Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2298: Ways to Get Rid of a Belly Pooch, the Ideal Exercise Volume When Bulking, How to Eliminate Pain When Performing Dips & More
Episode Date: March 22, 2024In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer four Pump Head questions drawn from last Sunday’s Quah post on the @mindpumpmedia Instagram page. Mind Pump Fit Tip: Do NOT watch your ...progress in the mirror or the scale! When you get that full picture, you can then create a relationship with exercise that lasts the REST of your life. (1:47) Sal opens up on his spiritual journey. (22:05) A review of the peptide Tirzepitide. (24:49) Approaching healthy eating habits with kids. (29:58) What is the most durable car brand? (42:21) Are EVs worse for the environment than gas cars? (48:02) One of the most effective supplements for sleep EVER! (50:23) The wide range of benefits of Shilajit. (55:33) Would you have sex with a sex robot? (58:10) Shout out to The Gentlemen on Netflix. (1:03:11) #Quah question #1 - What is the best exercise to get rid of “Mom Pooch”? (1:04:28) #Quah question #2 - I’m experiencing pain under my left clavicle after tricep dips. What am I doing wrong? (1:08:56) #Quah question #3 - You mentioned in a previous episode that volume should be higher when bulking, so what rep range is best to train in during a bulk? Is one more beneficial than the other - increasing weight vs increasing reps? (1:12:47) #Quah question #4 - How important is it to correct things like posture, muscle imbalances, and core strength BEFORE adding strength training, or can they be done alongside each other? (1:16:05) Related Links/Products Mentioned Visit Legion Athletics for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! ** Code MINDPUMP for 20% off your first order (new customers) and double rewards points for existing customers. ** Visit Organifi for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code MINDPUMP at checkout** March Promotion: MAPS Anabolic | MAPS Anabolic Advanced 50% off! ** Code MARCH50 at checkout ** Mind Pump#1802: Seven Surprising Benefits Of Exercise Why The Scale Is Not Always The Best Way To Measure Progress – Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump #1942: Lose Fat, Perform Better & Live Forever With Jason Phillips Tirzepatide: Semaglutide 2.0 For Fat Loss And Insulin ... - Jay Campbell TRANSCEND your goals! Telehealth Provider • Physician Directed GET YOUR PERSONALIZED TREATMENT PLAN! Hormone Replacement Therapy, Cognitive Function, Sleep & Fatigue, Athletic Performance and MORE. Their online process and medical experts make it simple to find out what’s right for you. Mind Pump #2290: Becoming A Better Man With Jason Khalipa One of the biggest myths about EVs is busted in new study Visit NED for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! ** Code MINDPUMP at checkout for 15% off ** Shilajit: 10 benefits and use - Medical News Today Sex robots increase the potential for gender-based violence The Gentlemen Cast Guide: Meet the Nobles and Scoundrels - Netflix Shrink Your Waist with Stomach Vacuums | MIND PUMP MAPS Prime Webinar Mind Pump #2210: Best Workouts For Bulking & Cutting Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Jason Khalipa (@jasonkhalipa) Instagram Mike Matthews (@muscleforlifefitness) Instagram
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mind pump with your hosts Sal DeStefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the most downloaded fitness health and entertainment podcast. This is mind pump in today's episode.
We answered listeners questions after a 62 minute intro portion. In the intro we talk about current events, family life, studies, and much more. By the way you can check the
show notes for timestamps if you want to skip around your favorite parts. Also if
you want to ask us a question that we might pick from go to Instagram at
mind pump media. That's the place you do it. Now this episode is brought to you by
some sponsors. The first one is Legion. Today we talked about one of their sleep supplements
called Lunar, and it's gone.
We used it up, we've asked for more.
It's super, super, super effective.
Try it out for yourself.
You wake up refreshed too, you don't wake up groggy.
Great product, so go check them out.
Go to buylegion.com forward slash mind pump.
That's B-U-Y legion.com forward slash mind pump and get 20% off your first order.
This episode is also bought to you by Organifi.
In today's episode we talk about their Shilajit gummies, backed by many, many studies.
It's a compound that's been used in Ayurvedic medicine for a long time.
Go check them out.
They have many other products and supplements as well.
Go to Organifi.com.
That's O-R-G-A-N-I-F-I. com forward slash mind pump. Use the code mind pump. Get 20% off. This month's workout
program sale is as follows. MAPS Anabolic 50% off and MAPS Anabolic Advanced also
50% off. If you're interested go to MAPSfitnessproducts.com and then use
the code MARCH 50 for that discount.
All right, back to the show.
If you wanna be consistent with exercise
for the rest of your life,
it's important to fully understand and appreciate
all of the benefits exercise brings you.
Okay, to be more specific, when you first get started,
one of the things you might wanna do
is not watch your progress in the mirror or the scale.
We're all aware of how exercise affects the way that we look or way.
And sometimes that gets in the way of all the other incredible benefits that
exercise provides. When you get that full picture,
you can then create a relationship with exercise that lasts the rest of your
life.
Do you think you can get there before tackling like whatever the
said goal was that got you to the gym?
Can you?
Yeah, likely, probably not.
Yeah, I've thought about this a lot.
Like part of I think what helped this process for me
was actually getting the, reaching the physical goals,
right, like in seeing that, seeing how I felt,
seeing that feeling that moment and it's like,
okay, it came and went and it's like, okay,
it came and went. It's like, now what? Yeah.
Had I not reached that, I wonder if I would still be chasing that and still feel like,
ah, I've just, but I've never felt this way or I've never got it. And you know, it's like,
it's kind of like the same thing too with it. We've talked about this comparing the,
your like financial journey.
Like when you, when you come from nothing and you have this goal financially of
like, Oh, if I just made, you know, a million dollars or whatever, I'd be so
happy, right.
And, and I don't think, uh, I don't think any wise, even, even wise older
version of me coming back in time and telling me like, that's not going to,
like, I don't think I listen. I think I have to go do it to feel it and recognize it myself.
So do you think it's possible for somebody who's entering their, their journey of fitness,
who's, you know, insecure about being 40 pounds overweight and feels that they just got to get this weight off
desperately or whatever.
Can you get them to shift their focus on what
you're alluding to right now?
Well, that's what I'm going to try and do.
Um, you know, with this conversation is
hopefully get people to kind of, um, you know,
consider it because, okay, so let's, let's take
a step back.
If you're getting started or you've been on this
journey, the ideal situation is you never stop, right?
So I think if you were to ask the average person who
gets started with exercise and fitness and you say,
okay, ideally speaking in a perfect world, would you
keep doing this forever or would you stop?
And they'd say, well, I'd like to be able to do this forever.
Okay, so if this is going to be something you're going to do for the rest of your life,
which could be 30, 40, 50, 60 years or more, then essentially what you're doing
is you have to develop a relationship with this activity where you're going to
want to continue doing it for that long.
And your best bet at doing that is to get a full understanding of what this will provide you.
You know, I think about the data on body
acceptance and body satisfaction.
When you look at the data on the average age that
people can say that they feel most satisfied, or
they accept their body, is in their 50s and 60s.
Right?
50s and 60s, like objectively speaking,
just in terms of aesthetics, right?
Like you don't look your best when you're in your 50s or 60s.
People would think, yeah, people would think you're 20s, right?
Or, you know, that would be when you look your best or whatever.
And yet the data shows that this is the highest odds
of body acceptances right around there.
So what does that tell you?
It has less to do with how you look.
There's a lot more that goes into this.
So, you know, I could say right now with full confidence, and I think
people, nobody would disagree, right?
Exercise gives you more, if you do it right, right, gives you more energy,
improves your mobility, improves your mood.
The data shows it's very incredibly powerful,
antidepressant, anti-anxiety activity,
balances out your hormones.
And then through that, right,
the filter through which you receive the world
is more positive.
So things don't seem as bad, things seem more positive,
you feel more resilient.
But the problem is, is that we, we hyper focus on two aspects of the
effects of exercise, which is like my weight and how I look, therefore ignoring
all the others and in the pursuit of those two weight and appearance, we end
up sacrificing all those other things.
We ended up moving in the wrong direction.
And then we ended up developing a relationship with exercise where we hate
it, it doesn't work.
I don't like this, doesn't feel good.
I'm not getting what I thought I would get.
And so it's no wonder people stop.
Now if people, if they put this, if they took the scale, I used to do this with clients
and when I could get them to agree to it was very powerful.
It was like, take your scale, throw it away or hide it.
Don't look in the mirror or at least don't study yourself in the mirror.
Let's do this for 60 days.
Can you do this for 60 days?
And at the end of 60 days, they were always shocked at the results they had gotten
because they weren't focused so heavily on it.
And think what happens because they're not weighing themselves, look in the mirror.
You have no other, it would be like, if I put a blindfold on you, how much more
aware you would be of your hearing and of your, of your touch and of smells,
because you're not able to focus on site.
So by not focusing on those, you're allowing yourself to be more aware of all the
other potential benefits. Then when you develop that relationship with it, well now it's this
thing that you're going to always want to do because it improves everything.
Yeah, I was thinking about your question, Adam, because I think, thinking back, I've had clients
that are a lot more mature than most and then some that aren't. You know, and it's usually like the younger clients
that come in will have this kind of idea
of what they wanna do and they're just gonna do it
regardless and they're gonna make mistakes
and you know, it's just kind of part of the journey
is they're gonna make mistakes and they're gonna pursue
things that you know, might not be the most ideal.
But then again, if you can propose something like,
I just think that message probably isn't put out there enough for them to see as an option.
Like, let's really draw this out and look at it for what it is to see, well, maybe this is actually
going to last the longest. My body is going to get to that place I want it to, but it's just going
to be a real gradual progression. And I'm going to be working with my body and I'm not going to be like really,
you know, pushing it to this extreme that I had in my own ideas coming into this.
Yeah.
Yeah. No, I think that's a really good point. Like maybe my perception of it is
because it's so attached to 20 year old me and maybe if a 40 year old me was just now
trying to get into shape for the first time in his life.
He found a good trainer.
Right, and maybe just the maturity of,
and maybe because I can draw that to like money
and other things, like oh, oh, so it's kind of like
that journey, like I get it.
I've learned this with other things.
Yeah, exactly, and so maybe 40 year old me
would be able to do that.
20 year old me, no way, right?
But, so maybe you're right, it's less to do with
that you have to go through that journey, per se,
and more so that there is a emotional self-awareness
maturity that you probably need to be at
in order to see that.
You know what the irony of this is,
is when you do what we're saying,
you'll end up looking better than had you not.
So this is actually the path towards
what you think you want.
And then speaking on appearance, you know, I
was having this conversation earlier on a
podcast and, you know, it really became very
clear to me.
I'll use another example to kind of illustrate
where I'm going to go, but if you consume
fitness information, media, social media and fitness
information, you would get a very distorted idea of how effective supplements are because
the fitness industry is an industry and it's a market like all markets, so it's there to
generate revenue.
Supplements are a revenue generator.
So a lot of the information that's put out there is to generate revenue from supplements.
A lot of information that's put out there is to generate revenue from supplements. A lot of the information that's out there
talks about supplements.
You would get the idea, and a lot of people do,
and I did as a kid, you read everything
and you think supplements make much more of an impact
than they actually do because the information
that's put out is constantly talking about supplements.
Well, media also puts out and lies to you through this
that it says having a six pack
or looking super attractive or flawless is way more important to your happiness than
it actually is.
You think it's one of the most amazing things, like, oh my God, if I just look like that
person, I would be so happy.
They have very good clear data on this. And it's actually, Arthur Brooks told me this, I think on so happy. They have very good, clear data on this.
And it's actually, Arthur Brooks told me this, I think on our podcast, he said,
if you were on a scale of one to 10, you were a five in terms of attractiveness
and you spent money and time and effort and years moving from a five to a nine,
your happiness would barely move up a little bit.
Of all the things that will affect your happiness, he's like, that will barely, now having good health, much bigger impact,
having better mental health, much bigger impact, relationships with the people
around you, having meaningful work, you know, not being in pain, those kinds of
things, which exercise also provides.
But what we're doing is we're putting all the value on our appearance because
we think the appearance is what's gonna give us all these things.
And it's totally distorted.
It's a big lie.
You also risk that you get there and you recognize
that you're not any happier and then you have the attitude
of like, oh, why even do this?
And then you throw it out the window completely.
Like you're so obsessed with reaching this goal,
this vanity goal and you get there,
you realize you're not any happier than what you were before
and you put all that work, sacrifice it,
and then you go like, oh, this is not even for me,
and then you write it off completely.
So I think it's so important that we teach our clients
to attach it to all these other things
because you risk one, like you originally said,
being so obsessed that it drives you
into unhealthy things to reach it, or you actually reach, being so obsessed that it drives you into unhealthy things to
reach it, or you actually reach it and then you realize, oh, how unfulfilled you are,
or oh, it didn't make you any happier.
And then you have the attitude of, F it, why even do that?
You know what's funny?
I bet you, I don't know, there's no studies that I could pull from, but I would bet money
that if you took the mental health of extreme physique owners,
like super ripped, super buffed, whatever, like
fanatic, crazy, orthorexic, whatever, like super
obsessed fitness people, if you were to sample
their mental health, it would probably be very
similar to unhealthy obese individuals.
I bet you would find a very, it would be very
similar in terms of their mental health.
But I mean, we know this.
How many people do we know in our space that,
you know, they post pictures and they look
like whatever and you meet them and you know
them and you're like, oh man, they are struggling.
I mean, this is because they traded one
addiction for another.
Yeah.
You have this, both mentally unhealthy, same
mentally unhealthy person, just one of them abused food. In one way. And then in one way, and both mentally unhealthy, same, same mentally unhealthy person, just, uh, one of them abused food.
In one way.
And then in one way.
And then the other, then they went the other direction and abused it by
restricting from it and over-obsessing about movement and exercise.
Yeah.
I mean, I mean, I always think, I think it's interesting too, cause it's like,
I mean, you always like to pull back and draw back to like evolution.
And it's like, I don't think we evolved to work out in a
gym seven days a week.
I don't think that was like the, I don't think, I
think that's something that we've adopted because
we've technology and things have evolved that we've
actually lost movement.
Like we don't work anymore.
We don't do laborous jobs anymore, but where's the
balance of that?
Like, where is there like, yeah, it's, we recognize
the importance of our bodies moving and picking up heavy things and doing hard stuff. But then there's the
other side of it. It's like when it becomes your life focus and you're obsessed with it.
And it's like, so where, where is that?
Does it improve the quality of your life or take away from it? So what are the, what are
the important things in life?
That's a hard one though, Sal, because the people that-
They don't know.
Yeah. Because a lot of people, and I know you've met people like this that
physically look amazing and they're in the gym seven days a week would tell you that their life
is much better. Because aspects of it probably is, right? There's parts that they probably get
complimented and feel confident, they're strong, they look
better than they ever have.
I mean, and they're probably sleeping better than they were before when they were fat and
lazy.
So there's enough things that they can draw to where they would make the connection and
saying that their life is.
Well, does it improve your relationships or does it take away from your relationships?
Does it improve your mood or take away from your mood? Does it improve your mood or take away from your mood?
Does it improve your ability to be productive,
take away, does it make you a better husband
or a worse husband, a better father or a worse father?
Yeah, are you well-rounded?
There's a lot of things that are easy to hang out with.
Yeah, you know.
I don't know, sometimes people can get in this
hyper-obsessed, which is fine.
We all have hobbies and we all have interests
and things that we really pour ourselves into.
You just have to kind of check yourself on some level
of like it's your entire world.
I mean, I guess I operate from that same place
of my goal is to do as little as possible
to elicit the most amount of change.
And so my philosophy as I've gotten older is,
Am I doing more than I need to? don't want to work out hardly at all.
As little as I can to obtain being strong, being fit and mobile, being capable. So you could do all the other stuff. So I could do all the other things and that's it. Like I just like what's
the least amount I got to go to this building and pick up these weird shaped weights.
So it's literally, so I could go do all the other things.
So I could get down and play with my son and not get tired.
So I could carry things for my wife when we need to go somewhere.
So I can protect my family if we were to be attacked.
So I could go do sports and activities that I love to do.
So whatever the amount of time I got to spend in that gym is, is the, I want
to spend as little as possible
Fill your cup up so that way you can you know
To do all that other shit
Any more than that is what?
To feed my ego?
Just so I can say I'm stronger than that guy some other guy that's obsessed like it's like other than that
It's like so to me. It's like I'm always measuring that and going okay like totally
What more can I apply?
So I get more out of these other things when it becomes the
cornerstone of your life.
I just, I think you're out of balance.
Evaluation that needs to happen.
I, it's, it, what's interesting too is, uh, you know, we, we,
there's definitely, um, signals that are being sent when you look at someone
who's fit and healthy, and then what we've done is we've idolized that, but
that's always, for all all human history that was never the goal that was a sign that there was something behind that that meant
something valuable in other words if you are a woman for 99.9999% of human
history and you saw a man with broad shoulders look strong good posture look
like he was mobile that told you told you, he could probably do things. He's probably healthy. He's probably viral.
When you look at a woman who's fit and healthy, it's like, oh, she could reproduce. She's healthy.
She's not sick. She can move well. What's happened is we've taken the, the, the sign and made that the goal.
Like, no, that's everything.
It's all about what you look like, not what
it potentially could represent.
By the way, I'm speaking from a place of
struggle myself.
This is my continual, I mean, I've been
working out for over 30 years and this is
something that I constantly have to like
examine and check myself on because I easily,
I go there often or that then becomes the goal is to just spend time
in the gym or do more exercise or whatever.
And so this is, I'm coming from a place of like,
look, I know what this is like.
But it's a continual conversation.
Yeah, I don't know if you ever, even from my angle, right,
which is kind of the opposite side,
like I'm still always on that too
because easily I can get to the justification of like,
I don't need to do anything.
You know what I'm saying?
So it's a constant conversation.
It's not this like, oh, I have it all figured out.
It's that I'm always evaluating it,
because there's always something I go and do.
Shit, Doug and I just recently went skiing.
And like, the note to self was, I could use a little more
cardio endurance.
Oh, because it was affecting your-
Yeah, you know what I'm saying?
Like, I mean, just carrying my snowboard
from the truck up the hills to get there,
I'm like, whew, okay, I was a little more winded
than I should be.
Like, so that's like the check-
Nice check.
Yeah, it's like this check-in of like,
and again, why?
Not so I could run an Ironman
or say that I'm faster than one of you.
It's because I love that.
That's something that gives me so much joy in my life.
And I don't want to lose the ability to do that or say like,
Oh, I don't want to go snowboarding because that sounds like so much work and I can't do it.
Like that's, I don't ever want to say it for that reason.
So that is what will drive what I do in the gym in the next couple of months.
I can't help but think it's like, um, we're, we're never ever in a period where you're in perfect balance.
You're always chasing and pursuing balance.
And so it's like, and if you stop thinking about that,
you're gonna be even further away from balance.
Oh yeah.
You know what I mean?
So, for me to try and keep and maintain my strength,
I have to always have a conversation with myself,
like what area should I kind of focus on now?
Or if I've been sort of neglecting certain relationships
or certain aspects of business or whatever it is,
you're just kind of constantly evaluating
where the need is.
It's gonna be constantly changing
depending on the seasons of your life.
There's gonna be times, like I remember
when bringing Max into this world,
it was just a, right before that was when I went
on this obsessed journey of being able to sit down
and squat, and so it was like a massive goal
to be able to just get down in a comfortable position.
Can I get to a place where I can be comfortable
in this quad position and play with my son on the floor
to where I don't have to like lay down on my side
or I'm all kneeling half like dad kneeling,
you know what I'm saying?
Like I don't wanna do that.
Like I wanna be able to hop down there
and play with him and be agile.
Like that's a, and that will change, right?
So it just depends on the season of your life and evaluate.
And to me, that's like, that's really what all of this.
Yes, because if you're going to do this for the rest of your life, how else are you going
to develop that relationship?
Is it really going to be how you look when you're 60, 70?
I mean, it's not.
When you meet people and working out for a long time, it isn't anymore.
They figure that out.
By the way, speaking of, I mean, with little kids, like you, when you're a dad and you
have little kids, you do realize the value of I mean, with little kids, like you, if you're a dad and you have little kids,
you do realize the value of exercise and fitness
because little kids, they're little nuclear reactors.
They don't run out of energy, they wanna play on the ground
and one of the worst feelings, this ever happen to you
where you're like, your kid wants to play with you
and you feel tired?
Oh God, you know, and you're like,
oh I don't wanna drudge through this,
I want my kid to be excited to play with him,
I wanna be excited to play with him.
I mean, that's it.
Seriously, that's a big part of my fit.
And so again, when you design your workouts
or when you go into a workout, it's like, right now,
I'm not hitting my PR.
Anywhere near my PR squats or deadlift,
I can still pull 400 pounds off the ground
and comfortably squat 300, no problem.
But I'm nowhere near my PRs or that stuff. But where is me adding 50 more pounds of the bar on either one of those lifts
support my ability to play with him? Or help my wife pick something up and carry it? Like
nowhere. So then if the extra energy that I would put to putting 50 more pounds on that bar would
be better served doing mobility drills or doing things like that,
because that's going to serve me at the current season.
Or maybe work on another aspect of your health, like spiritual health or reading
or learning. Exactly. Exactly. So it's like constantly having these check-ins,
uh, and looking at your, your,
your health as this pie chart of all these different things, spiritual health, relationship
health, mobility, strength, endurance, like it all is in this sphere at different points
of your life. More of them are going to be different priorities and always checking in
and going like, okay, where am I at? And then where should my gym be focused around?
Speaking of spiritual health, I told Adam the story this morning, but I'll tell you,
Justin, it's like the craziest things have been happening recently to me. So, I'm on this really
like deep spiritual journey. I've been reading scripture and I've been feeling pulled just to
become different, become better in certain ways or whatever. So I'm driving to work this morning.
I'm in my car, right?
And so when you get off the freeway over here, sometimes there's like a homeless
person standing next to the exit and I guess that's a good place for them to get
money, right?
To hold a sign or something like that.
So there's a dude there standing there and I've just been, you know, I've been
like really on this, on this journey and this homeless guy standing there with a
sign, so I, oh man, I feel pulled to like,
maybe give him some money or something, right?
So I kind of have like a little like, ugh,
you know, like inner check,
because there's always that like,
what if I give him money, what's he going to do with it?
Is it really going to help him type of deal?
But I'm like, you know what?
You know, I don't know.
I think I should do this.
And so I say like a prayer, like, you know,
basically help me make the right decision.
I open my wallet and I have four $100 bills.
I'm like, you ain't getting 100 bucks.
I'm not gonna give you a, yeah, sorry bro.
You don't get 100 bucks today, you know?
But I said that kind of prayer in my head or whatever.
Now meanwhile, I swear to God, Justin,
I'm listening to the book of Matthew in my car.
It's playing in my car, right?
So I look at my wallet, I see the hundreds. I already like, nah, you're not getting 100, buddy, I'm listening to the book of Matthew in my car. It's playing in my car, right? So I look at my wallet, I see the hundreds.
I already like, nah, you're not getting a hundred, buddy.
Sorry.
Say a little prayer.
And then right when I do that, the story in Matthew of the rich man going to Jesus
and saying, how do I get into the kingdom of heaven?
He goes, sell all your, he's a rich guy, sell all your belongings, give them to
the poor, come follow me.
So I hear that, right?
And I sit there and I'm like, oh, come on, man.
No!
Light turns green and I kind of drive off
and I feel like so conflicted.
I'm like, oh man, what do I do?
I gotta get here for a podcast or whatever.
But I mean, seriously, how crazy is that that I got that?
You're almost better off not asking.
I know, I was like, ah.
It's always tough lessons.
Hey, I found time, I found time though.
Did you find him?
I did.
I drove all the way back,
cause it was like weighing on me.
So I did a podcast interview, it was weighing on me,
and I'm like, I'm like, you know what?
How obvious of a sign could you get?
Did you just give it and walk away,
or did you ask him to do something?
I asked him to pray for me.
You did?
Yeah, so, and he said some really nice things to me,
this guy, some really nice things about my family
and whatever, so it was really nice,
but you got a nice crisp hundred dollar bill.
So thank God, dude.
Don't thank me, thank God,
because he talked to me at that moment.
It's so funny, I know, it was so funny.
It's like one of those moments where you just shake your
head, you're like, all right, dude.
It could be a 20 in here somewhere.
I'm like, what are the odds, right?
Yeah.
Anyway, funny stuff.
I gotta give you guys, I gotta tell you guys
of a review of one of our listeners who's
been using a GLP-1 agonist called Terzepotide.
So Terzepotide, Semiglutide, you know, the brand
names, Wegovi, Ozempic.
These are like making the news as these like peptides that are up until now,
there's nothing's been shown to be more effective at weight loss.
And it doesn't have the side effects of previous weight loss drugs.
It's not a stimulant or whatever.
People are using them and they're just, it's just working.
So this guy, he heard us talking about it and he wrote kind of a review of what's happening with him.
And it's not just the weight loss part that
blows me away.
And I keep reading stuff like this, which is wild.
So he started on terzepatide.
He's on one 10th, the normal starting dose,
which by the way, when they start you out, they
typically start you out at a very, very small dose
just to see what's an effective dose.
And I also didn't know this.
I think it's like a once a week injection. I don't think it's an everyday injection.
I think it's once a week.
Interesting.
So yeah, so for people who are afraid
of everyday sub-Q injection, I think it's once a week.
That's, okay, that makes sense to me
because I know if you were to do growth hormone,
you do growth hormone almost every day.
I don't think it's a short-acting peptide.
I think it's maybe long-lasting.
Maybe, Doug, you can confirm this,
but how often do you have to inject trisipatide
or how often do you have to inject some glutide?
That's the specific one our MP Hormones partners have.
They have trisipatide, they work with some of the glutide.
That's the one I order by the way.
That's the one you're gonna do.
Weekly.
Yeah, yeah.
It's once a week.
Once a week, yeah.
I know that, what was it last?
Was it last week when we talked about this?
Yeah. Mine should be. So check this last? Was it last week when we talked about this? Yeah.
I should, mine should be.
So check this out.
This is what this person's saying.
So they started on it and he goes,
no negative side effects, 100% taking away the food fixation.
So this is the words he used
that I've always struggled with.
I can't remember a time when I wasn't already thinking
about my next meal, even though I'd just finished eating.
Now here's the crazy part.
I'm still hungry.
No nausea, no headaches, but also not fixated on food.
So it's not like it kills your appetite.
He's just not obsessing about food.
And then here's the other part, and this is what
I keep hearing.
Attacks the cravings a bit.
Here's the part that's weird.
I've also noticed that I have zero desire to
engage in some other negative behaviors,
binging, procrastination, and a few others, because the
hedonistic aspect around them isn't there anymore.
That's the weird.
That's the weird thing about this.
For the audience, I'm a, I'm a few people.
I've ordered it.
And no one's more honest than Adam.
Yeah.
And I'll tell you what it's like.
Exactly.
What's going on?
I think it's going to be really interesting.
I, and I've definitely paid attention to, I've talked about it. Exactly what's going on. I think it's gonna be really interesting. And I've definitely paid attention to,
I've talked about it.
You're the perfect person.
I've talked about my relationship with sugar,
with diet coke, with all these different things
that I'm very, very aware of my pull and draw to it.
So it'll be really interesting.
And so I tell you one of the things
why I didn't do it right away.
When we first talked about it, I was like,
you know though, like the last thing I want is it for it to reduce my appetite so much that I have even harder time hitting my protein intake.
Yeah, I'd be worried about that.
Because that's my, my, my biggest struggle.
Eating that much protein.
You're, you have to, what do you have to hit?
220?
Yeah, 220 plus dude.
That's 230.
You know what I'm saying?
So in order to maintain that, like my body type from all these years of training to build muscle, unfortunately, if I eat bad, you know, quote unquote bad
where I'm not paying attention to my food, eating out, doing so with that, I'll
lose. Like I just, I lose muscle. Now my weight will stay about the same, but I
just drop muscle and build and gain body fat. It's like the worst.
So it's like the worst. It is. It's like I
mean if I just got a little fatter I'd be like yeah whatever you know. But I
lose my muscle at the same rate. It's like it's awful. So that's my biggest
fear is that okay so it curbs all these cravings and appetizers but then I'm
still struggling to eat. So that's really interesting that the feedback was he's
still hungry but not doing that. So I'm most interested in hearing what you have to say. So the person that I know that's close to me that's really interesting that the feedback was, he's still hungry, but not doing the- So I'm most interested in hearing what you have to say.
So the person that I know that's close to me that's taking semaglutide hasn't
noticed any of these other effects, but does say that they're not fixated on food.
They still enjoy it.
They just don't want to eat as much, but they haven't noticed anything else.
But I have read other people saying they're reducing other, um, like bad habits.
And then I've, uh, I've been reading about some people
having antidepressant and anti-anxiety effects from it.
In fact, there's some studies where they're
looking at the potential and it makes sense, right?
If it is acting on the parts of the brain that
are seeking like distraction or hedonistic pleasure,
that maybe it is an antidepressant in some cases.
So we'll see. I don't know.
But I'm interested to hear if you have any behavioral changes.
I just text Katrina right now
and it's already on its way.
So I should be getting it in the next couple weeks.
Now does anyone talk to you about how soon?
So should I expect it to happen relatively quick?
Also, I'm assuming I should probably
come off of my growth hormone at the same time. I shouldn't be running, I don't need to be running.
I don't think it matters.
Oh, you don't think it matters?
No, I don't.
So I can do both?
Yep.
Okay.
I would double check that, but I'm pretty sure
that doesn't matter.
Okay, okay.
Interesting.
I know, I know, right?
Along the lines of eating, I had a great conversation
about helping to teach kids how to develop a good relationship
with food. I was explaining it to this individual and I realized I never really explained it really
well on the podcast because he was asking me some questions. It's a very different approach
from the one that I had with my older kids. For I have, you know, for people who don't know, I have two older kids from the first marriage
and then two younger kids from my wife now.
And the age gap is pretty big.
My daughter, 14, and then I have a son that's three.
So there's 11 year difference.
And the way that I am with food now is very different
than I was with my older kids.
The way I was with my older kids was very educational.
Protein does this, carbs does this.
You can only eat that if you finish this first type of deal.
I thought that was like the best approach.
But what I found, and you see this a lot with people in our space.
Oh, this is what prompted it.
The episode with Jason Kalipa, which by the way, we're getting crazy messages on.
Crazy amounts of messages.
He was extremely vulnerable.
People are like, thank you for putting this up.
I was in tears.
I struggled, my daughter, my son, you know,
whatever, like really big.
So that's what prompted this conversation.
A lot of people in the fitness and health space,
we end up causing these problems with our kids
because we fixate on the health effects and do
this and do that and do this and that.
And the reason why that causes an issue is because the skills that you need in
today's world, uh, with food, especially for little kids is you want them to
learn to have a kind of relationship with food where they can listen to their
internal cues, where they don't eat to please other people or not eat in order
to avoid shame or ridicule.
Like you want them to develop a relationship
with food that's kind of like comfortable,
balanced, where they don't feel like they have
to use food to numb themselves, distract themselves
or restrict food in that case.
And so it's very different.
So what we do now is when I present, when we eat
dinner, we will put four or five options on a plate
for my kid.
And I pick one or two that I know that he'll like for sure.
Like I know he likes raspberries,
and I know that he likes rice, for example.
So that'll be on there.
Then I'll put stuff that I think he'll eat,
but that he should eat, that he needs to eat.
So like some lamb or some meat.
And then I'll put a couple of things
that I know he doesn't like,
but I want to present him with
so that he can learn to kind of start, you know, start to appreciate maybe different
textures like olives and maybe some broccoli.
And you put them in front of them and then you don't make a big deal about it.
And they eat what they eat and they don't eat what they don't.
And you just continue presenting it that way.
Now the difference is you don't let your kids eat whatever they want because some people
are like, oh, you just let your kid, no, no, no. Obviously they're impulsive.
They don't have the skills yet to make.
So you present them the choices that you are okay with.
And then you let them make their choices and you make it not a big deal.
And then you do your own thing.
And then little by little, they start to develop that confidence.
And you know, this is, this is.
I feel like, I feel like we're, you know, I really feel for parents that
are trying to figure this out after the fact.
This really has not been, so far, coming up on five years, this has not been a challenge
for us at all, but we went in it with intent.
What I think is first and foremost is what we do.
What we do and what we eat.
My son is-
Kids learn what you model more than anything.
He's never craved fast food because he's never seen
fast food in our house.
You know what I'm saying?
Like real fast food.
If we eat out, it's like Nick DaGreek, chicken on a stick,
right, that he called, which is one of his favorite things to have.
So, you know, he consistently, and when we eat, it's not, he
has his dish and then we have to, we eat together. It's the same food. It's like, and it's just
not a real big deal. Sometimes-
And you're not doing the whole, like, you have to eat all that.
Yeah, no. Sometimes he eats a lot. Sometimes it's less. Like, you know, I was, I was even
thinking about the other day, like I've had some nieces and nephews in my family in the
past that, um, like we're really overweight kids. And I remember thinking about like, oh, when I have a kid one day, I like, I'm
not going to let him, you know, get like that overweight that's unhealthy.
And I don't even like, I've been trying to figure out like, what is it that
probably caused their kids to put on that much behavior that's so, because I
really don't, we don't really like, we don't restrict Max at all.
And there's times when that kid, he eats more than me sometimes. And I don't tell, we don't really like, we don't restrict Max at all. And there's times when that kid,
he eats more than me sometimes and I don't tell him he can't. I mean, he's making all whole food choices,
he's eating like crazy and I'll let him just go eat when you're, but he doesn't eat snacks, he eats food,
you know, eats whole foods and that's just kind of how we've done it is like, hey, you're hungry? Go have a banana.
Oh, you want some to eat? There's the chicken leftover from yesterday.
There's like, so he can have it if he's hungry
and we don't go, Oh, you can only have this.
And he's always maintained and he's not like a,
like a sports kid.
So he's not like super active.
Like I feel like a really, this is really active,
right?
Physically runs everywhere.
Does like, I mean, Max and I wrestle and he plays
and he definitely plays, but he's, uh, he's also
content sitting in building his Legos or reading
or doing stuff like that.
And weight is managed really, like there's never been
a thing where I feel like he's put on too much weight.
No, I think if you give him, if you model it is a big one
because some kids, their houses, it's like unlimited,
you know, junk food.
It's like the pantry's full of it,
that's what the parents eat, that's what everybody eats,
and it's unlimited, there's no governing in the sense that.
That's the only way I think this is happening, right?
It's gotta be like, you're not governing it,
you're allowing them to eat whenever,
and then you're allowing them to eat Doritos, candy,
treats, and those calories do sneak up really fast,
and they're so desirable for a kid.
They have drug-like effects. Exactly, he's probably gonna eat. By the way, the brain is're so desirable for a kid. They have drug-like effects.
Exactly, he's probably gonna eat.
By the way, the brain is modeling so much as a kid
that if you grow up eating like that when you're a kid,
there's a certain percentage of that,
you'll never get back in the sense that
their brain is going to start to mold itself
off of these incredibly palatable foods
to where they might never be able to enjoy
whole natural foods the way they could have,
because they experience these drug-like effects from all these processed foods.
That's what we've been doing.
I've had a little bit of a, I guess we celebrated recently because we've had a bit of difficulty
with our youngest kid when it comes to just not, I mean, I guess just trying healthy foods and like trying to consistently seek it out himself.
And recently, like he's been ordering fish on his own.
I'm like, what? Like Brussels sprouts, like he's like ordering all this stuff if we go out to eat like on his own.
And so I guess my thing right now
is just to put a little encouragement out there
to parents that it's not always like, you might model it,
you might have the whole foods on display,
you might be doing all the right steps,
but your kid is still very resistant.
It's a long game.
It's a long game.
Yes, because this is what you're weighing,
that my kid eats perfect now, versus I help them develop the skills to be able to
make good choices for the rest of their life. And it's a longer process.
Really. It was the intensity that was for us around it that was backfiring.
So totally, you know, for me to step back and just be like, you know,
he's going to have some things like we're not gonna provide it, you know
I know he's gonna go his friends or he's gonna go sure gonna get some things like, you know outside of our control
But I mean he was never like that far off. It's just like you just eat at me
You know, it's just like ah, like why can't you eat more protein?
Why can't we like start you know in in this sequence and then like, you know
Let's let's and he would always fight and try and like make his own
Food while as a dinner. We're like having food
I'm like no you have like we're eating this as a family and you know, there's all this intensity around it
and so just kind of like pulled myself out of that and it's it's
Slowly been working. So I just I I didn't want to throw that out there
cause it's, a lot of this like, yes,
you can control your modeling and you can control
the consistency, but that's about it.
So talk a little bit more Justin about that,
like how you balance out, cause I also don't think
you give in to just like, imagine if you guys
are having chicken or steak dinner and say rice,
vegetables, whatever, a staple dinner might look like at your
house and it might be something he doesn't like. I mean,
does he get to go have pizza instead and have whatever he wants? Like, how do you,
how do you manage? Like, I don't like that. I don't feel like that.
But then same time too, the default can't be Doritos.
Yeah, I guess. Yeah, that's a good point. I don't have that is like the the fallback
It's more like I like the steak, but I don't like the broccoli and I don't like the
Rice and I don't have the choices that are there the potatoes like he didn't like anything else other than like one item
Okay, you know and then I'm like, well, that's all you're eating. Yeah, and that's it
Yeah, you know, it's okay and you relax always. Yeah. that's all you're eating. And that's it. And you relax. And you fight always.
Yeah, yeah.
And you're chill about it.
You know, I think, so we've been like that with Max, too.
And what I've noticed, even in his short four and a half
years, is he goes through these phases of liking some things
and not like.
Bro, they're learning.
Jessica makes a really good point with little kids.
She's like, think about it when you're a little kid,
little kids or kids in general general have no control or autonomy.
They're constantly being told what to do with it.
So when they feel like they need control,
they'll assert it in places.
And if you push, they'll push harder.
So like you said, you throw the intensity on,
your kid fights back in your,
it's because they're told when to wake up,
what to wear, where to go.
Yeah.
You know, so you give them a little bit of autonomy. It's freedom.
It's funny too how you can easily influence them
negatively without the intent of it.
For example, this just happened.
100%.
It's funny we're having this conversation because,
again, I think Max has been just incredible with food.
It has been very easy for us, but there's times when,
again, he doesn't like something.
And we made egg salad, because of the talk about eggs
recently, I've been trying to incorporate more eggs.
I'm like, you know, let's do some hard boiled eggs,
let's try to incorporate more eggs into our,
because that's an area he doesn't do a lot of eggs
for breakfast, that's not a go-to thing.
So-
Is this after we talked about that study?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So like, so again, right away, I'm trying to introduce that.
So Katrina made egg salad sandwiches.
He's never had that shit. I think I've only had that twice with her since we've been, it's just not trying to introduce that. So Katrina made egg salad sandwiches. He's never had that shit.
I think I've only had that twice with her since we've been here.
It's just not a staple thing that we would
make as an egg salad sandwich.
So we're having it first time.
And I'm really excited to see how he's going to react.
But because I'm over here, I'm like, this is so good.
Too much.
Too much, dude.
So like, he bit into it.
And he's like, he does like, spits it.
Overhyped. Yeah, he never does that. And Katrina like, he does like, spits it.
Yeah, like he never does that.
I'm like, and Katrina looked at me,
she goes, that was your fault.
You know what I'm saying?
And I'm like, what?
She's just like, yes.
She's like, that's your son
because you made it about you.
Like you wanted him to like it.
If you would have just ignored him, he would have ate it.
And he wouldn't even say anything.
That's me, dude.
I tried, I'm so bad at that.
I totally fucked up, dude.
And I know I did, cause I was like, I wanted him to be excited about it because I was in my back. It's funny, I. I tried, I'm so bad at that. I totally fucked up, dude. And I know I did, cause I was like,
I wanted him to be excited about it
because I was in my back.
It's funny, I've totally done that.
Yeah, normally I just ignore,
I don't even pay attention to what she's saying.
If you act chill and you do your thing.
Yeah, that's what Kachur's like.
She's like, that was all on you.
She's like, you made a big deal about how good it tastes.
And because of that, he was.
I did, so I did this last night.
So right before, so our three-year-old,
he's potty trained, but at
night he'll wear a diaper in case of accidents or whatever, but right before he
goes to bed, I want him on the toilet.
Otherwise what happens is I put him down, I stay with him in bed and then he's
like, Oh, change my diaper.
I'm like, Oh, we got to stop this process.
So I want him to sit on the toilet.
So last night, you know, I take him to the bathroom and, you know, I
try to goad him and excited.
And then I put him on, he kind of, you know, yells a little bit and I was like no you gotta go to the bathroom and Jessica's like you you don't got to do that
I'm like, what do you mean if he doesn't do that thing? I changed that I brought we'll deal with that. She's like
Just this is all you got to do and she basically this is what she does
She just talks with him hangs out. She slowly walks in the bathroom does some stuff in the mirror or whatever
What does he do? He follows her follows in the bathroom starts talking and they start having good conversation
While she's talking with him, he picks up a dental floss
like she has, he's doing it in there.
And then she pulls his pants down,
sits him on the toilet and they're still talking.
Like nothing.
Just relaxed the whole time.
Yeah, meanwhile I'm like, do it, you know?
I wanna be the authority, which is just,
that's correct.
So funny.
Adam, I wanna ask you, because you might know this.
What is the most durable car brand in the world as,
and now the criteria is how long these cars actually
stay on the road after they've been released or whatever.
Toyota or a Honda?
Rolls Royce.
Oh.
Rolls Royce, yeah.
Interesting. Yep, so Rolls Royce is, and Oh. Rolls-Royce, yeah. Interesting.
Yep, so Rolls-Royce is, and I'll read you the stats,
it's the most durable car ever made.
Almost three quarters of the cars that have ever been
produced in the company's history are still
in active use today.
Wow, that speaks to the quality of it.
Wow.
I had no idea.
Okay, so.
Now I wonder if it's the quality or if it's.
There might be a little caveat to that because when you.
People are taking care of them. Yes, like yeah, you have a $400,000 plus car, Okay, so now I wonder if there might be a little caveat to that because we
Yes, like yeah, you have a you have a four hundred thousand dollar plus car
You tend to sit in the garage well maintain it pamper it
It only comes out on Fridays for dinner. And so it's really common to buy a ten-year-old
You know Bentley or Rolls-Royce and it's still a nice car. So I wonder if that plays a role. I would definitely say it's gotta be the most durable
luxury car then.
Every expensive car.
Yeah, yeah, no, for sure.
And there's actually lots of like,
Maserati's an example of like a luxury car
that's got a bad reputation for like,
oh yeah, you'll have to fix something.
Do they really?
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, Maserati's.
I like the way a Maserati looks,
but that's one of the turnoffs is when you look at the reviews
I'm a for yeah, and they don't have enough horsepower, but don't they have a Ford engine
I don't know who does Ford own Maserati. So really ruined it for I didn't know that maybe check that
Maybe someone double-checked that Chrysler owned them for a while. Really?
I don't know that yeah, look up see who I didn't know that's me. That makes me not so that not like I mean there
They've got a gorgeous car when we were out with shopping for Doug's
I remember looking at this one. They had there that was beautiful
But when I got online and I looked at like all the reviews, it's just a what is it Doug?
owned by Stella Lantis, which was itself created in a merger between Fiat Chrysler automobiles and
Tougeau, okay in 2021. Oh, I didn't know there was a merge like that. Okay, so it's much more complex than I thought.
Yeah, yeah, but you know, that's really, well, I mean,
it's a really, really expensive, and our Rolls-Royce,
this is something I don't know either,
are Rolls-Royce handmade still?
Is it like Ferrari and stuff like that
where it's not a factory?
Every Ferrari's handmade, right?
Yeah, there's the deep. There Yeah, there's Italian dudes in there.
Yeah, they're just really hearty and like,
Yeah, they're made to order.
Yeah, handmade.
So I mean, that's just, again, that's, so yeah,
so you're gonna talk about like,
so the quality of it is.
I wonder if,
because handmade now means expensive,
whereas before it meant, like that's everything.
I wonder if, like, because AI and stuff,
that's gonna be like,
Yeah, like, hey dude, this sandwich was made by a human.
Like, exotic.
I do think that, I do think like,
this is like why I think we'll see this kind of,
we're in the middle of this weird time of like,
even like what we talked about before,
like shoes now, like knockoff shoes are super popular.
My buddies, they were wearing this thread,
these are my childhood best friends. And one of the things that's going right now in conversation
is these knockoff pro jerseys for like, if you want like a basketball or NFL authentic
jersey, you're paying like 170, 240 bucks for an authentic Jersey.
You know, these knockoffs are like 20 bucks.
Where'd you get them?
And they're ordered from China or whatever,
like they do on Amazon or something.
Can you tell?
No, that's what my buddies are just like,
you could not tell.
Like it's the detail.
So my point is that we're in the middle of this time
where the really, really expensive stuff
is getting out competed by knockoffs
that are like ridiculously cheaper.
And I, but I, what I do think will happen over time
is there'll be this resurgence.
And I mean, look at art, some art is done like so sick,
right, like you see this AI art that's being created
and you're like, that is bad ass.
So I think we're in the middle of like adopting
a lot of that stuff.
And then I think we're gonna come back to like exactly what you said.
It'll be like, well, who made this?
Did a person like creatively make this?
Oh, I'm what's the story behind? Yes.
And just and who is it?
Who's your favorite guy?
You always talk about the musician that Rick Rubin.
Yeah, Rick. He talks about how, you know, like real artistry
is the artist not creating something to go viral,
not creating something to appease the mass.
Completely their own interests.
Yes, it's this selfish diary
that they're sharing with the world,
and you like it or you don't like it.
Well, this story is so important,
which is why some music and art is more valuable
after the artist dies half the time.
Oh, yeah. You know, and then you hear about the story artist dies half the time. Oh, yeah.
You know, and then you hear about the story and the value goes up.
Yeah.
Because the story is really what people are buying.
Did you see, so you're watching that show I'm watching right now, Doug.
There's a part in there where they talk about a Patek Philippe watch that was worn by,
I think, Eisenhower when he signed some crazy bill and like the value of that.
And it's like, it's just a watch.
Because of that.
Because of the moment it's tied to.
Wow. So yeah, I think we're going to see things like, it's just a watch. Because of that. Because of the moment it's tied to.
So yeah, I think we're gonna see things,
like I don't know, what's cool about AI
and the ability for us to copycat
in these like fake shoes, fake things like that,
is it opens up the market for anybody
and everybody that wants to have or experience
what it's like to have that.
But I do think that there will still be this,
you know, high end market for man made. I agree with you 100%, we already have to have that. But I do think that there will still be this, uh, you know, high end market for.
It's, I mean, it's already been a hundred.
I agree with you a hundred percent.
We already have evidence of that.
Like it used to be, if you were poor, you had horses and if you were rich, you had
cars now, if you're rich, you have horses.
People, people who own a horses take care of them actually have money.
So, so true.
You know, speaking of that and talking about technology,
did you see they came out? I just saw, I think it was Sean Baker shared the report on the,
they just had a new study on the electric cars. Oh, that they produce more, that they're worse for the environment. Yeah. Have you, how much, okay, so- I haven't dived enough. Okay, I want you to
dive into it. You're better at reading studies and stuff than I am.
And because it's so hard to tell,
like it's a bunch of propaganda war on both sides.
So it's hard to sift through that and go like,
okay, how much of this is like truth
and how much of it is propaganda?
So.
It's interesting to think about too,
because one thing I know, I was listening, I think it was
a former CIA or FBI agent that was on Joe Rogan. He was talking about lithium and cobalt.
Oh, and how it's mined.
And who owns the majority of those around the world? And it's China. And China completely
monopolizing all of these mines
to the point where if we're shifting in this direction,
it goes right into their favor economically.
And we're basically handing over an entire industry
to make them a powerhouse even more.
So it was just an interesting thought.
Isn't that the same too?
So propaganda-wise, I'm sure that plays into it.
Yeah, 80% of the cobalt output is owned by China.
Well, then you add into what they're doing power-wise,
right, too.
Like, they're the only ones that are pushing the nuclear
right now, right?
Nuclear is, I don't know.
I mean, if somebody says that they care about the environment
and they don't support nuclear, they don't understand.
Yeah, but back to Justin's point, I mean, if we're,
it's so much better economically that if they it's like a race right
now and if we don't we're gonna get destroyed. Right.
Isn't that what's happening? Like if they get to a point
where they have enough of these nuclear reactors that
are producing energy they'll supply energy for the
entire world and we'll have to buy from them because
buying from them will still be cheaper than us producing
our our cell.
OK. So Doug if you could look up like what actually power, look at power
stations, you know what I'm saying? When you go to charge up, um,
I believe it's still like energy plants, still cold. Like, yeah,
we're still burning oil to produce a electric charge for people to charge
their cars with. So what's, what are we doing?
Speaking of energy, Uh, okay.
So I'm excited that we are going to mention Legion today because few, usually
when we work with a company that sends us a new supplement, either A, we're not
that excited about the new supplement or B, one or two of us is excited about the
supplement, but rarely is it where they send us a bunch of bottles
and we all take them and we're like.
Are you talking about Lunar?
Yeah.
Bro, I.
And everybody is, that has to be one of the most effective
supplements for sleep ever.
Ever.
Yeah, I definitely have received some of the benefits.
I went from like four down to two,
and then I swear you could find like your sweet spot. Doug says he does one tablet. Yeah. Is that all
you're taking? I just do two. So maybe I should back off the four because I take
four and it's like a coma. Yeah. Do you wake up too much? No, no. I should, yeah, I should
explain that too. It's like I fall asleep like I'm gonna, and for me I say
that because I've, you guys all know I get up to pee two or three times. This been now like, like if I take that might one time get up, which is why.
So here's what's weird, Doug, maybe pull up the supplement.
I looked at the ingredients and they're all legit ingredients that will help
with relaxation and sleep.
Okay.
But when I first looked at the ingredients, there wasn't, and this is
like, of course shame on me, right?
There was no like, whoa, new discovered herb or whatever.
I'm like, yeah, I'm familiar with these,
we'll see what happens.
And then you take it and it works so effectively,
improves the quality of your sleep.
I know you guys are measuring your quality
through your rings or whatever.
What this shows me is how much other supplement companies
lie, because they'll say they have certain ingredients
or certain amounts, but they don't work the same.
Yeah, you don't really affect.
We know Mike, and Mike is a super stickler when it comes to,
if it says it's got 500 milligrams,
it has 500 milligrams.
If it says it has this, it has that.
Doug, I can't see because the screen is messed up up there.
Yeah, it's hard to see because it's small,
but it's glycine, theanine, GABA melatonin. Nothing that
you would hear that's spectacular. Maybe those salads because because I don't
know if I've ever taken a supplement with that blend of those things and I
know how theanine makes me I like the way theanine makes me feel. I've thoroughly
glycine is a good one. Glycine also. I don't know if I've ever taken that
by something like that and we I know we've had GABA in it before. It's an
inhibitory neurotransmitter so kind of like chills out the brain.
And then the melatonin dose is really low.
So 500 micrograms.
Yeah.
Everybody takes way too much melatonin and disrupt their own melatonin production.
And you know this because you'll wake up in the middle of the night when it wears off.
Would that be considered a micro dose of melatonin?
Yeah.
Or appropriate dose, but compared to most melatonin supplements will have
three grams, five grams. Yeah. Yeah, this is half of a gram, right? 500, no, sorry, a milligram,
sorry, this is half of a milligram. Most companies are three milligrams or five milligrams. Three to
five. That's kind of the- Not grams, milligrams, sorry. Yeah, three to five milligrams is the
typical dose that you would get in like your regular over-the-counter. So yeah, no, it's been
interesting. So, you know, there's no concern because it's a microdose
in the melatonin that it's gonna-
It'll interrupt your melatonin production?
Yeah.
Far less of a concern at that dose.
So I did it for a while because it was so effective,
but now what I'm trying to do
is intermittently use it, right?
I think I went almost, I think, two weeks
without missing a day, because I was just like, no way,
this is the worst thing ever.
So I was like, okay, 14 days in a row,
this stuff works for sure.
And it's a chewable tablet, which I thought.
That's why I like it.
So I thought, why make it a tablet?
Who cares, it's a swallow pills.
That way you don't drink water
right before you go to bed.
That's why I love it.
It's one of the things, one of the things that I, okay,
I swear by Mellow, right?
So Mellow's been, which is the magnesium is what I've needed,
right?
So that's been the product that I always talk about for sleep.
The one drawback is when I forget
to do it like an hour or two before bed, and I do it,
and so I'm drinking.
Yeah, then I'm drinking that thing of water to get it down.
And then that's just adding to my problem
of having to pee all the time. So I do love that this is a chewable tablet. In fact, if our partners
over at NED are listening to this, if you can make Mellow into a chewable, that would be-
I think a chewable tablet for a sleep aid, it makes perfect sense, period, because of the water.
Yeah. Well, because I mean, I guess if you're not like me, because I don't drink a lot of water,
but any water, like I have to go pee. And it's this weird thing not like me, because I don't drink a lot of water, but any water. Like, I have to go pee.
And it's this weird thing.
So funny, because I was talking to my cousin about this.
And I've actually never heard anybody else communicate it.
And it's like, he describes it exactly the same way
that I feel.
It's like, it's so annoying.
That's not like I get up and I'm like,
oh, I'm having to pee so much because I drank so much water.
It's like, just the feeling you have to pee a little bit keeps you away keeps me awake
And I have to go to the bathroom and get out even a little bit that it is which is so annoying
It's not even like it's always been like that since you were a kid
Yeah for am I your uncle talks about my cousin my uncle all weird
Yeah, all you guys should get like you actually have your bladder scan. I wonder if you actually do have a small bladder
I don't know you say that I don't, but it's so, it's so annoying
that that happens.
And so yes, the chewable, uh, lunar Legion,
like Mike hit it out the park.
Speaking of supplements, uh, so one of the
most popular supplements that we've talked
about from Organifi are their Shilajit
chewables, right?
And so, and it's just, it's, they're selling,
they're selling them out like crazy.
So I pulled up, this is medical news today.
So just for people who are like, oh, you know, Shilajit, what is it, whatever.
This is a medical news today article and it's listing benefits from Shilajit
that are studied, that are shown in studies.
So it's good for Alzheimer's. So it's good for Alzheimer's.
So it's good for cognitive performance.
Um, it seems to show, slow down the
aging process when they measure it
molecularly, don't know what that means
necessarily, but it's positive.
Helps with anemia, antiviral, chronic
fatigue, so people with chronic fatigue
syndrome seem to do better, altitude
sickness, liver cancer, heart health, obesity,
and then this one, male fertility and testosterone,
which that's got a big, that's a big impact.
Yeah.
Yeah, wide range of benefits.
It's a weird compound.
It is literally like the plant matter that's been,
underground for thousands and thousands and thousands of years.
Dense nutrients.
And it comes out like black ooze.
What is, yeah, so what is, it's not, is it a fungus?
Is it like a, is it like a?
No, it's biomass.
It's broken down.
It's like topsoil kind of, right?
It looks like, if you look at my picture,
it looks like tar, it looks black and whatever.
It's high in folic acid and other nutrients.
I think there's something else we haven't identified
because it's been used as a supplement for a long time.
Arrhovedic medicines.
How does that happen?
Like mountain goat piss or something in there?
Bro, people were desperate.
People were desperate back in the day.
There was always that one guy that's like,
I'll try that, let's see what happens.
Hey, let's give it a whirl.
Did Fred die?
He didn't know.
Not only did he not die, but he just died.
What's interesting to me too is though,
it's not, I mean, and this is all supplements.
It's not like you see it or you take it
and it's like this profound instant thing.
It's like, you would have to,
I'm gonna try this for a while
and see if I notice these effects from it.
It's like, that's weird to me.
It's weird.
It's like, I put in the category uh, cause there's herbs that do certain,
certain things where I think it's more like a multivitamin in the sense that it,
the reason why it benefits all those things is I think that there's some
potential deficiencies that it may be filling is what I, is what it feels.
I think the same. It's, it's really like, I think,
especially on the mineral side of things,
I think that we just don't get that cause like a lot of the plants don't even have,
can't pull from that anymore because of the way that we farm.
That makes the most sense.
So since we're talking about studies,
I read the most interesting, I think obvious study,
when you think about it, but they took a bunch,
they polled a bunch of college aged and-aged men. And it was a bunch of
questions to see how the personality is, how they viewed women, relationships. And then at the end,
it was essentially like, would you have sex with a sex robot? Here's the connection that they found,
which now makes a lot of, when I say it, it'll make a lot of sense. Well, let me ask you guys this. What kind of guys are most likely to want to have sex
or that would have sex with a sex robot?
What kind of guys?
What do you mean by what kind of guys?
What kind of, well, I mean, you're kind of getting there.
What kind of personality, what kind of, you know?
I mean, somebody who's insecure and isolated and like.
On the computer and doesn't really like social interaction. Yeah
Actually made were the men that had the most negative views towards women
Were the most likely to want to have sex with this. Oh that makes sense to them. Oh my god sad creepy
Isn't that sad? Yeah, I'm trying, you know, would you?
Would you what I what have sex with a robot?
No.
You wouldn't even try it just to see?
No, I mean, if you're talking to a 14 year old me,
I mean, you could ask me if I had sex with a couch.
And I probably would say yes.
That's what I'm saying.
That's what I'm saying.
But like 45 year old me, no, I wouldn't do.
No, I'm not gonna say.
I mean, how many days would it take?
Yeah, I don't think I.
I don't think I.
Let's draw this out.
Yeah, let's see how long it lasts.
I don't know how long I could last. I don't, yeah, don't think even if they get to the point where they make them like so real human like I don't think I would make me less likely by the way because I'd be creeped out.
You know if it looked like a human and I was freaked me out when you have sex with it. Oh yeah. Yeah, no, I don't I don't think I could because I mean I was I had friends right that can do the
You know, what do you what's a I'm looking for a politically correct word fucking
I mean, what's it? What's the politically correct word for a whorehouse?
Solution a brothel brothel. Thank you. I knew there's a sex worker
Whatever you know what I mean? Right?
Yeah. I still said the word just cause you asked for the political.
Well, I was trying to find it. I couldn't find it. So you just get the real one. So real term. Yeah. I mean, I,
I have friends that I have I've been with have been to places like this before
and they, they have no problem. I, and I never could, like even being young, young guy, single.
Because you know that they don't actually like you.
Yeah.
So I couldn't even get aroused in a situation,
in a moment like that.
So I definitely don't think that the most amazing robot could
ever make that work for me.
Which I've always tried to-
It has to be indistinguishable, right?
What made me evaluate that is like,
what is it about me that's different than my friends
that could do that?
Like what's different about them than me?
I mean, that's pure.
The connection.
Yeah, and that's pure objectification, right?
They're objectifying the people to the point where.
They can disassociate, yeah, and they can just like,
you know, release.
Yeah.
If you will. Yeah, I mean, there was like, you know, release. If you will.
Yeah, I mean, there was like real enjoyment though from it.
I don't feel like they were going there.
Like, that makes me feel like you would go
and it's just like, it's something I need to do.
I just need to go here and do this.
Where it's like, they're excited.
Like getting good, you can go there and the trip.
Because it's, I don't know, yeah.
Yeah, and I'm just like, ah,
I'm not feeling this moment at all.
You know that they don't really want to be there. You're paying them.
You know that they've just been with whoever. Yeah. And that's it.
And because of all that, I, it doesn't, it doesn't turn me on.
And I don't care how, how beautiful the woman is or not. It's, it's not,
it's not attractive for me or doesn't get me aroused. So I can't imagine a,
you got to be kind of like't imagine a an artificial robot that I definitely know is this.
Those are the ones, you know, back in the day in history.
Oh, cause they're on a ship forever.
Sea manatee, hmm.
Yeah, exactly, they get real horny up there at sea.
Well, there's gotta be something right about your character
that allows you to be able to disconnect and do that.
It's total objectification, man.
It's, I don't know, it's wild, but the robot thing is interesting because at
some point, men and women are going to be presented with this option.
And I imagine it's going to be, there's going to be this conversation.
What's going to be like, oh, I like my robot better than a man.
Cause a man is this and he doesn't listen to me and he doesn't whatever. And this one just, or I like my robot girl cause she man, because a man is this, and he doesn't listen to me, and he doesn't whatever, and this one just, you know,
or I like my robot girl, because she serves me,
she does whatever I want, she's never mad at me,
or whatever, so they're much better.
This is gonna be a weird conversation, potentially,
or situation.
I mean, I believe it'll happen, though.
I think that'll be the next, quote unquote,
human rights argument, that's what I think.
I think they're gonna start, oh, well,
this robot has a right to marry.
I've seen that Black Mirror episode.
Yeah.
It's going to get weird.
I got the shout out today. In fact, I'll save this shout out,
Doug, for the next one so you don't forget, because you
already haven't written out a shout out. And I'll give you the
shout out on the show that I referenced, because we haven't
referenced a good show. Recently Gentlemen on Netflix is a Guy Ritchie film. So if you liked his style, so good. I haven't
I don't think I've got into a good Netflix. Netflix is not my favorite streaming service
of all the streaming services. As far as the quality, right? We I've referenced them as
the junk food of streaming service, right? But I definitely think that this was well done.
So if you guys haven't checked that out,
I know Doug started it,
you guys haven't started watching it yet, have you?
Yeah, check out Gentleman on Netflix.
Hey, in today's episode,
you heard us talking about terzepotide and semaglutide.
These are the GLP-1 agonists
that you've probably read about in the news.
Otherwise known brand names, Wegovi, Ozempic, GLP-1 agonists that you've probably read about in the news.
Otherwise known brand names, Wegovi, Ozempic, super effective peptides for weight loss. It's groundbreaking stuff.
Anyway, we work with doctors.
They work with GLP-1 agonists.
They also work with other peptides and they work with hormone therapy.
If you'd like a referral, if you'd like a prescription or learn more,
go to mphormones.com.
All right, back to the show.
First question is from Bree Strong.
What is the best exercise to get rid of mom pooch?
Okay. Well, first let's define that.
So this I'm assuming is not just extra body fat in the midsection because that would be getting
leaner, right? When people say mom pooch, and I've had a lot of
clients who have referred to this.
In fact, I remember one woman in particular,
she had three kids, hired me, we trained, we
worked out together and she got really fit.
She got really fit and lean and she said, you
know, it's really weird stuff.
She goes, my lower midsection kind of pooches
out and it was never like that before.
Before I had kids, when I was an athlete, similar leanness, I
didn't have that kind of pooch.
This, I was an early, this is back in the day when I was kind
of just getting started.
And so I looked at the muscles involved with pulling in the
midsection and it really became clear to me.
So when you, when you have a child, there are muscles that
surround the core,
the transverse abdominis is the main one that hold everything in second.
So when you suck in your stomach, that's the muscle you're contracting.
Well, when you have a child, that muscle has to stretch an atrophy
in order to make room.
After you have the baby, if you don't specifically target and strengthen that
muscle, it remains or will remain somewhat atrophied.
So you can work your abs, your obliques, but not really develop the TVA back to
where it was before.
And because gravity pushes organs down, it doesn't hold things in like it used
to, you'll get this pooch.
So the exercises you want to do are ones that strengthen and work the TVA.
Yeah.
I mean, I have two, two thoughts.
One is that I think that is absolutely true true because I actually seen this even on my own
Physique obviously I didn't carry a kid and have that but it was just for you know
little Joey pouch
This is this was something that I remember getting ready for my first show
I was before I even decided to get on stage
It was when I was like kind of prepping to see what it would look like to do my
first like real hard cut. And I got down to sub 7% body fat and even that lean,
I'm like, you're pretty shredded at 7% body fat. I still had this like pooch.
Extra body fat.
Yeah, extra body fat that was just stubborn. And what I realized was I had to go back to a reverse diet, bulk up, add some calories in the diet again, but staying lean.
Obviously I put on a little bit of body fat, but it stayed under 10% but
put on muscle, bulked up, and then came back down again, cut really
hard, got sub 7% again. Then a little bit of it went away. And I did that about two
or three times before I felt like it went away.
You're referring to the, to stubborn body fat.
White, white fat is that stubborn body fat whereas brown is more thermogenic
and active and brown fat will burn faster than white fat.
And there's things you could do to convert white to brown.
I don't know how much of an effect it has, but things like subverging
yourself in cold water, strength training, and then I think
getting yourself down to a certain point, I think then once you get rid of it,
it doesn't come back in the same way.
Yeah, it just, I mean, it eventually does.
Like if, because I carry more body fat now, it's there again.
But once I did that, and as long as I kept my calories in check and I was
strength training consistently, then it maintained staying lean there. But I did notice that. So I
think the combination of both working on TBA core exercises, the draw and maneuver, the vacuum pose,
those are great exercises to strengthen the muscle to pull it back in. And then also understanding that if there is some body fat still there,
and it's not just atrophied muscle, that, and it's just stubborn body fat,
you know, as you continue to get leaner, reverse diet, get leaner again,
reverse diet, leaner again, it eventually will go to-
By the way, like, again, drawing back to that story, I remember when I
learned about the TVA then,
I said, oh, okay, we can get on hands and knees,
and I want you to draw your belly button in
towards your spine, like you're trying to suck
in your stomach, do it as hard as you can.
So I did this exercise with her.
Now keep in mind, at this point she was fit,
we'd done core exercises, abs are good, obliques are good.
She couldn't even connect.
She had trouble connecting to drawing in.
She would draw in just a little bit.
I'm like, you can't draw in anymore.
She goes, no. And I'm like, light can't draw any more. She goes, no.
And I'm like light bulb, like, okay, this is the issue.
And then through practice, she was able to draw in more and more.
And then it did, it shrunk her waist.
I think it came down like a quarter or half an inch just
from strengthening that muscle.
Next question is from Erin MLT.
I'm experiencing pain under my left clavicle after tricep dips.
What am I doing wrong?
This is, sounds like a chromioclavicular joint pain, right?
AC joint is typically what's happening.
Shoulder mobility, stability,
and shortening the range of motion
and slowly working on a larger range of motion,
but going with less resistance.
If you have AC joint pain and you push it too hard with this exercise, it's not gonna be good. It's gonna backfire, yeah. And I've had a lot of motion, but going with lesser resistance. If you have AC joint pain and you push it too hard
with this exercise, it's not gonna be good.
It's gonna backfire, yeah.
And I've had a lot of clients that have shoulder mobility
limitations that try to dip and they really feel the pain
and restriction there.
So it's definitely something like maybe that should be
like an entire focus is really to like open up,
you know, range of motion and strength there with a lot of mobility drills before really
like diving too much into dips.
Do you think because there's a discrepancy from left to right for this person that
they would, they would obviously see this in like our zone or one or zone one
test? Like, I mean, so this, I mean, again, this is, uh,
stressing why like everybody that listens to this podcast, if you go through any of our major
programs, Prime is a program that you all should, it highlights if you were to hire me as a trainer,
the first thing that I would do is Prime. I would do a full assessment on you to look for these types
of things. If I was to do a zone one, zone two or zone three test, and I see a major
discrepancy left from your left to your right on your shoulder.
And what I mean by that is like, so this person, I'm guessing, if they were to
do our prime pro zone, you would see when they go to put, get themselves in
that zone one test, that one side's probably going to be off the wall
significantly more the other side.
And then, then it's very obvious when we go in to do an exercise
like a dip that the reason why you're feeling that
is due to your shoulder mobility.
So it's gonna show up on that left side in that test.
And then it will work, it'll find its way into issues,
into different movements.
The way that I, when I was younger,
got myself to be able to do really deep dips early on
was I used a weight assisted
dip machine and put enough assistance to where I could do a deep dip without pain or without
too much struggle. And I practiced in there and slowly added less assistance, less assistance,
and it got me to be able to do a full dip. The other way to do it, and this is actually still
to this day, how I can go cold into really deep dips.
I'll walk over to the dip bar and actually standing up without my feet elevated and put
myself in that position and then hold an isometric position right there.
So I get really connected.
Yeah, so I can connect to the really, really deep position and then I come out of that
versus what most people do is they jump up.
Start at the top.
And they start at the top and they come down into the position. I actually get myself into
the deepest position I want to go. I get connected in the isometric position. That's kind of how I
warm up and then I go into the exercise from there. That really, really will help. But
nonetheless, back to my original point to the audience, that if you're running any of our
programs, you should also have prime. It should complement anything if you're running any of our programs, you should also be have
prime. It should compliment anything that you're doing and should go through that so
that when you run into these issues, you have a reference to go back and be like,
Got to address it. Can't ignore it.
Yeah. And then, and in there, like, like if you, if you fail on the zone one, there's
movements, there's shoulder mobility movements that will improve that. And what's awesome
there's movements, there's shoulder mobility movements that will improve that.
And what's awesome is if that's the reason,
which is probably what it is,
you go do those exercises that we have in there,
those priming movements, before you go do a dip,
and you should first time feel a difference.
It may not eliminate it completely,
but it should already start to move
in the positive direction of how you feel from that.
And that's your, right away your side is like,
that's the problem, that's the root cause, I need to address this.
Next question is from Meg's Daily Wellness. You mentioned in a previous episode that volume
should be higher when bulking. So what rep range is best to train in during a bulk? Is one more
beneficial than the other, increasing weight versus increasing reps?
Well, I think you need to clarify should. I don't think you said should. I think the comment was is one more beneficial than the other, increasing weight versus increasing reps?
I think you need to clarify should,
I don't think you said should,
I think the comment was you can.
Yes, yes, when you're bulking
and you have a lot of calories,
that's when you can add more volume to your training
with a lower risk of over-training.
Yes, your point of that,
to make this clear to the audience,
was not that you should increase volume for sure
just because you're in a bulk,
it's that if you were going to increase volume,
you're more likely to be able to handle it.
But you very well could be not in a bulk,
already over training your volume,
and then you go into a bulk,
just because you're having a few hundred more calories,
you go too much volume.
So you can still do too much volume.
100%.
Yeah, especially volumes,
you're go to for the way you train all the time.
So to interrupt that and do something with less reps
and crank the intensity a bit
might be the perfect shift.
Right, now as far as rep ranges are concerned,
the rep range is gonna give you the best results
in that, especially in that initial five to six week period,
is a new rep range. Regardless if you want to bulk, if you want to cut, maintain six week period, is a new rep range. Regardless,
if you want to bulk, if you want to cut, maintain, whatever, it's that new rep range. Now that all
being said, okay, if all of that is equal and you're starting out, let's say you're starting out,
let's just say all rep ranges would pose that same initial, you know, like a novelty signal to your body, then I think higher reps are probably better in a bulk
and lower reps are probably better in a cut, mainly because
of the volume issue, which we talked about earlier, but I do
want to be clear.
It's not like this massive effect.
It's not like you go from now, unless you're like, you're,
you're super low and deficient in calories, but the difference
between a good appropriate cut in a bulk in terms of volume is not like
you add 50% more volume to your training.
I have a different way to communicate this question, right?
So the back half of this question is,
is one more beneficial than the other?
Increasing weight versus increasing reps.
I would push you in the direction of whichever one
of those two is more novel for you,
meaning that there tends to be two types,
there tends to be a division between the type of person
that you are.
You're normally one or the other.
And I'll use Justin and I as an example of this.
If Justin and I are going after our workouts,
this is just typically, doesn't mean that all the time,
but typically I'm the guy that would
lean towards more volume, more reps.
He would be the guy to go add more weight to the bar.
So if you're asking yourself, what should you do in this situation?
Doing the opposite is going to yield probably the most return for you.
So because Justin knows that he's the guy that likes to push weight and push
strength more than he likes to add a bunch more of reps and exercises to his
routine. And he's like, man, I'm trying to get changed.
I'm trying to see change in my body. This is maybe a time I should probably go
the volume. Same. And the opposite is true for me. I'm typically the guy that's like, Oh, I'll just do a super set or I'll add an extra set
or some more reps where it's like, you know what I, you know, let's challenge myself
weight wise, let's add more weight to the bar.
So ask yourself which one are you more likely to probably do and then go the opposite
direction because the novel stimulus in the bulk will probably yield more gains for you.
Next question is from Ben Melton Coach. How important is it to correct things like posture, muscle imbalances, and core strength before adding strength training or can they be done
alongside each other? I'm going to change the question because it's posing the question in a
way that is actually presenting in accurate information. Here's what the question should say. How important is it to correct things like posture, muscle
imbalances, and core strength before trying to add more weight
to the bar or just keep getting stronger?
Okay.
Because correcting posture, muscle imbalances, and core
strength is strength training.
It's all strength training.
So if I'm trying to correct, work on your posture, if I'm
trying to work on a muscle imbalance, I use strength
training to do that.
And I'm not trying to do that.
I'm trying to work on my posture. I'm trying to work on and core strength is strength training. It's all strength training. So if I'm trying to work on your posture,
if I'm trying to work on a muscle imbalance,
I use strength training to do that.
Now how important is it that you correct those things
before you just add weight to the bar?
Imperative, it's imperative because if you add load
to your body without correcting those things,
you will strengthen those imbalances.
If you have this imbalance between your right shoulder
and left shoulder where your right shoulder hikes up, every time you do a row and you just don't like forget
I'm not going to correct I'm just going to add weight to the bar, you're going to make
that problem stronger. It's going to be harder to correct and you're going to present yourself
with potentially worse problems. So like trainers know this, good trainers know this. You don't
add weight to the bar if there's an imbalance. You fix that first. That's always first.
Yeah, there's nothing to add to that.
I mean, that's exactly how you address,
maybe the add to that is like,
what are some of the ways you do that?
Like switching over to unilateral movements,
doing corrective work, right?
Because again, to your point, all of it's strength training.
So just because I switch over to unilateral work,
I'm still strength training.
I'm just now more concerned
that I want to keep the left and the right side equal.
You know what I think about? Do you remember that DEXA scan we got from that listener who
followed map symmetry?
Yeah.
So when you, here's the, and here's the selling point, and I'm going to sell everybody on
why they need to do this because I know people listening, me, if I was a kid, I'd be like,
whatever, I don't care. I just want to gain muscle. All right. This young woman was already well trained.
So she was young woman, already strong, already fit, built.
She followed MAPS symmetry.
She got a DEXA scan before and after.
And what she saw on the DEXA scan was,
I don't remember what side it was,
but her left side was a little bit smaller than her right
in terms of lean body mass.
And nobody's perfect.
Nobody has exact 100% the same,
but she had a discrepancy between her left and her right
side, she followed map symmetry, gained three pounds
of muscle, which for her was a big deal because she'd been
working out for a while, and it all went to the areas
that she needed it.
And now, would she have built that muscle had she not
focused on correcting that discrepancy?
My argument would be no.
Or maybe she would have, but she would just have created a greater discrepancy. My argument would be no. Or maybe she would have, but she would just have created
a greater discrepancy.
Right, so now the point of this is,
it's all strength training.
So it's not like you're like foregoing building muscle
and changing your body because you're working on imbalances.
It is part of it.
Well, I also want to make the point,
because you guys kind of brought up mobility too,
is like where the discrepancy lies,
a lot of times you don't, um, you don't ever really focus on certain ranges of
motion. Uh, and you have to treat that like you're a beginner in like certain
angles. You're probably very strong and proficient up to a certain degree, but
then, you know, anything further than that mobility is strength training.
You're, you're connecting, you're recruiting muscles
to be able to support and provide you
with a way to be stronger in that movement,
but you have to learn it all.
It's almost like you're learning it from scratch
if you haven't really focused on that.
And so that's why mobility,
it looks like it's just stretching,
but you're literally building up strength
from a safe,
you know, body weight perspective.
Then we start slowly adding load.
And so it's a gradual process,
but you can get to the point where, you know,
it's supporting your major muscles and you're just about as
strong in new ranges of motion,
which builds up your entire body mass.
This is why people who are experienced, who've done this before will tell you,
like they went lighter, got better range of motion, built more muscle.
Yep.
So you are not sacrificing progress for this.
This is how you progress.
Look, if you're a hard gainer, if you have a tough time building muscle,
gaining weight, just can't seem to figure out how to pack on the mass. Check out our free hard gainer guide. Go to mindpumpfree.com.
You can also find us all on social media. Justin is on Instagram at MindPump
Justin, I'm on Instagram at MindPump DiStefano, and Adam is on Instagram at
MindPump Adam. Thank you for listening to MindPump. If your goal is to build and
shape your body, dramatically improve your health and energy, and maximize your
overall performance,
check out our discounted RGB Super Bundle
at mindpumpmedia.com.
The RGB Super Bundle includes maps anabolic,
maps performance, and maps aesthetic.
Nine months of phased expert exercise programming
designed by Sal, Adam, and Justin
to systematically transform the way your body
looks, feels and performs.
With detailed workout blueprints and over 200 videos,
the RGB Super Bundle is like having Sal, Adam and Justin
as your own personal trainers,
but at a fraction of the price.
The RGB Super Bundle has a full 30 day money back guarantee
and you can get it now plus other valuable
free resources at mindpumpmedia.com.
If you enjoy this show, please share the love by leaving us a 5-star rating and review on
iTunes and by introducing MindPump to your friends and family.
We thank you for your support, and until next time, this is MindPump!