
I do pretty well as far as me getting
like full extension up and being able to balance that weight. But for whatever
reason on my left, I can only get maybe almost lateral, almost parallel to the
ground. And I have to really stretch high up there to get the full extension up.
So I was wondering if you had any mobility tips that I can work on.
I already have a pretty consistent mobility routine that I start my lifts with.
I usually do handcuffs with rotation.
The cat cows, I'll do some thoracic leverages against the wall. I'll do the lizard with rotation.
Yeah, I was going to name that for the needle.
Yeah, yeah, the arm through the needle, like through the window.
Yeah, just so I just feel just pretty unstable and and there's just like a lot of resistance on my
I guess that would be like my lateral deltoid
It just
Okay, I was gonna ask it. I wasn't asking Kyle where the sticking point was so it's not in your core your QL
It's up in the shoulder area it sounds like yeah, okay
It's and you feel like it's you feel like you're having to over, it's up in the shoulder area. It's shoulder area. Sounds like it's... Yeah.
Okay, and you feel like you're having to overcompensate
with the lateral side of your deltoid?
Correct.
It's your scapula.
Yeah.
Okay, so...
Yeah, so you're having trouble engaging in this...
Is the scapula has to retract quite a bit to give you that full extension.
And if it doesn't, you'll make up for it with your deltoid, and you're going to a strain at the top of the humorous. So the issue is up in the scapula. Now, one
thing you could do very easy is you could practice the movement without any weight, get down
on that bottom position and just, I symmetrically squeeze and focus on getting the scapula to
be in position. So yes, you want to extend the arm and bring the arm up, but try to connect to that kind of mid back scapula area.
Yeah, this is hard as you can. Yeah, and then just hold that position.
Some light. Some light seated rows to primate would be really good too.
Yeah. So like before you do the movement, actually get into like a, just a seated row
position and you could use a band, you could, because we're not trying to go heavy or you know that you go light and really
really put a lot of emphasis on the retraction and depression of the shoulders to really prime
prime them.
And this is how you know if this is the issue is if you do that and you notice an improvement
right away like if you even if it's just a little bit but if it improves your ability
to rotate and get up even better than you did before, there's your issue.
And then you just want to keep priming and working.
And you can do that throughout the day, too.
I also like hanging scapular circles.
They're really hard, but like, those sounds like he's doing a lot.
I know, but those are, I feel like those are so hard to do for somebody who has a hard time.
You can do that.
I'll let pull down too, with the list resistance.
I suck at it, that's the reason why.
I mean, you can do it. Pull down too, with this. I mean less resistant. I suck at it.
That's the reason why.
I mean, you can do it just with the air against the wall.
We have this in Prime Pro, where you're just basically focused on retracting, you know,
and going through the full circle with your scapula.
You know, I have noticed, I have noticed I do have a hard time with wall circles on my left side.
Yeah.
And especially on that motion backwards, I feel just a lot of resistance right there.
So, yeah.
So the key is, and this is the challenge that people have, and this is what's hard about
doing this virtually with people.
Yeah.
If I was there with you, and you were doing those wall circles
and you, when you feel that where it gets to resistance
and you feel the rest of the body want to compensate and cheat,
that's where you need to hold and create an isometric contraction.
That's your exercise.
That's it.
That's just to that point and then you squeeze the shit out of it.
Yeah, but it's coming from, I'm almost positive.
It's coming from your shoulder blade.
Any injuries on that side? Did you ever hurt your shoulder blade any injuries on that side did you ever hurt your?
No, no never never really had an injury
And I can do like shoulder preface is just fine and I can do you know lateral shoulder presses just fine and I feel I don't have an issue
like
Putting my head through the window when I'm shoulder pressing. It's just
for whatever reason on my descent down
While I'm holding that weight up above my head my arm just naturally just wants to start to like drift
Down and then start to go like parallel to the ground and I feel like I just really have to
Really have to twist and get my my body into the correct position.
It could also just be that you're not rotating as well
on that side as well.
Yeah.
That's the other thing.
Because if you're not rotating enough,
then you will have to compensate by...
That's a thoracic rotation is brutal for people.
Yeah, it takes a lot of work.
Nonetheless, even what is a call with a stick,
shoulder dislocates, it's not even gonna be good,
but nonetheless, I would do the windmills by starting with your left side Even what is a call with a stick shoulder dislocates might even be good, but
Nonetheless, I would do the windmills by starting with your left side and letting the left side dictate what you do at the right no matter what and just Yeah, and just keep the two things I would focus on is the rotation and
The scapular control those are the two areas then also how long I mean how long have you been really aware of this and are we how long
Are we in the program because we you might just you could resolve this just by literally
Hypocusing on practicing yeah, yeah, yeah, that's I think that's the point we're trying to make is we can get
Through the gift with a lot of different drills for you to do but honestly you just doing it and then being way more intentional as you get to that side
Especially start with that side and and really like squeeze and and get to that side, especially start with that side and really like squeeze and connect to that
or shouldn't of your sticking point.
What a great point, Justin.
How far into old time are you?
I mean, that was my point.
So I'm only, I'm still on phase one.
I just started at the beginning of December.
Oh.
So I've only done it.
I've only done the workout twice.
Oh, yeah, bro.
I'll tell you fine.
Yeah, you're fine. Start with tell you fine. I'll explain now.
Yeah, you're fine.
Start with your left side.
Yeah, dude.
The fact that you're already priming the way you're priming,
you're aware of what's going on.
You're opening up a new world here.
This is part of the motivation of us,
this is part of the motivation of us writing this program,
is you're an exact example of like somebody who's
been working out for either a long time
or for a while long enough to know their body and goes,
oh, wow, there's some discrepancy here.
And as you work through the program,
you should see this in proof.
It's insanely common.
You know, I'm not gonna have both styles like doing what you want.
Yeah, it was such an, almost like an ego check, you know,
just being like completely new style of training
and new types of workouts.
It was humbling.
So I was like, okay, I'd love to get your guys
opinion on that on the sticking points and everything.
So that's awesome.
Yeah, I'm gonna have, are you in the form or no?
No.
I'm gonna have Doug put you in that and then just,
you know, check in with us in about a month
as you go work your way through the program after,
you know, hearing some of the stuff through it. And by the way, I know we threw out a bunch of ideas. Don't go do all of them.
No, I think if I do one or two of them that you notice the biggest difference.
You just follow all time. You're two weeks in. I think that might just do it.
Yeah. And just and then stay, stay connected to us. Keep us posted on how you're doing. But I have
a feeling that at each time you do the, you go around and then do the windmills
I think you're gonna see improvement by the way you get good at the windmills watch what happens
You're dead lifting your squat after you're done with it. Oh wow really. Oh, yeah, yeah, watch what happens more stable
You'll see what happens. Yep. Yep. I got it. I got to do a little self-brack. Thanks to you guys
I I joined the
thousand pound club a few months ago so we're doing bench deadlift in squat
right you're not like pressing you know yeah yeah yeah bench bench squat
deadlift that's awesome Kyle yeah thank you
Colin and brother oh thank you guys so much. Appreciate you.
Boy, you know, it's like it's so embarrassed that we didn't ask that early on or I didn't think of that because we're giving them all this advice
and it's like this is the second time I've done the exercise. We just assumed. Yes. Practice the exercise. I think that's it.
He's with his background and exercise and fitness and I mean, this is a classic example of why we wrote this.
And why we were so excited to put this program out
is because we knew, he's perfect, right?
He's been lifting for 20 years, knows his body well,
strong, right?
Thousand thousand.
No pounds of shoulder press, no pro.
Right, right.
And then all of a sudden, he does it,
he says, does that and goes like, wow,
what's going on on my left side?
And it's like, yeah, and then working through it,
watch what happens,
as he works through it, watch the improvement
that he's gonna see from.
Because that is a limiting factor.
Yeah.
To all of his lifts.
Our next caller is Dylan from Connecticut.
Dylan, what's up, man?
How can I help you?
Hey, guys, how's it going?
You're really cool to be here.
Thanks for the opportunity.
You got it.
So, I'm gonna give you a little background
kind of reading from my question here. So, I'm 23 to give you a little background kind of reading from my question here.
So I'm 23 years old living Connecticut.
I work as an analytical and stability associate scientist for a supplement company out of
Vermont.
And I recently purchased Maps and Obolic.
And it's kind of like a switch from what I was doing usually.
I was pretty much following like a push pull legs kind of split.
And I started doing the maps in a voluptuous,
a little concerned about the volume.
Like I felt like I wasn't getting in,
like certain exercise that I was doing before.
And I just want to get you guys a penny on that.
Kyle, Dylan, sorry.
Have you been doing, are you doing the three day week version
or the two day week version?
I think I was aiming for like three days a week. I haven't followed it to the T. I can admit, but
do the three day week version because you're young and you've got fitness experience and the only
way you're going to know is if you stick to the program and see how you respond and the best
sign is going to be your strength. Are you getting stronger if you are you moving the right direction?
I'm not concerned with the volume at all.
Listen, this is a classic.
I'm 20 to 25 years old.
I've been lifting for some years now
and I've just been introduced to Maps and Obolic
and I think this is not enough for my body.
It's like, and this is always the people
that we blow their minds if they can trust the process.
But if you, if you flirt with it and you don't commit, then you won't know.
But you just gotta, if you trust us, I don't know how long you've been listening to us or not,
but if you trust us that we know what we're doing, I promise that when you go through this,
it's gonna blow your mind.
You're gonna hit PRs, you're gonna see things that you hadn't seen before if you train consistently.
Be consistent with the trigger sessions too, Dylan.
Don't add shit to it either.
Don't go like, oh, I followed it.
Plus, I did this and that.
Follow it to a T.
I promise you, we built enough volume in there
for you to see significant change, especially considering
you're coming from something different.
Like you're coming from a push pull type of split
and now we're convincing you to move to this kind of full body
routine.
Watch what happens.
Yeah.
Cool.
Sounds good.
I guess I didn't provide as much background.
I do have an experience.
I think I would consider myself intermediate to advanced.
I've been doing it for a while more seriously, like really dedicated within the past like
years.
So since I found you guys about a year ago, so I've been listening and learned a lot from you guys. Thank you so much for all that.
Yeah, just so you know, I assume that. That's why I said the 23 to 25 year old.
I assumed you've been lifting for a while. You're going to supplement.
You know what you know what you're doing. And this is what this is exactly what we get with
someone like you is that you're tough. It's tough because you do know.
And sometimes that's the problem is you know too much.
Okay, I know too much.
You know too much already.
So you're already,
a lot there.
A lot of times they get guys right in the same age group
that have got experience and they're just,
ah, this is just not enough.
I mean, and why I can speak to this is,
because I was the kid too.
I was, this is, this is Sal, this is me,
this is just, all of us were like that.
I was training five, seven days a week
and hammering my body, thinking that that's what's gonna make me grow more.
And if some guys told me to drop down to three days a week
and do full body routines, I would think that they're giving me some chick workout.
And this isn't for me.
That would totally be my mindset.
So, I'm telling you from experience that if you just trust the process,
you're gonna be happy.
How long into it, are you?
Well, he hasn't even followed it consistently.
I haven't got out of phase one yet,
about to do the switch, I think, on Sundays
when I'm supposed to switch.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Follow it through, do the trigger sessions,
I think it'll be pleasantly surprised, my friend.
What's your supplement company?
What other company work for?
It's called New Chapter, Route of Vermont. It's a really cool company. I am an employee. I should say that but I think you guys would like it to if you haven't
I heard of it before. Send a sample. Doug's not like you heard of it. I'll try anything. I've heard it. Oh, yeah, I've heard of it.
Well, I'll try anything Dylan send a sample tell your boss that the mind pump guys want to try out your supplement and then I'll be honest if I like it.
I've seen it before. Yeah, I have seen it.
Okay.
Are you guys in some major stores,
or have I just seen it online?
Yeah, I think Whole Foods is one of our big, okay.
That's where I've seen it.
Of course.
Oh, interesting.
Send some women's wellness stuff to Adam.
Yeah, she's been doing it.
Yeah, send us some stuff.
I'll check it out.
I'll check it out.
And bro, trust us, I promise. Okay.
Yeah, yeah, just give us one time all the way through and then you can use all your brilliance
to modify and change and do stuff.
But just trust the process one time through and we won't let you down.
Sounds good.
I like the trigger sessions too.
That's kind of a switch.
I haven't really worked out with the attitude like before and I'm liking that so far.
Yeah, you just get a pump three times a day.
That's it. Don't overdo those too. Yeah, don't go crazy so far. Yeah, you just get a pump three times a day. That's it.
Don't overdo those two.
Yeah, don't go crazy with them.
Just get a little pump.
Awesome.
Sounds good.
All right, man.
Thanks, though.
Hey, thanks guys.
Take care.
You got it.
The leap.
He's not listening to me.
I can tell.
I just like, you fuck off.
Yeah.
It's the, you know, he took the 23 to 25 year old thing. Like I was meaning that he's like, not experienced. It's like, that's not the, you know, he took the, he took the 23 to 25 year old thing.
Like I was meaning he's like, not experienced.
I was like, that's not what I meant by that.
I've met that your young guys probably, and he's ended working for a supplement fitness.
Something like coming, he's probably smart, probably knows his stuff, probably been working
out for a long time.
He's getting after it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Listen, his strength is more if you're getting stronger.
It's working.
Do you remember when we first did Maps Santa Block?
The number one thing we heard was exactly.
Oh, this isn't enough for me. Not enough. How long have you been working? I think the stronger it's working. Do you remember when we first did Maps and Ablog? The number one thing we heard was exactly,
oh this isn't enough for me.
Not enough.
How long you been working?
I'm on the second week I can tell it's not enough.
I'm like, oh God.
Did you get stronger or your muscles building?
Those are the things you need to be concerned with,
not like, can I do more shit?
Can I add more?
Yeah.
When I finally made the switch, it took me so long.
When I did, I really had to take a step back
because I thought, ah, this is
not enough, but I'm getting stronger.
All right, I'm going to stick to it, you know, like, duh.
You just have to like hammer that in.
I had to do that to my athletes in high school, too.
It's just like, this is too much.
Like, we're going to do what's right.
That's it.
Look, if you're a coach or a trainer, here's what you got to do.
Go to mindpumptrainer.com, sign up for a three day free live course.
I will be hosting in January.
Mindpumptrainer.com.
Also, you can find us on Instagram.
Justin is at Mindpump Justin.
I'm at Mindpump to Stefano and Adam is at Mindpump Adam.
Thank you for listening to Mindpump.
If your goal is to build and shape your body, dramatically improve your health and
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