Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2264: How to Eat More & Lose Fat, When to Raise Calories When Reverse Dieting, Ways to Transition Away from Working with a Fitness or Diet Coach & More (Listener Live Coaching)
Episode Date: February 3, 2024In 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: If ...you can’t eat enough protein, amino acid supplements may help. (2:15) Recapping Justin’s birthday weekend: Muscle cars and rocking out with the boys. (13:22) Adam’s evolution around masterminds. (24:55) The benefits of red-light therapy and how the guys have used their Joovv devices. (42:55) Testosterone is making people more resistant to losing. (45:08) Delaying gratification debunked? (46:22) Earth-friendly diet? (51:04) Using a hand grenade to crack walnuts. (54:56) Costco’s weird return policy. (56:45) Shout out to Steven Rodriguez. (1:01:42) #ListenerLive question #1 - What advice and programs would you guys suggest I do for the next couple of years to be at my best physique? (1:02:44) #ListenerLive question #2 - Any advice for someone who has engaged with professional coaching and is now looking to transition out and work on their own? (1:15:11) #ListenerLive question #3 - How do I never cut again? (1:26:08) #ListenerLive question #4 - As a relatively new lifter, I want to follow MAPS programs and want to chase health and do it in a healthy way. So, in 4 years I will have a physique I’m proud to present on stage in a competition. I don’t have to win but want to build a physique I’m proud of. (1:38:41) Related Links/Products Mentioned Ask a question to Mind Pump, live! Email: live@mindpumpmedia.com Visit Joovv for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! ** Code MINDPUMP to get $50 off your first purchase. ** Visit Paleo Valley for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! ** Discount is now automatically applied at checkout 15% off your first order! ** February Promotion: MAPS Performance | Extreme Fitness Bundle 50% off! ** Code FEB50 at checkout ** Mind Pump Fitness Coaching Course Mind Pump #2260: Look Younger & Live Longer With Dr. Adeel Khan Not giving up: Testosterone promotes persistence against a stronger opponent High steaks society: who are the 12% of people consuming half of all beef in the US? | Beef | The Guardian Vegan Men Fart Seven Times More Than Non-Vegans, Study Finds Chinese Man Used a Hand Grenade to Crack Walnuts for 25 Years Seattle woman who returned Costco couch after 2.5 years goes viral, sparks ethics debate Steven Rodriguez | Spotify For a limited time only, Mind Pump listeners get a free LMNT Sample Pack with any purchase: Visit DrinkLMNT.com/MindPump MAPS Powerlift Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Dr. John Delony (@johndelony) Instagram Adeel Khan, MD (@dr.akhan) Instagram  Kyle P (@mindpumpkyle) Instagram
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind,
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Sal DeStefano, Adam Schaefer and Justin Andrews.
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This is mind pump. Right. In today's episode, we answered live callers questions,
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All right, here comes the show.
All right, look, unless you've been hiding under a rock,
you probably know that a high protein diet
will benefit you regardless of your goal.
But what if you're one of those few people
that just doesn't
feel good eating a lot of protein?
Some people get digestive distress.
Some people get constipated.
Some people just can't eat that much protein.
What do you do then?
Well, in those cases, amino acid supplements can actually be
beneficial.
Uh, essential amino acid supplements and branching amino
acid supplements in particular can help with things like
recovery, performance, muscle gain and fat loss.
If you just can't hit your protein targets.
So at the end it's all about the context.
If you can't eat enough protein, amino acid supplements may help.
Oh my, okay.
This is interesting.
You went this direction.
I just brought this up.
Uh, Jason, uh, our good buddy went to dinner at Mastro's last couple weeks ago.
We can air, we can have for two. Jason, our good buddy went to dinner at Mastro's last couple of weeks ago, a week and a half or two ago.
And his wife was bringing up amino acids and there was some brand that was
like, you know, I was trying to explain to them to me. Oh, he did. Okay.
So that's so funny. So they went to me first and they're like,
Adam shit all over it. So I'm going to go to Sal and see if Sal does the same thing.
I'm going to decide.
Nice guy.
So the, okay, so I'm going to be, I'm sure you said the exact same thing as I did. And
and it sounds like it from your tip today, which was like, if you, I mean, obviously the goal,
number one is to get everything through Whole Foods because you're getting all those benefits
and more. So right, but granted, I, we say on the show all the time, hardly anybody gets their
protein intake. It's really difficult to do that. But then I said, then the next step after that
is just using a protein powder,
because a protein powder,
it would still be the next best thing to do.
And then, and only then, if like,
you have issues with digesting, you know,
whey protein or you just don't like taking the protein powder.
And so taking a handful of, you know,
branched-hand amino acid pills at the end of the night
because you were so low on protein, could have some benefits to it in comparison to
not, right?
Yeah. Yeah. No, I was having a conversation. So that, and then I had a conversation with
a family member who's training for a Jiu-Jitsu tournament. And he's telling me he's having
issues recovering and I'm like, you got to get more proteins. Like I tried so hard. I
can't hit those targets. My appetite won't let me. He's like, and I can try taking shakes, but I don't even feel like
taking a shake sometimes.
He goes, what about just a, like a couple of branching into acid tablets?
I said, well, in your case, you'll see some benefit.
And it reminded me, I've had a few clients like this where they didn't want,
that they don't want to take a shake, although just for the audience, one scoop of protein powder will give you
more than enough branching when acids
and essential amino acids, okay?
So rather than taking a scoop of something
that's called essential amino acid supplement or whatever,
a scoop of protein powder will do that and then some.
So that's even better.
But like I said, I've had clients where
they can't eat it with food, They don't want to take a shake.
They want tablets or something easy.
And then they can help.
And if you look at the studies, cause this always cycles, right?
Or the supplement market tends to do these cycles every 10 years or so.
And you'll see people selling branch human, or acid supplements again.
Is that their main studies?
Yeah.
Is that their main focus is that, uh, to market to people is that it's for
recovery.
Yes.
It's the best benefit of like taking the main acid. Well, if you look at this, if you look at the studies on branched chain
amino acids, that's leucine, isoleucine, valine, or the essential amino acids,
these are the ones that your body, you have to consume them, right?
They're essential.
You have to consume.
You can't make them.
When you look at the studies on them, those studies that show that they're
beneficial, all the participants are not eating the high protein diets that are recommended by
the strength community, which is about roughly or close to a gram of protein per pound of target
body weight. If you miss that and you're eating what the RDA says and you don't want to eat more
protein, then yeah, you supplement with BCAAs, you'll notice a benefit. It just goes to prove like, uh, they know that a lot of people are, are low and
deficient on some levels of protein.
Yeah.
Well, this is also why too.
Why, I mean, cause obviously something that gets that much traction and
there's that big of a market now.
People will notice benefits.
Right.
Exactly.
And, and, and that's what how I explained to her at dinner.
I'm like, listen, if, if I need you to be eating for optimal, right?
I need you at 130 grams of protein and you're hitting 40 grams every day.
And I give you some amino acid pills.
Like, uh, yeah, you're going to, you're going to build some muscles.
You're going to recover better.
You're going to feel a difference.
It's going to make an impact, but it's not the pills.
It's that you were, you're so under on the protein that of course, you would have
seen that felt the same thing too.
If all of a sudden you added a six ounce chicken breast on top of what you're
eating every single day also, you would have felt the exact same benefits as what
you got from that. So it's not like there was something magical about the
the powder or the pills. Yeah. So I was, go ahead. No, I just wanted to ask you
more about the, because I actually didn't see it. She was just telling me the name
of it was like super amino something. And she was saying like the guy who, the doctor guy who sells it or whatever,
was talking about how it's at the special amino acid. I was like, that's how they market to you.
And this is, by the way, that, that's no different than the creatine market. I mean,
the, every market, they, because everybody knows, uh, amino acids are, you know, or not,
I shouldn't say that, but most people in the fitness space know that Amino acids, protein powders, important creatines, important, all these things are and it's gotten so oversaturated that the margins
Driven the margins down made it very competitive and better for the consumer. So now you have to, yeah, so now you define
Now you have to find, and this is pre-workout same thing too, right?
Because caffeine is the main driver that makes pre- really, really good, but caffeine is cheap. So we got to find other things to put in it.
And then they sell the other things as being so magical and so amazing.
When it's like, no, the, the main ingredient is the most valuable thing.
Problem is everybody now sells that has that.
So you're going to find creative ways.
Isn't that funny?
Cause it's like then, you know, their direction is going to be like some exotic
place in the world or some, you know, religious communities always done this and they've lived for like 120
years. You know, like something like there has to be like a tragic story of like,
I, you know, it was in a car accident and my whole body burned to smithereens.
And then I took these amino acids all of a sudden it grew on my skin back.
Or I traveled to some weird part of the kind of the world, you know, some corn.
Like I saw you berries was like this.
Yeah, yeah, I was like.
Icai berries were popular, or became popular here in the States
because it was like this Amazonian.
Monovey.
Super food, right?
Monovey did it.
Full of antioxidants.
It's a blueberries got more antioxidants
than Icai berries, or very close.
Yeah, it's just, it's hard to say.
So it means something.
It's just, most people are not familiar with it
and it tastes good.
And so it's like, oh my God, this, this is new thing.
No, look, proteins are chains of amino acids.
That's all it is.
So amino acids are the building blocks of proteins.
So if you take a scoop of protein powder or you eat 10 grams of protein,
a complete protein, meaning it has all essential amino acids,
you are going to have way more branching amino acids or essential amino acids or beneficial amino acids than
three tablets, essentially three tablets of essential amino
acids. In fact, the cheap amino acid supplements were just
compressed protein powder into tablet form. That's the best.
Yeah. And they would, they would be called like a amino 5000.
I remember I used to take these back in the day. I used to take,
I remember I bought a long time ago because, you know, I was a
kid. I felt for more for less. I used to take, I remember I bought a long time ago, cause you know, I was a kid. I felt for every minute.
More for less.
Bro, I bought, I don't remember what it was like,
a Mino 5000 or something like that.
And there were these massive.
Big old pills.
Huge.
Yeah, yeah.
I took those too.
I'm not even exaggerating when I say like,
choking hazard style tablets.
They were like, think of the biggest tablet
you could think of, like a multivitamin tablet.
Now make it like twice as wide
That's what they look like and the recommendations on the bottle and it wasn't even a bottle like eight of them
Yeah, it was like a
Yeah, bro, I look like a mini jug was like this yeah, and you had to take eight in between every meal
That's what they recommend and I did it yeah, I need to take each individual one
It was so easier to dry scoop way, bro. I never, a I'll never forget. I figured this out. You know,
through me, I'm going to pat myself on the back for freeing this out as a kid.
I was 16 years old. I'm doing this every day. And I'm like, Oh my gosh,
this is terrible. You know, is it working? I don't know.
And I remember I turned the bottom. I looked at the ingredients, whey protein.
It was whey protein that they compressed and put added a binder to make into
fricking tablets.
That's what I was taking.
Way protein.
That was amazing.
I was so mad.
But anyway, my, the, the person I was talking about with, uh, you know, that
was just mentioning who's, who's getting ready for a tournament.
I talked him into trying, um, the paleo valley bone broth protein because he
doesn't like other protein powders and make him feel bloated, gassy, doesn't
like it.
So I said, try the bone broth protein. It's the easiest, like I have yet to find anybody
who hasn't tried it, who hasn't said it's the easiest to digest.
I know I'm late to the party on that, but I've been like ever since you got me to do that,
that's actually what I've been taking that in more than anything else now.
It's so easy. Yeah. I mean, it's I could take 70 grams.
That's why that's why I find it's really nice is that, um, you know, rarely ever
am I missing exactly, uh, just 32 grams of protein.
It's like I'm missing more or whatever.
And so being able to scoop more.
And in the, in the past, if I were to do that with like a way, just 70 grams of
whey protein just doesn't sit, doesn't sit right with me where I can take that.
And it's no problem.
So, but I do have to say the, the, the chocolate donut flavor is the best one.
Yeah.
I tried the other player was like, yeah, I wasn't, I wasn't like as, as impressed.
It's just chocolate though, right?
It just tastes like dough.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think, you know, it's funny.
They were gonna start branding it chocolate donuts.
Start branding it chocolate dough.
You know what it is, is that it's a, so bone broth or collagen protein is
um, flavorless essentially. If you ever have pure collagen, you add it to water that it's a so bone broth or collagen protein is
Flavorless essentially if you ever have pure collagen be added to water doesn't taste like no they have it. I've tried it Yeah, yeah, they have they have almost nothing. Yeah, so it's easy to flavor
So you can very easily make it tastes really good
Whereas like plant proteins are really hard to make taste good really really hard. Yeah, I'm egg protein
Did you guys ever take a protein powders? I did. Oh, I did.
For the longest time, I did the pump.
Oh, you just, that's just whites.
Yeah.
I did that for a long time.
The sulfuric smell.
I actually really liked the egg white pump thing for a,
did you make your shakes with that?
Yes.
So you do that and then add protein powder.
Yeah.
It frosts that up.
Yeah. You didn't know that. Like, cause
Oh yeah. The egg white makes it all frothy. And so it makes, it actually made the shakes
better. So I used to make the shake and then I do a kind of remember with the pump,
like how many ratio or how many pumps I remember that. It was like a jug with a
big giant one in a bill.
Really smart. What they did is they put, it was just a bunch of, I'm going to give
someone a supplement idea right now. What it was it was, was it was egg whites pasteurized.
So, and you could just add it to whatever you want and bodybuilders and everybody
wants egg whites, right?
Cause it's just pure protein.
There's a market for egg yolks.
If someone just had an egg yolk pump or something like that, I know,
that's way more muscle.
So why wouldn't you just do the whole egg though?
I mean, that's what, I mean, if that case, trying to do novelty, bro. This is mean that's what I mean if that case Novelty bro
This is the supplement market. I mean you're right
average person I have eggs in the fridge
It's more like a counter knowledge. So then there's this weird like that's that right? Yeah, you've been missing the most muscle building
Hey this weekend was your birthday weekend
I haven't been eating the best part. Hey, hey, this weekend was your birthday weekend.
Would you go do, I saw you drove the car.
I saw you drove the car.
I got to, yeah, so I got this car, like it was back in November, I think,
but I haven't even been able to like physically see it.
I immediately shipped it to my friend who was it the first time you saw it,
actually, in person. Yeah. Oh, I didn't know that.
I thought you've actually had already been down there. Oh, that's great.
Yeah. So I shipped it is my friend, like he's the work.
And he was on that show overhauling with Chip Foose. And so I high school buddy of mine like we played football together and stuff. And so actually we were in in auto shop together.
And it's interesting because like a lot of the guys that were in that class ended up doing a lot of
they're big in like the car world and everything. And I don't know anything now. Yeah. And so I'm
just like, Oh, please help me, dude.
Let's build a sick car.
So yeah, so I finally got to like go down there
and had to register it with the DMV and all that.
And still-
Did you take it home or is it still working on it?
Still working on it, yeah.
So he actually just made it drivable just enough
so I could like go to the DMV.
And I kind of was like pressing on it a bit
because I wanted to, you know to get a good feel for it
and like suit the car.
It was actually good because that way I see the,
I'm gonna see the difference of like how it drove,
and it's sort of-
Are we gonna tell the audience what kind of car this is?
1969 GTO, sorry.
Yeah, that's one of my favorites.
The judge.
One of my favorites.
So what are you doing to it?
So like, a lot.
Yeah, yeah, let's swap and get, you know, increase my horsepower like 520
horsepower, and then I'm going to get to new exhaust and suspension and also new like sound
system and, you know, lots of other like accessory kind of stuff, but like it nothing major like
rims tires, all that kind of stuff. Are you gonna make it look classic like original or are you gonna do like the cross kind of where it looks?
Sort of like rest of mod kind of style. So you get like it looks classic enough, but it's it's definitely like modified. Yeah
Yeah, so I've like upgraded looking rims. I've upgraded like
little
additions to the paint job and you know, all that kind of stuff.
So it's not going to be like stock.
Yeah.
Is that so is that what yours would be considered?
Resto mod.
Yeah, they're both.
Yeah, that's what I, okay.
Yeah, you have this.
Like it's, it doesn't look too.
It's not.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The classic look as far as the body and the interior and stuff, but then
you've got a lot of things that you've switched out like the Rams that like
once you put an LS engine in it's now it's not a, yeah, right?
So you're now, I prefer that.
I know for collectors, and if I was buying the car
for like a long-term investment,
you always want the original, you know.
It holds more value if you do the original thing.
I mean, I'm driving it, you know what I'm saying?
So, and I want what I want, and I want it to feel safe.
So I'm the one that doesn't have a,
you gotta get what I'm thinking, what,
we're like at Barracuda or like a hemi
I love some sort some challengers and chargers. Yeah plum purple
Yeah, oh, yeah, I wish we could get you to do it
I would love to I love first it because that's just be a waste on me
I go don't you know, I'm not a big car
I mean I would like it for a bit and then you know, yeah
I see I don't know about that if you think I mean
I don't know it really depends on like if you could even see yourself on like a Saturday or
Sunday where we'd meet up and we would go, yeah, cruise.
Like, and so if you see yourself, you could get away for a few hours on Saturday
or Sunday on, you know, nice days.
I could totally see us all waking up and driving.
Yeah.
I mean, I was really motivated because my dad and I used to, uh, we, we connected
a lot with cars and drag racing and like, um, you know, a lot of like hot rod shows.
And so that kind of, like I had my truck and then I had to sell it once I, you know, was making
down payment for my new house. And so ever since then, there's just been this void there. And like,
you know, the kids are at an age now where they're interested in cars and they're interested in like
cool stuff like that. And I'm like, well, now's the time if I'm ever going to do it to kind of, you know, bring that back.
So we plan a hot, I guess, nights as in Reno.
And so we're going to do that this year with my dad and yours
will be done by then.
Yeah.
Okay.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
Hopefully like into March, like I'm pressing, pressing Ben to get it done.
It's the difference like, you know, a muscle car, the difference
of five and horsepower on that versus like
a modern five on horsepower car feels way different.
Oh, it feels unbridled and yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I like that.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Dangerous.
Dangerous.
Oh no.
Yeah.
300 horsepower.
I'll tell you what though, you get a lot of attention from dudes.
Yeah.
Thanks, bro. Yeah. Hey, it's like getting buffed in the gym. I'll tell you what though, you get a lot of attention from dudes.
Thanks, bro.
Hey, it's like getting buffed in the gym. Yeah.
It's like getting buffed in the gym.
All the things that we do thinking to get more women attention.
No, all guys, all guys our age, they're just like, yeah, dude, like knuckleing up.
Yeah, you're cool.
I had a guy stop me at the parking lot the other day.
You're fit, bro.
Like, okay.
It's really cool though. They stopped me at the parking lot the other day. You're fit, bro. Like, okay. Yeah. Can I touch it? Yeah.
Oh, no.
No, it's kind of cool though.
Anyway, speaking of muscles and stuff,
did you guys, I said you guys,
that picture of my one was 14 month old,
standing up on her toes.
She had little, oh God.
My wife's genetics are strong, bro.
Muscle bellies.
She's got this huge little calves, dude.
I was a little baby.
I'm so excited.
They definitely have mama's genetics for sure, bro. I'm so excited. They definitely have mama's genetics for sure.
Yeah, I'm so excited.
You guys have no idea.
Uh, I get so many DMS of like, uh, people with like sending me pictures of kids
that have like ridiculous calves and I just don't send them to you guys.
They're like, don't show cell down this.
Yeah.
I got two kids now with them.
All right.
I was like, I was like, why, like why are you roasting them?
You ever see, but sometimes you see kids and you know, you look at them.
Oh, no, you can't.
Oh, they're going to be.
No, of course.
I mean, you could tell on, you can tell on your kids already.
I mean, I can tell even on my son that he'll have better than I did just
because he could tell by his symmetry and he's a little bit thicker than I
already was.
He's by no means, he's not thick like your kids are, but he's like thicker than
I was.
So he's not going to be the skinny, lanky kid.
Did I tell you that my three year old,
Jessica was reading to him a kid's version of the Bible.
And they were talking about like a Genesis, right?
Cool.
And he refers to Adam and Eve as Adam and Katrina.
That's so epic.
She goes, who are the first people in the Bible?
Adam and Katrina. Yes, yes. That the first people? First people, yeah. In the Bible, Adam and Katrina.
Yes, yes.
That's so good.
That's so good.
Katrina, making you eat that apple.
What else did you do down there?
So I, and it's funny because this is like what's exciting to me is like an adult and
you know, an old man that's like, dude, I just want to like relive my past, you know, an old man that's like, dude, I was like relive my past. You know, I orchestrated it all.
So I like picked this house that was like way out in the boonies
down there in like a row of grande.
And I don't know, they might be a fan.
So I don't know if like I'm just going to say it.
But we literally just like jammed like so loud, like we brought all our equipment
in there and like closed off the doors.
Thankfully we weren't around a lot of other like properties because I was
like any sound complaint were done.
Yeah.
It's not going to work out, but nothing.
And so we're like, okay.
So we just kept going in like recorded some stuff and like we just
geeked out and played like really loud.
So this is the same group that you did with truckie last year then?
Yeah.
So now it's just becoming an annual trip for you guys.
I mean, it's kind of like, if we can make it work, like at any chance,
I just kind of throw it out there and see who can, who can make it.
So it was like just me and my friend who's a drummer.
And then, um, uh, my other friend who I played, um, at Chicago in,
in a college football, we played together too.
And ironically, like he's sort of the pastor of this church
and like my friend Ed is also working at that church
with him and I knew them both from different timelines
when I was out in Chicago.
So it's just a weird, it's like both of my best friends
in college like ended up, they're now friends
and working together.
After the fact.
After the fact.
Oh, that's wild.
Yeah, and it's funny cause he's like really into like, it's funny because he's really into like,
you know, happy, like chill music and stuff. And like, so he always makes fun of us for
being like really like crazy angry music. Do any of them play in the in their church?
Because there's some incredible, they do. Well, yeah, Ed used to play a lot, but actually
he's he's kind of stepped away from that. but his son is kind of, you know, he plays drums.
And, but he used to do some, some music like that, like, but they have like worship pastors and stuff.
Well, there's some, because the place, one of the churches I go over here, they have, they have a band that opens up and plays music.
And some of the singers are like, wow, I know.
Really good. Yeah.
I wonder how many like talented people there are
that just stick to that.
There's tons.
I mean, there's some.
Remember when we were in Nashville
and we were just going up the street.
Yeah, that's true.
It's like, oh my God, like how are these people
not on these like major labels?
Did I tell you guys the conversation
that Katrina had with John Deloni
about coming out to Nashville?
Oh, it was pretty funny.
It was just, this was actually just like a couple weeks ago.
She was on the phone with John and talking about coming out to Nashville. Oh, it was pretty fun. It was just, this was actually just like a couple of weeks ago. She was on the phone with John and talking about coming out there.
She's like, oh yeah, I, you know, the guys want to plan a trip out there.
And John's like, yes, I want you guys to come out for a week, bring your families.
It'll be great.
And Chris was like, yeah, I was looking on the counter and I see Morgan
Wallin's going to be there at this week like that.
And he's like, she's like, she's like, what?
You don't like Morgan Wallin.
He's like, there's a Morgan Wall on, on every corner in Nashville.
Yeah.
She's like, so she's like, you go, he tells her like, you walk down the strip
and there's a Morgan wall in every single bar that's playing music.
There's talent everywhere.
Just that.
And I mean, there's two things that I take from that is one, the, yes, I know
that because we've been down in Nashville, that there's that kind of crazy talent,
but also to like how many artists are manufactured?
Like, especially with the way the way we the way we've learned to hack music.
And yeah, like what's your, you know, what Rick Rubin said about how we think it's
we've lost that, you know, purity where an artist is putting out the stuff
that they put in their diary and they put it out because they love it.
Where now we've we're trying to hack everything.
We're trying to hack an algorithm.
We unpack what is working and then we just modify
whatever we're doing to fit that mold.
Plug in the formula, we've got the distribution.
And so, you know, and again, I'm a Morgan Wallin fan,
so I like enjoy his music right now,
but I don't know enough to know like how much,
like he's been manufactured or not.
Like is he like just an example of somebody else that's been just like planted?
Speaking to that, like that was that's part of my favorite thing about hanging
with like some other guys that are like really still into music and stuff.
It's like you you get like it.
So we play this thing is basically like what used to do when, um, uh,
Napster was out, right?
And you go download like a song and people would take turns
and kind of like, you know, check this song.
Like you try and kind of introduce people to new artists
and stuff that's out there.
So we kind of like to spend some time doing that on YouTube
just for videos and like, hey, I dig this and this artist.
And so I got like a lot of new artists and things that were just
interesting and it's like I would never listen to that normally but I see like the appeal of this
and it's there was this one I forgot I forget the name of it but there's this guy who really
good guitarist but the entire video he's like he's looking at the the camera and when he plays like
He's like he's looking at the the camera and when he plays like near
He like makes notes his his mouth kind of mumbles it and so it's like he's talking this whole song
And it's like he made it. It was so creative like he made it So it was like he was he was trying to ask this girl out his heart gets broken like all this stuff and it goes through
It's literally just the guitar playing. Oh, but it but it plays to like, and he's just like kind of miming it the whole time.
It's really weird, but I just like, wow, like I never would have watched that.
You know, otherwise people.
Yeah.
So much creativity.
You had a crazy weekend, Adam.
You were hanging out with some.
Yeah.
I mean, crazy, crazy in a different way.
Right.
Like not like crazy wild or like over the top, like fun doing stuff, just I had an opportunity to meet
my Hampton group.
I got to meet them in person, you know?
And, you know,
this is a group of like successful individuals who are trying to like,
yeah, so I love each other.
Obviously, if you've listened to the show long,
if you've listened to our show long enough, you've heard me
and on social media, you've heard me hammer like mastermind groups. And like, so it's kind of ironic that
I'm in this, you know, you know, quote unquote mastermind group, because I am so anti all
that shit so much. And I was actually thinking about after this weekend, because of how much
I enjoyed this, like, you know, do I need to rethink the way I talk about these mastermind
groups because I've found so much tremendous value in this. And I think the biggest thing that
I see that's different from this group that I got to be a part of versus what I see on the internet
and all over social media is that they made a, like you have to make a certain amount of money
to get into this group.
And what I see online a lot is, you know, these people that are praying on anybody that's willing to pay for access.
And so in my opinion, like a true mastermind is a group of individuals that
are, that are, like it says, masterminds that, and they get together and they
collaborate and they're all brilliant and successful and they leverage each
other's knowledge and experience, all brilliant and successful and they leverage each other's knowledge and experience
and strengths and weaknesses.
But what the internet's done is bastardize those groups.
It's now turned into like I'm the one that has this information. All I do is I regurgitate stuff that's like on self-help books.
I'll allow anybody who's willing to pay me into this group.
And so now it's a group of not necessarily mastermind,
it's just a group of people that are willing to pay to have access into this group. And so now it's a group of not necessarily mastermind, it's just a group of
people that are willing to pay to have access to this room.
And so you're sitting around a room and maybe you get lucky.
So maybe you're listening to this right now and you've been a part of a mastermind
group and you're like, Oh, I had a great experience that I paid for this.
And it's like, well, maybe you got lucky and there was a couple other people that
were really intelligent or brilliant or successful in there, but not most of them.
But this group is like that because everybody is that like this crazy,
you know, different industries.
Oh yeah.
Dude, I mean, you had, um, you had, you had apparel people in there.
You had photography in there.
You have venture capitalist guys.
You have a peptide market.
You have, um, uh, you have corporate corporate events.
You have, I mean, you had all these like really different and we're, I mean, if you see that there's a picture of us, I mean, you had all these like really different.
And we're, I mean, if you see that, there's a picture of us.
I mean, just look like a bunch of dorks.
You know what I'm saying?
We just look like a bunch of dorks, you know, just all of us.
And just, no, but what I loved about this group
is that, you know, there's some things that you find
in common when you, when I guess you get to that level.
things that you find in common when you, when I guess you get to that level, one is extremely successful and type A and confident they are. They also have this incredible balance of humility
and empathy and they're just, they're so humble and you would never know like that, you know,
looking at a group, there's like $300 million a year in revenue,
like sitting right there.
And you would just, you would,
you would walk right past them and not think anything of it.
And the conversation was just so incredibly stimulating,
the entire, I was exhausted.
Every day we stayed up till midnight or one of the morning
was back up by 7, 7.30.
And it was just seven people of this crazy.
I talked to you the last day of it
and you were so stimulated.
Yeah.
Like you were just going off.
And I love that feeling, you know,
when you're around really, really stimulating people.
Yeah, I can't remember the last like,
I know like when I talked to other people about my,
my relationship.
So when I talk to you guys,
well, no, I was gonna say is when I talked to people about our relationship, right? All of us and like, my, I want to talk to you guys. Well, no, I was going to say is when I talk to people about our relationship,
right? All of us and like why, why it's worked in the growth over years.
I said, you know, I attribute a lot of that to that, right? You guys were all,
and then there's definitely some attributes that we all share with this
group is that, and one of the most common ones I'd say is that, uh,
that there's this common theme of like,
ultra confidence with humility and the,
just the pursuit of growth and learning. Like that is like the core and they could,
everybody could have different political religious background,
all these other things that growth minded yet just yeah,
unbelievably growth minded, open minded,
and just so fun to have conversation. Probably one of the coolest exercises that we, we did like, open minded, and just so fun to have conversation.
Probably one of the coolest exercises that we did, like, I mean, it was an intentional
exercise, but on the last day, there was so much good conversation going that one of the
things we had talked about before we got together is like, hey, for shits and giggles, we should
build a business together.
We should just use all of our strengths and like, let's see how fast we could throw together
a business that requires as little of our time and effort.
And to be in the living room and watch that exercise unfold
with the different strategic minds.
Because you guys, you told me about this,
like you guys got detailed.
Yeah, yeah.
It wasn't like, I got an idea, oh cool, I'll do that.
And I'll do that.
It was like, how do we fix this problem?
Running numbers.
What about that problem?
Oh yeah, I mean, you have,
it's like you have like the guy who does like corporate events.
And so he's like unblanked.
You have, he's like unbelievably organized.
Then you have, oh, we have a chef, right?
So we had this master chef, Michelin star type chef
who built this app who's super organized.
And so you had the two of them that are like,
okay, well, hold on, give me the line items.
We need this, this, this, and this.
Okay. What else?
What else prodding the rest of us of like,
what else do we need to get this like right now done tomorrow? And like, okay, I've got it revisited. Okay. Who then tasking
it out to each person. Then it's like, what else do you need support that? Okay. And then
you have the guy who's, who's a VC, you know, his markets is like, okay, well, what's the
opportunity in that market? Okay. Oh, it's $4 billion. Okay. What are the top 10 leading
companies? Oh, they're, uh, they make up this much of the pie. Okay. This is like just being able to distill it down to where the, how much
opportunity is there, how much potential could we even possibly make?
How fast can we get it up and going?
How cheap can we get it up and going?
Then how can we delegate it out to make sure it was just in an hour's time.
So, and then also processing all the other ideas, right?
So you've got everybody spitballing these ideas and within, you know, minutes,
you could decide whether that was a valid idea
for what we're trying to accomplish or not
and then move on to the next one
and then be like, okay, that's the one.
And I mean, this morning I got an email
of all the task of who's doing what
and like, it was just like that.
That's so great.
Yeah, yeah, so.
You know what you just made me think of?
You said something that reminded me of something else
you said a long time ago about when you were growing up.
You just said that these people all have this
combination of things.
Like everybody's very successful, very wealthy, right?
You said like, you know, millions of millions of dollars,
lots of success, but also lots of humility and growth minded.
I remember you saying this when you were a kid,
that when you were a kid,
that you were raised to think that wealthy people were evil or bad or whatever.
And then when you started to have friends whose parents did very well, you learned like that's not the case at all.
And it flipped everything for you.
And it just made me think of one of the, because Jessica has had this experience as well.
She grew up kind of similar to you.
And one of the biggest
lies that's been sold to people in most market economies, free societies, which most Western
countries fall under that, unless you inherit a ton of money, okay? The vast majority of
millionaires are self-made, over 85%. That's real data. When you meet people that are very
successful, they're not what the media depicts. They're typically not evil, scheming, you know, get, you know, step
on the little guy. They're typically really growth-minded people that work
really hard. And I, you know, and it's, so it's like this huge lie that we tell
people, and I think it's to keep people from trying to grow or pursue. It's
really weird.
I also think there's something else that perpetuates that.
Trying to grow or pursue. It's really weird. I also think there's something else that perpetuates that
begin at least this has been my experience is
there's levels to this and
The level before this level is the people that have have made good success. You make good money You're deep into the six figures. You're you're taking care of you and your family
But you're not like uber rich Like most of these guys Uber like rich.
Like so, and at that level, a lot of people still including myself cause I
remember being at this level, right?
Into the six figures, making really good money for myself, but still driven by a
lot of my insecurities around money.
And what comes with a lot of those insecurities, there's like these dickish
personalities, this buying things for other people, not for yourself, trying to
front, trying to act like you're at the next level when you're really not.
And so I could see how someone like Jessica or me could have been raised that way and
then have like a confirmation bias because we've been told by our parents, oh yeah, the
rich are assholes, they don't care about anybody, they're this or that.
And then you meet these people who are you perceived to be rich? Cause they drive the Mercedes, they've got the nice clothes on,
they talk about everything they do.
And it's like, and there's a lot of that in the middle.
There's a lot of that when they're, when you're coming up of this
pretending that you, you've really made it when you really have it.
And then there's a difference of, oh, I fucking passed making it a long time ago.
And I don't have to talk about it.
I just remember this as a trainer.
At one point, my clientele got very high end, right?
Cause you build a reputation as a trainer,
you get higher end clients, awesome.
And I would meet these people and they were all very
hardworking, many of them very, very educated,
some of them self-made as entrepreneurs.
And it wasn't, they weren't just good at what they did.
They were also like classically trained pianists on the side, or they have hobbies,
like mountain climbing and like, you know, like they're just growth minded.
They're, they're reading books constantly.
And it's like, you see more of that at the higher levels.
And you do at the lower level.
It's licensed.
And that's going to sound shitty.
People are going to hear this and be like, Oh, no, no, no, it's true.
Like there's less to, when you're growth minded and you pursue this thing,
you're more likely to be successful, but we're constantly sold. And remember, I came from poor
immigrants. So, you know, part of me is that suspicious growing up too of that. But then you
get to certain levels and you meet these people like, well, you know what, a lot of them are just
growth minded. This is why they continue to succeed. And a lot of them didn't start off that way.
They built themselves up.
It's a shitty lie that we sell to kids,
that we tell them that, you know,
that making money is evil.
That's not evil.
Worshipping money is evil.
That's totally different.
Totally different.
We found out that everybody in the group,
which this was kind of really rare,
that everybody has a trauma story.
Like we all have like crazy fucked up backgrounds.
Yeah. So everybody had come from that.
You know, the other thing that's interesting about like, like watching these guys and doesn't break you, right?
Yeah.
And, and watching Jasmine was the only girl than the rest of us were guys,
but watching the way that they process information or they take, like when someone
like, I think I shared this with you when we were on the phone, when I was all
excited about like just how brilliant this group was.
I said, uh, you know, JT, he's in the medical space, which is like, you know, nurses and medical devices,
and he's into, he's like in, into that, right? And he found out like midway through like the,
our story at Mind Pump, and he was just so fascinated with the media company and what,
what we've been able to do off of it and everything like that. He's like, oh my God, he's like, can I call you?
And so one day he calls me and I probably spend an hour, maybe an hour and a half.
We talk on the phone.
I just, I'm just telling him everything I've learned up to this point, like all the
things I did wrong, the things that we've done right.
And like, you like the things that we've pieced together to have grown the social
presence, YouTube, Instagram, things like that podcast.
And, uh, he just, you know, he's before he hangs up the phone.
He's like, man, I appreciate this has been so, you know, I owe you so much for this.
I was like, oh, don't worry about the hour call.
Yeah.
Hour, hour and a half call hangs up.
Okay.
That was, uh, not even six months ago.
Okay.
That dude's Instagram is about to pass mine.
And gave the formula months ago. Okay. That dude's Instagram is about to pass mine. And gave the formula.
Bro, just,
well, just they know how to take the information.
Yeah.
When I was telling Sal, that was so, that's like, it's, it's, it's awesome to see.
And also frustrating because like, it's not like I haven't shared any of that
information with my own YouTube team.
Right.
Like I've talked to them about all the same things, like of like figuring
out using what we have as a litmus test, going back, you know, going back to tweaking a little bit more than do it again.
And then he just took all of it and like systemized it. He hired somebody who was a friend of his
who's already got a video editing thing. They meet once a month for three or four hours. They
batch like 60 pieces of content that it drips all month long.
They go back, they evaluate everything, every comment, every like,
every share, everything like that.
They look, they compare all the things that they just, they just did from the
previous one. They go, okay, that doesn't work. That doesn't work. Okay.
That worked the best that they're the next best. Okay. Now how can we tweak this?
Tweet that. Okay. Boom. Now they're 60 and they just kept doing that for six months.
And then before you knew it, he started to hit and then now, now everything's just hitting. And he's, he's a very, you were telling. Okay. Boom. Another 60. And they just kept doing that for six months. And then before you knew it, he started to hit. And then now, now everything's just
hitting. And he's, he's a very, you were telling me about this guy. He's 27 years
old, dude. Yeah, he's rare. Yeah. Super talent. Super talent. Like he could see
things or just, yeah, yeah. No, it's like turbocharged him. Yeah. Yeah. It was, you
know, it was, it was, it's so cool to see though, to see that, uh, you know, when you
do that, I mean, and I don't know if you guys are watching, I'll share when we get off air because these, this was just happened this
weekend and now all of them are posting. Now I knew they, I knew I kind of got to them a little bit.
I didn't know how much, um, when I worked them out because they all wanted like this workout.
It's like, you know, I saw that. I saw you kind of taking them through a little bit of mobility.
Yeah. I literally taught three moves. Okay. Yeah, I taught three moves
I actually taught a combat stretch. Yeah a windmill. Yeah, and I got everybody a squat and they all wanted like they were like
They had this was planned on the schedule. I think we're gonna take him through. Oh, yeah
Yeah, they thought Arnold get a get a hard pump and like, you know, what are we gonna work out today?
And they're all like jazz to get in there and and I'm like what the fuck am I gonna do and then let me live
Mind you this group is so different. I got tall. I got short. I'm like, what the fuck am I going to do? And then let me live. Mind you, this group is so different.
I got tall, I got short. I got athletic.
I got not athlete.
I mean, I'm like, this is like the epitome of a group class, right?
You know, say like, what the fuck am I going to do with them?
So I had to tell them, I say, Hey, here's the deal.
Like, I know you guys were really excited about a workout today.
And I'm going to, I'm going to, I'm going to work you out somehow, but I would
never do this.
I would never take people like you all in a group and then just take us
through some random ass workout, not knowing everybody's this and that.
And I said, and so I was really torn.
I didn't have a plan.
I'm like, what the fuck am I going to do right now?
I said, you know, let's start with a windmill, right?
And so like, let's just warm them up and I'll do some stuff.
And then, and then I just turned into this like hour lesson of these,
these three, these, these three movements and afterwards.
And you know, I could tell that you, you could hear,
you could just see them all processing the information
I'm giving.
And they were all like super grateful afterwards.
I wasn't sure, you know,
cause we're still all getting to know each other
like how they took it.
Now I see, cause they're all posting about it.
And they're just like,
it was like a light bulb moment for all of them.
It was like, there's some things that, one of the things I know that, you know,
when we talk about, you know, going in and exercise instead of thinking of it,
like exercise is thinking of it as practice and a move.
And I was, and they're always like, so should I do 10 reps of this?
Or should I do, I said, does it matter?
If you did one rep that's extremely, that is quality, it'll be better than
three sets of 10.
So don't get hung up on that.
Perfect this movement that I'm trying to teach you and figure that out first.
That's your foundation.
So instead of just piling on more exercises, more sets, more reps.
And so they expected, let me guess, they expected to beat the,
have the crap beat out of them, but instead afterwards they were energized and
they felt good.
Yeah.
Yeah.
See?
Yeah.
And like,
you're an opportunity for trainers and coaches listening right now.
This is what people expect when you show them something like Adam did,
because you didn't, I don't know if you want to share this,
but they all told Adam afterwards.
No, I do.
I pay thousands of dollars for that.
I do want to share this to the coaches because here's the thing too.
Like this, and this is the power of paying for or getting access to a group like this
and then being able to offer your services for free.
Now, obviously I had no desired outcome to train clients. I don't want to train no more clients,
but had I been still trying to build my training business and I got a hold of these people,
offering them a free hour like this would have been so incredibly valued because what happened,
and by the way, they all came in thinking they're going to work out. Right. I didn't give you
exactly. I blew their mind with three movements that didn't even get them to sweat. Do you know that this, but shattered their paradigm of how they had been,
and they all kind of work out already.
But you could tell like all of them like, oh my God,
everything I've been doing is wrong.
And without me saying that, right, just me giving value and teaching and showing.
And then afterwards we went for a walk and all of them are trying to convince me
how on the side of this business, I could be charging a thousand to $5,000 an hour
for these, these
services to teach what I had just taught and whatever else they're like, whatever else you
have behind that. And I'm like, I don't, it's not, it's not the money thing for me. I don't,
I said, I don't want to, I don't want to train people anymore as much as I love you guys and
everything. But what it highlights is your points, Sal, is like, man, if you're a trainer and you're
coach right now, like do not want to be afraid to offer your services for free like that.
And then also do not allow other people to dictate what you know is best.
Like I, you know, I, and I was close, not gonna lie.
I was like, oh, should I just throw them like four or five exercises and we'll just get
everybody's way.
I'm like, God damn, no way.
I'm not going to do that to these people.
Right.
And I, and they have to know that like I would never do that.
So I was like, you know what, let's just, and then once we started moving and opened
the door for me to like explain why this guy couldn't do a full
lizard with rotation and why she could get down this way and why her right foot
was externally rotating on this person, why this person's heel was raising up
over here.
Just building value.
Oh yeah.
Just teaching all of them on every little thing and explaining why it's so
important that we address all these things.
And that's literally when you're a coach and a trainer
and you're helping someone for free,
that's how you're planting that seed
for why they're gonna train with you
for the next three to six months.
You could be teaching them these things.
While you're teaching them,
you're breaking down all these things
that you see in their room.
And the way they feel after,
I used to love getting clients that after the workout
they'd look at me and be like, you know what?
I feel really good.
And they were surprised.
By the way they said it,
I could tell that they were like,
how did you expect to feel?
Well, I expected to crawl out of the gym.
Like, you're not supposed to feel like that
at the end of a workout.
You're supposed to feel really good.
Oh, I'll be coming back.
You know, you blow their mind.
That's crazy.
How has everybody's journey with the red light juve?
Everybody's been using it pretty regularly.
Yeah, yeah. Well, now we have,
I have an extra one in my house now,
so I'm back to it.
You're still doing the juve sex?
Yeah. With the red light. You still doing that? Yeah, juve sex
Since I talked about it actually but
I do have it up in my bathroom right now, which is nice So what I need to do is I got to find out if because I asked you guys last time if how much the glass delutes
But you gotta ask the guys. Yeah, so I gotta find that out because that's how I've been using
I'm so I'm at like three days a week. What do you do it same or yeah, I'm daily you're every day. Yeah, okay. Wow three four days
Yeah, I what's cool about it is just like how the kids have been noticing
And keep asking me questions about it's funny to to try and answer
You know like the benefits of it with you know without it sounding like you know magic
Yeah, they're like like, you know, magic. That is so crazy. Yeah.
They're like, well, how does light help affect, you know, you in a healthy way,
and like trying to explain what it does to cells and, you know,
in the mitochondria and like trying to, you know, describe to them the benefits.
It's challenging, but it's also like, it's cool because they're getting, you know,
exposure to the fact that this is like something that's valid that,
I mean, I didn't even know.
Well, remember we had Dr. Khan on the show and he kept talking about foundational principles of health.
So like, you know, you'll have certain dysfunctions, he goes, but if you can improve the foundational
principles, then everything gets better. For example, if you're just an easy one, right? If
you're not moving, if you're just on a couch all day long
and you have high blood pressure, higher risk of cancer,
inflammation, you get headaches, you're not sleeping well,
one foundational principle is let's just exercise properly
and move and that'll improve everything.
So that's what that basically means, right?
So with red light therapy,
because that particular wavelength of light positively affects the mitochondria in any cell that it shines on.
So no matter what cell that it shines on, it gets the mitochondria to operate more effectively and efficiently.
It gets it to operate better.
So if it's a skin cell, you get faster regeneration.
If it's a testosterone producing cell, you produce more testosterone.
If it's a hair follicle cell, you'll grow more hair.
So that's basically how it works. By the way, speaking of testosterone,
I got a study I got to tell you guys about. This is pretty cool.
I love studies on hormones and behaviors.
I think it's so much more interesting than hormones and things like fat loss or
or muscle building or whatever. Yeah. So trip off this, right?
So I'll read the, I'll read the highlights.
So the study is titled testosterone promotes persistence against a stronger
opponent. Okay.
So they investigated the effects of exogenous testosterone on competition
persistence. Before the competition,
they manipulated individuals perceived control testosterone,
doubled competition persistence in those with low perceived control.
In other words testosterone enhanced sensitivity to the opponents,
uh, growing advantage. So in other words,
testosterone made people more resistant to losing,
made them want to compete harder, made them want to push harder.
Yes. Yes, yes.
Men with low perceived control quitted twice as early
as those with high perceived control,
but then they gave them the testosterone
and it countered the effect.
So just one more thing, Justin,
to add to the conspiracy theory
of why they're trying to lower everyone's testosterone. Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha It's out there, man. You know, speaking of study, I didn't even plan on bringing this up.
You just reminded me of this.
You know, the study that we talk about, the marshmallow one, the delayed gratification one?
Have you heard someone tell you that that's been debunked?
I did.
I've heard someone say that, but I don't know how to make details.
Okay.
So someone in my group said that this weekend because I brought up the delayed gratification thing.
Because the study originally was like, this can predict like success.
Yeah.
They said it was one of the greatest predictors of
the kids future success was if they had the ability to delay
gratification and they tested them with the marshmallows,
have one now or two later type of deal on the kids that said two
later or there.
How long did they follow them?
Well, so listen, so here's, here's the debunking that I heard from it.
And what was interesting was that I was like, well, I could totally relate to that.
So, uh, what it said was it was more, there was that I was like, well, I could totally relate to that. So what it said was there was more correlation
to how those kids were raised,
whether they were raised with privilege or not,
because the kids that grew up that were underprivileged,
they wanted the marshmallow.
I don't know if I can get one.
Because it was scarce.
Because it was scarce.
And so they were so quick to grab it.
Were kids that had abundance and had a lot of money.
And with that, they had more patience.
They could wait.
And I was like, oh, shit, that's kind of crazy.
Because they need to control for that.
That's my sugar addiction comes from that.
I've told you guys before on the podcast,
like I took me a long time to realize,
why do I have this wealth there?
Weird behavior of when something sweet is in the house,
I've got to fucking eat the whole box.
I don't do that with anything else.
Simply to eat it.
Right.
But I mean, for 17 years of my life, I trained myself to,
you better get it because you ain't getting seconds, you know.
And so you take a kid like that versus a kid who was either an only child
or has abundance and doesn't work like that.
Like I saw a study with I saw a study with kids where they told
they put treats in front of the kids.
They said, okay, I'll be back in 30 minutes, don't eat me or whatever.
Then they leave and they see which kids will sneak one or whatever.
And then they did it where they said, in that chair, it's an empty chair in the corner.
In that empty chair over there, there's a fairy that's watching you to make sure that you don't take any candy.
I'll be right back. And then that worked.
If the kid, they told the kid that there was like a magical something sitting in the corner,
they would like sit there like, oh shit.
There you go, I hit the candy.
I did this with my son.
And I did this with my son and I almost cried, dude.
Like literally got me so emotional.
So I just had this for the weekend.
This is literally last night I did this with him.
And so I'm like, oh, I haven't asked him.
But maybe he's, is he old enough yet to me
to have this conversation?
Like delay, try and test him. And so I said, I said, hey, daddy asked him, but maybe he's, is he old enough yet to me to have this conversation like the delay, grab, try and test him.
And so I said, I said, hey, daddy wants to,
I have a question to ask you.
You have an option.
You have, you have, you can get two cupcakes
or one cupcake.
Daddy'll give you one cupcake right now,
or if you wait till tomorrow, you can have two cupcakes.
What do you want to do?
And he sat there and he like pondered it for a minute
and he goes, two cupcakes, daddy. And I go, why? And he sat there and he like pondered it for a minute and he goes, two cupcakes daddy.
And I go, why?
And he goes, so I could share one with you.
Oh, come on.
I was like, oh, God.
Oh, my God.
Everyone's going to cry.
Oh, dude, I just tell her to get it.
He got me because he was got me in the field so bad.
I was like, oh, first, you know, it's closer like his dad.
That's what I, it's, it's, it's not part of his life.
He's like, yeah, he's going to be, he's going to be.
He's all, he's all, if I tell him that he'll give me three. Yeah. I's like, it's like, he's like, yeah, he's gonna be, he's gonna be, he's gonna be.
He's all, he's all, if I tell him that, he'll give me three.
Yeah.
I was like, oh man.
That's cute.
I know, not only did he pick two,
but then when I asked him why,
so he could share the other one with me.
And I was like, oh bro.
Come on, you would wait
and then you would give up the other one.
I'm like, come on, that's so cool.
So like, yeah, instantly I got all.
Yeah, my three old keeps telling everybody tells a nanny tells his mom.
I I'm gonna be at whatever it is just like bupah and it's always something really good.
I'm gonna be strong just like what I'm gonna be really smart.
I can't wait to grow up and be just like bupah.
Oh, they tell me about this.
Oh, you know, that's so nice to get that.
That's the best.
You know, that's cute man that he said that.
Oh, I know. I was like so I didn't even know if I could have that
yet with him. Like, is he at a point where he can even, you did not expect that.
I did not. I did not. And I was like, the first, of course, the first part of me is
like, oh yeah, he said, did you give him two on the spot?
You win, buddy. You know, this is what I also, what my son's so amazing, right?
Like he, I didn't even have that to give to him.
He didn't even bug me and ask me.
Did you go by him?
No, we didn't even talk about it.
I was like literally just like,
we were in the bathtub and we're talking
and I brought it up and then he said that,
got all emotional, oh, I love you buddy,
you're so amazing, this and that.
Then we went right back to playing,
he didn't even think that.
I mean, this also too, that's,
I think another thing that it highlights
and my friends that are having kids now
that are coming up or like, or going to, the sugar thing was such the move I feel like,
because that's the relationship.
He didn't even bug me about it.
He didn't even ask me afterwards, like,
Daddy, where's the cupcake?
Or am I going to get like, he just, it wasn't a big, it's not a big deal.
You know, which highlights too, why he was like, no big deal about waiting another day for two.
So he can have an extra one to give away.
Like, I was just like, Oh my God.
That's so awesome.
Hey, speaking of eating,
did I tell you guys the percentage of people
or who consumes the most beef?
Did I tell you guys this?
Like what, what type of people?
So, I just read this.
Like what region in the world?
I just read this study, I thought it was really awesome.
Cause I know that we all in this room
make up this percentage.
The majority. Yeah. Yeah.
50% of the beef consumption in America.
So half of the beef that is eaten and consumed in America is consumed by
12% of Americans.
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait of Americans are eating half the beef. Okay No, well, you know what that says to me even more we got how under protein everybody is to imagine if
Only 12% of the people are eating a majority of the meat and even the people that I've I've had that I've trained that eat meat Still under consumed protein. What do you think is happening to that? Yeah, 82?
Well, so you see this proper way now the study. What do you think they twit? How do you think they they spun this? What do you guys is happening to that 82%? Well, so you see this the proper way. Now the study, what do you think they twit,
how do you think they spun this?
What do you guys think they said?
Oh, that we're the ones doing the damage to the plan.
Oh yeah, many Americans.
Like 12% of us are fucking up the level.
Claim it offenders.
Oh my God.
So hey, listen, listen, this is, by the way,
this is a new term.
We're gonna hear more and more.
I'll have a stat for you.
We're gonna hear more and more of,
especially during election season.
Ready, here's the quote. Many Americans are eating nearly eight
times more beef in a day than what's recommended. Ready for this? This is the new term for an
earth-friendly diet. Earth-friendly diet. Earth-friendly? Yeah. I just read an article,
by the way. How about this stat though? I heard that 9%, so vegans fart 9% more often than beef eaters
Wait nine times
So I'm like, so I'm like, so I'm like, nine times more.
So who's really contributing more to the climate problem?
All the all the gas in vegans.
Come on, man.
Yeah, this check me.
Doug, Earth friendly diet is going to be a thing.
Okay.
They're going to start saying that earth friendly.
Are you eating an earth?
So three people from my group were ex vegans.
X.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Let me guess.
They felt like crap and they had to, yeah.
Yeah.
Exactly what happened.
So, so they, and they had converted to a pescatarian.
A, is it a pescatarian or pescatarian?
Pescatarian.
Not a pescatarian.
It's pescatarian.
No.
That's just when you're referring to a pescatarian.
Yes. So Justin, you'reia, just pescateria. That's just when you're referring to a pescateria. Yes.
So Justin, you're wrong, but not that far off.
So men who follow a mostly vegan diet
fart seven times more than those who follow
a predominantly meat-based diet.
Interesting.
Ah, C2%.
Well, have you guys ever eaten?
Still.
Have you guys ever tried to eat a vegan day?
Soy and stuff like that will do.
Well, no, have you ever had a vegan day?
I've done it a few times. all those actually do this once a month
where I would have just a vegan day, go low protein for other reasons.
And yeah, dude, you just just just an air machine.
What?
All the all the all the fermentable fibers and stuff, you know,
yeah, so you just like an old're just blowing out the ozone layer.
What the hell is wrong with you?
Seriously.
It's funny.
Stop it, you know.
Anyway, this will be, this will be,
this is going to be a thing.
Where they're going to start talking about this,
but you know, I've said this before
and people in the health and fitness space understand this.
The average American eats a terrible diet.
Most of their diet majority is made up
of heavily processed foods,
but the only whole natural foods that most people still eat are meat, milk,
and eggs. And if you cut those out,
you are going to cause far worse health in many, many people,
which is worse for the earth.
The best thing we can do for the earth is have healthy, strong, productive,
uh, people in good moods,
who have good moods and aren't depressed and not anxious.
So this whole like, let's sacrifice our health for the earth.
We're gonna put a bunch of sick, unhealthy,
unproductive humans.
That's not good for anybody.
No, not good for anybody.
Yeah, speaking of, so we're talking a little bit
about eating nuts, walnuts, legumes, whatever, right?
So there's this guy in China who was eating walnuts, you know, legumes, whatever, right? So there's this guy in China who was eating walnuts
and he was cracking walnuts with his,
something that he found that he was just cracking
the walnuts with, it was working out great for him.
Like a tool.
Later on, like a tool, seemed like a tool.
They look at it, he brought it in somewhere.
I think somebody saw it and was like, oh my God,
turns out it was a grenade, a live grenade from like World War II, like a German grenade.
And he's just slamming it against these wallets to open them and like had no idea.
Like somebody had to tell him like, hey, that's like a grenade.
Wow.
Can you imagine?
It's just a matter of time.
Maybe like that one strike boom. Oh, no. Stupid. Yeah. What would even make you lead you to do that? just a matter of time. Maybe like that one strike. Boom.
Oh, no.
Stupid.
What would even make you lead you to do that?
Use that of all the things.
I just thought, yeah, it's a heavy object.
And he was like, it's kind of long and slender.
Super dense.
I know that.
Oh, that's a German grenade.
Yeah, German grenade.
I mean, a lot of people, it looks like you could.
Kind of like a pestle or whatever you call it.
Oh, yeah, yeah, no.
OK, I get it now.
Because I'm thinking of a traditional looking grenade. How did they set those off? There was no pin, right? Did you call it? Oh yeah, yeah, no, okay, I get it now. Cause I'm thinking of like a traditional looking grenade.
How did they set those off?
There was no pin, right?
You twist it?
How did that work?
Oh yeah, it looks like that, right?
Like you twist and then just throw it.
I guess, I don't know.
I don't know.
Good question.
That is interesting.
It's actually a Chinese grenade, not German.
It's not German?
Yeah.
This is so red.
I'm so wrong with my facts.
It just reminded me of a meme.
I had a picture of an AK-47. Yeah. This is so red. I'm so wrong with my facts. I just reminded me of a meme. I had a picture of an AK-47.
Yeah. And it said, uh, the only good thing socialism ever created and, uh, left us hate it.
Because AK-47 was made by the Soviets. It's like the most widely used gun in the world.
It's always the example, right? We gotta get rid of these.
Did you guys see the, uh, it the, I go viral on TikTok right now,
the Costco woman with the couch?
No.
Oh, pull up, pull up woman returns Costco couch
two years later.
Two years later?
So, okay, so I have to admit something
that I'm a bit embarrassed to admit
that I didn't know this in high school.
Okay, so, and I don't know how much the policy has changed.
I think it's still is kind of like that, but Costco has a very similar,
like Nordstrom vibe where it's like, if you've had something for a really long
time, you can still bring it.
So I had a, I had a girlfriend in high school who every, like, she had a bunch
of stuff, like her stereo.
I know she did it with like her bed stuff.
She had like a couple of like things that she would,
she would buy from Costco and then a year later return it and get the newest
model.
And she just did that every single year because Costco has this return policy.
And yeah. And this is, look at,
so the woman is going by after returning her couch of two years after buying.
Oh, she said she's like the color anymore.
Yeah. After two years.
And that's absurd.
So they do, they did it with, they did it with cameras.
They did it with like a lot of, and she used to do that with like, like Nikon and
Canon, like nice, like, how much do you think that eats into their profit?
Like, if you take account of these cuts, cause this people, like, there's got to be
like a decent amount of people that will do this.
That's a good advantage.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, I'm sure it happens all time.
I don't, do you know if they've changed the policy or anything like that?
I don't know. Uh, Did you know that you do that? Oh, well
So Rachel my girlfriend. Oh, she does it too. Well, so she had this Dyson box and apparently there's some return policy And I go why keeping that Dyson box? Well case I want to return it. I go how long have you had this thing?
I thought it for like a year. I go, are you kidding me?
You're gonna return a Dyson after using it for a year?
Do you understand that you're making everybody's Dyson
more expensive?
So the girl that I'm talking about,
she came from her dad was a lawyer.
So she was like the richest girl out of all of our friends.
That's why I thought it was really crazy that she did it.
Cause I was the same way.
I was just like, wait, wait, wait.
She had her, this is the first time I found out.
She had a box for like her stereo boom boxing that she had kept. And I'm like, why do you
still have that box thrown away? She's like, Oh, no, I might
return this next year. And I'm like, we return it next year.
What do you mean? Oh, yeah, Costco lets you I'm the worst
returns. I'm the kind of guy like, I don't like to see more. I
don't want to return it. I took it. I took it. Yeah, I go get
somebody to just take it. If it's anywhere close to a tank of
gas in price, it's like, that's how I,
I try to justify like not going back.
I'm terrible with that.
Isn't that crazy though?
It is crazy.
Yeah, it is crazy.
I mean, I was actually pissed off.
Cause I heard how common it was.
And I just thought, you know, as a business owner,
having people take advantage of you like that,
it's not cool.
It's dishonest.
It's probably dishonest.
I'm gonna put it out there.
No, you're right.
They have to make it.
Yeah, they gotta.
Every company makes a factor in shrink, right?
That's what that is, right?
So you have to factor shrink in and so it is a little bit more.
It's really theft.
When you get right down to it, it's just theft.
Hey, he gets so mad.
You ever see how mad he gets?
We've had a lot, very rare.
We've had people who'll, because our program's come with a 30 day money bag.
Yeah, Doug does bother hitting them.
Oh yeah, someone will do it like three or four times and you could tell what they're doing.
There's some people that will take advantage.
Doug gets heated.
He wants to fight people.
I love it.
Well, you know, I have a very strong sense of justice.
What can I say?
Or integrity, right?
You have a lot of integrity.
I'm with you, Doug.
And so that's one of those things where it's like.
I mean, it just doesn't make the world any better
when people do dishonest.
I mean, it really bothers me.
I'm just calling it out for what it is.
It's somebody who's got money too.
No, that really bothers me.
I mean, if you're like, you know, destitute,
yeah, yeah, because I feel like it's like,
okay, well, you're not exactly stealing.
So it's like one step up.
But they made a virtuous post on Instagram.
So it covers, you know.
Hey, Andrew, did you find the actual TikTok video
that went viral?
Cause I was looking for that.
I want to see that.
I did, but it's, it's kind of a long video.
This girl goes over her entire story of beginning to end.
But I looked at Costco's return policy
and they have a risk-free 100% satisfaction guarantee
with basically everything except cigarettes and alcohol.
They don't accept returns and most electronics
like television, smartphone device device MP3 players are 90
I'm not giving people ideas. Listen Costco's
They're a model of they're very successful and they provide high quality stuff and they've got high service
So they must have enough customers who are like Doug and you know, who are like, okay
I like this company in order to make up the difference. I mean, I love their I love their
Um, they're a hot dog philosopher. Yeah, I mean this company in order to make up the difference. I mean, I love their, I love their, um, their hot dog philosophy.
I mean, that is brilliant. It's so smart because so many people go there for the cheap hot dog and they lose on the hot dogs.
You know, kind of like a dollar 50.
I forget how cheap.
Basically marketing at this point, right?
It is.
It's so, it's so brilliant to make the, the hot dog and the pizza is so cheap that
everybody goes there and there's a good chance that you're going to need to
pick something up from Costco.
It's a brilliant straight.
It's the same thing that I remember a Safeway hacked into with the whole
chickens, right?
They take a hit on the whole chicken.
That's a, that's a massive marketing strategy that everybody's tried to adopt
after the fact has driven so much business their way.
So smart.
Interesting.
Yup.
Oh, shout out.
Yeah.
Justin reminded me he was talking about music and random artists. It's driven so much business their way. So smart. Interesting. Oh, shout out. Yeah. Justin
reminded me he was talking about music and random artists. So this is a different type of a shout
out for the audience. But I've literally, I think like for the last five or six months,
like his music has all I've been listened to. Stephen Rodriguez, cool artist, really,
really cool artist. So if you have similar music taste as I do, if you don't, then whatever.
Really, really core artists. So if you have similar music taste as I do, if you don't, then whatever.
Uh, but you'll like it.
I think I've really enjoyed his stuff.
So check out his stuff on, on Spotify or wherever music is streaming.
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All right, back to the show.
Our first caller is Anthony from Idaho.
Anthony, what's happening, man? How can we help you?
Anthony, did I tell you Green Bay beat us already?
Yes, I saw that.
That was real.
Yeah, you are a true fan.
Yeah, so true fans.
So rock that right now.
Yeah, that's a tough one. First, first off, just, uh, this is pretty surreal for me.
This is pretty crazy.
Been listening to you guys for the last couple of years.
And, uh, so I don't ramble here.
I will just stick to my email.
So thank you guys for the podcast.
You really pretty much saved my life.
I had hit rock bottom in August of 21
with alcohol and my health. I had gotten up to about 430 pounds at the time and was sitting in
a jail cell for about 90 days due to too many DUIs. When I found your podcast after getting out
of jail because I wanted to start a new life, I haven't stopped listening to since I've gone back to all sorts of your,
to the old ones and been playing catch up with the new ones going back and forth.
And that's been pretty fun to hear the, the podcast evolve in that way.
Um, currently I am down to around 327 pounds.
It actually spent a good year after getting out of jail
around 350 pounds following your programs and listening to your podcasts. And I have
really noticed now when I've been trying to drop the weight, it's been a lot easier,
which has been really fantastic to go through just listening to you guys. I really wanna push myself, my mind and my body
and be the best version of myself by my 40th birthday.
And what I want to do is I wanna try and do
one bodybuilding competition at the age of 40,
just to see how far I can push myself
and just to see if I can do it.
And I was just wondering what advice would you guys have for me going forward?
First of all awesome
Story to hear where you're at now man. That's in that's you what you've done
Oh, wow, we just got a picture of this is you currently right now
Yeah, the bottom one with the trying to flex
How long it's. How long?
Wow, that's incredible.
How long does it take?
How long until you turn 40?
It is a little less than two years.
I turned 38 in November.
Okay, okay.
Okay, we can make, and you've got a good base.
Yeah.
You've definitely got some muscle on it for sure.
Yeah, you know, now let me ask you this.
What is it about competition that you're drawn to or doing the bodybuilding competition?
What's the feeling or the drive
or what are you getting, what are you gonna get out of it?
Cause that'll help me with my answer.
So I've been a competitive athlete my entire life.
I spent most of my life playing baseball and basketball,
played baseball in college.
And I just kind of coming out of the last three years of basically a whole new transformation.
I really want to push myself, my mind and my body to the limits. And I want to see where it goes.
I want to see what I can really do. Okay. Okay. Now there's a good and a bad side to this. Okay. The good side is if you take your time
And do things the right way then it'll work out well for you
the bad side is if you rush it and or and or
You fall in love with this
This goal like this is everything once I hit that goal man. I life is gonna be different. It's gonna be incredible
You could suffer from what they call a rival.
So what is that post post arrival, depression, or where you get the goal.
And then afterwards you're like, Oh God, what do I do now?
Can I, can I make a suggestion for a different kind of competition that I
think may serve you a little bit better?
Yeah.
Have you thought about powerlifting?
I'm seeing the same thing. I actually kind of did think about that. The, it kind
of was those two that I was kind of thinking about doing, honestly. I like powerlifting
better. Yeah. Even if it's beforehand. And I also think that you could take that advice
from Sal and still build a sick ass physique on the way. Yeah, dude, because powerlifting
has weight classes. So you could get leaner and leaner and leaner and leaner and leaner and still be very competitive in powerlifting.
And you could do a powerlifting competition now. I mean, you could you could get ready for one now.
And because it's performance oriented, the potential damage that it could run on, let's say,
your metabolism, your body and your psyche is far lower. And I'm not saying powerlifting is perfect,
but bodybuilding is one of those sports where And I'm not saying powerlifting is perfect,
but bodybuilding is one of those sports where,
I mean, you get into it and if you just,
you're just more likely to have a better relationship
with food going through powerlifting.
Bodybuilding is,
It'll mess, it messes with a lot of people.
It's really, really difficult to not put you
in a bit of this body obsessiveness
and this extreme levels of dieting and cardio.
And so you're just flirting with that.
And because you're in this,
you're in a beautiful place right now.
I mean, I love hearing a story like yours
where you've completely turned your life around.
You're fucking heading down the right path right now.
I love the idea of setting up a crazy bad-ass goal,
getting after it.
I don't like bodybuilding as the choice,
just for the reasons of,
I know what it can do to you mentally going, getting so obsessed with the body.
But I also respect that you want to push your body to a level like that.
And I, we can do kind of both meaning we could train for a power lifting
meat, but then I could also help you like, Hey,
let's keep sculpting and getting lean and getting ripped.
And like, why not look badass while you do it too, but not so obsessed about the
calories and the, and the, and the weight and the body fabricators that you start
doing things that are unhealthy just to get this body.
We'll feed that competitive itch.
And I know like, you know, as an ex athlete myself too, it's just, it's one of those
things you want to be, you want to drive towards something.
And it's like a very rewarding experience when you see yourself progress and you're pushing
your body in that direction. I think, you know, to pour yourself with a strength focused goal
is going to carry you so much further. And, you know, as you get into that, and you really,
you know, it becomes ingrained in you, uh, and you're eating and you're feeding yourself appropriately and healthy. Uh,
that's where we can start looking at, you know,
maybe going into showing off your body and like what's happened as a result of
what you've put in. Yeah. Look, here's the deal.
You can get lean and do powerlifting,
but the powerlifting is going to check whether or not you're over dieting,
overdoing cardio because you'll get weaker.
You're just going to get weaker with bodybuilding. People ignore that.
They get so focused on the scale.
And I got a chance.
I got an over train.
I got a diet, whatever that they, it's like they don't pay attention to their
performance or their health or how they feel.
Now, again, I'm not saying you can't go unhealthy in a powerlifting competition,
but it's a far better choice for most people.
And it's going to feel more like the competitions you
did when you were playing sports than bodybuilding. You know, bodybuilding, you get on stage and then
judges tell you whether or not you win or not. Like powerlifting is much more like football,
baseball. For sure. Like you, you, you lift the weight or you don't. Like the judges are just
looking, they're just very objective. They're just going to make sure you touch your chest when you
bench and you're going to do a deadlifting and get full extension. That's it. The judge is not going to look at you versus another guy and go,
well, his bench press looked prettier. Therefore, nah, you move the weight or you don't.
I also like the idea of that, even if, let's say our long-term goal is to eventually get on a bodybuilding stage.
Going the powerlifting route first is only going to serve you.
Way better.
Because it will, it's going to force you to get really strong,
build lots of, uh, uh, build lots of muscle, also not do any sort of
metabolic damage because you're in a place where you need to be able to perform.
And so you'll be so centered around that.
And then when you're like, shit, I'm stronger and leaner than I've ever been
right now, now let's take it to the bodybuilding thing.
You'll be in a better position to prep for a show from there than you, than you would just going straight for prepping for a show right now, now let's take it to the bodybuilding thing. You'll be in a better position to prep for a show from there than you would just going straight for prepping for a show
right now. And so if we have any influence on you, I think we're all in alignment. I would push you
towards the powerlifting me. And if you do choose to do this, one, I love to give you maps, powerlift.
And then two, I'd love to put you in the forum and be there to help guide you through this process.
And then two, I'd love to put you in the forum and be there to help guide you through this process.
Okay.
Yeah.
I think you guys, because I was teetering on going either way, and I think you guys kind
of convinced me to go the powerlifting route because I think like you said, the competitive
nature is it's objective right there.
You win or lose, you got to do it.
So I think that's the best way to go through it.
The iron, the irony is if you, if you're doing things like tracking your
protein, watching your diet, make sure you eat healthy, you'll end up with a
better physique in a year doing powerlifting competitions than you will
bodybuilding straight up.
Where, where are you at?
Um, give me an idea where you're at calorie wise and then tell me where your
lifts are at.
I'm kind of, I want to know your starting point here.
Give me an idea where you're at calorie wise and then tell me where your lifts are at.
I'm kind of, I want to know your starting point here.
Um, so calorie wise, I am at, uh, I, let's say over the holidays, I didn't
track as well as I wanted to.
So, yeah, let's say when you're tracking, when you're tracking, tell me where you're at.
So when I'm tracking, when I'm, when I've been dropping the weight about a
pound and a half week, I was about at
3, 3, 200 calories.
Okay.
All right.
Good.
Good.
Good.
That's what I wanted to hear.
I didn't want to hear something like 1800 or 2000 calories.
Yeah.
Right.
No, no, I, I don't think I could ever go to that.
I like to do 200.
Yeah.
You know what though?
By the way, that's exactly what happens to bodybuilding competitors though is
they end up pushing themselves to those low, low,
just to keep the weight loss going, the weight loss going.
And so, and that's what we're afraid of is you're so focused on the stage day that you start to throw out what's best for your body where you won't get like that in powerlifting because it's,
there's no benefit to you being that low of calorie and, you know, leaning or losing that much weight right before a powerlifting meet.
So I think the powerlifting, I think you're in a good place already calorie wise.
So I think you're in a really good place to do this.
And then, Hey, let's, let's assess after the powerlifting meet.
Um, if you're still thinking about the bodybuilding thing, and I think
you'd be in a much better position.
You're like, yeah, atmosphere of a powerlifting me too, man.
Being an athlete, it's going to feel so, it's going to feel familiar.
I like him. Okay. Cool. Yep. Yep. All right, dude. We're athlete, it's going to feel familiar. I like it.
Okay.
Cool.
Yep.
Yep.
All right, dude, we're going to send over maps, power
lift and then get you in the form.
Make sure you say hi and let us know when you start the process.
I will.
Thank you guys so much.
I really appreciate everything you guys have done and taking my question today.
You got it, man.
I appreciate you.
I switch you guys.
Have a good one.
If 90% of the people that competed in bodybuilding, and I say 90% because that
probably encompasses like the average, like people competing to local shows and
stuff, right?
There's that 10% that are like highly competitive.
But if you took a majority of people who tried bodybuilding shows and put them
in a powerlifting, they'd be better off.
Oh, yeah.
How many would you say, like, I know Arnold had a bit of a background in powerlifting.
I know there was other examples of like famous bodybuilders that started there.
And then their physiques look amazing.
Yeah.
Ronnie Coleman, Ronnie Coleman, the other one, Franco Colombo.
Yeah.
That's another one.
So and two, I mean, and we, we've stressed this a lot, I think with women in
terms of like being able to get, because it's less, I guess, you see it less.
And so to get them, you know, focus on strength
is such so transformative.
A guy like this is losing so much weight.
If he went into a bodybuilding, my fear,
which I think would probably happen,
is he'd over die it to the point where he would,
and then he would be screwed.
He'd go right back and gain all the way back.
Yeah, yeah. That's why I wanted to know where he was at calorie wise and then make that
point that you be, you will get down. That's what they do is they start off at 32 and then
the weight loss slows down and they're so focused like, Oh shit, I'm on stage in 16
weeks. So I need to do this. And so you start, you just start doing that because you don't
care about how strong you are. You don't even care how you feel.
You don't care about your fitness.
No, you're trying to get down to a size to, you know, do well on stage and you just throw
out everything else. And so it's just not, I tell you what, these, uh, when we get callers
like this, this is a part, this is my favorite part of what we do. Like I just, hearing somebody
like that where they, they get thrown in jail because he's had so many DUIs, level of depression
and shit where he's at. And to see him turn his life around right now
and then make health and fitness.
That's amazing.
So, so cool, man.
Keep going, Anthony.
Our next caller is Adam from Wisconsin.
Adam, what's up, man?
How can we help you?
Hey guys, thank you so much for having me on
and appreciate your time
and just really everything you do for the community.
I know you hear that a lot,
but Begg's repeating multiple times.
So thank you.
Thank you.
Awesome.
Wanted to ask a quick question about folks that myself included who have
engaged in professional coaching, had a trainer, a nutritionist over a period of
time and now are looking to kind of transition out and are feeling empowered to do that work on their own.
And wonder if you have any advice for folks that have navigated into that space and what you would advise them to kind of take as first steps navigating this stuff on their own.
That's a cool question. How long have you been with a coach and how many times are they seeing you right now per week?
For a year and check-ins are once a week.
Okay.
And that whole time, it looks like you did like reverse dieting.
So everything's good now.
You got this nice stable place.
Yeah.
I went up from over, basically over a year from about 2,000 calories, a little short
of 2,000 calories, now up to 3,100. Um, and in that time period actually dropped some, some weight, uh, along the
way, which is, um, confusing, but here we are.
So, so yeah, so, but feeling at that stage where, you know, I've got the tools in
my tool belt and kind of want to take a path on my own.
Awesome.
Adam, what are your, what are your worries of going on your own?
Cause you've been with them for a year.
So you, you have a good idea of kind of what to eat, what to look for and feel.
But I'm assuming you feel a little apprehensive. And that's why you're asking this question.
What are your fears?
I appreciate the way you frames that. Not necessarily fears, but just more of kind of
questioning, well, what do I do when I don't have someone that's, you know,
checking my calories, checking my macros, saying, hey, are you a lot not necessarily
accountability, but just more about where do I go from here? Not having a goal or a strategy or
someone to check that past. So maybe that's maybe maybe that's an answer to your question.
Have you thought about it? know it's Sal was actually
Notorious for this as far as the three of us. He did this the most is is actually
Scaling down to once a month before you go completely
I was just gonna say that like if you feel if you don't feel like fully comfortable
Going on your own and even if it's not he's fully comfortable even if you just appreciate the accountability
That's right. That's what I mean. Like so it's a valuable investment.
Once a month, once a month, you reduce your cost by one fourth.
And now you and you but yet you still have that accountability that
I'm going to have to see, see Sal on, you know, Monday of next week.
It's like peace of mind for you.
Yeah. So I mean, have you considered that?
No, it's a great it's a great framing of that.
I kind of was doing the, the false binary of it's one or the other.
So it's a great, a great, a great, uh, yes, and there.
So I appreciate that.
Yeah.
No, it's, uh, you know, it's, it's a scaling down, right?
Cause going from working with someone to nothing at all, uh, that can be challenging.
It just can because it's completely different.
Um, but you know, you could go, you could go once every other week
or once a month.
That's what I would do.
So if you were my client and you voice this to me like,
okay, I'm coming up on this and, you know,
I'm not sure how I want to do this on my own.
That's what I would offer to you.
I'd say, well, I can meet with you every other week
or we can meet once a month.
And then let's just take it from there.
And then that's a, it's a much more gradual
Process and you get more time on your own
Feel it out and then from there you eventually get to the point where you're on your own. Yeah. Yeah, right, which is kind of more
The space that I was framing the question in because it's it's maybe I was motivated to say
You don't really need this anymore. I don't know if you've had clients
Excuse me in your experience where you're like,
no, I feel, and that's kind of how I feel right now. Like I feel, I feel good, but I still have goals and I still want to crush them.
And so what are, what are the mechanisms out there for kind of someone like me
that is, is moving from a space where you hurt, you're kind of outsourced that
thinking and now you're going,. It's a blank blank slate
I can do kind of whatever I want with this. Yeah, no, so the conversation with your coach is exactly that it's like, okay
I'd like to
Slowly transition to being on my own
So I'd like to meet with you less frequently and I would like for some of our coaching to be centered around
How I can start to figure out some of the stuff on my own.
So what you don't wanna do is work with someone,
let's say once every two weeks,
and then they give you everything to do
over the next two weeks.
So it's really not that different.
The only difference is you're not checking in as often.
So then the coaching changes a little.
So like the way that it would,
typical client for me,
there were people I trained for 10 years,
you know, 12 years nonstop.
And typically what it would look like is someone
would start with me two days a week, then they'd go three days a week, then they'd go down to two
days a week, then they'd go down to one day a week, then they'd go down to one day every other week,
and then I had clients who were with me once a month who had been with me for 12 years. And it
worked out perfectly. And then some of them just stopped and they were on their own. But a lot of
them just went down that path because they appreciated the check-in, the meeting,
the, maybe I need some new exercises or I got this new pain or whatever.
Because, you know, I'm the expert and they're not type of deal, but it was a,
it really in terms of, uh, improving sustainability with my clients, it was
one of the key factors that played a role.
Sal did this the most, but I did do this also.
The clients that I did do it with the way it looked like for me was you actually
would see me that once a month and it was more you actually telling me everything.
I was just there to like give you like thumbs up, like, oh yeah, great. Yeah.
Good call on that. Or, oh, you know what?
You probably should have scaled this a little bit slower or, you know what?
Maybe it's time that we changed this routine out for that routine or like, you know what, let's stop that. Or you know what? That probably should have scaled this a little bit slower or you know what? Maybe it's time that we change this routine out for that routine or like,
you know what? Let's stop that. Or you know what? Your knees bother you.
Let me do some things. Like they were really,
they were leading everything at that point.
And I was just there to be that authority to go like, Hey, great job.
Or you might want to consider this. Or like Sal said,
if there's like something that has been troubling you for that month,
you would bring it to me when we
get a good, we're normally good friends. We've been working,
we've been training together for years or years at this time.
And so, you know, we enjoy the workout together and seeing
each other and catching up. So there's, there's nice
camaraderie around that. And then it's like, literally, you're
telling me what's going on. And I'm just kind of there to kind
of guide you on and give you a high five along the way. I had
a lot of success with that. I think my clients really enjoyed
that. And, you know, if, if it financially, if it's something that's feeble to
you, I think there's a lot of value and especially if it's a really good coach. If you really respect
this person as like, man, this guy or girl knows their shit and obviously way more than I, they do
in this profession, you know, and so there's a lot of value just having that person to see once a
month regardless, if you could do it all on your own, just having that brain to, you know, bounce things off of.
Well, to kind of, yeah, kind of piggyback off of what they're saying.
This, this is what led us into also like really crafting these programs the way that we did.
So that way too, it's like one kind of leads into the next, which leads into the next.
And you can kind of draw that out in terms of like the entire year
So that way it's not like guesswork in terms of like well, you know if I'm just trying to be healthy
I have sort of like a path that I can take
You know in that direction to stay strong and keep my muscle mass as is or if I want to like really test myself and challenge myself
In this part of the year
So I don't know like you know if he has you on very specific plans that you could then, you know, sort of take that and then
run with it and then you just check in with him, you know, or if this is just based off
of like nutrition, that that I was like, more of your concern was like, I did this to nutritionally,
you know, the training, I'm sort of, I got to have that down, but like, I need more help
with this.
No, it's a, I appreciate the kind of the framework and I don't know if
this has been your experience or if you've heard from other trainers, but
it kind of seems like they presented as like, this is the package.
Like I've, I have option A and option A is this is the way it works.
This is the cost for it.
And so I haven't even thought of the alternative there.
So I'm grateful.
Well, show this video to your trainer or coach because they need to,
this is a good thing for a train for a coach, uh, to understand because what
happens is they've, what they've done, you know, without realizing, cause I
know if when you bring this up, they're like, Oh yeah, let's do that.
What they've done is presented you with this false idea that it's over afterwards,
but that's not really how it works.
So yeah, they, a hundred percent, they're going to be like, totally.
Let's do that.
Yeah.
Cool.
Awesome.
Thanks guys.
Appreciate you.
Thanks for calling him.
You know, one thing I like to focus on there, just for all the haters out there,
the reverse diet and you don't speed up.
He went up a thousand calories and lost weight and that's countless people.
Or like that.
So yes, you could totally do it.
You could totally do it.
Yeah.
It takes a little bit of time.
You got to do it the right way.
But what do you, uh, psychology or sales?
What do you think he was in?
Oh, him?
Oh yeah.
Some kind of.
Yeah.
He, he, he, he, he multiple times talked about reframing.
He also did the, uh, and yes.
So either he's got sales training in him or he's or psychology improv classes.
I want to know Adam. So when you email in or DM me one or the other, I'm just curious. I
meant to ask him and then we got carried away on other questions. But you know, I think that
when you find, I have a client like this still to this day, you know, when you find a good trainer
and coach that, you know, there's no question in your mind,
like their level of education experience is going to, it'll always exceed yours because
it's their profession, you do something completely different and you can afford to keep someone
like that out of your life once a month. There's tremendous value. Huge, huge value. Because,
you know, I mean, shoot, I was just doing this with Sal, like I have family that reaches out to
me, I still default to hit to Sal, help me out with answering stuff with my own family.
And just the fact, obviously it's on their family so that I'm not charging them to do that.
But imagine they didn't have me, like the value of being able to go like, oh my god,
you know, uncle so-and-so is going through this or, and like, you know, when you have
a profession or professional like that that you can rely on.
And if you can afford to do that, so much value.
I think professionals really need to consider this
in today's age, like just a text message.
Like if they have that as an option, like, you know,
every now and then I can kind of text from you
or like, you know, keep me accountable.
Like because people do want to be able to have like
somebody they can refer to as they're going through,
you know, on their own.
So I think it's a viable.
Bro, as I actually was teaching Kyle this the other day when we were doing
this stuff for the trainers and for all the trainers that are listening right now,
I think that should be your, your last drop or your cheapest thing is that you
have this offer that's, you know, a hundred bucks a month and that's all it is.
But it gives a digital access to you all the time for them to be able to text
and ask questions and do stuff like that
And you'll and you'll answer a lot of value in that
Our next caller is Katie from Ontario. Hi, Katie. Hey, Katie. How can we help you?
Hey, how's it going guys? Good. What's happening?
Good. Um, so first of all, I just want to say thank you
After listening to your advice, I was able to reverse diet myself out of a pretty bad situation a few years ago
I was over training under fueling and sort of messed myself up hormonally a little bit
And so since then I've gone through a few mini-bulks and cuts
My problem is cutting makes me feel terrible. It makes me feel like trash. My workouts suffer. I'm exhausted
and it just makes me feel awful. So goal-wise, I guess I could stand to lose a little bit of body
fat but it's not really that important to me to be honest. I have a decent amount of muscle.
What I do want to focus on though is getting stronger, um,
and just feeling good in my body and having more, um, energy. So I'd like to push the
calories back up again. But if I noticed that I'm putting on some body fat, um, more than
I'm comfortable with, I'm just wondering how I can mitigate that, um, without a drastic
cut and feeling like prop again.
Yeah, great question. There's two ways to get leaner.
Body fat percentage wise, Katie. Option one is to lose actual body fat. Option two is to build muscle and keep the amount of body fat you have on your body the same.
Because remember, body fat percentage is a percentage of overall body weight. In other words, if you gain five pounds of muscle,
you're now leaner, even though you didn't lose a pound of body weight. In other words, if you gain five pounds of muscle, you're now leaner,
even though you didn't lose a pound of body fat.
So reverse dieting slowly and focusing on strength
will accomplish both of those for you.
Now, if you reverse diet and you say,
oh, I think I'm gaining too much body fat,
you just reverse a lot slower or pause,
pause the reverse and see if you can,
or reverse out of it just a little bit.
So let's say you went up 200 calories this week and then you stayed like that for a couple of weeks.
You're like, oh, I'm putting a little bit of body fat.
Bring it down again.
Bring it down maybe 100, 150 and just keep it there and just play that little game,
that little step ladder game of bringing the calories up or maintaining while focusing on
performance in the gym and getting stronger.
That's going to serve you in the best way.
You know, an exercise I used to do with my clients when we were going through
something like this, and this is all for the psychological aspect of, I feel like
I'm getting fatter at them because we're adding all these calories and we're in
this mini bulk.
And many times that feeling that they have is just they're holding a little bit
more water, they have more carbs, so glycogen in their muscles.
And so they feel a certain way.
Maybe they are, they're inflamed a tiny bit because we train really hard.
And a lot of the times it's not that they're putting body fat on,
they just feel this certain way.
And then a lot of times they, they course correct and go the other direction.
So one of these exercises I used to love to do with my client is as we're in this
reverse diet, and I think they're doing great. We're slowly increasing calories.
They're getting stronger and they report back out of my fill.
Like I'm getting a little fatter and putting body fat on.
I go, okay, tomorrow we're going to do a 24 hour fast.
And I put them on a fast and then I'd say, how do you feel?
Oh my God, I feel, I feel so much better.
I say, listen, we didn't lose any pounds of fat today.
We didn't do that in one day.
One day did not lose a pound of body fat even on you.
All we did was bring down inflammation,
we depleted your glycogen,
and so you look like you're less full right now.
So it's not that you're fat
and it's not that you're putting fat on right now.
We're just, we got a lot of calories in us.
We're reverse dieting.
This is total, this is a total normal process.
So I love to do that.
And sometimes that's a good exercise
if you don't have coach and trainer.
It's a great little exercise to do to yourself just to And sometimes that's a good exercise. If you're not, if you don't have coach and trainer, it's a great little
exercise to do to yourself just to make sure you keep yourself in check.
When you have those feelings, instead of going on this long cut or now
depleting calories for extended period of time, do a fast and see how you
feel and look after that.
And a lot of times that will solve that.
And you'll be like, Oh, wow, I feel great.
Or I look great.
Just don't overcorrect as the main thing here.
Yeah.
Do you, how do you judge whether or not you're gaining excess body fat?
Do you have an objective metric that you use or is it based off of just feel?
So I want to get more into the place where I can, I'm gauging based on, you know, how
my clothes are fitting or how I'm feeling.
I stopped weighing myself last week because to be honest, I was messing
with my head a little bit. There were a few times I weighed myself, my weight's up, but I look at
myself and I feel like I look great, but the scale was still screwing with my head too much.
So I decided that that is not my friend. So I ditched that. So yeah, the metric that I really
want to use is just how I'm feeling and how,
like even how I look, but based on that judgment, right?
Yeah, the scale becomes our God.
And that God will tell you, you're gonna have a good day
or you're gonna have a bad day
regardless of what's actually going on.
So you did a good job by tossing the scale.
You could get a body fat caliper test.
Do you go to a gym?
Yeah, so you might be able to ask a trainer there, hey, can I get a body fat caliper test as a, do you go to a gym? Yeah. So you might be able to ask a trainer there. Hey,
can I get a body fat test with you, you know, once every three weeks or something like that.
And then just look at the trend. That's another way to do it. How your clothes fit.
That's another way to do it. But I like performance in the gym and clothes,
how your clothes fit and then how you feel in the gym. And by the way,
if you're building a little bit of muscle
in certain areas like the hamstrings or glutes,
that means your pants may feel tighter in that area,
but they tend to feel looser in the waist type of deal.
Sometimes my female clients would freak out
because their shirts might feel tighter,
but that's because their posture straightened out.
Maybe they got maybe a little bit more deltoid development.
So it's really, it's a lot of this is in our heads and it starts to mess with us.
A lot of it's in here.
I mean, sodium can manipulate this with water.
You can have a poor night's sleep and a little bit of extra
stress in your life and then the body gets inflamed.
And like, there's a lot of things that could really change the
way our clothes fit, feel and the way you look in the mirror
day to day.
And so if, and I like the idea of the body fat percentage once every three weeks, but here's the rule
that I would have if you were my client also is that
this is our plan, we're gonna reverse diet,
we're adding these calories.
You go, I'm gonna go take my body fat test, you test it,
and then you're like, oh, out of my, I feel like we're putting,
I'm putting on body fat,
or I don't feel like we're going the right direction.
I would want you to feel that way
and make it through another body fat test to confirm
that that's
what's happening before I let you course correct.
Because you could just be having a day or three days in a row of just that kind
of feeling. And then once that water gets out and then once the inflammation
comes down, all of a sudden you're feeling better.
And what I didn't, I don't want to do with you is course correct and go the
other direction before we gave it some time to see like, Oh, let's let that
inflammation come down. Let's see how you feel in a week or two for now.
So, you know, when you, and three weeks, by the way, in a slight reverse diet calorie surplus
is not going to put on a crazy amount of body fat. So when you get that feeling of you want a
course correct, make sure you stack two body fat tests back to back in a row. I did one this week.
I didn't like how the results were, but I'm still not going to course correct.
I'm going to stick with it for another three weeks.
And then if it's still is trending in the wrong direction, okay,
I can course correct. But a lot of times what will happen is within that week or
two, it'll even out body will respond and then you'll see positive results.
And then you know, okay, I just need to stay the course.
How do you, how do you feel otherwise?
I feel great. Um, my sleep's pretty good. I was running as well,
running two times a week. So I'd go to the gym doing a program four times a week. I was running
twice. Since my last cut started, like mid-December, I don't have the energy to run,
I started like mid December. I don't have the energy to run.
Just tired all the time.
So, you know, I needed to cut that out.
But other than that, like before that in December,
when my calories were higher, when they were like 2,500,
I felt amazing.
Like my sleep was good.
I had good energy, you know, woke up like right away,
not groggy.
So everything else was great.
Just, just lift, just lift.
I would cut the cardio.
Unless you like to stamina and the endurance, the running endurance,
which if you do, that's fine, but I wouldn't even do the running.
I would just walk.
If your goal is just to feel fit, lean, strong, incapable. Again,
if you want that kind of endurance, you're only,
you're only going to be able to get it if you run. But otherwise I would cut that
out. I would walk and I would train to build muscle and strength, slowly reversed
diet, and you're going to get leaner from doing that.
That's what's going to happen.
The, the body fat percentage will go down, but you will mess with your head.
If you use metrics to, to gauge progress too frequently, but obviously the scale,
you took that out wonderful, get rid of it.
Don't even have in your house, but even circumference measurements, even body fat,
if you get addicted to those,
those can even start to mess with your head a little bit.
Because what they do is they tell you
what you're feeling is wrong.
Yeah, oh, I feel good, uh-oh, but the scale said this,
oh, now I don't feel good, or I feel like crap.
But the scale went down, I feel good now.
It's like, it literally takes you out of your body
and it becomes your God dictating to you
how you're supposed to feel.
And you don't, you don't want that. It's gonna, it's not going to direct you in the right way.
This is why I want two, two bad body fat tests in a row before we even, which is six,
three weeks, which is six weeks. That's three weeks, three weeks.
That's six weeks before you make any drastic decisions because a lot can happen in that.
And a lot of times you're just testing on a wrong day that it didn't test good.
And so don't allow that one test or one scale way
to deter you.
So that would be my advice if you do the body fat.
You wanna know what's funny?
You wanna hear a true story?
This is a trip.
I stopped testing body fat percentages and weighing people,
probably the last, I don't know, nine years of my career.
And I got way better results with all my clients,
all of them, and I stopped doing them completely,
didn't do them at all, unless somebody asked me
and it was whatever, but I just stopped doing them,
and people got way better results.
I think they're more of a negative
than a positive for the most part.
Yeah, that makes sense, and I 100% agree,
I found that I don't want some sort of external metric
like that dictating my progress, because I felt that I would look a certain way of external metric like that dictating my progress because
I felt that I would look a certain way, be happy and then weigh myself and then feel
bad about it for no reason.
With respect to the frequency of how many calories to increase when going through this,
I have in the past just gone really, really slowly and just done like a hundred wait a
few weeks, a hundred wait a few weeks. Would you recommend that kind of frequency?
Yeah, that's fine. I could do 100 every two weeks, 150 every two weeks, depending on the individual.
But if you feel comfortable doing that, there's nothing wrong with it.
Yeah, I love that.
And listen, fall in love with how you feel in the gym.
Fall in love with your energy throughout the day.
Those will be far better guides than everything else.
Awesome, thank you.
You got it, thanks for calling in.
Thank you.
I bet you guys did the same thing.
Did you guys test body fat and weigh people
towards the back half of your career?
If I did, I actually didn't let them know.
Yeah, isn't that weird?
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, I would do it.
We were taught to do it.
Like, this is what you're supposed to do to track your clients.
Then we all figured out it was better if we didn't.
I mean, you know me, I like all the metrics.
I appreciate all that stuff to kind of factor it into my decision.
But you kept it to yourself.
Yeah, I kept it to myself.
That's what I learned.
I learned that letting them know was a bad idea,
because then that would throw them off.
It was more of a records thing for me. So I would yeah, I would take it all and then I would like
Periodically, I would kind of go back and test things. But yeah, I wouldn't show them or like really pay a lot of attention to that
It was really just focused on the training and nutrition that they're doing and complete transparency
This came really full circle or I really, really fully grasped us when I competed because never did I ever have to track to the level I
had to.
And boy, did I go through many times where I thought, what the fuck?
I'm doing something wrong.
And I had to trust the process.
I had planned this all out.
I was tracking so diligently like, yeah, I knew the math, but man, and the
mirror, you know, that's why I'm like, when I tell people like, you got to be careful because, you know, I, I remember
seeing a high sodium day of inflammation day of these.
And then you had to look in the mirror and I go, Oh, fuck, like something's wrong.
I ate too much yesterday.
And it's like, you have this, you want to the very next day, go cut the calories,
get on the cardio or do something.
And you do this drastic course correct.
And so you got to let the, you have to let the days kind of play out.
And it's like, man, just be careful before you, you, you correct every single time.
Cause a lot of times your body is, it's just holding a little bit of extra
water due to multiple different factors.
And you had no idea what you were doing.
Perfect.
Our next caller is Dwayne from Texas.
Dwayne, what's up man?
What up, Dwayne? Yeah. Hey, how's it going? Howdy from Texas. Dwayne, what's up man? What up Dwayne?
Yeah.
Hey, how's it going?
Howdy from East Texas y'all.
What's going on?
You got it dude.
What's happening?
Hey, first of all, I just want to say thank you for having me on and man, you guys have
really changed my life.
Um, I haven't worked out like pretty much my whole adult life, right?
High school was the last time I saw a weight
room and started getting into just losing weight because I got really out of shape overweight and
uh did it you know the wrong way like everybody does to start with um got on weight watchers lost
40 pounds and uh within a couple months of getting off Weight Watchers, gained half of it back.
So decided that wasn't even close to sustainable.
So started doing a lot of research
and started counting macros, tracking my calories
and everything and then started getting into fitness.
Decided, you know, I needed to get in shape
and joined a couple online boot camps
and didn't really necessarily enjoy those,
but since it's been so long since I worked out,
I really didn't know any exercises or how to work out.
Luckily, very early into starting to lift,
I found you guys started listening to your podcast,
digesting your podcast and bought some programs,
started with y'all's programs,
and it has totally transformed my life and not only my life but
Seeing the progress I've made my wife has started strength training and now my 70 year old mom
Is a month into strength training as well. So you guys engine, you know my life
But you're changing a whole lot of lives your reach is a lot farther than just your listeners. So thank you
Hell you love Hell yeah. Hell yeah. Love hearing that man.
Yeah.
So how long now have you been since you found mine pump?
Is this been months, years?
Cause you would have fooled me by saying that you just got going on, on working out.
Especially with that sick ass weight.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You're all in man.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh man.
All in absolutely.
When I get into something, I go all in.
So yeah, I built a home gym and uh, that way I could never have an excuse
not to work out. Um, but no, I've been, I've been following
my own programs for a little over eight months now and working out consistently
for about a year and a half.
Nice. Excellent.
Beautiful. Good stuff, dude.
Yeah, great.
What you got for us?
You have a question?
Okay.
Um, I've always been interested in, you know, individual sports
Not much of a team sports guy, but I've always loved individual sports. I think because of that
I'm kind of drawn towards bodybuilding
So I really want to on my 50th birthday, which is just a little over four years away
Get on stage for men's physique. I hear you guys, you know, talk about if you chase
health, you'll get aesthetics as well. If you chase aesthetics, you don't get either. So my question
is, as a relatively new lifter, I want to follow mind pump programs. I want to chase health and
do it in a healthy way to where in about four years, I can have a physique that I'm proud of
to present on stage in immense physique.
I don't have to win, I just wanna be proud
of my physique that I present.
Dude, this is so crazy you're asking this
because just two callers ago,
we got a guy who, he's his goal by his 40th birthday,
so he's coming up on his 40th birthday
and wanted to do the exact same
thing. And I think our advice is going to sound the same. Yeah. To be clear, when it
competing in a stage presentation sport like physique or bodybuilding or for women bikini
or fitness or figure, there, there is, there's a healthier way to do it, but there isn't a healthy
way to do it. I remember when Adam was competing, in fact, we started the show and he was
still in competition competition, uh, mode, and he would tell everybody, all
right, guys, I'm entering into the unhealthy portion of prep.
Um, those they're not pro health.
Now bodybuilding from a workout perspective, build muscle, muscle
perspective, consistency perspective can be very healthy.
Competing in bodybuilding is not, okay?
That being said, if you want to compete in something and hit a goal and look good doing it
and doing the way where you're gonna, you know, you're gonna, your health will be great and all
that stuff, powerlifting would be a much better place to compete in. Have you, have you thought
about doing like a strength-based sport like powerlifting?
Um, not really, no, but I think I would definitely be interested in, in something like that. Have you thought about doing like a strength based sport like powerlifting?
Not really no, but I think I would definitely be interested in something like that. Like I said, I like individual competition. Yeah
And definitely, you know y'all's programs have definitely scared me in the right directions towards strength my all of my lifts have gone up dramatically
I've done I started with map starter and did anabolic then performance.
And now I'm doing maps aesthetic.
I'm in the second week of maps aesthetic, just about done with week two.
Yeah.
Well, I want, I want to address a couple of things.
One, you should be very proud of the physique that you walk around in
already right now, dude at 40.
So in your mid 40s to look the way you look currently right now, you look,
you look phenomenal.
So I first want to address that.
And then just like the other guy, um, I wouldn't tell you that we can't do
bodybuilding, but I would tell you, let's, let's do the powerlifting first
because it's going to set you up for bodybuilding anyways, because that
strength is the foundation of all pursuits.
And so if we focus on getting you strong as fuck, building your metabolism up,
and we really go in that direction, right?
Competing in powerlifting.
And then you're going to be, and I think you're going to be happy with the way
your physique looks.
You're going to be stronger than you've ever been, which is also going to result
in probably a faster metabolism because we're not going to be dieting like a
bodybuilder, which will only put you in a position to get ready for a bodybuilding show.
So if you were a client of mine and you did want to ultimately do Minsfizik,
I would actually first go, let's do a powerlifting meet.
Let's go that direction.
We're going to build your metabolism.
We're going to build some strength on the way your physique is going to continue to change
and look great, but we're not focused on the cardio hard cutting calorie aspect that
physique does tend to attract.
And we're focused more on the metrics in the gym of your strength,
your benches going up, your squad is going up.
We're feeding the body enough so you're not depleted.
Like those things are so important to powerlifting and they're not important to
bodybuilding. And where you're currently at in your stage,
that's where I want you first.
And then afterwards,
if we do our first powerlifting meet and you check that box, if you're like,
all right, Adam, let's go, let's go, let's go bodybuilding now. I would love to take on all
the muscle that you can, man, keep that strength focus. It's, it's such a healthier pursuit that
then is going to reveal itself. Like, you know, the further down you go, I know this is like,
what do you say, the eight months like recently of doing, you know, our programming, I think,
like, there's so much more to explore. Oh, bro, it's just going to keep going. And at that point, too,
you know, like, it's not out of the question to then step on stage. But, you know, you're going
to establish a really good foundation to then you just make, you know, a little tweaks in your
diet, and you can kind of get to the point where now you feel comfortable going in that
position.
Yeah, and there's no shortage of good, small, local powerlifting competitions in Texas.
Yeah, right.
That's all.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Even strongman competitions.
They're great, dude.
I think you'll enjoy that.
And it's a great competition and it's not going to take you away from health.
The only detriment to powerlifting is sometimes people will,
they'll disregard joint pain
or they'll not focus on mobility.
So that's the only thing I'd say, keep in mind,
if you start to notice, you know,
cause your strength is going up so much
and you're only doing, you're doing the same kind of movements
and you start to get a little joint pain, you know,
you back out a little bit, do some mobility,
maybe do map symmetry for a cycle, go back to powerlifting.
But other than that,
man, that's the way to go.
We'll be there with you if you're open to this.
If you're open to doing the powerlifting, I would love to do the same thing that we
just did with the other guy two callers ago and give you maps powerlift, put you in the
private forum with us, and as you're going through the process, keep us in a loop.
Let us know how it's going and what's going on, and we can help make adjustments to the
diet or like you to Sal's point, if you start to notice achy joints or something
going on, we'll help correct course and put you on some mobility stuff to fix that. But
if you're open to it, I would love to see you do that first.
Okay. Yeah, absolutely. I've got maps to our list and I'm in the book.
Oh, okay. All right. Well, shit, I'll give you a what, when it's time for bodybuilding,
I'll hook you up with Max Esthetic.
You have that already?
He's on it right now.
Do you have, do you have Maps Prime Pro?
I have Prime, Prime Pro.
I have pretty much every program you all have.
Except OPR and Hit and stuff, the more cardio.
And you don't need.
You got all that.
Well, I guess we're just gonna have to help you out in the forum then.
Make sure when you get in there and you, and you start power lift, give us a heads
up at the starting point.
And I'd love to see, you know, I don't know, each phase updates on your, your big lifts.
Yep.
You know, I'd love to see how they're moving and, and what the, where the weight's at.
And then, and then of course use that as a resource.
If you have questions, nutritional or your things like that, but bro, you're doing really
good, man.
You're doing really good.
And, and I am, I am very proud of what I've accomplished so far.
It should be.
200 pounds and totally out of shape and, you know, 203 pounds now and whole lot of muscle.
I went eating 2200 calories trying to lose weight.
So now I eat 3200 calories and I've got to start adding more
because I'm starting to lose weight at 3,200.
Oh, you're on fire.
Fuck yeah, bro.
You're on fire.
And this is perfect for powerlifts right now.
Reverse diet and do powerlifts.
Yeah, you got it, dude.
Yeah, I love that.
Awesome.
Yeah, I really appreciate it.
You got it, Dwayne.
All right, Dwayne, we'll see you inside the forum, man.
Thank you.
This is a loop.
I know we don't normally do this, but I want his before and after in there because the one I saw,
I like it, we heard from him so people can hear from him and see what the process was.
2,200 calories to 3,200 calories before and after. Unbelievable. I mean, that, I mean,
not unbelievable. We've seen that, but he was consistent. He did it right. And I think
powerlifting competition is the right direction.
A bodybuilding show would, would, would probably present and cause potential damage.
Yeah.
Bro, you know how sick that he's 45 years old, dude.
Okay.
He's every bit are older than each of us in here right now, except for Doug.
And he's literally looking the, probably the best he's ever looked in his life.
Looks incredible, dude.
And what a cool story where he's met a ball clear right now.
Keep it up, Dwayne.
Keep it up.
Look, if you love the show,
head over to mindpumpfree.com
and check out our fitness guides.
We have free fitness guides that can help you
with your fitness or health goals.
You can also find all of us on social media,
Justin is at Mind Pump Justin.
I'm at Mind Pump to Stefano
and Adam is at Mind Pump Adam.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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