Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2299: Ways to Kick-Start Arm Growth, How to Adjust Calories When Training Volume Changes, Signs You Should Stop Bulking & More (Listener Live Coaching)
Episode Date: March 23, 2024In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin coach four Pump Heads via Zoom. Email live@mindpumpmedia.com if you want to be considered to ask your question on the show....
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.
Right in today's episode, we answered live caller's questions, but this was after an intro portion.
Today was 51 minutes long.
This is where we talk about fitness and current events, studies, and much more. live callers questions, but this was after an intro portion. Today was 51 minutes long.
This is where we talk about fitness and current events, studies, and much more.
You can check our show notes for timestamps. If you want to fast forward to your favorite part.
Also, if you want to be on an episode like this one, email us at
live at mind pump media.com.
Now this episode is brought to you by some sponsors.
The first one is butcher box.
They deliver grass fed meats, heritage pork, healthy chicken, wild-caught fish to your door at
incredible prices. So if you eat a lot of meat, you have a high protein diet, get it
well-sourced, save some money, go to ButcherBox. Go to ButcherBox.com forward
slash mind pump and new users will get two pounds of ground beef, three pounds
of chicken thighs, or one pound of premium steak tips
included for free for a year. Just use the code MINDPUMP. By the way, that also gets you $20 off.
This episode is also brought to you by Joy Mode.
This is a science-backed, all-natural supplement that helps improve your performance in the bedroom.
But it also gives you energy and it's good as a pre-workout.
No, it's not stimulant based.
There's no stimulants in it.
It's a good natural energy,
and it does, again, increase the pump up above
and below.
Check them out.
Go to usejoymode.com forward slash mind pump.
Enter the code mind pump at checkout
for 20% off your first order.
The program sale this month is Maps Anabolic 50% off and
Maps Anabolic Advanced also 50% off. If you're interested go to mapsfitnessproducts.com then
use the code MARCH50 for that discount. Alright, here comes the show.
One of the highest sources of natural creatine you can find in the world is red meat.
In fact, this is probably why athletes of the past,
bodybuilders at the turn of the century,
the Bronze Era athletes,
why they found so many strength gains
when they ate primarily red meat.
It's very high in creatine.
It's also one of the most nutrient-dense foods
you can find on the planet.
Yeah, do you know what the, how many ounces of red meat is equivalent to?
2.2 grams of creatine per pound of red meat.
2.2 per pound.
Yeah. So five, five grams of creatine per kilo of red meat and you'll get five
grams.
So I mean you figure a guy like,
like me or you is probably eating easily a pound and a half to two pounds of
meat is almost getting it through, through food. So do you do, I mean you figure a guy like me or you who's probably eaten easily a pound and a half to two pounds of meat is almost getting it through food.
So do you do, I mean you are pretty consistent
with your creatine no matter what.
You probably, so there's data now that shows
that there's probably benefit, probably,
so it's not conclusive, but probably benefit
to getting 10 grams of creatine a day.
Cognitive benefits.
And there's no comparable compound from plants, right? Your body can make its of creatine a day, cognitive benefits. And there's no comparable compound from plants, right?
Your body can make its own creatine and it makes it from,
I forgot the amino acids, maybe Doug, you can look up amino acids that make up
creatine. The problem is,
is that your capacity just to utilize creatine or store it as
much higher than what you tend to convert and much higher than what you tend to consume.
So, creatine is naturally occurring in animal products,
in muscle, muscle's high in creatine, right?
So, you eat animal muscle and you're gonna get,
you're gonna get creatine, but your capacity
to store creatine is higher than what we tend to consume.
The amino acids are methionine, glycine, and arginine,
and then there's two enzymes that are not good.
Red meat is definitely your best option
in terms of the most.
This is why, again, back in the day.
It's the only punch, right?
You can't get creatine from white meat, can you?
Yeah, you can.
All animal sources love it.
All muscle.
Oh, it does?
Yeah, so fish, pork, chicken.
It just takes way more of it in order to get,
it's less.
I don't know how much less, but it's not as much.
I know red meat is the highest has got one of the highest sources.
Um, but again, I mean, this is bodybuilders in the fifties and sixties,
forties, and before they would, they would talk about how, like, if you really
want to get strong, make sure you eat a lot of red meat.
And so in bodybuilding circles, red meat has always
been known as like this strength muscle building type food.
And then later what happened is people were like,
well there's nothing special about red meat,
you get protein in chicken,
because people didn't understand creatine.
But then we started learning about the benefits
of taking creatine as a supplement,
we look back and we go, oh.
It was probably.
Contributing factor for sure.
Definitely, definitely.
So okay, in regards to creatine then,
does it matter if it's grass-fed or not?
Wow, great question.
Okay, I'm gonna make a speculation,
maybe we can look this up.
Grass-fed beef tends to be leaner per pound.
So a pound of, you know, rib eye or tri-tip that's grass-fed
is going to be leaner among other things.
It also has a little bit of a different fatty acid profile
which is beneficial and it's got higher levels
of other nutrients that are better for,
grass-fed meat in general is just a little bit better
for you.
But the fact that it's leaner per pound,
I would assume since creatine is stored in muscle,
that it would be higher than creatine per pound.
Interesting.
And I don't know how much higher,
or how much of a difference.
And if you were going based off of calories,
say I'm allotted this many calories for this meat,
you're gonna be able to eat more of a leaner cut too.
Yes, yes, yes.
From that perspective.
So I would imagine that, but I don't know
if there's more creatine per pound of lean tissue
in grass-fed versus, um, you
know, conventional, although I would say I'll make another speculation.
And again, I don't think this is a huge difference if it's true, but this
is a speculation again, but grass fed animals tend to have more freedom.
They tend to move and roam more.
Happy cows.
I don't know if that's that commercial, right?
Yeah.
So their muscle might be healthier.
Definitely not as sickly as some of these
that are just confined in their space.
And then, I mean, that's really where the antibiotics
and all that played a factor was because they're just so
confined, right?
You had to.
But yeah, like the marbling that people like, there's less
of that in grass fed meat.
So they just don't have as much body fat.
So I would assume it's got more, more
creatine as well.
Did you find Doug?
What do you got?
Well, this is interesting.
Herring actually has the highest.
Oh, wow.
Look at that.
The second is beef.
Yeah, beef and then pork and then chicken.
So chicken has half the creatine per
gram that beef does.
So, so let me just paint the picture.
Imagine if you're a bodybuilder and you're
eating or somebody who wants to build muscle
and you're eating 150 grams of protein a day
from chicken, and then you go to 150 grams of
protein a day from beef, even if you control
the macros, even if you eat the same.
Get double the creatine.
Double the creatine.
And so this is why people have noticed,
wow, I feel so much stronger.
And they used to think, oh, maybe it's the B12,
maybe it's the iron.
That's crazy, cause I know those tilapia,
and for a while all you saw was like tilapia
and asparagus was like the bodybuilder.
That's still the standard, really?
That's the cut, yeah.
That's the cut.
Yeah, yeah, on the cut.
But you know, by that point,
when the tilapia craze happened, creatine was a staple. Like if you're That's the cut, yeah. That's the cut. Yeah, yeah, on the cut. But you know, by that point,
when the tilapia craze happened,
creatine was a staple.
Like if you're a bodybuilder,
you're supplementing anyway.
Yeah, first of all,
I mean, pretty much everybody will benefit
from supplementing with creatine,
regardless of what your goal is.
But if you're a bodybuilder and you're not taking creatine,
like I don't know, like, what are you doing?
Well, you can take a lot of it.
If you're, if you're taking it.
Maybe you don't care.
Yeah, if you're taking it.
You didn't take creatine.
Tren, if you're taking it, Tren, Test, and Deca.
Tren, Tene.
Yeah, Winnie, and everything.
I was like, sure, throw some crentin in there too.
You took D-ball monohydrate?
Let's sprinkle some of this on there.
I actually used to think that was funny.
I used to think funny, and then got my peers that like,
you know, they're- Spend how much money on something.
Yeah, their anabolic stack is like crazy,
and it's like, oh, you're throwing some branch chain
amino acids in there, huh, buddy? It's really making a difference. Yeah, Oh, you're throwing some branch chain amino acids in there. I'm buddy.
Good thing you're taking that. You know what I'm saying? Wow.
What are all those pills?
It's probably not that trim below it at all.
This is an anadrol two, you know, five 50. This is D ball.
And this is a Lucy, you know, but yeah, I think, you know, yeah,
generally speaking, gram per gram, you're going to get better. I mean,
overall, right? Fatty acid profile acid profile on grass-fed meats better.
And it's not a huge difference,
but it's enough to where if you eat enough,
if you eat a lot of red meat like I do,
makes a difference.
I mean, I eat so much red meat
that I want it to be grass-fed.
Almost all of the red meat I eat,
I don't wanna say almost all, yes, majority,
at least 80% of the red meat I eat is from butcher box.
At least 80% if not more.
Yeah, I'm probably about that.
Everything I'm cooking from home is,
I shouldn't say everything,
because there's times I'll go over to the butcher
and go get something really nice that's not grass-fed beef.
That's when you want the fatty marbled.
Yeah, but you know what though,
you can only have so much of that.
When I found, when I moved to the new place
and I have like this like super high-end butcher
right around the corner,
I've got on this kick for a while where I was like a five wagyu all the time.
And it was like after about three times in a row in a short period of time,
I was like, it's too, it's too rich. It's too much.
It's like a nice treat to do it occasionally to eat it on a regular basis.
It's too rich. It's why that's, it's almost like, um, creamy,
like the ones that we've had or so. No, it's so much.
It's like buttery.
I was explaining to Katrina,
because she's always asking,
a lot of times I'll cook the meat
and she'll pair with it.
And I tell her, I'm like,
when I make this type of a cut of meat,
I don't want a fatty side at all.
It needs to be like a really light side with it,
because there's so much fat in that. you know what's like that for me is
a bone marrow if you eat because bone marrow is real obviously it's like pure
fat so rich and so delicious but after like just a little bit have to have a
little bit and I'm like I'm done yeah it's like it's a nice it's a nice treat
every now and then but to get on like to do it all the time it's like have you
ever eaten foie gras? You guys ever eaten that?
Uh-uh.
You know what, you've had that, right?
You know what that is?
Uh-uh.
Oh, that's terrible.
What is it?
Not that you don't know what it is,
but it's a terrible food.
What?
It's fatty, geese liver?
Goose liver?
I believe it's goose, yeah.
Goose liver.
Or duck, I'm not sure.
Or duck liver.
So they take a duck, I don't know if it's a duck or a goose,
and the way they get it, they force feed the hell out of it
until their liver gets diseased, and then that's what they serve a goose. The way they get it. They force feed the hell out of it until their liver gets diseased
and then that's what they serve.
A lot of restaurants have banned it.
Huge, yeah.
Because of that.
Oh, interesting.
Yeah, it's like, no, it's not cool how they make it.
Are you gonna show a picture, Doug?
It makes it look terrible.
No, I'm just looking at that.
You watch the video.
But it's like a super rich,
they add it to steak at really nice steak houses.
Yeah, I was at some crazy fancy restaurant that did that.
Yeah, surprised you never had it.
No, yeah, no, I don't think, I mean,
I don't know if I'd ever, yeah, I'll have some duck liver.
There was a place where I used to live a long time ago
that was called Mallards that was specialized
in all duck stuff, and I think they had it there,
but I don't think I remember ever having it.
There's a restaurant that Doug's been referring me to
that serves lots of organ meats,
like organ meat skewers and stuff.
I haven't gone there.
It's called Gaku, it's a Japanese restaurant,
yakitori restaurant.
What does yakitori mean?
Tori is like chicken,
and then yaki is like to cook it on a fire.
Okay.
And so they do it over a special really hot charcoal,
and it's, I mean, they have liver, they have heart,
they have gizzard, they have, of course,
thighs and everything else.
Fantastic.
I'm excited to go eat in Nobu this week,
because it's so funny, right after we booked that trip
to go there, I've seen so many people sharing.
There's one in Palo Alto, there's one down in San Diego,
I think, all over the place.
Some of the craziest strength things I ever saw as a kid
was when I ate chicken liver on a regular basis.
Crazy strength gains.
Really?
But it's high in cholesterol, super high in cholesterol.
That's when I started to piece together that.
Was it from that or food to eggs?
That's when I first figured it out,
is I started to eat,
because I know that Body Blowers took
desiccated liver tablets back in the day.
Yeah, and then drank cream and everything too, right?
So I bought, or I had my mom buy chicken liver,
which by the way, half the time I'll give it to you
for free because they're throwing it away.
And I had her fry it up on a pan and I just ate it
because I was stupid, I was a kid, I didn't care,
I just ate whatever.
And I got really strong off of it.
The hack on that is to grind it up,
put it with your hamburger, and cook it together.
That's right.
You don't even know.
We did that with beef liver, and it wasn't that good, though.
I don't like beef liver.
Nah, you do chicken liver.
Chicken liver's much better, anyway.
I got an interesting statistic for you.
Justin will like this one.
Oh yeah.
Sometimes I read things and I'm like, Justin.
Sometimes I read things and I'm like.
It's rarely for me.
Adam.
No, I did the car one with you the other day.
I had a few for you. The Rolls-Royce one. Yeah, one for every 10 and I'm like it's rarely for me Adam. No, I did the car one with you
The Rolls-Royce one one for every ten. I think that's true
You two have a conversation. Yeah. All right, so check this out. So the inventor of the automatic machine gun
Here in Maxim, so he invented the machine gun. By the way, did you guys know when the machine gun was invented? they thought that that would be the end of the world. Do you guys know that? Really? World War I happened.
And because before that warfare was like charge, you know, you're
charging against me and charging.
Load the gun.
And all of a sudden they were just mowing people down and there were
people who thought this is, this is the, this invention will end the world.
Unfair advantage.
It'll just end the world is what they thought.
Little did they know we'd make it a top.
How accurate is the last samurai with that depiction?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, they showed that.
Yeah, I remember that part.
You remember that part where they charge
and just get mowed down?
Like a gatling gun?
Yeah, it's basically a gatling gun.
They showed and they're just mowing down everybody.
Oh, yeah.
So anyway, that guy became deaf, right,
from test firing his gun.
His son is the guy who invented the silencer.
What? Yeah. isn't that weird?
So he invented the machine gun and his dad goes deaf
and he's like, we need to do something about this.
And his son invents the silencer.
I don't want to go out like that.
Family business.
Get ahead of this.
Last weekend, speaking of that, silencers,
this guy over here, we go and he's like.
Doug doesn't want you to tell anybody.
He's making a face right now.
I'm gonna tell everybody right now.
Adam can't keep a secret for the life of him. Oh, yeah, bro. we go and just like, he's making a face right now. I would tell everybody right now.
Adam can't keep a secret for the life of him.
I'm like, hey bro, you got something you want to tell me?
Or what?
I like to keep my business down.
He takes you down to the gun store to go pick some guns up.
And he's like, yeah, my silencer's in.
You know what I'm saying?
You sign my silencer for my AR-15.
Yeah, we got John Wick over here.
Yeah, he is like John Wick, dude.
I'm like, what are you?
So why is this?
Just because you think it'd be cool to hear it?
I just think it'd be fun.
And plus, they're loud, right?
Guns are loud.
Yeah, I mean, we can wear ear protection.
I get it, I get it.
Just cool, okay?
It's cool.
Because he wants to change the crime scene
when someone breaks in his house.
Yeah.
Psst, psst, psst.
Yeah.
Oh crap, he didn't have a weapon on him.
You do now, here's a knife.
All right, all right.
Sprinkle a little drugs on him.
You're getting me in trouble here.
Sprinkle some crack on him.
Actually, you know, that was the, how funny is this?
I didn't see that coming.
That was the single most liked video I've ever posted.
It surpassed Ab's pictures and it surpassed food pictures.
Of you and guns? The guns. Really? People were really excited to see me get guns. It surpassed abs pictures and it surpassed food pictures. What of you?
In my story.
The guns.
Wow.
Really?
People were really excited to see me get guns.
Wow.
Yeah, I thought that was really interesting.
Yeah, you got a bunch of shotguns.
I did, I did get a bunch of shotguns.
Just a bunch of shotguns.
Home protection mainly.
And then also some for sport for shooting clay.
Cause I really enjoy shooting clay.
Katrina enjoyed doing that.
So I want her and I to be able to kind of do that.
And then of course us, if I ever get all of us planned
to go do something like that.
And then home protection.
Like that's, I want something easy.
Like that's, in a moment like that,
I think that's the thing that a lot of people,
I know you're more of a revolver handgun person,
but it's like, I don't know, in a situation like that,
that's really scary and if you ever shot a pistol,
like it takes some practice to shoot a pistol straight
and well.
Not just that, but the panic of the anxiety of all the safety
and you've got to really practice often.
Yeah, I mean, so I got her a shotgun.
You want to be like.
With the freaking.
You grab it.
Yeah, honestly they say that. Is that true now? So I've heard Yeah. Honestly, they say that-
Is that true now?
So I've heard that.
So our cop friend said that-
That's what I heard, that oftentimes racking the gun-
Is enough.
Is enough to hear the noise.
Now, here's the thing.
Is that true or is that one of those things that-
Urban-
Yeah, like the shotgun PR company.
Well, okay.
Here's an easy way to probably figure that out. How many home intruders do you think are, like someone who's robbing a house, like the shotgun PR company. Well, OK. Or whatever. Well, here's an easy way to probably figure that out.
How many home intruders do you think
are, like someone who's robbing a house, how often do you
think they're even armed?
Right.
I bet more than half.
Well, the vast majority don't want any of them.
And also, who wants resistance?
So that's what I'm saying.
So if we could first figure out, in a home robbery situation
or home break-in, how often are those people armed?
If it's less than half the time they're armed, unarmed,
then imagine how scared they are when they walk in
and they hear somebody, you know, saying,
and they don't got nothing.
So I know, so my ex-father-in-law,
somebody broke into his house, okay,
in the middle of the night, which is not,
it's actually more often they break in during the day.
Someone broke in when he was home, he runs out out of his room and as he
comes out, he yells, I have a gun. He didn't have a gun, but he yells it and the
guy ran away just from him saying that. Right. Yeah. So I, you know, I, I just
said, that's what I am. Like my thought was this, like, so it was like, of course
I'm thinking of the worst case scenario. I'm not home, Katrina and Max, they're
upstairs and she hears the alarm go off,
or someone is in the house,
and her being able to grab a shotgun
that's got a freaking laser on it,
coming around from upstairs,
and just imagine a red dot flying all over the place.
Yeah, dude, I hear the cuckoo, like,
I'm hoping that's enough, she ain't gonna kill nobody.
You're quiet, the dude's going through your stuff,
there's a red dot.
Turn the van on, turn the van on! Your friend's all, brother, there gotta kill nobody. You're quiet, the dude's going through your stuff. There's a red dot.
Turn the van on, turn the van on.
Your friend's all, brother.
There's a red dot on me, for it.
Oh shit, oh shit.
So this is where my head goes with stuff like that.
I don't necessarily think about somebody
breaking into my house, okay?
I just don't feel, that's just not something
I think about when I'm home, like that's gonna happen.
I think more like this, like I need a gun if there's a natural disaster or we lose
power for two weeks or something happens.
Like apocalypse stuff.
He's like, I don't think it's something that's more likely.
I know it's more likely.
I think more of something apocalyptic.
Say like in the movies, like vampires or zombies.
My neighbors got all this food.
Although, I'm just like hungry.
Have you guys ever heard of the blackout
in the 1970s in New York City?
Have you heard of this?
I didn't hear about that.
How long was the power out?
It was only a few days, wasn't it?
Bro, crazy, the crime went crazy.
So I didn't know about that until we had
that rolling blackout that happened in California
not that long ago, a couple of years ago,
where it was taking a while to come back. people, and I didn't, I didn't
even think of this, but.
How long?
It was only 25 hours.
25 hours.
So listen, so listen, I didn't know about that until we had those rolling blackouts
in California.
Yeah.
And because it was already hours that we didn't have it, people were freaking out because
they said, Hey man, if you, if it's pitch black for more than a day or two, people will start to
fucking freak out.
I'm like, that's weird.
Yeah, that's why I don't go to cities.
You know, I'm not a city guy.
I guarantee that's one of the bigger problems
because they already have a lot of crime.
Yeah, they have it out in your guys' place.
No, don't get me.
Power goes out every week.
Power goes out all the time out there.
All I gotta do is get out a banjo.
Yeah.
Ding ding ding ding ding ding ding ding ding ding ding. They is get out of banjo. Yeah.
Yeah. That's, that's where my head goes. Like if, if something like, like I think it was a power grid failure or something like that, then I think
Doug's the same way too, cause he's got the zombie.
You pocket that's why he hasn't silenced killing zombies.
I know, you know, we just ran out of water. Don't worry. I literally,
I just want my wife safe.
That's how I think about it.
She's gotta go to the range with you often, dude.
You need her to feel as comfortable as possible.
She's into it.
I mean, she already likes to shoot,
so she was like, when I told her I was getting,
she was like, oh, I can't wait to shoot.
So she's like, we had a really good time
the first time that we went and did the clay shooting.
And so that's part of why I wanted to finally
go get this done, so we could actually go.
What's crazy to me is that there's insurance for people, you talked about this. and did the clay shooting. And so that's part of why I wanted to finally go get this done, and so we could actually go up there.
What's crazy to me is that there's insurance for people,
you talked about this.
We bought it.
You can get insurance.
This insurance, if you have to use your gun
in self-defense, a lawyer will represent you.
But here's the crazy part, they'll also clean up the mess.
They'll send somebody to clean up your house and shit.
It was actually, when Doug and I-
We're trying to think about it.
You have like a guy.
Yeah, well when Doug and I were learning about it, I actually was,, I mean, we both got you, you bought it too, didn't you? Yeah, we both paid for it because I was like, wow, yes, this is you don't think about that. No, like imagine you keep, oh honey, I saved you and then oh shit. There's brains and stuff. Well, yeah, and not and not to mention, heaven forbid in California, someone's in your house and if they weren't armed and they got shot or something like that like I'm you're potentially gonna go to jail
So I didn't cover trail you first like yes breaking your ass
So that was that was I they got me for sure
I paid for both Katrina and I both to have that because I was like obviously the reason why I'm doing that is just for
Protection and if some scary thing like that happened and another thing that the guy when he was telling me that I just again
I didn't think about how you communicate to the police officer on how it
happened. The words you use are such a big deal. Really? Yes. Like what? Like you
need to, you need to have expressed, you were afraid for your life. Oh, so don't
act like a tough guy. Well, yeah, like you can't be like, he broke into my house and I
shot him. Even though that happened, but the way you say it and
communicate can make all the world of a difference in your defense. Of course. I know. I would have
never thought that. And who would in the heat of the moment? Well, I mean, I'd be probably be in
shock. So I don't even know if I'd show any, you know, major. Sure. And you're, but in the last
thing you're thinking, if you defended yourself is like, Oh, I need to make sure I say this. And so
they actually teach you what these do. The insurance is like you tell the officers that you're fully cooperating,
but can I make a phone call to my lawyer?
And they have somebody who literally handle it from right there with you.
Wow.
Because of that. And I'm like, wow,
I just never thought about like how much that could screw you on how you say
that. And just think you're scared adrenaline's going. You're not thinking like,
Oh, I need to make sure I communicate it this way,
because if I don't.
The whole fear, the crappy part,
because a lot of, house on the East Coast,
I think a lot of them are not like this,
that the scary part is because here in California,
the houses are all sheetrock,
and you fire a gun, it's gonna go through several walls.
It'll hit, even if it hits the guy, or the perpetrator,
that scares me, you know what I mean?
Because your kid, or whatever, could be in the other room.
That scares the shit out of me. That's the part that I yeah, I know
We none of that happens no, yeah
I have something sweet of our kids and stuff that I
Have feel like Katrina was just like, you know, that's gonna blow up in your face, right?
I'm like well, I
Just started like maybe a month ago and I thought it was funny and cute.
And then, like many things I'm sure we do with our kids,
where it's like, you think it's funny and cute,
and then you start to catch it happening more and more,
and you're like, ooh, maybe this is not a good thing, right?
So I don't even remember what the thing that we were doing,
but Max and I were doing something,
and he's like, where are we going, or what are we doing?
I'm like, oh, me and you, just the boys. Just the boys are gonna go do this, right? I did that, and he's like, okay. we going or what are we doing? I'm like, oh, me and you, just the boys.
Just the boys are going to go do this.
I did that.
He's like, OK.
You could tell it clicked on him.
Oh, not mommy.
Just the boys.
Just the boys are going to go.
And so that's become this thing.
Daddy, just the boys.
Just the boys can do that.
Everything's just like, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Katrina's like, oh, good.
I mean, now it's turning to everything that he does.
He looks over at me and is like, yeah, the only boys can do this, right?
He was like doing a whole letter from school.
Yeah. It's like turned into like,
like it went to something cute that him and I just the boys go do to now,
like only us boys do can do this and mommy can't do it. Girls can't do it.
Just boys can do it. And I'm like, oh,
I'll tell you a common one that backfires have you ever taught your kid how to pee outside yet yeah that often backfires you gotta be
careful yeah I think every dad goes through that yeah teach your kid pee out
backyards then he just does it so that's all you want to do or he pees out in
public yeah my my Angus did that we were downtown Santa Cruz and like he just
thought cuz we'd find a tree you know my backyard So he found a tree and he's just like we're outside of Starbucks
Pants are in his ankles and he's just and then I just stop and it's like I'm not gonna stop a mid stream
People walking by like laughing and I'm like
Yeah, they're cracking up young enough to get you know,, what's taking me, it's different when you're a man.
What's taking me forever to break him up from,
from peeing is cause his mom taught him how to use the restroom initially. Right. She potty trained him is, uh, he,
he wants to wipe his wiener after he's done peeing. Yeah. Like, no,
you shake it. So I'm like, she's here to shake it. And he has this,
he wants to grab the toilet paper. You don't need the toilet paper, bro.
You just, you should, we just shake, he wants to grab the toilet paper. I'm like, you don't need the toilet paper, bro. You just, we just shake.
We just shake all the time like that.
But because he learned how to do it that way,
because mom taught him to wipe.
We've always taught the little boys to wipe.
Oh, you have to.
Always.
Oh, interesting.
Oh, see.
The little bro, you get a two and a half year old
to shake. Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Shake becomes.
Yeah.
Shake and spray.
It becomes art.
Yeah, real fast. That's exactly what her thought process was. Okay, so he'll be okay. Yeah, he'll be fine. Shake becomes art.
Real fast.
That's exactly what heart thought process was.
Okay. So he'll be okay.
Yeah, he'll be fine.
But it's hilarious.
At some point, wait a minute.
You call that Jackson Pollock or whatever?
It's like dots everywhere.
Yeah. Yeah.
The shake.
Yeah.
Anyway, shake.
So I read, so you guys hear about this bill
that passed the house on TikTok?
Yes.
Okay. So it would ban TikTok. That's now, here's the deal. Okay. That's just a story, right?
Justin's on it. I love it. He's always on it, bro. Tell me this isn't like the,
the whole, uh, Patriot act type of boy. You guys have gotten good with this.
Shit. I'm full Tim foiled hat. Now. Yes, dude. We converted. So somebody,
I now default to that first.
Now somebody that I respect quite a bit in government
because they're very transparent, just in a mosh.
He always breaks bills down.
He always talks about what's in them
or hey, we can't pass this yet because it's 300 pages
and we just got it.
They want us to pass it an hour later, stuff like that.
So here's what he says.
Yeah.
The so-called TikTok ban is the government's latest effort
to control speech and control you.
The bill's definitions, ready for this?
Give it broad potential applications.
As with the Patriot Act, FISA and AUMFs,
the executive branch, the executive branch, the president,
will maximally exploit each provision
to amass and abuse power.
In other words, this bill, what they're doing,
and this is what they always do very well, is they said, oh, we think we could get
Americans behind this TikTok ban because China owns it and they don't
like their kids using it.
And I mean, even me, like initially I hear this and I'm like, yeah,
let's ban this social media.
Right.
But really what they're doing is they're using that to put through a
bill that gives them power to start to really regulate social media companies and regulate our speech.
Is there ever, is there ever a bill that's just pure?
Nope.
Is there ever like a straightforward, like, Hey, this is just cut and dry.
Or is it like, there's always this like, I'm always fascinated by that.
You know, with how many lawyers it must take for them to write these like
novels of, uh, uh, you know bills and things they're trying to push through.
And then the time frame they give all of the House
of Representatives and the Senate time to vote,
or even read it.
They don't even have people that can read the whole thing.
I've heard of scenarios where it just drops.
And then they're voting the next day, 24 hours later.
And it's like, and it's 500 pages,
it's like, who the fuck reads 500 pages in 24 hours?
Like, well.
Yeah.
And the strategy literally is, if you are a politician
and you want to give funding, or your funders, right,
the people that donate to your campaign, whoever,
they want money, one of the best ways to do it
is to throw it in a bill, in the middle somewhere,
and then name the bill something, or have something in it that people would get
behind would get behind. Yeah. And then next thing you know,
your buddies are getting money and you're getting more.
Well, just all the foreign aid and stuff like that just ends up, uh, you know,
getting smashed in there. You're just like, what?
We're giving like billions of dollars elsewhere. You know, through this.
Do you feel like this is like last ditch effort by the government to like do these,
these, because I feel like more and more people are waking up.
Like, I don't know, like I explained after watching the octopus desk thing that I
watched, I was just like, so I think everyone's been asleep for so long that
it's becoming, I feel now the average person,
when something gets posted that's coming from the government
or a new bill comes out, I feel like there is this,
there's more distrust than there's ever been before.
Where in the past it felt like, oh, it's their government,
they're here to protect us, like where I feel like
way more people distrust the information first.
What's the expression grasping straws or or it's like their last ditch effort.
I believe maybe, I don't know, man.
All you gotta do is scare people.
And then you typically get what you want.
You know, I mean, what they passed, I mean, we were alive in September 11th.
We were all held in our twenties or teens.
And after that they passed shit they would have never passed before.
And they would call it things like Patriot Act or, you know, the
National Defense Authorization Act.
Um, and because people are scared.
Look what happened with COVID.
COVID comes now, by the way, they're labeling it a flu.
Other countries, many countries now are saying, oh, this, we regard this like a flu.
When COVID happened, it wasn't that long ago when it happened, this stuff that
they got away with that people allowed them to get away
with was just insane. It was supported half the
time because people were scared.
So.
You didn't have a choice.
It was pretty insane.
Well, I mean, you kind of did if everybody kind
of stuck together, you know, but people were
just scared.
It's easy to scare.
No, I mean, yeah, we were eliminating your
choices.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I don't know.
And then speaking of this, the whistleblower for
the boing.
Oh, bro. Yeah. Can we don't know. And then speaking of this, the whistleblower for the Boeing. Oh, bro.
Yeah.
Can we just, yeah. So what happened?
I'll say, so this guy.
Committed suicide.
Is that the story?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So he, this is the guy that came out and said,
Boeing is, they're putting stuff together too fast.
They're not doing enough like checks on their equipment or they're putting stuff together too fast. They're not doing enough like checks on their
equipment or they're putting things out that
are faulty like the, the, whatever that system
is that comes down that gives you the mask,
the oxygen system.
So he was about to go to court to testify
against Boeing and then killed himself.
They found him committed suicide.
Now the, the, the, the crazy thing is that Boeing, almost
half of their funding comes from the government
because of their military contracts.
So that's where everybody has, you know,
everybody's alarm bells are ringing.
Cause you know, that's national security,
right?
If you crush that company with a lawsuit, that
could hurt national security.
It's just like, there's so many cases like that
of suicide that are like just suspect. It's like, are we so many cases like that of suicide that are like just suspects
It's like are we ever gonna see one of them get thoroughly investigated by like an outside party that has no vested interest in
Military industrial complex. Nothing was worse than Epstein. Come on. Well, that's what I mean
That one too. It's just cameras stop working. It's the go to
Working it's like, what the hell?
I know.
How quickly we just forget about it too.
How quickly is like, that was like so wild
and everybody like up in arms
and then it's just like, oh, we forgot about it.
I know.
Like no one talks about it anymore.
I know too.
Like we never got the full list of people.
He killed himself.
Go to the cameras.
Eventually should come out with a book.
You know, and then it's like, tell all
and they're all like dead already.
Great. Thanks. You gotta love it. You gotta love it.
I have other news, business news outside of the conspiracy theories.
We'll move away from that. Uh, did you see prime now is so Jake, Paul,
Logan, Paul, the boys, right? Uh, signed with NFL with, um,
I think the Kansas city chiefs. Wow. What? Yeah, bro.
So the WWE, I mean, you're talking.
They're two mega contracts.
I want to know, and maybe we can keep an eye on this,
how much the market share of electrolyte energy drinks,
whatever, and how close they are to catching up
to a Gatorade that's been established in the sports world
for decades now.
They are making moves.
Quick moves.
Fast, dude.
Real fast.
So they create this partnership.
How do you think it works?
Do you think the NFL, who is it, the NFL?
Or no, it's not the whole NFL, it's the Chiefs.
Yeah, it's the Chiefs right now,
but I mean, that's your first, I mean, that's,
I don't know, so I don't even know how would that work?
Would that be like, uh, we pay you to do this or we work together, share the
revenue? So I imagine, no, I imagine. Okay. So I don't know this for sure,
but I imagine the way Gatorade always worked. I mean, it's massive advertising
for Gatorade. Totally. That's what Gatorade is going to supply all the
drinks you could possibly want for your teams. Plus they're going to pay the NFL huge to be the official drink. Yeah. And they're going to supply all the drinks you could possibly want for your teams plus they're gonna pay the NFL huge to be the official drink. Yeah and they're gonna
make sure that none of the players are drinking the competitors stuff. Right, right
yeah so and that in fact that's such a strict rule that if you were playing on
a team and you were drinking a competitor Gatorade you'd have to put
tape over it. You couldn't even have a bottle that had something else like okay
there's the market share.
Wow.
They're not even scratching the surface yet.
So what's Gatorade at?
What is that?
6.7 billion.
Prime is only at 250 million right now.
But look at Liquid Death.
Yeah, they're above Pedialyte.
Wow.
That's legit.
Liquid Death.
Oh my gosh.
Wait a minute.
Hold on a second.
Sports and energy drinks and Pedialyte is this is a cool skit.
That's you Doug. I want, I want that clip. That's an, I've never
seen that before. What's that? We have five hour energy. Wait,
what are all those? Okay. You know, all of them, a Gatorade
body armor. You know that are still beaten in five hour, five
hour energy bang.
Bang. No, what's that one after five energy? What is that? Uh,
body armor or no, Luke. Oh, Zade. I have no, what's that one after five energy? What is that? Body armor?
Oh, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no is it is five-hour energy just a that shit shit product has been around
for so long no it's not it dominated yeah I don't mean that it's not shit
like it's strong it was like the first is the smart it was the smartest I
remember when five-hour energy came out as it because it's been out I find out
see how long it's been out small container yes you know for I'm like a
this is brilliant when it first came out I'm like this little tiny body box in the middle of the day, you get your massive boost of energy
and you don't have to drink a big can of whatever or take pills because people
feel now body armor either merged or was acquired by somebody. So there's,
there's, there's a reason why they're that high already too.
So 2004 was five hour energy, 2004. Yeah. What if you came out with like what if you came out six
hour energy apps five and a half hours oh there's right there oh start it was
it's with the quarterback oh it's with okay so it was with my homes yes so the
partnership isn't with the chiefs of interesting so I wonder how that works
I can do that how he can sign with them while Gatorade is an official sponsor of, of the NFL, maybe off a healthier
alternative. Yeah. Yeah. He might not be able to drink that at the games.
We'll see. That'll be, you know, try telling the face of the NFL. He can't do
that. I mean, you're talking about, I know he is the golden boy. Yeah. So
that, you know, I heard a stat. So I heard a stat on some salad that I want to know if you is true
It was is actually in one of like I was reading one of Max's books and it's like
It's like it's like a science. It was actually like a science devotional and something else books
It was like and they made a point about and they were talking about
Electrolytes in it and that in back in the days and they were talking about electrolytes in it,
and that back in the days,
and they were talking about desert lands and stuff like that
where there's not a lot of water and stuff, milk,
and that you can get as much electrolytes from milk
as you can from any of these like,
or that milk provides you with those essential.
Yes.
Probably, that makes a lot of sense.
I didn't know that. I didn't know they had that much, yeah. You didn't know that? I like the light essential. Yes, yes. Probably, that makes a lot of sense. I didn't know that.
I didn't know they had that much, yeah.
You didn't?
Electrolyte content in there.
Yeah.
No, that would make sense.
It's a, I mean, it's a milk, right?
So you would think that the human breast milk
would probably have that as well.
Passed on from the manhole, right?
So that would make a lot of sense.
Look up the electrolyte content in milk.
Uh-huh, so I thought that was really interesting
because it was talking about desert lands, right?
Where there's not a lot of water and rain and stuff like
that and how they survive. Decent source of sodium and potassium. Wow! Do you know who
drank a lot of milk? The Mongols, wasn't it? The Mongols? Yep. They would
they would that was cheese. That was one of the secrets to their ability to
conquer besides their fighting style that they would travel and they would
drink they would have milk and they fighting style, that they would travel and they would drink,
they would have milk and they would have cheese
that they would consume.
They found that milk may be more effective
than water or sports drinks as restoring
and maintaining normal hydration status after exercise.
Yeah.
Most likely to do to milk's electrolyte content
and energy density.
You know what's crazy?
Whenever we talk about milk,
whenever we talk about milk,
there's always people that comment afterwards that I don't know how that this weird, it's gotta be PETA. It's
gotta be this super propaganda machine. Yes, dude. That somehow milk is like, it's one
of the most nutrient dense, like healthy foods on the planet. How weird is it? We've been
steered so far away from things like eating meat that's obviously bioavailable
and has lots of nutrients in it,
and we've been doing since the dawn of time,
and drinking milk, and clean water.
It's like, it's all propaganda.
People are so swayed by it,
and they don't wanna use their brain.
Do you know there was a period there where,
it's not like this anymore.
Now people understand and know,
but there was a period there when formula was first created. Well, they said it was better. They said it was better like this anymore. Now people understand and know, but there was a period there
when formula was first created.
Well, they said it was better.
They said it was better than breast milk.
Such bullshit.
And women were encouraged.
Didn't formulas sign big contracts with hospitals and stuff like that?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And they were encouraged.
Yeah.
You know that?
That women were encouraged to not breastfeed.
There was a time where it was being promoted on TV as better than-
Like our scientists have made it a superior formula. Yes. where it was being promoted on TV as better than.
Our scientists have made it a superior formula. Yes, such bullshit.
Such arrogance too, yeah.
It's wild to me, but there was a period there
and I wanna say, I think it might have been
the 50s or 60s or maybe 70s.
Longer after that.
No, no, when they were told, when women were encouraged.
Yes, I thought that was like 80s. That wasn't that long ago. Even in the 80s they were encouraged? I think so, no, no. When they were told when women were encouraged, yes, hey, that was like eighties. That wasn't that
long ago. I think so. I think so. And well, I don't know. Were
you guys formula? No. Yeah. Yeah. You were too. No, you were
breastfed. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. No. Oh my God. The women in my
family are funny. I have a cousin was breastfed to was like
three and a half.
And he would ask for it. Mom could have some milk.
Katrina's got Katrina's got family. That's like that. That their, their, their daughter was all the way till almost four. Like walk over and just
like pull the shirt down.
I mean little like it is, it's so weird to us but in reality
back in the days when food was so scarce
if you had a natural source of food
to be able to feed your child
you would probably have done that for as long as you call
Absolutely.
I mean survival wise.
Yeah of course.
Absolutely.
I mean you're talking about taking the pressure off
of me going and hunting
I gotta get one last fucking deer you know what I'm saying?
Like cause you got that covered all the way.
Your wife's like, yeah, well fed and everything. Yes. Yeah. So I know we,
we need to be socially weird and unacceptable. I'm like, for me,
I'm like, I think we should stop when they remember. You know what I mean?
I don't like kids grow up and remember.
You're definitely going to have a preference.
No, I want it right now. No, not right now boob or an argument. No, I want it right now.
No, not right now, we're in public.
No, I want it right now.
I was breastfed, I don't remember it.
I'm happy I don't remember breastfeeding.
You know what I mean?
I don't wanna go back.
I don't wanna mess that up.
All these kids walk around.
What you got over there, Doug?
It seems like it was in the 1960s
that doctors started to really promote it.
And the idea was that it was more scientific
and complete and better than breast milk.
How long did that run for?
I think it ran for a while, Sal.
I think there's a lot of people who still think that maybe.
I do think.
No, not anymore.
Not even the doctors will say it anymore.
It's said in the 70s and 80s,
they were finally pushed back.
There is people that still think that.
I do think there are people who think it.
There are people that think, you know, part of it,
just naive.
Just naive, because they're not around.
Even if you ask the doctor, is this better or not?
They don't say that.
Oh, that, yeah.
So if that has been perpetuated since the 60s,
there are people that think that.
There's a lot of reading material that will point to that.
Now, and on top of that, formulas have come a long way.
Like, the fact that they said this in the 60s,
when they first invented formulas.
Yes, it was.
But then it was basically protein balance.
Yeah, they haven't even tested it.
It was like nonfat milk, you know,
and some cheap vitamins.
It was like designer way.
Now it's, you know, now it's come a long way, and now of course
it serves an incredible purpose.
There's definitely situations where it's needed.
Carnation beat God at what he does.
Man, that's...
Okay, more business news.
So do you guys know the company that bought out Blippi?
I think it's called Moon.
Oh, oh, oh, Moonbug.
Moonbug. Is it Moonbug? Yeah, I think moon bug is the company
They buy cocoa melon too. Yes. Okay. Yes, very good. Uh, very good dad
Pass the Blippi phase so
Gary V just signed a big deal with moon bug to
Make his Vee Friends into I
think a cartoon. Vee Friends? Yeah, are you not following all that? No. Okay, it's
like his NFT project that he did. So he did like a bunch of NFT stuff that was
called Vee Friends and signed a big deal with Moonbug and maybe one of the guys
over there, one of our two producers can pull up the article for me. It sounds
like they're gonna to make a cartoon,
Ariel. Moonbug and Vanir want a co-animated series based on the Friends franchise.
What?
Yeah.
That's weird.
Interesting.
It is.
Really, really interesting, especially since a lot of these NFT projects really have flopped. I mean,
if you're not getting sued.
All of them.
Yeah.
Yeah. Almost everybody I know is...
So this is how he's like pivoting, trying to still use, uh, that content.
Yeah. Yeah. I, it's, I don't know like how he's going to integrate that in the
NFT. What's it say right there? YouTube in September. It will launch in YouTube
in September. Oh, Moonbug and Vanirvott both attached. I want co-founder of
A Friends is built as a-
It's a contemporary. Oh, okay. No, it's the V Friends is focused on
collectibles, events, games,
and technology based around characters
who aim to make soft skills cool.
What's a soft skill?
Soft skill, yeah, it's communication skills,
like one-to-one, like being able to have small talk.
Oh, interesting.
Are you noticing the,
so we talked about this a while back, right?
And I think it was at least a few years ago
when we predicted that education would be like
the next big industry that would get disrupted.
Super disruptive.
Are you, okay, you have Jordan Peterson,
you have, who else did we just talk to?
Jaco.
Jaco, you have Alex Hormozi,
you have all these guys creating,
I'm missing some other big one that's being created right now.
Tim Kennedy has a school.
A lot of people are creating their own education systems
and schools.
Of course.
And it's starting to pop, big people too.
Elon Musk?
Huh?
Elon Musk.
That's right, Elon, there was the one that I was like,
there's someone bigger.
There's, oh, is that the V friends right there?
Yeah, interesting.
Super wild.
They're kind of weird looking characters.
They do look a little creepy.
Look at the guy in the middle of the big nose.
Yeah.
That's weird.
I don't know.
Andrew, are you familiar with how his NFT project worked
and if it was successful or not, or if it's still
hanging in there?
I know that he created hundreds of them.
And each one had some sort of utility,
which just means it could be used to be a VIP or have ticket access to one of his events and things like that. But I know
that all of his, like the names were, they were, they were drawn purposely as if kids
drew them and the names were like gratitude gorilla, clever crocodile, things like that.
So it makes sense for them to go in this direction.
Interesting. Do you think you could be someone like that, like that, and Elon Musk would get thrown in this category,
Peterson would get thrown in this category.
That obsessed with, call it money, power,
growth, network, whatever you wanna call it,
and be like balanced in your life at all?
Oh, no way.
No.
Yeah, like how?
Most of them I think the self-aware ones
do admit that, you know, that there's like definite
like deficits in certain areas of their life.
Finding me an extreme, extreme performer in any category
and I would think, I would be shocked if they were,
if they had balance in their life.
And is, and where, like how do you,
how do you take from that, right?
The skills that they've learned to apply
to become very successful, right?
For financially free.
But then also find a way that,
oh, I also wanna be a good husband and a dad and a friend,
and I wanna enjoy, be present and all these things like that.
Like, how do you juggle that?
And then is it run be present and all these things that like how do you how do you juggle that and then is it?
Is it run like them and have their mentality and then be self-aware enough when you when you reach a level that you
Provide all these comfort things or is it along the way?
You're always checking back in going like hey am I too much in this direction like what is that?
I don't know man. I think part of it like that I've seen when
I've seen like high performers like that are like really famous people try really hard to
make that work or like have some kind of family. They have to like incorporate them in all their
stuff. You know like they bring them to the set. They have them do their school you know right
around them like they it but, then at the same time,
like they're all grown up, like just experiencing
everything they're doing.
You know, they don't have their own life
that they're really leading.
Yeah, I feel like,
I mean, is there anybody that inspires you
that you guys see?
Like there's like, I don't even wanna,
I would never wanna be any of those dudes.
Yeah.
Like none of that sounds even appealing to me.
No, no.
I can't figure one. I think they're tortured too.
I think it's a torturous existence.
I think, and what's interesting is we idolize them
because they offer society so much.
Like oh my God, they built this and they did that.
Well they're super valuable, yeah.
But there's a lot of, probably a lot of sacrifice
on their end and pain on their end.
I think ideally what you would do is
before you have those really important things in your life, like family, that then you can say, well, it's
just me and I'm young, so let me just go as obsessive as I can. But then when
you're ready to start a family and do all that, then you have to figure it out.
That's, I think that would be like, if I was to like lay out a blueprint of, you
know, and assessing how I, how I did things or how I didn't do things
and going like, okay, talking to like a young teenager
or someone in their early 20s,
I think the advice I would probably give is like,
take a lot of what those guys have done,
the obsessiveness with the career path and the passion
and the drive to grow and do all those things like,
and read and learn and level up and network
and like take from them.
But then at one point, you know,
if you're this person who does want to have a family
and settle down and have that like that,
be self-aware enough to recognize that
that's a massive shift in.
And you're gonna have to start sacrificing.
Yeah, and balancing in a different way, right?
Like your priorities will shift. And I also, I also think it's, um, cause I got
caught in that trap, right?
When I, when I was younger, um, and I had my, my
first two, I think, um, I think we don't quite
understand a lot of people understand what really
makes people happy.
So we think it's, it's a lot of money is going to
make me happy or looking perfect is going to make
me happy or achieving a certain level of honor,
which could be fame or prestige or wherever you're at,
like I have the highest PhD,
or all these people know me on social media.
And so they chase that,
but that's not gonna make you happy.
The stuff that makes you truly happy in the data shows
are the things that you don't hear people being like,
here's John, he's like the father of the year.
You know what I mean?
There's no like, you know what I mean?
We're not talking about John, the father of the year.
We're talking about Elon Musk,
who created all these incredible things.
And I'm not taking anything away from that.
No, because we need those people.
We do.
We absolutely do.
It's absolutely necessary.
You know what's weird?
If humanity, human behavior was different, we wouldn't.
If human behavior was so that we kind of worked together
and were friendly and giving with each other,
we wouldn't need.
We wouldn't need like these geniuses
to invent these crazy, you know.
Now you're advocating for social systems.
No.
I didn't say force.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
Co-ops and shit, bro.
No, no, no, no, no.
That's forced.
Sal the socialist.
Come on, no, voluntary is the key here.
That's an unfortunate ring to him. There's a big difference between force and. I'm doing it voluntarily. No, that's forced. Sal, the socialist, no voluntary key here.
Unfortunate ring to there's a big difference between force and doing it voluntarily.
But it's, I mean, you're right.
It's human nature for us to, to, to not be that way, which is why I think the,
the capitalist model works so well.
Is that it mitigates the worst of us and kind of helps spread the good of us.
Yeah.
By no means does it make it's perfect.
No.
I'm saying, and you're still gonna have your outliers and stuff.
But I'd rather have an evil capitalist
than an evil dictator.
Yeah, you got a lot more options.
Yeah, dude.
You have no options with it.
They can both mess with me, you know, hurt me.
The dictator's really scary.
How do you guys, okay, so I gotta ask you guys.
We're now about 70
minutes in after everybody took a dose of Joy Mode. Okay, so Joy Mode. What's your
Joy level? Yeah, listen, so Joy Mode is marketed as a supplement for
blood flow, you know, pre-sex, right? Helps with, you know, that kind of stuff. Does it promote that you
like get really energized
because that's what I feel?
Yes, so that's not what it's sold for.
It's sold for blood flow, nitric oxide for sexual
performance, that kind of stuff.
But I take it in the middle of the day
because it makes me feel good.
And I think it's the combination of the ginseng
that's in there and some of the nitric oxide.
Doug knows the same thing.
Him and I will take it for the same.
Yeah, I do feel like it might be a little hack.
Because when we get about this time in the studio.
Besides the boner justice.
How exciting, by the way.
How's your butt?
Here's a towel.
Yeah, since we asked.
Can you hold it up?
The camera's going up a little bit.
When we're in the studio, at this point, right,
this far into the day.
After being in the cave.
Yeah, I tend to really dip,
but I don't have that feeling today in this,
like this qual, right?
Like I feel like I have way more energy.
So maybe that will be like a little hack.
It's like after I eat lunch,
maybe I'll pound one of those joyous.
Yes, cause it's not caffeine.
Yeah.
That's why you don't see me back to go back
and I'll take it.
Yeah.
I like it.
It is, I feel it for sure.
Have you been getting,
because we've now resigned with them a few times.
It was a company that, this is a,
there's sometimes there's companies where I hear it
and I'm like, yeah, I'm not,
let Sal's gotta approve that,
because I don't know enough,
or I'm not like, I don't know,
I don't see people really getting into that.
You go, yes, I like it, let's do it.
Have you gotten feedback from people?
Oh, you have.
Uh-huh, so of course you get the messages like,
oh, you know, my girlfriend and I,
or I took it with my wife,
I definitely noticed an improvement.
But I'm getting a lot of messages from people
who like it for energy or as a pre-workout
because of the pump, because of the blood flow.
So that's how I like to take it.
Like I said, I take it midday here
so that I'm aroused when I'm around.
No, that's not what I mean.
I take it midday because it's not a stimulant.
I don't want to take caffeine this late in the day but I still want to have it.
Now if I were to not work out say for another hour or so would it still be effective or is it not
close enough to that because we took it now almost 45-50 minutes ago at least. No you I think the
the increased production of nitric oxide should last you for a good at least few hours. Oh okay.
Yeah so yeah I'll report afterwards what the what the workout was like. All right who's the the increased production of nitric oxide should last you for a good, at least few hours. Oh, okay. Yeah.
So, go test it out.
Yeah, I'll report afterwards what the workout was like.
All right, who's a shout out?
Oh, here's a shout out.
So, podcast episode.
So, Alex Hermosy and Chris Williamson.
Chris Williamson, Modern Wisdom,
I think one of the best podcasts.
One of our favorite interviewers.
I think he's one of the best podcast interviews in the game.
In fact, I would argue that he is.
I think he's, I enjoy his interviews better than Joe
Rogan's. Um, and he does this thing, he does this thing with hormones. He's so if you pull it up,
you'll see he's got quite a few interviews with them about every six months. They're friends. He
will bring her Mosi on, uh, the podcast. And Chris is a very intelligent guy as it is he's very talented interviewer and one of the styles that he does is he lets like six months pass by between him and
Hormozi meeting and then he'll take all of
Alex's like most controversial tweets and basically make him explain himself and he'll
He'll defend it and then he'll he'll go deeper ask him deeper questions on his thought process on that or challenge it.
And so it's just a really cool, especially if you follow or pay attention to Alex Ormosy,
I definitely think that his interviews with Chris are by far the best that he ever does.
So go check out that podcast, Modern Wisdom.
Get Dynasty is a company that allows you to get a trust, a living trust in five minutes for free.
It costs nothing.
You can go on the website, set yourself up with a trust.
By the way, trust is better than a will
because a will has to go through probate core.
A trust doesn't.
A living trust is a personal and private entity
that you create.
You can move your property into.
Nobody knows who it is. so instead of owning your homes,
investments, banks, your trust owns them,
and then you control the trust.
Again, it's free, takes five minutes to set up.
There's no hidden costs, nothing like that.
It's the first of its kind.
Go check them out, go to GetDynasty.com.
All right, back to the show.
Our first caller is Matthew from Illinois.
What's up, Matthew?
How can we help you?
What up, Matt?
Hey, how's it going guys?
It's awesome to be on here.
I appreciate the time.
Just to start off, wanted to say, I know there's been some debate over team Adams and team
Justin and team Sal's and I'm just here to represent team Stand When I P.
I don't know where I fall.
That means you're on.
Yeah, you're cutting out Matt.
We can't hear you anymore.
Sorry.
Team man card is what they call that one.
Good job, bro.
Good job.
It's okay.
Are you able to hear me?
No, he was just kidding.
He's just, you heard his.
Dang, you walked right into that.
I did that. I did. Um, but, uh, also just before I get into my question, I wanted to
say it's, uh, it's been, uh, your podcast has given me a lot of knowledge. It's helped
a ton both personally and professionally went through a reverse diet after losing the weight the wrong way, increased my maintenance by a thousand calories and was able to have a successful
reverse diet, able to fix my mobility that didn't allow me to squat, even get the bar
behind my head was impossible.
And then professionally becoming a trainer, becoming lead trainer, going to manager.
It's just been an awesome ride.
And a lot of it is in part to what you guys provide.
So thank you.
That's awesome.
But you're still pissing all over the seats
like these clowns, huh?
Yes.
Freedom, dude.
It's all right.
It's all right.
All right.
How can we help you, man?
I can tell.
Yeah, so basically just calling. I'll kind of just read what I emailed.
So in the past few years, I've gone on multiple bulks.
Uh, I've tried smaller calorie surpluses going into the bulk, larger
surpluses going into the bulk.
Um, and in both scenarios, I'll add weight to the scale slowly over time.
But all the weight tends to be body fat, I feel. For reference, during my bulk, I'll
typically gain 12 to 15 pounds through the fall and winter. I'll do three to four weeks
in a surplus and one week at maintenance or a slight deficit. During the entire bulk,
weigh myself, measure fat percentage, get
waste measurement every week and just follow the trends.
Uh, my waste and fat percentage will always go up with the scale.
I've tried going slower, adding only a hundred calories every few weeks.
And I still increase fat percentage with scale weights, Workouts are traditional strength training,
whether I'm bulking or cutting, just changing the stimulus or the program. I follow a lot of the
MAPS programs. I've been slowly getting stronger over the years at my big compound lifts and just
non-compound lifts, but I feel a lot of that has to do with my mobility and just practice of the movements
getting better, giving me those strength gains, appearance and body metrics haven't really
changed.
I've also noticed one of the weird things that happens is every time I go into a cut
phase, especially the beginning of a cut phase, I'll actually put muscle on for the first
few weeks, being in roughly a 500 calorie deficit.
I'll get stronger while the scales dropping after the first few weeks.
Then I just seemed to maintain muscle and lose body fat. Um,
but all of my PRS, uh, really my biggest strength gains are during a cut.
I think he's eating something. So yeah, that's, that's a, that's strange. Yeah. It's, it's a weird, that's a weird thing to cut calories and you notice strength go up.
Do you change your workout?
Mm hmm.
Um, I do, but it's typically like, so I've run, I've run anabolic on a cut and in a bulk.
I've run performance in a cut in a bulk.
Um, those are the two I can think bulk. I've run performance in a cut in a bulk. Those are
the two I can think of where I've done both and I've responded the best to
both of those programs in a cut or at maintenance. When I go into a bulk,
really the only thing I notice is maintaining everything but gaining body
fat. So you don't go into a cut and change programs right when the When the cut you're doing the same program the whole time, or do you
change when you go into a cut versus a bolt?
I'll change.
Yeah.
So anytime I change.
Yeah.
That's where the strength gains are coming from.
Do you, do you typically go to reduce the volume when you go into a cut?
Is your maintenance less than you think?
Uh, for, so first for Sal, uh, you said, do I do less volume
when I go into a cut is that what you said?
Yeah.
Um, probably not.
I know I went from anabolic in a bulk one year to performance in a cut.
So performance seems to have more volume than, than anabolic.
Yeah.
Okay.
It's the change of the program.
I think that's giving you the strength gains.
It could be that, but the other, the other example I have when people that's
happened to people is when they are, they have some sort of an intolerance
and the reduction of that, I mean, you're an example of this.
Do you, do you talk about this?
Why was fighting?
Yeah.
When you're in, in your,
do you have any gut issues or what do you, what kind of foods are you eating in the bulk or are they different foods?
So it's typically like protein.
I'm always able to maintain whether I'm cutting or bulking,
I'm able to maintain 180 to 200 grams just from,
you know, chicken eggs, meat sources, no problem. Um,
and then really all that's changing is like, carb load, more or less rice, more or less
oatmeal, more or less potatoes.
But yeah, basically whole foods all the time.
I've gone the other way too, where, cause I'll change the stimulus or the program.
Like I'll jump from one MAPS program to another
when I'm going from maintenance into a bulk as
well, but I don't seem to notice those same
strength gains as when I change it going into a cut.
Yeah, that's weird.
I would, my inclination is to say there's some kind
of gut or inflammation issue that would contribute
to that.
Because that's very counter to what typically would happen.
Would it make any sense in the other way, unless protein intake was different, programming
would be the other thing I would look at, other factors we might not be considering
like sleep and stuff like that.
Do you generally feel better in a cut?
Um, I would say not,
not towards the end of a cut, um, when calories are getting down to like
2000, but when my cat, when I first started cutting, I'm in the mid 2000s,
I'd say that's when my,
I typically feel the best is when my calories are in the mid 2000s.
Have you tried to shorten the time period of cuts and bulks where you undulate calories more regularly? In other words, like, instead of doing it for extended periods of time,
you just you give yourself a low calorie for a few days and then go right back to kind
of maintenance or slight surplus and go back to low calorie and then kind of undulate like
that because it sounds like you're getting this great response when you reduce calories.
My guess is it has something to do with food intolerance or gut or something like that
because that's really weird. But if that's the case, you reducing like that is obviously
sitting and it's not until the end of your cut, you're saying that you feel the adverse
effects of it. So why not shorten the cuts up or the time periods and undulate the calories
on a more regular basis and kind of try and be more maintenance versus trying to
be in a cut or necessarily a bulk all the time.
Well, I think what's clear here, Matt is, is if all the factors are controlled,
right?
If everything's the same except for the calories and you notice you're stronger
and you feel better when you get to the mid 2000s, what you want to do is always listen to your body and ignore what might
be conventional wisdom because you would think on its face it doesn't make any
sense. I should feel stronger eating 2800 calories, 2900 calories I do at 25 but I
always feel better at 2500 calories. Well, there's something we're missing.
Nonetheless, if you just listen to your body. So I would stay in the calorie range that makes you feel the best and not worry so
much about whether or not you're in a bulk and a cut.
In other words, I would base it off of your strength and how you feel and not so
much on the, I'm eating a surplus or a maintenance or deficit.
Because there's something we're missing here.
But regardless of what it is, if you just follow with how you feel, then you're going to move in the right
direction. Does that make sense?
Yeah. Yeah. That makes sense. Um, I kinda had, uh,
I guess an idea that maybe you guys would point to the gut too,
cause that's kind of what I've maybe thought that it is. Um,
I don't really tend to get any extra
blow or any like gut issues when I eat
certain types of foods, but that's kind
of the same thing.
I just, that's kind of my unknown area
too is, is gut health.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But here's, okay, let me give you an
example of myself in this case.
Like I have really subtle issues with
this, like, so for forever, thought whey never even bothered me.
But what it really was, the only time it bothered me
is when I had it three times in a day.
If I have it once or twice, the response is so low level
that I don't see this physical response of like
major bloat or major fatigue.
But then when I would push it in a calorie surplus
where I'm trying to eat a lot more to bulk,
that's when I'd see some of these adverse effects, right? And they still weren't loud signals.
It was just enough to me to start to piece together. Man, when I cut that out,
I just feel so much better. And a lot of times it's the things that we eat on a regular basis.
And when you're maybe in a calorie- So it's the dose that makes the poison. Exactly.
So maybe when you're in a calorie deficit or look closer to maintenance,
Exactly. So maybe when you're in a calorie deficit or look closer to maintenance, those signals don't really pop up until you are like in a bulk for a period of time and you've been over consuming whatever said food is. And that now said food is starting to bother you a little bit. And the best way to do. I'd start with some of those and see like,
oh, what happens when I switch that food out
in a bulk and in a cut?
Does that make a difference?
But it really points in that direction.
But no matter what, to circle back to Sal's point,
none of it matters if we don't get the for sure answer.
The answer would still be the same of,
let's listen to your body.
It sounds to me like you have found this area where
your body likes to be calorie-wise.
When you go too low for too long,
you start to see adverse effects.
When you go too high for too long,
you start to see adverse effects.
So maybe hovering around closer to that maintenance,
dipping into the deficit for just a couple days,
going back up to and playing with the calories like that may be your best answer.
And instead of being so focused on am I on a cut
or a surplus of my calories,
just kind of try and go off a feel and intuitively.
Base it off your performance in the gym.
That's what I would do.
But if you want like really,
you want to really get granular,
I would work with a functional medicine practitioner
and they could run some tests to see, you know,
specifically what might be going on if anything.
But at the end of the day, just, just follow, listen to your gut.
If, if you feel good at 2,500 calories and that's where you see the best
performance and stay there.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And the last thing I was going to add to, just to get your opinion is like, it
just so happened that this week, um, I had to change up my
programming and nutrition a lot.
Cause actually a week ago, I ended up separating my shoulder a little bit.
So I've got to take things down in the gym, obviously.
Um, but with the heavy reduction in volume, just focusing on, you know, I went from like
seven hours of sleep tonight to seven and a half hours of sleep a night and up to my calories a little bit.
In this case, I've actually lost a few pounds in the scale in the last week,
even upping my calories and dropping volume.
So I wasn't sure if potentially volume could be an issue.
Of course.
That's why I asked about your workouts.
You know, know, I would
focus on the workout programming and eat in the way that makes you feel the best and you might be
overdoing it. You might need more sleep and less volume. Sure, sure. I've seen people go into cut
and get stronger because they cut the volume and it was the programming that did it. That also would
point the direction of the calorie surplus thing to be having an adverse effect too because remember
your digestive system is like your muscular system.
They're all systems of the body.
They're all uniquely connected.
And if you're stressing all the systems out, your body's not going to respond very well.
So if you're stressing your digestive system by over consuming, simultaneously over stressing
by over stimulating and over training, then you could have a negative response inside
the gym and performance.
And then the reduction, it gives you some relief,
at least on the digestive system,
so then you see this positive like,
oh, thank you, at least one of my systems
isn't stressing like crazy,
and then you get this positive feeling.
And then you continue that for a period of time
where then now your body's like,
okay, we've been low calories for a couple weeks,
now we're not seeing as much positive effects.
So that's might be what we're, we're noticing.
Yeah.
All right.
What's the name of our forums?
MP holistic health on, uh, yeah, go to Facebook and MP holistic health.
It's our functional medicine forum and you can ask some questions there.
I do think this might be gut health related.
Um, that's what would make the most sense, but the only way to know
for sure is to do some testing. Yeah, yeah. And I'll, yeah, I am
actually in that forum but I just have never really asked anything in there but
I'll definitely make a post there. Yeah, I would say when I eat more, when I
eat more of the same foods, I actually get weaker in the gym. When I eat less of
the same foods, I feel stronger in the gym. What could be going on? And then
they'll, you'll probably get pointed in the right. When I eat less of the same foods, I feel stronger in the gym. What could be going on? And then they'll, they'll,
you'll probably get pointed in the right direction of in terms of testing.
Yeah. Well, I, uh, I appreciate, appreciate the feedback. And once again,
thanks for everything you guys do.
Found you guys probably six years ago and listen almost every episode since.
And it's, uh, it's awesome. Thank you so much, man. But Jim, by the way,
you running in, uh, it's an anytime fitness you so much, Matt. What gym, by the way, are you running?
It's an Anytime Fitness.
Oh, good deal.
Nice.
All right, man.
Thanks for the support, Matt.
Go hit goal.
Yeah, thanks.
You got it.
All right.
Those are the big, are those the big?
No, no, no, no, small ones.
I almost bought one of those franchises.
Oh, that's the one.
They're the ones where you only need like three people
to manage them and they're all self-automated.
That's right.
Yeah, yeah. That's right.
They're still trucking along.
I wonder how.
It's an interesting model.
Yeah, I really seriously considered it,
and then never pulled the trigger.
Can't remember what I ended up pivoting
and doing at that time in my life, but like,
I remember having.
The cost of starting one of those is,
they're just a little expensive.
No, not bad at all.
They're not that crazy at all.
The equipment and stuff.
It was quarter million or less.
For a gym, that's not bad at all. Well, that stuff. It was quarter million or less for a gym.
That's not bad at all.
Well, that's what I mean.
It's still a quarter million.
Half a million for Orange Theory.
Really?
Oh yeah, you wanna do a big gym.
You're talking a million.
Yeah, a couple million.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So I mean, relative, right?
What a weird, weird scenario,
but it does point to, in my opinion,
something with gut health.
Of course, and it does make a little sense
that he gets this initial positive.
Yeah, because then inflammation goes down,
he's absorbing more nutrients, everything feels healthier.
And people have to understand,
this is the part of our space,
the health space that I don't like,
is we have so many specialties,
and they only talk to one system, the body.
And they all are, they're connected.
And so you have to understand
that if you're stressing the shit out of multiple
systems, that the body rebels and doesn't give an answer.
Then all of a sudden you give a little bit of relief or you take care of one of
those systems. And then all of a sudden you see this positive effect.
And sometimes it could be in a different one than you would think.
Like he's all of a sudden,
he relieves his digestive system a little bit by reducing his calories.
And then he sees this positive on the muscle side. Yeah. So it's like,
it's not, it's just trying to get to the bottom of where,
where the stress and the,
the potential over training or over consuming of something that he shouldn't
be eating.
Our next color is Rajni from Australia.
Rajni. How are you? Nice to talk to you.
I think I talked about you on the show, right?
You're that amazing before and after we talked about and the whole
transformation deal and all that?
Yes, you did.
Thank you so much.
She went through, she had a really, really rough time,
lost her daughter, and then she went through
this amazing transformation, competed,
fitness really changed her life.
You guys remember that?
I do remember now.
Yes.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Oh, awesome.
Incredible story.
Great to see you.
Nice to meet you.
How can we help you?
First of all, I never thought be, and I'm, I hear you show all the time and everyone says it. They never thought they'll be nervous, but they get nervous.
And I thought, oh, it's like talking to you guys. I listen to you guys every day.
I won't get nervous, but I'm nervous.
First of all, thank you very much.
You guys helped me through a lot of things, a lot of things, not just exercising and eating
and working with my anxiety, even the fear at the gym.
You know, I'm one of those people who went to the gym, did the deadlift and someone made
a comment or it's a stripper's bum and you're like, what does it even mean?
I don't have a stripper's bum or not knowing technique or getting conscious and listening
to you guys.
I had learned so much and just kind of thought I'm going to get myself a coach and be perfect.
Still not perfect.
I mean, there's no perfection. kind of thought, I'm going to get myself a coach and be perfect. Still not perfect.
I mean, there's no perfection, but you have really, really, really helped me
through a lot of things and also made me realize what it resonated with me. When Adam said that, you know, sometimes we use gym, um, something to run away
from, so you guys also helped me to face that and not use gym as an addiction.
I mean, when I say not use, I still do to some certain level. I do when I don't want to face something, I still go to the gym,
sometimes to just to process it. But there it is a way of dealing with things. But it's amazing. And thank you
for your honesty and courage to even talk about these topics on running away from the gym,
from situations and using gym and addiction to exercising, because there's so much mixed
information and no one talks about it. And when someone tells you, Oh, you addicted to the gym, you think it's a, it's a compliment. Whereas, whereas you learn that I'm running, actually, I'm,
it's not a compliment and listening to you guys have opened my mind so much.
It's unbelievable. So thank you. Thank you.
Um, and Justin, thank you for, um, showing Red Mill. I hate it.
I really, really hate it.
That's good for you.
I'm one of those listeners who transformed from nothing to who I am today,
all because of you guys.
Like I've implemented everything from diet to using novelty, exercising,
using from CrossFit to strength training, listening to good information and I love
listening to you guys about your kids. Sometimes when I'm listening to
you guys at the gym I laugh in between sets and everyone's like I think
she's got mental. I'm listening to this guy's mind pump and my brother says I
think I'm on commission with you guys.
So this is me saying thank you. Thank you. My question is not that complicated and I think so I know the answer. It's like, it's like a confirmation I need from you guys. So I've taken a job which
requires me about 90 minutes to commute one way. So it's about three hours minimum, sometimes it
goes into four hours. And then my hours are, I mean, I'm going to move closer to work. So it's about three hours minimum, sometimes it goes into four hours.
And then my hours are, I mean I'm going to move closer to work but it's in July and it's still three to four months. And the work is eight to five which is another nine hours. So I still train
five days a week which I want to reduce to four because I'm getting tired.
But I don't, and I always hear you guys talk about steps like walk every day and I use walk also
to get out of the house because I still don't have a social life as in friends to go out with or
hang out with. I think so you guys have become my friend I hang out with you guys all the time.
I think you guys have become my friend and I hang out with you guys all the time.
With that, I eat 1800 calories and I'm only 152 which is 411. I was about to say 411. 411 not that small and I weigh 50 kilos. Right now my body fat is 18 percent. It was 14 percent
at the comp. I needed to bring it back to a normal place where I can work,
be happy, take care of my life and things that no life admin. So I feel good at 18%, no 19%.
And with 1800 calories, I get to eat enough. But without any walk, it takes away any active aspect of my life.
I'm just training and then I'm sitting on my hands all day at work.
So what do you guys recommend I should do so that I can stay in a good mental
health space and also maintain this.
Like I'm in a steady place.
I want to maintain this like I'm in a steady place. I want to maintain it.
And I do have programmed for 18 weeks and I want to use your maps and a bullet going
forward.
Should you think I why I have 18 weeks is because I was trying to compete again in July
before I turned 50.
And I was like, it's too many things happening, not the right time to compete, let's just give it up.
But I still have the program.
So what do you guys recommend?
I'm glad you made the decision to not compete
with what you got going on.
I think that that's too much with that kind of a drive
with that much of a shift in lifestyle right now.
And it sounds like we only have,
it's really just till July, right?
July, you plan to move closer, is that right?
So, and if really just till July, right? July, you plan to move closer, is that right?
And if you could handle this, my recommendation would actually be to reduce the volume of training and replace it with walking. So if you like going to the gym still four or five days a week,
I wouldn't stop that. That's healthy. But I would actually drop you all the way down to one or two days of maps
anabolic and then the other two or three days walking and
you know put us listen to mind pump or read listen to a book or
Do something listen to music whatever you like to listen to and mind?
Yeah, and and get a nice walk in on the treadmill or low-level
Cardio on the elliptical.
I think that would be a great way to get or go outside if it's a beautiful day, even better
and go for a walk.
But you've heard us say this, I know you have if you listen to all the shows is that it's
amazing how little volume you have to do to maintain from what it was compared to get
there.
So you already have an amazing physique. You work so hard to get here.
You don't need to do nearly as much to maintain what you have,
especially if you keep your diet in check and you look like you eat really well too.
So if you're eating really well,
you probably don't got to train. And this is a time where I would reduce the volume of training way down,
especially with that kind of a commute and I'd replace it with more walking and stuff.
I like the reduction in volume.
I mean, you can't even do maps on a ball
three days a week.
And now here's the other aspect with activity.
Forget the calorie burn.
Sitting down for eight hours straight,
even if you're active outside of that,
tends to not feel so good.
So what I used to do with clients of mine that work, because we're here in Silicon Valley, so like most of our clients did that. That's what they did.
They would sit for 10 hours. I would have them every two hours, I would have them stand up
and walk for five minutes. So every hour or two, get up and do a five minute walk. And that turns
into like 20 minutes of walking throughout the day. But you'll notice your productivity increases,
you feel better, better energy,
blood sugar control is better.
So literally, you just have a little alarm on your watch,
and when it goes off, maybe 90 minutes it goes off,
get up, do a five minute walk, maybe around the office,
come back, sit down at your desk, and get back to work,
and then you don't have to worry about outside activity
because you've already made up for it
with those little mini walks throughout the day.
But I wouldn't change your calories. Don't drop your calories.
No. No, no, no. Okay. Okay.
Yeah. Because you'll feel great. I think you'll feel great doing that.
I love that advice. Although I still think you should reduce volume. Three hour drive
plus an eight hour day of work. If you're lifting five days a week,
like MAPS and a ball of three days a week, this would be perfect.
Yeah. And then the other two days you could do mobility, whatever. And then the little
mini walks throughout the day, I think you'll feel amazing. Thank you. Yeah. I appreciate this
because I was like, I'm sorry, I'm very careful of using my words because you know what? You tell
yourself because reality. I don't want to use addiction. I like going to the gym five days a
week because it's kind of a routine. It's just same thing every day, but I do understand of keeping myself mobile more than just
do that one hour and then just sit and rest of the day. The other option you have that I would love
to see you do, and if you don't have it, we'll give it to you. Do you own Maps 15 already?
No. Okay. So I have Doug send you Maps 15. That's a six day a week program.
That's the, and do the advanced version. But it's only two exercises. So what I'd love to see you do
is go to the gym, do those two movements, and then walk for the other 30 minutes. That'd be great.
That would be awesome. So that way you still have your routine, because I don't like breaking a
client who likes that. Like when you're in, I know what it's like to be in that routine and be in a
good groove and you like that whole process.
I don't like to disrupt that.
And so I'm all for you still going to the gym five, six days a week.
Just now drop it down to the two.
So we'll literally follow map 15 advanced.
And then the other spread it out.
And then the other time you're in the gym, either go for a walk on the treadmill or do
mobility or do something that's more working inward, do something like that.
That would be awesome.
By the way, the comment you made about running from things with exercise,
if you exercise and you didn't, and then you said, sometimes you process with
your workouts, if you put yourself in your body while you work out, if you're in
your body, feeling your body while you work out, that helps the process.
That's actually helps processing.
It's, it's called, it's somatic.
When people run away with exercise, what they tend to do is they're out of their
body, they're just, oh, they're just going and then they're not processing,
they're running, but be in your body, allow yourself to feel what you need to
feel even while at rest in between sets.
That's a great way to process a difficult feeling.
One of my favorite ways to do that is kicking shoes off,
getting barefoot and doing mobility stuff where you're like,
you're moving your feet in the grass or the artificial turf. If you're indoor,
and yeah, you're going slow. You're pausing in the movements.
Like that's a great practice for working inward.
I love bare feet and my gym doesn't have aircon.
So sometimes they don't have a choice, but see me bare
face, it's too hot here.
I'm going to die.
Well, that's awesome.
Roger.
Well, we're going to send you that we're going to send you the maps 15.
I think that's a, that's a great program for you right now.
Thank you so much.
Hey guys, I really appreciate your advice.
Um, and, um, I don't have anything else to say just to say, thank you. Thank you so much and guys I really appreciate your advice and and I
Don't have anything else to say just to say. Thank you. Thank you. Are you in our forum? I want to see more of you. I
am I'm not on social media is just I
One of those people who did stay off of it
Get on it stay off of it. Yeah, you know what?
With us in a couple months check back with us in a couple months. Check back with us in a couple months. Yeah. Yeah. I'd love to hear how you're doing
once you make the move. Thank you. I will do that. But I have thought of the only problem with
the social media is linked to your phone and then other people start sending you messages once we
friend and you're like, I really don't want friends with you. I like you. Yeah. Yeah. We
don't want to encourage that.
You can just, just email us every couple of months.
We'll, we'll stay in touch.
Thank you so much.
All right.
Thank you, Roger.
Have a great day.
Thank you.
You too.
She's lovely.
I didn't recognize her.
You guys remember that?
Well, you know, I remember once Doug pulled the pictures up and showed her
before and afters.
Amazing transformation.
What she went through and all the stuff that she goes through that.
I mean, unbelievable.
Amidst all that.
And such a great attitude.
I know, such a great attitude.
Amazing attitude.
Yeah, yeah.
And she looks phenomenal.
I mean, she looks healthy, you know?
Yeah, yeah, no, she does look really healthy.
You know, you talked about going barefoot.
I've been doing that lately more, even with my kids.
Like when my three-year-old is just acting crazy,
we take our shoes and socks off, walk in the grass.
It brings everything down.
Yeah, there's something to it, man, for sure.
Our next caller is Maddie from Colorado. What's up, Maddie? How can we help you?
Hey, how we doing guys? Right on. I just want to start by thanking you guys for
the information you put out and it's been a great help over the last couple
of years. Right on. What you got for us, buddy? I'll just jump into my question.
That's all right. Yep.
All right. So a little background.
I've been training since I was 14.
I'm 20 now about to turn 21.
I've been consistent since the time I started, but with consistency and
diet and programming about three or four years, freshman high school, I was a
skinnier kid, about 150 pounds.
And I graduated around two 220 with probably 16 17
percent body fat so it wasn't too crazy but I've done a few phases cutting and
bulking I'm currently bulking eating around 3,500 calories a day eight to
ten thousand steps and I'm back up to that 220 weight but I have a lot more
muscle strength than I had last time I was at this weight I'm relatively strong and benching three plates squatting four and when I was dead lifting I got up to 500
I've been dead lifted in like a year and a half because I've been lazy honestly
But I've dropped 189 pounds and I'm back up to 220 like I said and my arms have stayed nearly the same size
They're lean and vascular. I don't really hold much out of my arms, but I just have been
having a hard time growing them.
I've ran your guys a split program and I started those, the push and pull days
with, I started them with arms.
So I was exerting most of my energy from the jump on arms, but I just
want to see what you guys thought.
That would be the first thing I would do Consistently is is and you never say this typically to the average person or typical but hit arms before you move
To your compound lifts that should work over time also
Have you done any occlusion training for your arms?
Where you put like the occlusion band and you have blood flow? Yep. Ah, no, I've not.
That'll probably add half an inch to a quarter inch to half an inch on your arms
within a couple of months.
Just practicing that.
Yeah.
And what you would do is at the end of your arm workout, just do like a couple
sets of occlusion and it's gnarly.
Do if you do it right, it's gnarly and it does tend to add muscle.
I mean, I, I was able to see a good quarter inch on my calves from
from adding that. Yeah I like Maps Antibolic protocol with trigger sessions focused around
arms. So I like yeah and then and also doing what you're doing right so following Maps Antibolic
starting with the arms which is not normal we tell someone so your goal mainly to develop your
arms I'd be like let's's do maps and a ball.
Let's start with arms always like you're doing.
And then your trigger sessions on your off days.
I want focused around arm pumps like that.
And you could probably cycle in the occlusion training in there every once in
a while, just be careful not overdoing it.
No, I would do with maps and a ball.
Like I would do occlusion once a week with all that once a week.
Yep.
Yep.
Yeah.
I would do recommend doing that on the back all that. Once a week? Yep. Yep.
Yep.
I would do recommend doing that on the back,
those last few sets of arms.
No, so if you start with arms, start with arms,
do your workout, and then at the end do,
one of those days, do like three sets of occlusion
for biceps and triceps.
Okay, and just stick to the wraps that are in the program?
That's it, and then do trigger sessions for,, for, uh, you know, all, all three
of them on the off days, make them arms.
Right on, right on.
And you should get a good, I would say a good half an inch, uh, probably
within 60 days or so, by the way, a 15 and a half, 16 inch arm that's lean
is way more impressive than a fat 18 inch arm.
You know, we get caught up with the inch, you know, inches of our arms type of deal,
but when you're lean, you don't need huge arms to look,
you know, muscle.
We just looked at your pictures, you look pretty balanced.
Yeah, and you're strong as fuck.
Thank you.
A lot stronger than I was at that age.
So you're ahead of the game, bro, for sure.
You're already, you're doing really,
yeah, you're doing really good.
And it's just, if they're smaller muscles,
they take a lot longer to see.
Frequency and volume is really gonna help you.
Yeah, it takes a long time to see a big difference on on
arms because they are small muscles it just takes consistency and you've came a
long way for how young you are already so you're gonna be just fine dude I
forgot he's 20 20 years old yeah you're doing good man yeah and is there I don't
have anabolic but is there deadlifting in there?
Should I start doing that again?
Yeah, deadlifts are in there.
Yes.
Thoughts about development in the arms?
Yes.
I was just going to say the deadlifts are in there.
And deadlifts are great for seeing arm growth.
So it's like one of those side effects
that you get to the biceps that not a lot of people
think they're going to get.
We'll send it to you.
So that in itself is probably going to help.
I love anabolic for you and focusing trigger sessions on the arms and let's see what that does. Right on sounds good. Well that was my
only question. All right Matt. Talk to you guys. Thanks a lot for the help. All right Matty take it easy.
I forgot how he was 20. Yeah bro. Hey bro 500 deadlift and 20 and three plates. Yeah he'll get his arms.
Fucker was over the next week. Over the next few years he'll get his arms over the next few years,
he'll get his arms up to a good 17 inches,
which is like really good.
And you know, to point out that,
that was a side effect of deadlifting,
I didn't anticipate.
That extended tension, that lengthened bicep tension.
Yeah, it's an isometric position for the bicep and forearms
that you just-
With fucking 500 pounds.
Yeah, where else do you do that?
Loaded heavy as fuck.
No, I saw huge gains in my forearms and my biceps from that, not anticipating that at just. With fucking 500 pounds. Yeah. Where else do you do that? Load is heavy as fuck. Yeah, no, I saw huge gains in my forearms
and my biceps from that, not anticipating that at all.
What's the biggest you ever measure arms?
You ever measure them?
That's a good question.
I don't know what they were at the peak.
I don't know if I even, how funny is that?
I was into bodybuilding and I don't know.
I mean, it doesn't matter.
Nobody cares about you.
I know.
And you know what I also realized too
was that they were probably the biggest one
I didn't like the way I looked like when I was just big
Bulking oh Lee. Yeah, I was probably bigger. Yeah, I probably had 19 inch arms when I was 240
But then I looked better with 18 inch arms when I was you'd lean
Yeah, of course
So, you know, that's the thing too about like the this is something I get stuck
We get people get caught up on the I remember this age though at this age. I remember
Oh, I got 19.
I remember guys saying stuff like that and getting caught
but it's like, you go through this enough
and then you realize like, oh wow.
I got the most jacked arm compliments when I was.
When you're lean.
When I was just.
And they're smaller.
Yes. I know.
Yeah.
Next caller is Marta from Minnesota.
Hey Marta, how can we help you?
Hey guys, I feel like I know you guys.
I hear you all the time. Yeah. Thanks so much for everything you do. I'm great. I'm really excited for this opportunity and just want to thank you guys for everything you do. It's very much needed,
especially with my background. And I'll go into that too here quick. Um, I'm about five, four, I'm about one 75 and I've already lost
about a hundred pounds naturally.
Um, I, yeah, thanks.
I lost it doing low carb as I was type two diabetic, uh, diagnosed
with that back in 2019 and I have since reversed that, um, with a
combination of weight training and cardio.
Oh yeah.
That's great.
Um, I can, yeah.
Uh, I completed my first triathlon last year and I'm now looking to
compete in a physique competition.
This is completely out of my comfort zone.
Um, I listened, I had been listening to you guys for awhile and I ran
maps anabolic twice last year.
I was always doing more circuit type training, did that.
And that's when I saw the most change was not doing so much. I was consistently tracking my macros, keeping carbs between
50 and 100 grams as I was a bit nervous with the type 2 diabetes being in
remission. Fats are generally around 70 grams, protein was always high, and
calories were around 17 to 1800. I've been at it that for a while and stuck
with that for about a year and a half
and I didn't see much movement on the scale. I didn't want to cut more calories because
I hear you guys and that's pretty low already. I know the scale doesn't matter as much but
with about 30% body fat I still have a lot of work to do. And I had been so stuck and
thinking that I need to just jack up the calories a bit as 1800 is not enough
to really cut from.
But I was nervous about that too, of course.
Since I've eliminated cardio, maybe taking walks here and there, and I purchased MAPS
anabolic advanced back in December, and I'm now going into phase three and see significant
changes.
I know you'd be happy to hear I have, I've
just heard more of the content and put my faith
in and fear aside and just trusted the process.
As you guys say all the time and went from
1800 to 2300 calories while doing anabolic
advance.
Wow.
Yeah.
So protein is between 150, 200 carbs went up at about 170 and fat are always between
70 and 100. I'm currently in the deload week and I'm now going into phase three and I feel great.
I'm stronger. My hormones are really balanced. I feel in great health and shape right now.
At this point, I'm looking for how to get leaner from where I am. This would be
a big change for me. I'm between the same three to five pounds during this process,
which is great because I feel strong and I'm getting good sleep and everything you guys
reference I feel great. I'm just not sure how to start cutting. I really need to build
my legs because the triathlon training and running and all that really messed those up with all the cardio I did.
And I just want to get into competition physique. And I'm not sure where to go at this point being in the place I was extreme overweight disease and everything else to now. Um, I was looking at maps aesthetic, but then heard that I should do performance
first and now, but I'm looking for the hard sculpted physique now. And this is my first
time doing it. I'm nervous. I'm scared. And I'm just kind of looking at you guys for a
little advice, you know, being that I was in a more extreme and now I'm going to the
other.
So Marza, you're, you're doing great. Um, you've, you have continued to make better
and better and better choices along this
entire journey. I think you,
you've come full circle as far as like where I'd want you to be.
So where you're at right now mindset, the way you're training right now,
the way you're eating right now is where we need to be.
We can interrupt the current like calorie intake with mini
cuts, but I act,
you're nowhere near right now where I want you to be
if you were a client and you said you wanted to compete
at one point.
I don't want you, I don't want, and the reason why,
and I'm sure you've heard me say this,
that the real work is done in the off season,
not in the cut for the show.
Well, all the hard work is in building the muscle,
building the metabolism to get us ready to cut for a show and your intuition was right. Being at 18, even being 2300
calories is just too low of calories to say, Hey, let's do a show in November
and let's start getting ready for it right now. Bad idea. Right now you want
to continue doing what you've kind of done right now, which is, and by the way,
to have cut out cardio to have increased to
2300 calories and did not have put on any body fat and to be getting stronger you have done a ton
in that short period of time. I just want you to keep doing that. I want us to keep going in that
direction and again if you want to see a little bit of movement on the on the scale down or
whatever okay I might let you go okay we're gonna do a cut for three weeks so we reduce calories back down to 1800 for three weeks and then I want to go back
up now this time we go up we're gonna go to 2400 calories and I'm gonna keep you at 2400 calories
for a while until you start to talk to me like this again and I'll go okay let's go cut for about
two or three weeks again so you can feel it see that and then okay now let's go up to 2500 calories
and I'm gonna keep playing that game with you until we are at a place where your metabolism is roaring. You're eating so much food,
you're looking back at me going, Adam, I can't even eat all this food. And you
feel strong and the scale hasn't gone up at all during this whole process. That's
where we want to be. Well in that place for a while before we even say, okay,
here's a date for when I want to get ready to try and...
Marta, what do you, what's the,
what are you looking to accomplish by doing this competition?
Is it because you like to train for a target or a goal? Is it, uh,
that you like to work towards something?
I've always admired the muscular physique. Um, I,
I mean as far back as I can remember,
just the work that goes into it as something I was never capable of doing.
My mind wasn't in it, you know,
being a hundred pounds overweight and developing the
EEs and everything.
You're doing it right now, Marta.
You're doing it, listen,
what you're doing is just such a challenge for me.
No, okay.
You're doing it right now.
Competing won't do that for you.
No.
If you get in a competition right now,
it's gonna send you in the opposite direction.
You're doing it already right now.
You are doing exactly what you,
if you hired me to get you ready to compete,
and I had no time, you just said,
Adam, we're building towards this long-term goal
to compete one day.
This is the process, what you're doing.
What you're doing right now is the process to do that.
This is the hard work.
You are building muscle.
You're building, like you're kicking ass right now.
If you jump too fast, if you jump the gun too fast,
you're gonna see, you're gonna backfire.
Everything's gonna go backwards,
and you're gonna send your body in too much stress,
potentially could cause more issues with your blood sugar,
believe it or not, because of the low calorie,
the training, the stress,
can actually cause metabolic issues as well.
I wouldn't compete right now, I'd do what Adam said.
And if you wanna compete, if you're really interested in some kind of a
competition, what's probably going to give you better results, even in
terms of getting a hard physique would be a powerlifting competition, not a
competition where you get on stage and you extreme diet.
I would rather see you do powerlifting than physique.
And if you still want to do physique, I would do what Adam said and just slowly
you're, you're moving in such a good direction, trying to compete.
Now would you would throw a wrench in the whole thing.
Right.
And I debated that, you know, cause I'm just getting started with everything,
but it's just something that, you know, it's a challenge for me.
Um, I see it as a good thing, you good thing that I'm able to put in the work
to do that and show myself.
You know what's happening?
I just saw your, we just saw your before and afters
and what your progress looks right now.
You're fucking killing it.
Yeah, you know what's happening right now
is you feel so good.
You're on fire.
You've already tackled the biggest hurdles,
which is losing 100 pounds and beating
type two diabetes.
Not a lot of people can do that or say that they've done that.
So you feel so good.
You're like, all right, I'm ready for the next.
Yeah.
What's next?
Yeah.
And what you don't want to do is jump the gun and throw a wrench into the whole machine.
Keep moving in this direction.
And you're crushing and just bask in this amazing feeling that you have right now where you feel balanced and strong and rested
and healthy. You don't need to push your body beyond what you're doing now. It's
not gonna get you there faster. It'll actually slow things down and maybe even
cause a reversal. And like I said, if you want that competition because I know you
did a triathlon before, to's, you know, this, to me, I had clients like this where they
liked to have a target, uh, you'd be much better served doing a
powerlifting competition than you would a stage presentation competition.
So if you need to sign up for something, find a local powerlifting
competition, I'll send you a Maps power lift and you can follow Maps power lift.
By the way, through that process of following MAPS Power Lift
with a slow reverse diet, you're going to build more muscle
and get better shape than if you were to start a-
Metabolism's going to go crazy.
Yeah, then you would if you were going to enter
into a physique competition.
Another good goal for us to have, if you want goals,
is the goal is to get to 2,800 calories
without putting weight on the scale.
And the way you do that is by doing
what you're doing right now, and then every once in a while,
interrupt it with a small cut
Never longer than two or three weeks. Okay, so never longer than two or three weeks
Do I want you to cut back down to?
1800 calories or so and then come back out of it every time you come back out of it try and come at a little bit
Higher calorie than what you were before and play that game
Just keep doing that until you can get to a point where you're like, I can eat 2800 calories and I'm maintaining this weight. That's amazing.
That means that we had built a bunch of muscle in that process that has now
sped your metabolism up that your body needs that many calories just to
sustain. That is a massive win. That is a massive win.
And that's a great goal. You were at 1800 calories. What were you eating?
What were your calories when you were losing the a hundred pounds?
What did you bring them down to?
It was, I didn't really count that kind of just got aggressive and
eliminated a lot of the crap I was eating, you know, processed food, nasty
carbohydrates, pastas, things like that.
And just kind of, I didn't really dial it in until I started training for the
triathlon and, well, I need to have more weight to lose and everything else.
And it wasn't until I actually started listening to you guys that I'm like, wait a minute, I need to have more weight to lose and everything else. And it wasn't until I actually started
listening to you guys that I'm like, wait a minute, I want
muscle, I need to lift more weights. And I'm not an idiot
in the gym, you know, I've lifted here and there, but
nothing like I'm doing now. And, you know, just I was just
afraid of gaining the weight, of course, you know, even, even
though I was eating healthy, but there was nothing happening.
And so then I heard you guys, you know, slowly reverse. I'm like, oh man, you know, like,
all right, you know, finally I just, I pulled the trigger and I'm like, I'm just going to do it.
I mean, what's the worst that can happen? You know, I just go back and it's been working
beautifully. So thank you. It works. For that advice. It really does work. It's insane.
How would you feel about following MAPS Power Lift as a workout?
Yeah, I'll give it a try. I mean I do have some shoulder issues that have slowly
been going away with some of the working out I've been doing with anabolic and
the mobility and anabolic advance. So that's helpful. But yeah, I mean, that sounds great.
All right, then I'll send you,
do you have Maps Prime Pro?
Yeah, wait, no, I don't.
I have, what, is that a program?
That's one of the programs?
Yeah, so I'll send you,
I'm gonna send you both Power Lift and Prime Pro.
Use the mobility movements in Prime Pro for your shoulder
and follow Maps Power Lift and continue on this process. It's going to be amazing.
All right. Thank you guys. I appreciate your time. Are you in our forum?
I'm not. Okay. I want you in our forum or anything else. That's,
I want you in there and I just want you to check back with me once a month,
check in with me once a month and let me know where we're at calories,
how you're feeling, where your mind's at.
I'll keep you on the right track.
Awesome.
All right.
All right, sounds great.
Thanks guys, I appreciate your work
and appreciate your time, thank you.
Thank you.
I love hearing that.
She's doing so good.
I love hearing that.
Reverse her type two.
Bro, so good.
I mean, incredible.
I mean, she's made a massive transformation already
and she's cut out the cardio,
increase the calories, reverse diabetes. I mean, fuck, are you
kidding me right now? The worst thing she could do. Oh, yeah. No
way. She's my client would never let her know. Never, never,
never throw everything backwards. No, no, no, no, no,
we're not ready. We're not. It takes a bit of the wind out of
the sails, but that's the right advice. No, she needed to hear.
I mean, there was something that drove her to triathlons,
which was a bad decision back then.
Also.
Yeah. Right, right, right.
Right, so, but I love that she put,
pieced that together and got rid of that
and look at the winds that she's having right now.
She's now, whatever was in her head
that made her think the triathlon is the same thing.
For physique.
For physique, same thing.
It's like just a different modality,
but it's like the same, like you don't need to do that
right now, you're doing the right thing,
stay the course. Exactly. course look are you a hard
gainer check out our free hard gainer guide mind pump free calm also find us
on Instagram Justin is that my pump Justin I'm at my pump to Stefano Adam is
that my pump out of thank you for listening to mind pump 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.