Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2396: The Best Way to Improve Your Squat, What to Do After Losing a Lot of Weight, Strength Training for Young Athletes & More (Listener Live Coaching)
Episode Date: August 7, 2024In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin coach four Pump Heads via Zoom. Email live@mindpumpmedia.com if you want to be considered to ask your question on the show. Mind Pump Fit Tip: How... you lift weights changes how you look. (2:31) Being a badass. (12:05) The fun process of building a MAPS program. (15:26) Sal likes to drive fast. (16:51) Adam’s hunt for creative car pathways. (17:41) New studies on the entourage effect of cannabinoids. (25:56) An appreciation of old muscle cars and the feeling of being present. (29:15) The ‘skibidi toilet’ viral trend. (41:02) Addressing the controversial Olympics opening ceremony. (45:45) The race to autonomous cars. (53:48) The latest deal from NASM. (58:33) Shout out to the FREE ‘How to Build a Profitable 7 or 8-Figure Coaching Business’ webinar with Jason Phillips and Adam. (1:00:02) #ListenerLive question #1 – What are your thoughts on athletes who do not have an “offseason”, but would still like some muscle gains? (1:03:23) #ListenerLive question #2 – How can I best utilize these higher-than-normal testosterone levels to optimize my strength and muscle building? (1:17:22) #ListenerLive question #3 – Is it better to work with clients on perfecting a deeper range of motion with their squats first or heavier weights and build strength? (1:28:26) #ListenerLive question #4 – How would you incorporate MAPS programs for an athlete who does their sport year-round? (1:40:10) Related Links/Products Mentioned Ask a question to Mind Pump, live! Email: live@mindpumpmedia.com Visit NED for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! ** Code MINDPUMP at checkout for 20% off ** Visit NASM for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! ** 50% off their Certified Nutrition Course, Promo code MPM50CNC at checkout ** August Promotion: MAPS Bands | MAPS 40+ 50% off! ** Code AUGUST50 at checkout ** Mind Pump #1932: Lifting Heavy Vs. Lifting Light Mind Pump #1872: Eight Benefits of Lifting With Light Weight Alice's Station Corvette ZR1 The Ruthless Elimination of Hurry: How to Stay Emotionally Healthy and Spiritually Alive in the Chaos of the Modern World skibidi toilet 76 (full episode) Olympics organizers address controversial 'Last Supper' tableau Gojira's Epic Performance at the Olympic Opening Ceremony Ottopia Technologies How to build a Profitable 7 or 8 Figure Coaching Business with Jason Phillips and Adam Visit Brain.fm for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners. ** Get 30 days of free access to science-backed music. ** Get your free Sample Pack with any “drink mix” purchase! Also try the new LMNT Sparkling — a bold, 16-ounce can of sparkling electrolyte water: Visit DrinkLMNT.com/MindPump Mind Pump # 952: Chad Wesley Smith of Juggernaut Training Systems Mind Pump # 2287: Bodybuilding 101- How to Bulk and Cut How to Box Squat to Improve Your Squat Form - YouTube 3 Day Mind Pump Personal Trainer Webinar Mind Pump Fitness Coaching Course MAPS Prime Pro Webinar Mind Pump #334: Jujimufu- The Anabolic Acrobat Mind Pump #435: The Secret of Jujimufu’s Success Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Kyle P (@mindpumpkyle) Instagram Dylan Wahl (@mindpumpdylan) Instagram Brian Kula (@kulasportsperformance) Instagram Cory Schlesinger (@schlesstrength) Instagram Paul J. Fabritz (@pjfperformance) Instagram Max Schmarzo (ATC/CSCS/MS) (@strong_by_science) Instagram Joe DeFranco (@defrancosgym) Instagram Chad Wesley Smith (@chadwesleysmith) Instagram Jon Call (@jujimufu) Instagram
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How you lift weights actually changes how you look.
I'm not talking about shaping and sculpting
certain muscles over others. I'm not talking about shaping and sculpting certain muscles over others.
I'm talking about lifting heavy versus lifting lighter. There seems to be a difference. Lifting
heavy tends to produce a granite hard look to the body. Muscles look dense and hard.
Lifting with a little bit higher reps, getting that pump tends to produce a rounder full
look to the muscle, maybe more like a bodybuilder. Now I have no studies to support this whatsoever,
but I have seen this personally in myself and in clients,
and this is something that bodybuilders have speculated
for decades, so do both.
You want that grand hard look and the round full muscles,
train the low reps and then the higher reps.
Get the best of both worlds.
You've been watching my morning workouts again, huh?
Which one?
It's, you know, the main one.
Okay, I don't know. What do you mean? You've been watching my morning workouts again. Which one? You know, the, the main one. Okay.
What do you mean?
How would you study?
I don't know, dude, but tell me you haven't noticed this.
I mean, we've talked about this.
I made it.
So it's weird.
What I wonder is, uh, is it though that maybe that whole time that I was training in hypertrophy, I just
wasn't building as much muscle as I thought.
I was just kind of airing it up all that time.
And then maybe when I switched to lower reps, heavier weight, really started to push myself
that way, I actually just built more muscle.
Do you think that's possible?
I don't know because-
Because I've thought about this and I've tried to wrap my brain around
like what is going on that I could clearly see a difference in the way my physique looked
pre heavy strength training versus you know a lot of hypertrophy training. But I what
I haven't figured out is if it's actually something like that or maybe I actually just
built significantly more muscle once I started training that way.
It's hard because I thought the same thing but obviously bodybuilders are the most muscular
strength athletes, right?
They have the biggest muscles.
That's not to say that powerlifters and weightlifters and other strength athletes aren't massive
and muscular as well, but bodybuilders obviously build the most, I guess, visual muscle. And they tend to move towards more of the hypertrophy style stuff, focusing on the pump.
But the look that you tend to observe in yourself, it is different.
Like, I just switched over, right? I haven't lifted heavy in a long time.
I haven't done five rep sets in a long time.
I've been kind of in this hypertrophy style of training for probably four months or so.
And I switched over a couple weeks ago
and I'm noticing it in my body.
I just, my muscles just look harder.
I don't have the same kind of bubbly look
but it just, everything feels and looks a little denser.
And every time I switch from one to the other,
I notice this.
And this, you know, Arnold used to talk about this.
Bodybuilders have talked about this for decades.
Like they'll throw in a strength phase
to get the granite hard look or they'll go into the pump phase or whatever to get that round fuller look.
I don't know. My speculation is one is more muscle fiber growth, whereas the other one is
more maybe sarcoplasmic growth. Remember, lean body mass isn't just muscle. It's anything that's
not body fat. Muscles are 70% not muscle fiber.
So if you were to take your, you know, take a muscle off your body and dissect
it and count everything that's in there, you know, 30% of it is muscle fiber.
70% of it is, is other stuff.
Sarcoplasm, fluid, glycogen.
Do you think, do you think the hypertrophy training is training the muscle to allow more fluid to be able
to be stored into the muscle belly and then actually like heavy loaded training is actually
stressing and breaking down the muscle fibers which are then in turn adapting, growing and
rebuilding more?
You think, and I know that both do a little bit of each other, right?
So it's not like either or.
I understand that for the people that are screaming at their radio right now
I know it's not that but is like is one of them. I think it's a computer phone
Your stereo in your car
Do we not call it a radio anymore? Well, no, I mean, you have a radio in your car.
Are you tuning in?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You don't tune in to it.
We're not on there.
We're not on FM or AM.
Yeah, yeah.
So if you were to say, you were to say,
like I'm listening to you in the car,
you would say stereo instead of radio?
Why would you say radio?
Radio is the actual tuning in and the frequencies.
AM, FM.
Yeah, AM, FM.
Is that right?
That's correct.
Oh, so it does go around with the invented technicality. That's why I lifted him to AM. Back in the day, it was smoke signals. Yeah AM FM. Is that right? That's correct. Oh, so it does was around the invented
That's why I looked at him. Back in the day it was smoke signals
Your stereo. He was listening to tablets.
It just sounds weird to say it that way.
Obviously that they both are doing that right? Both are contribute, but is it one of them is just so much more focused on
but is it one of them is just so much more focused on
volumizing the cells and allowing the fluids to be able to load, which gives you that kind of pumped,
bubbly look, and then the other one is actually doing more,
dare I say, damage to the muscle.
I don't know.
Because they're both providing tension, you know,
so it's, yeah, it's one of those things
that you think about, because two,
I don't know if it's like more demand with the shearing forces, or if it's one of those things that you think about. Because two, I don't know if it's more demand with the shearing forces or if it's because
of the pumping.
Sometimes I don't know if you're just squeezing more, isolating certain muscles so you can
get more of that focused pump out of it versus a full systemic effect of stress.
I don't know. You know, I don't know, so this is, I mean, by the way,
if you're listening this far, this is all pure,
everything we're doing here is first-time.
Yeah, we're speculating.
It's like spaghetti on a wall.
There is absolutely no data on anything that I'm saying.
Yeah, hopefully it's not your first time listening.
We tend to.
No, this is just, you could talk to strength athletes
and bodybuilders and they, and many of them,
we've been doing this for a long time, we'll tell you this,
and it's been said so many times
and it's repeated so many times. And like we've seen in strength sports and bodybuilding,
things that people have repeated over and over again that the science tends to be, you know, laugh at, eventually gets proven right, right?
Oh, yeah, there's the value there. Maybe they were communicating it wrong, but there actually is something to this. You guys have been observing something
that's real. I don't know. It could also be this. The central nervous system
something that's real. I don't know, it could also be this,
the central nervous system controls
how your muscle feels too.
It's not just the muscle, it's also central nervous system.
I'm wondering if that high tension
just kind of maintains this tighter feel maybe,
and look, it could be a central nervous system function.
I don't know.
I'm also-
The low reps definitely I feel tap into
a lot more central nervous system response versus the
other but yeah, that would be a big difference.
I've also noticed this, I'm sure you guys have too, those guys in the gym that are stronger
than they look in terms of size, they're not big but they're hella strong, they always
look like there's something solid and chiseled.
Just grainy.
And grainy.
You ever meet someone in a blue collar job
because we all work construction with them.
Yeah, we always call it wiry.
Yeah, you ever see that wiry guy, kind of skinny,
165 pound dude.
Strong.
Strong as hell, you're like where'd you get that,
but his muscles look grainy and just, they're strong.
Yeah.
So I don't know.
I mean, so I don't know either because the earlier years
of my lifting was so much more focused on the hypertrophy,
but I do, and I have shared this before,
I do remember being so frustrated after lifting for years
that I felt like I only looked like I worked out
when I was working out.
When you were pumped.
Yeah, when I was all pumped up, I remember like,
man, I just wish I could look like that all the time.
And it wasn't until I really started lifting heavy
that I feel like I achieved that look
even outside of being aired up and pumped up.
Like, and even now, like where I've been on this kick
where I've lost a lot of weight,
I've lost a lot of muscle,
I still feel like I have a really solid base from that,
where that would never happen in the past.
In the past, if I didn't train for a couple weeks
or even a month and I had lost a little bit of muscle
or lost weight, I would just, it would all of a sudden
look like I started all over again is what I felt like.
And it wasn't until I felt like I really trained,
you know, consistently heavy loaded,
like in low reps for a long period of time,
that now it's like it
It's it seems to have stayed or built a longer lasting base. I don't know. I don't know
I just noticed like this. I'm only three weeks in and I just feel it on myself
I know what I normally feel like I could feel it on myself. I see it when I work out at the gym
I don't get the same pump, but I kind of have more of this like, I don't know, it's a different look, more of this kind of grainy look.
It just feels different.
Side note, by the way,
having deadlifted in months on purpose,
I avoided deadlifts for a long time
trying to balance things out.
Avoided heavy backloaded squats for a long time
trying to balance things out.
And so I went back to deadlifting for the first time
last week, and I was able to pull five plates,
which was, you know, made me happy and I was able to pull five plates which made
me happy.
I was able to do it okay.
You know where I got sore?
In my brachialis muscle.
Not in my back, not my hamstrings or my glutes, but right in that muscle under the bicep
just from the tension of holding on to the bar and I noticed my grip with five plates.
I could do it, but I noticed
like I couldn't go much heavier because my grip would hold on.
Just goes to show you like, if you don't train your grip heavy, you're not
going to maintain that level of strength.
Even though I've been lifting, I don't use wrist wraps.
That's what a lot of the strongman competitors would always notice too.
Like if they didn't do any bicep training, like eventually that was one of the main
culprits, the terror and like limit
their progress.
So yeah, you gotta, you gotta make sure you upkeep your grip.
Speaking of weightlifters, I don't know the name of this weightlifter.
I posted it in our forum, this young lady, black girl performing a clean.
I saw that video.
I didn't see it.
Oh bro.
I didn't see it.
She gets the clean up.
It was the toughest, bad, most badass move I've seen.
She, you have to catch it, right,
with your fingers in the bar.
Her finger dislocates.
So she's holding it with one hand,
holding it with one hand like this.
She's got a dislocated finger,
takes her other hand off, pops it into place,
puts her hand under.
Pops it in place.
And then finishes the lift.
Finishes with the jerk, yeah.
How did she even do that?
Bro, it's like, you see her fingers? She's bouncing on her shoulders. Yeah, how did she even do that, bro? I it's like you see her short ass and on her shoulders
Yeah, and then as she reached over back pops it in gets it back and that's made live press
They crushes it overhead. I did not see I have never seen anything
So that was so there she is look look look look so watch her. It's her left hand. Oh fingers jacked
Oh, she's like she's like
And look she holds it on her shoulders hand. Oh, fingers jacked. She's like, and she's like,
and look, she holds it on her shoulders,
pops it into place, gets her hands back under it,
and then fricking rips it, dude.
Shut up.
I wanna know her name.
What a badass.
What a badass, dude.
You see Element?
Oh, Element T sponsored them, that's awesome.
Where is this, what is this?
Squat University posted it, I don't know her name.
Oh, wow, he normally tags, he didn't tag her. Oh, have you guys ever done anything like that mid-lift or some shit?
I've never heard of that or seen that I have a bloody nose halfway through the set. No finish the set I did
I mean, I definitely had had blood and whatnot and just kept going
I don't think I've ever had a I don't think I've ever had a bloody nose. I puked I've had had blood and whatnot and just kept going
I don't think I've ever had a I don't think I've ever had a bloody night. I puked I've done that but I've never I was a
Kid when I first got into lifting my parents were concerned rightfully because I was obsessed
So I just be in the backyard for three hours, you know, my parents were just like I know what they're as a parent now
I'm sure the conversation was something like it's not really a bad thing, but he's a little obsessed
Should we say something, you know, so everyone's my mom. Mom would say something like maybe it's not really a bad thing, but he's a little obsessed. Should we say something? So everyone's, my mom would say something like,
maybe you're going too hard.
Maybe it's too long.
And so there was this one point,
I think she saw me buy supplements and whatever,
and she's like, I think you're doing too much.
You need to do whatever.
And I'm just like, let me do my thing, mom, or whatever.
So I'm in the backyard and I'm doing overhead press,
and I wanted to go for a PR.
I don't remember what it was of reps.
And rep two, my nose starts bleeding,
but I'm feeling good.
Hell no, I'm not stopping.
So I finished the set.
Of course, who walks out?
Almost when I'm halfway through the set, my mom.
So she sees blood coming down.
Oh God.
While I'm pressing the way, you know,
Italian mom freaking out.
Ah!
You know?
You're hurting yourself.
Yeah.
Yeah, like no, I'm fine.
That'd be an epic picture to have though.
Oh, I know. That would'd be an epic picture to have
No, it was mainly concussions for me I just kept playing which was you know, that's
Part of the process that's weird and weightlifting you don't see that very out that one. That was cool I wonder cuz I know you've had how many concussions confirmed have yet
Confirmed three but a lot more than that. I wonder how many you've given you know, I mean, oh, yeah, that'd be cool
No, that'd be that I would
Like kills
Put those tally marks around my helmet I would hate to get hit by Justin
That's just you know what Kyle told me the story of you in the mosh pit, he's like, oh yeah, he launched the guy. That was the word he used.
Speaking of Kyle, I saw that he looked like he saw a ghost after his drive with you back home.
He was a little shaky, I heard. You're going to get in trouble. My wife's listening to the
podcast. So I got to say this first. Does she not like you to drive fast? Does she? No, dude.
Oh, okay. I'm going to get get blasted in fact after she hears this.
Look, she's every right, it's stupid,
it's dangerous to drive fast, right, I just love it.
I love to do that.
Well, let me back up for a second.
We were creating another Maps for us.
Every quarter we create a new Maps program
and they're just so much fun.
It's one of my favorite things that we do.
We all get together and for people who ask about
what does that process look like,
what it looks like is lots of focused, creative conversation,
very creative, interrupted by tremendous shit talking.
We.
Like a lot.
We.
Yeah, dude.
It's a little more than extra this time, I vote.
It's just we rip each other and laugh and then we get real
creative and we put things together and then we rip each other and laugh and three of us will gang
up on the other guy and just beat him up. So Kyle, this was his first time ever being part of it.
You could see he was just, his face was sore from laughing because the amount of shit talk
that we do with each other and I asked him afterwards, so what'd you think of the process?
Oh you did? I wish, so I wanted to hear this.
I wanted to hear what you thought.
Oh, he's like, it was awesome.
He's like, so great to be a part of what you guys are doing.
What'd you think of the shit talk?
And he's like, it was the funniest podcast
I could ever listen to, you know,
because we're ourselves.
But anyway, on the way home, he was riding with me,
and you guys are riding in your fast cars or whatever.
And so it's just, you know, it's exciting.
We're kind of pushing each other, having fun.
But we were alone and so I was gassing it a little bit
and there was a couple times where there was an opening
and I squeezed through it.
Well there was one where I'm coming up on a car
and there's another car next to me who sees me coming up
and speeds up to not let me in.
You know how people do that?
So I'm like, oh, I'm gonna still get through.
Yeah dude, he did this in his seat.
And he goes, bro that was close.
And I started cracking up.
I'm sorry I'll stop.
And after that I drove normally.
You were moving fast for sure.
Because I know how fast we were going
and the fact that we didn't catch up to you.
This dude, I told Justin that.
I was like, I bet he must be smashing right now.
It's too much fun.
Yeah, dude, speaking of driving, I'm so, uh, I'm a little bit embarrassed that,
um, you know, that's like a thing that I'm into.
And I had no idea this thing that we had in our backyard, uh,
highway nine to skyline ridge to Alice's restaurant,
uh, which is funny because I've been nonstop talking about it for like the last three days and like now everyone's like, oh yeah bro, that's the, I'm like,
everybody knew about it.
Yeah.
He's like, no one wanted to let me know or what?
I like didn't say anything.
I don't know about it.
Well, I've been on this hunt for like, have you guys heard of pizza?
It's so delicious.
So I went down to, uh, I went down to Barnes and Noble last week and bought all of these
like maps and Atlas's and stuff like that, road maps for all of California.
And so I, and I've had them out,
Katrina's making fun of me, right?
Cause she comes in the other day.
Wait, you're spreading them all out?
Oh yeah, I got them all over the counter and stuff like that.
Got my highlighter out and I'm like highlighting
all these cool paths.
And I'm looking for like all these destination areas
that we like to go.
Like we go to highway one a lot and go down south
Monterey area or up north,
Half Moon Bay area. And so I'm like, I'm figuring out, okay,
here's these destinations I like to go to.
Now let me find the most creative pathways to go there.
And so I've been like marking them off and I've been like scouting them out and
then coming back and telling Katrina like, oh, we got to drive this.
This would be a fun one to drive. And I found this, this place.
I didn't know about it
at all. No one had said anything. Maybe someone had mentioned to me and it didn't register
or whatever, but I put it on there and I tell her, I was like, Hey, let's go for a drive.
It was so cool because we came back early from Paso Robles, like you're talking about,
which we thought we were going to be down there until Saturday to pick up Justin's car
and that got postponed.
So he, I know he was all sour about that and it felt bad.
Yeah.
We come back early, surprise Katrina wasn't expecting me to be home.
So she already had plans that Friday night to go do something.
And then she's like, Oh, well now that you're back on Saturday, let's, let's
go, let's go for a drive on Saturday.
I say, Oh, awesome.
I've already scouted this, this place out.
Let's go.
So she calls up her mom and asks Tina
if she'll watch Max. And she's like, of course you can come stay the night. And so we drop him off.
And then I'm like, Hey, let's just pack a bag just in case. And then we'll go for a drive. I said,
there's this restaurant I want to go to and I want to take you on this road and we'll figure it out
from there. And if we really feel like doing the coast and then stopping, staying the night, then we have everything. We don't have to worry about it.
And if we don't, then we'll come back home. That's so nice. She's like, oh my God,
that'd be awesome. Let's do it. So we packed a bag and went and did it. And so I'm heading down this
road. First of all, Skyline Ridgeway or whatever it's called is basically the,
the rich, just like it sounds, the, the ridge of the mountain top line. And it's like overlooking Redwood
City Palo Alto, Saratoga, that whole area. It is beautiful. The road is beautiful. The
scenery views are beautiful. You're half the time you're going through a Redwood trees.
And so it creates almost like this canyon effect of the engine echoing going through.
Oh, it's just I've never done it, but I always hear going through. Oh, it's just, I've
never done it, but I always hear about it. Oh, and then we get, uh, we end. It's cool
too because this is like, you would never take this unless you're going there to drive
or you live back there because it's obviously not the fastest way to get to the highway
one. But if you live back there, you would go back there or two, you're going back there literally just to drive.
So there's like almost like this unsaid code of if you catch up to someone, they just pull
over because it's a two lane road, right?
And you can't pass because it's got too many turns and stuff like that, but it's got a
lot of little turnouts.
And everybody knows this is people drive this to drive.
That's right.
And so you see someone,
and I would do the same thing too.
If someone actually like a bike,
street bike caught up to me or something like that,
I'd merge over so they could scoot past me or whatever.
And then we get down,
we come around this corner out of the trees
and here out in the middle of like the forest
is this little restaurant and single pump gas.
And there must've been a hundred and something cars.
So imagine not seeing hardly anybody for an hour
out in the middle of nowhere in the forest,
a single pump gas station, and then a restaurant,
and it's got like a hundred car, it'd be just packed.
Packed so much that the whole restaurant parking lot's filled.
There's parking across the street that's filled.
People are parked on the side of the street coming up.
And there's everyone, the street that's filled people are parked on the side of the street coming up and there's everyone
All these people out with cameras and and they're recording and taking photos and all these beautiful cars and street bikes
That's great and amazing food. I mean it was such a cool
cool experience and it's really fun to watch
Katrina fall in love with it because it's like we're 40 something liking it. She's like totally no way
Yeah, so this is what you should have
This is a dream for you. You have to yeah, totally
So you have to ask her about it because ever since her incident
She's been anemic and stuff and of course the doctors say like no drinking which for Katrina and her family is like, you know water
Right, right. So it's like, you can't have any alcohol. So this has been a long streak for her.
The only other time she's ever not drank
was during Max, right?
So during pregnancy she did it.
But other than that, like this is the first time
she's ever gone this long.
And she says, driving gives me the same feeling
as like being intoxicated from the alcohol.
She's also, so it's been like this really cool thing of,
I don't miss it because I feel like I've replaced it
with this new found adrenaline love thing that I have.
And it's been so cool to watch her start to kind of fall.
That's great that you guys are both into it.
Yeah.
That's, it's typically the husband and the wife's like,
just puts up with it.
I know.
I wasn't sure what it was. I wasn't sure. I took a risk hoping that she would
really adopt it and like it. Because when she's in the passenger seat, she's not as
much of a fan of it.
Of course.
So if I'm ripping around turns and stuff like that, she's like, ah, slow down, constantly
doing that. But once she got to be in the driver's seat and she's the one ripping around
the corners, you see her really start to get into it.
My dad rides motorcyles, he's got a Ducati.
So many of them out there.
Yeah, so he belongs to a group and they always go there.
They always ride up there and he always talks about it.
But I don't think I've ever met him.
So Katrina's Troy who passed away what, seven years ago,
Tina's ex-husband before he passed, right, late husband, he had a Ducati
and they used to go back there all the time. So when she, we got at the restaurant, she's texting
her mom, oh my God, there it is right there. So you can see, look at all kinds of cars and
the single pump gas station and it's out in the middle of all these trees. It just come,
you come around a corner, then all of a sudden it's there and it looks just like that. That's
exactly what you see. All these exotic sick cars it's there and it looks just like that That's exactly what you see all these exotic sick cars
Everybody eaten and it's huge area to eat. So look at exactly like that. That's how it was
Just love rows and rows of all these beautiful sick cars and all and like the whole drive you see
Oh my god, it looks just like well, that's that's funny. That was that was me say yours. It looks just like mine
all these just like mine. That's funny. That wasn't me. It looks just like yours. It looks just like mine. All these people on the sides of every turn,
like videoing. And then I told Dylan about it,
and Dylan's like, yeah, there's like full pages
dedicated to-
Oh, this is literally the Yelp for Alice.
Yes.
For this place that you're going to.
That's how much, like that's how common it is.
We came back-
How cool is that? You open up a restaurant
in the middle of nowhere, and everybody's like,
what are you gonna do? Who's gonna do your business? Bro, gonna do? Bro, I'm so interested in this. No competition.
I'm so interested in the story because imagine, I bet you the land cost them nothing.
Nobody wants some property out in the middle of something like that, but I bet that place
rips business-wise. And you said the food was good. Amazing. Is it a diner? Is it diner food? It's a burgers, pizzas, it's like a grill like place. We should all go up there. I
want to do this with you guys. It was so much fun that I would love and then
we continued on to Half Moon Bay, stayed at one of our favorite hotels there, got
up the next morning and then drove it back. And the morning with the coastal dew,
and the sun beaming through the trees,
it was just epic, such an epic experience
that was in our backyard this whole time,
and I had no idea about it.
You gotta do it together.
Oh, I know, I can't wait to take you guys,
because it was so much fun.
Speaking of team and entourage and all that,
I read some studies on the entourage effect for cannabinoids,
some new stuff that I wasn't familiar with.
So the entourage effect, you guys,
I've talked about this before,
it refers to how in the cannabis plants
or in the hemp plant,
how the cannabinoids work better together
and they also work better in combination with other compounds in the plants like the terpenes. Terpenes are what we give them their scent and their smell. So check this out.
This is just with other cannabinoids. So THC, which you'll find in cannabis, the pine scented terpene,
so whenever you smell pining, that's the terpene pining, you'll smell it. It helps counteract the memory loss effects.
Oh, interesting.
CBD and the peppery terpene.
So there's a, there's one that smells kind of
peppery, maybe beneficial for the treatment of
addiction and then CBD and limonene.
So limonene is the lemony smell.
By the way, lemons have it.
Okay.
But if, when you combine the two, they work
together better, together better to alleviate
anxiety which is interesting because the the lemony smelling hemp extracts always
those always ones I like the most isn't it I always find it interesting how
nature does it yes and how we you know the arrogance right of us to like you
know find something right right we find of us to like, you know,
find something, right, right. We find something really good and
like, oh, yeah, let's do let's extract it, make it 10 times
more powerful. And like, then it'll do this, it'll be better.
And then like, and then we celebrate how amazing that was
science is so amazing. And then like, as time goes on, and stuff
unfolds, it's like, oh, but you know, you're not getting this,
like, I mean, everything, everything that we seem to find
in nature, we tend to find, I mean, everything. Everything that we seem to find in nature,
we tend to find out later on
that something that it was paired with is beneficial.
This is why you talk to people who've tried pure CBD
and you'll get a mixed reaction.
Some people are like, yeah,
and other people are like, I don't notice anything.
Then when they try like Ned, Ned is full spectrum.
It's the whole plant, it's everything.
It is CBD, but it's also the other cannabinoidsids plus it's also all the terpenes and other compounds and
they'll say, oh this, I really feel this, this is very very different because of
the combination of things that are in there. And maybe that's why is because
there's all these other benefits that you're getting besides maybe the one, the
benefit that you you're taking it originally for is one thing but then
there's this... Of course.
By the way, just concentrating isn't always going to give you all that benefit.
Dude, it's so funny too because there were synthetic cannabinoids where they tried to
copy THC to skirt through the law and they were making these...
They don't think they're available anymore because they banned them.
These like the zombie ones?
Bro, they were trying to...
They made people crazy.
They were creating these cannabinoid, synthetic type cannabinoids.
They're not cannabinoids.
They're not the phyto cannabinoids obviously, but they're synthetic.
And people were ODing on them and getting all kinds of weird negative effects where
you couldn't, I mean, technically you can't overdose on the natural phyto cannabinoids.
It's almost impossible.
People, kids were buying these-cannabinoid. It's almost impossible.
People, kids were buying these synthetic concentrated cannabinoids.
Yeah, I just heard bad stories about that.
And they would get really bad effects.
It's like they're trying to copy nature and you end up with this Frankenstein compound
or whatever.
But yeah, I know.
What did you do this weekend, Justin?
Since you didn't get to get to your car.
Yeah, I mean, I actually, well, since we're kind of preparing for this party, we're going
to be throwing this like 70s party for this house that I'm going to be remodeling and
working on.
So we're kind of are using the pool.
And in the pool, it was like such a beautiful weekend for that.
So we're in this perfect spot where it's like the fog kind of rolls in early and burns off
and then it goes a little further towards Soquel and kind of misses us towards Watsonville.
So it's like the perfect view that we got over the weekend.
So we just spent a lot of time in the pool and then trying to get everything kind of
set up so we have a crazy 70s everything in the house kind of like trying to get everything kind of set up so we have like a crazy 70s
everything in the house kind of ready to go for everybody. So that was like the majority
of what we did this week.
Do you swim swim or when you do when you get in the pool are you like, no, I just floating
bro.
I just wait.
Do you mean like swimming laps or something like that?
People have people like you know into the bin No, like the lap pool stuff like no
Honestly, what I'm looking forward to is like keeping it cold and then using that is like I'm just go jump in the pool
Come back and that's like my first like cup of coffee. You know, you're doing the morning. Yeah, have you done it yet?
I've done that before when I would stay at like these Airbnbs like I love that. I loved it. It was like oh man
It's just you know, everything just like wakes up the motivation to first do it
Oh, that's not so you standing up you gotta get through that. Yeah, just fucking do it
No, I don't want to put my shorts on and go but yeah, no, it's just yeah
So we were just chilling and and obviously I was hoping have have the car
So I could have cruised around and maybe met up with you, but, uh, you
know, it's not talking to Adam bit about it, but it's like, it's better
because most guys I know that have gone this route, um, would have to end up
bringing their car back because like something would, would happen like some
part wouldn't have been a good fit.
And, uh, so he's like troubleshooting all of these
things right now and he's very meticulous and and you know he's it so I
have to trust you know he's he's doing all this so that it's gonna be built
really well so I'm excited bro both you guys got the the exact like like the two
top favorite cars of mine ever I'm not a big car guy, but there are some cars
I really like, and both of you guys have the ones.
Now we just gotta get you on board now, dude.
Well, I mean,
Especially how much you like to drive.
It is funny that you haven't gone and done that,
because it's not like you don't like to drive.
Like, you like to drive.
I mean, I like it.
I'm not in love with it.
Not like me, I know.
Yeah, you guys really enjoy it.
And I appreciate, and don't get me wrong, I appreciate cars isn't it fun I wonder if guys were
doing this when cars didn't exist you think guys were bringing up the horses
to each other for sure racing of course of course they were 100% it's like I
feel like it's like built in you I just I really do I feel like like we evolved
sabotaging the other by feeding them like sleepy oats.
Bro, your horse looks fat. Test them out. Let's see.
Yeah, let's put you to test.
It's funny you say that because I bet it was like that and I bet having a good looking,
powerful, fast horse was like a big deal. You know what I'm saying? Oh, that's a nice horse.
How fast is it? How fast is it in the quarter mile?
Your horse is looking a little old. I don't think we ever change.
We're a lot chow.
I think it's so interesting that we, who was I talking to about that? I think it was Dylan
I was talking about how, you know, you talk about the Justin's old school and the mine
and stuff like that in the sixties. It's crazy to think that since then we haven't had a
really good generation and I know some people will argue like some of the stuff
that we've had is there's been some pretty breakthrough cool cars but as far
as that like how timeless those vehicles are like it's so it's like a
piece of art dude like that. It was a pinnacle I know I would say well for
American automotives was pinnacle muscle cars were the pinnacle I know I would say well for American automotive is a pinnacle muscle cars were the pinnacle of American automotive horsepower I don't
know if it was a pinnacle 50s were pretty damn good too that's when the
American automotive industry was super dominant but you those muscle cars I
mean they're always gonna be it's definitive I mean definitive American
muscle dude cuz anytime anybody gets excited about a new car coming out like
they model that design off of right
I'll car like you know, this is the new version of the muscle car. It's like yeah, okay
Yes, if I it looks like a cool muscle car that like happened already. Did you guys see the ZR1?
They're really done veiling of the ZR1. I said it's a Justin
Yeah, so Corvettes new ZR1 that just got unveiled, the 20,000 horsepower,
1,043 horsepower. Okay. At some point, is it going to get ridiculous?
It already is. That's ridiculous. Like what are you going to do with that?
That's as fast as, yeah. As much horsepower. So I may-
You're going to start putting rockets on cars?
I think that we are going to see- You're on muscle, dude.
I think we're going to see a movement to come back to, you know, five, 600
horsepower, naturally aspirated engines. And you- It's because of the enjoyment, the fuel. Yes, you know, five, 600 horsepower naturally aspirated engines.
And you, the enjoyment, yes, because there's like, there's a good point there.
Uh, you know, I've experienced driving both and yeah, there it is right there.
It's, it is sick though.
It is definitely cool.
And so that, so that back windows.
So that's a window that is a, a, uh, what do you call that?
Like a, um is a what do you call that like a nod yeah
homage or a nod to the 1960 something Corvette when that was the only time they
ever split windows which is one of the most expensive old Corvettes that you
can buy but yeah that was the reason why I thought that Justin was making that
point about how like even when we make a modern car one of the things like the
one of the highlights of that car is that it looks like an old yeah It's a nod back to the old split window of the 1960 whatever Corvette and so yeah
No, it is it is interesting though, right how it captures
So much passion so if there's in other words
There's got to be a deeper meaning than just it's fun. It's fast, right?
There's got to be something deeper and it has to be something evolutionary,
where if you were fast, you were probably a better hunter,
you were probably more successful,
and if you had a fast horse,
well now you could feed your horse,
and you were probably more, you know,
it probably means something more than what you see
on the surface.
Oh, okay, here's Katrina.
So Katrina and I have been talking so much about this
because this is like so new to her and and she's even surprising herself
Like I'm really surprised how much I'm liking this and finding myself loving more and more and one of the points that she brought
Up that is I think so true and such a she's like when you're driving these things like that
The level of present you are so, you are not distracted by anything.
You know that's what my dad says about motorcycling,
because my dad's in his 60s now,
and he got launched off his bike once,
relatively recently, miraculously came out with nothing.
And he's a speed demon, my dad's always been that way.
And my mom gave up a long time ago,
she was like, let your dad do what he does,
it makes him happy, you know,
because she used to be real fearful.
And I talked to my, my siblings and I had an intervention
when my dad, after he felt his life.
And we said, you shouldn't be riding a motorcycle anymore.
And he says, look, I know it's dangerous.
I know it's this and that.
And he goes, but he goes,
I don't think about anything else.
I'm riding my bike and I am there and I am nowhere else.
And I also know that my dad, he can miss being back home,
he misses his family, you know.
So it is, it's being present and it's gotta feel
so alleviating, because our minds are always
all over the place.
To be so just in here right now feels good.
That's why people talk about being present.
And one of the ways to do that is to be in a scary
situation that requires all of your attention.
So Katrina got really, I hope she doesn't get mad at me
for sharing this, she got really emotional after the
drive back from LA and you've been asking a lot how she's
been doing as far as processing what she went through
and so with that and she's like, I had no idea that
this would have been something that would have made me feel so much better.
And a lot of that is just simply that.
Is that, yeah.
And I think that in today's time, it's even,
it's always been valuable, but we rarely ever spend time
not distracted by these phones and people
and TVs and like this digital era,
we've really supplemented every bit of downtime
with some sort of entertainment digitally for ourselves,
that there's very few things that we do on a regular basis
that we're not also looking at our phone
or also watching a TV screen.
Like we always, and now, so this kind of brings it back
to something like that.
And I just, anybody who's ever experienced flow state,
right, if you've played on a team,
you've done like a downhill, like, you know, skiing type,
like I think those things do a really good job of that.
Obviously skydive, crazy stuff like that.
Like the feeling of flow state is so cool.
And I think it's just one of those things
that you kind of, it forces that.
There's a book that I'm halfway through.
I might have brought this up on the podcast.
It's called The Ruthless Elimination of Hurry.
And he talks about this.
He talks about, and now it's a Christian based book,
but I think anybody can find value in it,
where we're always rushed, we're always hurried,
we're always thinking about the next thing,
we're always so distracted in how detrimental that is
to our health, our mental health,
but especially our spiritual health,
because it prevents us from sitting and pondering
and being present with some of the most important things,
and how the world has gotten worse with it.
And it's true, look.
Well, we're being bombarded with fear.
We have all these time-saving devices.
We have all these ways to schedule
and know what we're supposed to do or whatever
that you would think that we have more of this time,
but all we've done is filled up more of our space
with more things.
So like, to give an example, when we were kids,
our parents didn't know where we were all the time.
They didn't have tabs on us.
They were not nearly as organized
because they didn't have as many tools as we have.
But they never organized play dates.
They were never having to be present
with everything their kids did.
You went out and you played.
Now you're busier than ever because everything
is scheduled and you're present,
you have to be there for everything
and you have to schedule play dates
and you have to make sure it's all,
and so it's like we're more sedentary yet busier.
We've filled our time with more stuff
because of time-saving technology.
So time-saving technology only gave us more time
to fill with more stuff.
It's like what people talk about with money.
You make more money, you spend more money.
You ever hear people talk about that?
And it's true, so reading this book, it's like,
oh yeah, we do this, when do you ever have time
to not be busy?
And it's not that you don't have time,
it's that you don't allow that time to happen.
Think about when you, stupid stuff,
like waiting in line and sitting in the toilet.
You just don't do it without distracting yourself.
I also think it's the single most destructive thing
we are doing for parent-children relationships.
Oh, that, yeah.
I think that either one, we are distracted as parents
with our own phones, or two, we're using the technology to babysit our kids instead of just,
and I really think that literally just making that a goal for your house of just
and being there to, to allow the conversations to have,
to allow the potential activities, the play of the engagement.
I think that we are just, I think it has a lot to do.
Well, I was talking about this a lot with my kids and I always get some new insight on a lot of, you know, how they perceive, you know, kids that are addicted to devices and they all know like, and they make fun of each other and there's like degrees of, you know.
So kids are actually calling each other out oh they call it like he's got brain rot you know and that's like a term that they use a lot of
times too when and then certain kids are just addicted to like jumping on the next post as
somebody does a snapchat and they're like just like constantly you know looking out for that
i guess there's this like a whole and this is be funny cuz this is gonna You know a lot of people are gonna have an opinion about this whole like skibbity toilet thing
What's that? I don't know if you guys have skibbity toilet. It's like first of all
I know that's a word that generation Z uses right? Yeah
Don't say that I've never heard of that you have yeah skibbity. Yeah, welcome to like yeah like teenager
Lingo a lot of shit. They say Okay, so tell me it's skibbity. Yeah, welcome to like yeah like teenager lingo a lot of shit. They say
Okay, so tell me skibbity was it's like it's this really trippy weird like
Video that I guess there's like nine hundred something videos somebody made
where it's just it's just like
Distorted has this guy coming out of a toilet, and then he's doing all this weird,
it's really hard to describe.
It's just like trippy.
It's almost like you're watching some kind of psychedelic
video, but geared towards kids somehow,
and you literally get nothing from it.
You get no education from it.
You get barely entertainment from it,
but it's like weirdly addictive. Justin's covered it pretty well. It's basically just
like a meme that caught attention on YouTube. So did you know about it too? I just from
kids talking about it like 10 year olds and nine year olds. I've got my son kind of say
it from time to time but Justin introducing introducing his brain rot is a good way
Yeah, brain rot so these yeah, and I guess some kids like on their device will like watch
Hold my hunter all day long
It's just like sucked into it and it I it almost seems like some kind of weird mine this one down mind control
Is it right here? Yeah, there you go
It's just the it doesn't make any sense. It's like, it's really trippy.
So does it mean, okay, skivety toilet,
does it mean like, did someone made this
for you to watch while you're on the toilet?
Is that what the concept is?
No, no, no.
I think you just named it.
It's just a name and it's 17 million views.
Yeah, that's what I mean.
It's like really, okay, we lost it, but.
Yeah, he's gonna put it up on the other one.
Yeah, my daughter said it or showed me so they know too. Yeah
Yeah, it's they were like trying to make like a series out of it or something. I'm like, how do you make a series of this?
It's almost like it's okay. I put it this way
It's like if you're watching a concert and you had like throw away like b-roll video in the background with does just digital like weird
Trippy imagery. Yeah,'s kinda like what it is.
We've officially reached a place where we're not cool.
You know, remember your parents were like,
I don't get it.
And you wouldn't get it.
I don't get it at all, dude.
Well even then, the kids are making fun of the kids
that are watching it.
You know, cause it's such like nonsensical, stupid shit.
Yeah, this looks like a cool video game.
This is it?
Oh!
Is this it, Doug? Yeah. Are you sure? This looks like a cool game. That's what it says. This looks like this cool video game. This is it. Oh, yeah Is this it Doug? Yeah, are you sure this looks like a cool says this looks like a cool game
Now is the whole thing like this Justin or it's like this this kind of like animated. Oh, yeah. Yeah, yeah animated
Weird and he's in a toilet, but he's yeah, that looks terrifying. It's it is not yeah, it's like and that went very
All right. Well interesting futures It looks terrifying. It is, it's not, yeah, it's like scary. And that went viral, huh?
All right, well.
Interesting.
The future's a little terrifying, I think.
Yeah.
What's happening?
Yeah, can you go way forward so I can just see
if it continues like this?
This is the full episode.
There must be clips of this or something.
No, just scroll way forward so I can see
if it's just as follows the same kind of interesting.
Like weirdness, yeah, yeah, it is.
Just a bunch of weirdness. and this went viral. Yep.
We're doing something wrong guys. We are trying to get our information to go out
there. We should have, why are we trying to educate? We should just do some random
shit. Random. Everything. I mean, there's probably some brilliance to this,
right? There's whoever created it probably psychology. They've,
they've nailed the just like, we'll watch it.
We'll watch it because we're curious.
Where is this going?
And so it's like this curiosity, I think, behind it.
But you leave with what?
That's the thing is these kids just are zombified after they're done.
Or it's got some more nefarious roots.
I mean, what do they do?
I know.
That's what I was thinking.
Psychologically, what are they programming?
I don't know, man. There's a weird cultural war going on right now.
Very, very weird and cute.
I don't, I hate, like I try to stay out of all this stuff
as much as possible.
I'm not into political stuff,
but the thing that happened in the Olympics to me
is just, I don't know, man.
I don't know if people think it's funny to do that, but to it's crazy that we are
okay with mocking Christianity in our country, yet we wouldn't do that to any any other religion.
And so it's so interesting how that's become okay to do that.
And not just okay, but on one of the largest stands on the Olympics It's like this isn't like some satire channel on Comedy Central or like a some air R rated series
Oh, yeah, or an R rated funny skit. This is something being broadcasted to the world
And we're okay with that. That's a you know, I was that's weird to me. I was I'm a really new Christian
It's only it hasn't been very long. so I'm not super well versed on theology.
It's only been maybe seven months that I would say I'm fully a Christian. When I saw it, I got mad
and rage like I think most people. And then I got some wisdom from my wife. My wife sat down and was really helping
me process some of it and I thought a lot about it. And so this is my limited knowledge of the
Bible. But from a spiritual standpoint, if you're a Christian, you know how this ends. I mean,
the Bible tells you exactly how this ends and the Bible tells you exactly what to do.
Your job is to save as many people as possible.
If you believe this is the enemy, and now a lot of people are going to be like, I don't
believe in that spiritual war stuff.
I feel like the people who put that together do.
I feel like that's what they're trying to do.
I don't think that they're doing it tongue in cheek.
I think the enemy loves nothing more than for Christians to get mad and then mock the other side or mock people with the same kind of intent.
Because then what it does is it pushes more people away.
So then what happens is you see lots of people making fun of the people who are mocking Christianity.
Look at that person how weird they are. Look at that woman with a beard, look at. And so then people on the other side who still haven't moved over or who aren't Christians will say, oh how can you be so intolerant? And it starts, and what it does,
it doesn't save anybody. I think when I see that and I get mad, but then I take a step back and I
go, okay, the apostles preached within the Roman Empire, which is easily the most hostile time
that a Christian
could preach.
They were persecuting them, they were putting them to death, they were crucifying them,
and here are the apostles preaching.
And they didn't grab swords, they didn't grab spears, they didn't go and try to overthrow.
What they did was they preached the gospel, and here we are 2,000 years later and the
Roman Empire is gone gone and Christianity has reached
every corner of the world.
So I think as Christians, two things you do, in my opinion, again, I'm a new Christian
here but my opinion, I don't want to watch anything that feels that way to me.
So if I see that, which I saw, I'm not going to watch the Olympics.
I think that's, and we're blessed to be in a market economy, market world where that
actually has power. It wasn't like that in the past. In the past, you preached,
they would kill you, so there's a lot of fear there. Now it's like, I can just turn it off,
and there's billions of us, that has a lot of power, number one. And then number two,
there's a lot of people that still need to be saved. There's a lot of people that look
at that and think it's funny or whatever and haven't truly heard the gospel,
haven't truly heard the good news and what the Bible actually says, which is good.
If you actually pay attention and you hear what the Bible says, it's the most inclusive
religion. Literally, you are saved by accepting Christ no matter where you're at.
I mean, that's the story of Christ on the cross.
And our job is to try and save as many people.
So the rage, I get it, because I felt it.
But if we really want to help people the best we can, then trying to mock these people,
make fun of them, all it does is it makes people go in the opposite direction.
So, and that took me three days of processing.
Well, what they don't show is the thousands of people
that got together the next day and held a prayer visual
for that.
And a lot of people were pretty upset about it
and then got together.
So it's, again, to me it's just like it's the world stage, it's the portrayal,
it's a lot of the media, you kind of see where that's been going and this is just like another
layer to that.
Pete There's two kinds of anger I see. One is Christian anger, real Christians were like,
oh, that's hurtful, like what is happening here? Why is this? And then I think there's cultural
anger, which I think is what we're seeing more of.
There's a lot of people who aren't necessarily Christian, but who are conservative, and they
view this as an attack on culture.
Like, oh my God, look at these.
They're making fun of this culture that we're built upon, and that rage then fires back
with their own making fun of and poking, and you're weird, not us, and you, whatever, not us type of deal. And that just spirals into who knows what.
Well, all that aside, I was happy with one aspect, which was they were doing the opening
kind of ceremony. They had like one of my favorite metal bands was playing, which I would have never
thought was going to be playing, you know, for like the Olympics. Gojira was playing, which I would have never thought was gonna be
playing, you know, for like the Olympics. Gojira was playing, you know, their
French metal band. And so they're like chained up to this castle and
they're like all playing. There's like explosion. I don't know if you guys saw it
or not. Oh, it was sick. It was super cool.
Isn't that the original name for Godzilla? Gojira? I yeah. Yeah, I think so
Yeah, yeah, but it was I enjoyed that part of it and then the rest it got kind of sideways
But I'm not watching it at all. I was sad because I love the Olympics, but after that, yeah
I'm just not gonna tune in. Yeah. Yeah, it's a little much and I think you're right
I think that's the best way to to handle some of this. I don't think I think that's the mistake
I think a lot of people make too is they feel like
it's like you
you know, you brought up like the as a Christian what you're supposed to do, right?
But I think the the challenge is I think so many people interpret how to go about that.
Yeah.
And I think...
I mean, we don't set shit on fire and kill people because they mocked us. What we do is we live a way that converts.
And that is a testament that is not a negative.
A lot of people say it's a negative.
We're weak or whatever.
Are we?
Or has Christianity survived some of the most insane stuff and hasn't reached every
part of the world?
Or is that the way it should be?
So, and again, we know the end.
If you're a Christian, you know what the end is.
So, you already know what the...
If you believe that's the word then yeah
We know what the ending looks like so but it sucks. It sucks to see that cuz it's like alright, come on
What's happening here? Yeah, why are they doing this in lighter news? I saw this
You went there. I know I know you you're bringing that stuff up and I'm like, oh, you know
I was like this is so like I mean it was weird to me bothered me. I brought it to Katrina
I normally don't talk about this to get into that stuff,
but it was like, it was a little over the top, man.
It was a little more than, and on that stage,
I think that's, I don't care about social media stuff
and what this person, that person says,
but boy, man, you're broadcasting this to the world.
They're lying now saying it was a,
no, it was a depiction of a Greek god or whatever.
Nobody knows who that is.
You know what you're doing.
Yeah, I just, whatever.
That's because they're feeling the market pressure.
The pale horse, come on, dude.
The symbolism was completely obvious.
They're doing it on purpose,
but you know, they're feeling the market pressure.
They pulled every clip of that off of YouTube,
so you can't find that.
Oh, they did.
You can't find it.
Interesting.
Because they lost advertisers,
they got lots of talk boycott.
So it's the beauty, we live in a market economy
We have so much power by just turning it off. Yeah, which is great. No, I agree
Yeah, so there's a company like I said transitioning the lighter news
called
Otopia otto
Pia I think is how it's spelled
Pretty interesting. Obviously we're in this,
we've been talking about the race to autonomous cars,
for a while, who's gonna win,
what's that gonna look like,
how long it's gonna take to happen.
And this company, a startup company,
has created basically a bridge between where we're at now
to getting there that's pretty brilliant
for designated drivers.
So that is basically software to actually, somebody is driving it remotely from home with
cameras yes so imagine automatic yeah but there's a driver yes that's actually
brilliant very brilliant right and very brilliant because you know the laws and
regulations they become fully autonomous cars really hard they're gonna be really
hard and take a long time.
This right here could become a billion dollar company for a decade.
And then they can outsource it to is cheap because people are just wow.
Yeah, it could be anywhere, right? Isn't that fascinating?
That is amazing.
Oh wow, so she's actually driving with a steering wheel.
Yes, she's driving it. This guy has a built-in camera system so that you can see all angles or whatever like that and then they are remotely driving.
And is that legal? Are they letting them do it supposedly?
Really? Yeah, what happens if she scratches up your rims? Yeah
Not let her drive my car. She could drive a car. That's great though, but isn't that isn't that pretty brilliant?
Yeah, I thought that was pretty I thought that was pretty clever
To cuz that's I think that's the part that I find
Most challenging is like with laws and regulations and how dangerous, you know, traffic laws and stuff can be. It's
like, it's gonna take a long time before nothing but autonomous cars driving around.
Did you guys see there was a report of a guy with like a jet pack that was in LAX that was just flying close to the flight patterns.
What? Yeah. And multiple pilots were like, yeah, there's a jet man, an Iron Man. This became
a bit of a joke, but came back and same thing was you could see in the distance this little
guy in a jet pack just flying around.
And there's only like two or three companies that have made like serious innovation with
those things.
But one of them was just like the one that he was flying around in.
And it wasn't the one with like the propulsion on his arms, but it was on the back and it
had like, so anyways, like they still don't know who it was.
They couldn't catch him.
But like, it was funny to listen to the pilots joke about it like, you know, LA's Iron Man
You know like his back at it again
Flying around but they don't know how to like regulate it. Oh, so they don't know who it is, huh? No
Oh, he was able to get away with it. Oh, that's pretty funny
Jetpack man, yeah, that's uh, that's fun and they can't can't know who it is. No, no, so he invented himself
Well, I think I think he bought it. I think I mean there's where do you buy?
I've seen a lot of videos of these
Coming out where they'll do I have to they'll take them to like these
specific events or
Like I've seen one off aircraft carriers. I do that picture that he showed me don't look like no
He's got sparks flying out that's one of it so it wasn't that one it was more like that oh that's cool yeah yeah I've seen
I've seen I've seen some of these popping up all over the place that's
super what are we gonna do when the like more people are just like near home like
just flying around independently like that back to the car thing that I was
sharing with you because I was thinking about that more, like how does this get integrated into the society
and what business captures this or what that.
Imagine right now, we've already created Uber
and Uber can become a lucrative position for somebody.
Now imagine if these cars have the ability to put this on,
like imagine you pay a very low fee
to have someone drive your car to work every day
So you could work while you go to work
That's even cheaper than what over is maybe go find parking. Well, and what's awesome is that guy?
He doesn't have the okay there the the the one drawback of being an uber driver to make more money is
Going from each customer to each customer the time in between the time in between
So now you can just you now on the next car.
So like.
So you can jump to like another car in a different area
and just start driving.
Exactly, it's all digital.
So imagine I have a contract with all three of you guys
and I drive you each to work and you leave at this time,
you leave at this time, and I first drive Justin
and then immediately, or Sal's gonna leap.
Now the conspiracy theorist in me is like, wow, they can hack these cars and I'd first drive Justin and then immediately, or Sal's gonna leap, then I'm,
then I'm driving.
Now the conspiracy theorist in me is like,
wow, they can hack these cars
and someone could drive your car?
Well that's always been my concern,
even with like electric vehicles.
Yeah, just the accessibility is crazy.
I gotta tell you guys, so NESM, we work with NESM,
do you know what they're doing for our listeners?
Mm-mm.
50, half off their certified nutrition course.
So 50% off.
Not 20% off.
Not there.
So.
That's a great deal.
Yes, so instead of paying 8.99, it's 4.50.
Do they have a monthly option too?
Or $39 a month.
Oh wow, wow.
Like that's a huge, huge.
Have you guys ever seen 50%?
How long have they run this special for, Doug?
That's a good question, let me see if I can find that out.
Yeah, so certified nutrition coach,
they actually have a course if you want.
By the way, as a trainer, the most challenging thing,
well there's a lot of challenging things.
All month.
All month.
All month for August.
So with training people, there's lots of challenges.
One of the biggest challenges is diet by far.
Workouts are not that hard because they're there,
you're training them.
Diet, very challenging, especially when you're trying
to individualize it, especially when you're trying
to get them to adopt different behaviors.
NESMs, I mean they're the gold standard in the industry
when it comes to certifications.
They have one for nutrition, and then again,
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Half.
Yeah, it's really cool too that they offer a payment option like that.
That's one of the hardest parts, at least it was when we were trainers, is a lot of
certifications were so expensive and you're not making very much money at the beginning.
You're just building your clientele and so the fact that they have payment options, offer
that much of a discount for our listeners, that's pretty cool.
Yeah. The fact that they have payment options offer that much of a discount for our listeners. That's pretty cool Yeah, and by the way speaking of training coaches, how is your webinar you and Jason Phillips doing a webinar?
How's it filling up? So it the episode where we brought it up on this. It doesn't go live until tomorrow
Okay, so I'm an anticipating probably I mean it's already got 200 people that are so many people do you would you I would like to see
500 in there.
So that's the goal is to see probably 500.
I'd like to see about 700 to a thousand signed up knowing that probably 50% can't be watching
it live.
So I'd like to get that.
Did you guys organize it all?
You know what you're going to cover?
We have a, him and I have a thread that we have in, because there's people already asking
for specific things.
He has a big announcement that he wants to go over too.
And so we have a thread where we're kind of gathering all that stuff.
And then before we obviously go next week, him and I will meet and go over like, because
there's going to be a lot.
There's a lot already that we can't cover all of it.
And so we'll narrow down what we think are probably the best topics to cover.
Because obviously, you say something is vague,
is like helping people scale to, you know,
a seven eight figure business and there's like a million directions that you can
take that. And then plus the news that he's going to announce,
I think that's going to take up a lot of time. So at the end of the day,
if you're a trainer, whether you're a brand new trainer,
or you've been working there for a, you've been a trainer for a long time, you know,
I think we're going to bring tremendous value to both groups.
And it's not just cause I know you and Jason,
there's very few people that I would listen to who would,
if they, if someone put together a, Hey,
scale your training coaching business to seven, eight figures,
I wouldn't watch unless it was a very few people and you, you two guys,
for sure. Cause everybody else hasn't done it.
Yeah, well that's step one, right.
We didn't make 7A Figures selling 7A Figure courses, right?
That's right.
My goal always when we do something like this
is that if I want to be able to give enough
really good tactical things that people can walk away
and go implement into their current business
and make a difference.
That's a huge win.
If you can, Jay, you dedicated an hour of listening
to Jason and I, did we give you something that you went,
oh shit, that's, I can do that right now,
or I can apply that right now, and it make an impact,
to me that makes it all worth everything.
So that's the goal for sure.
And that's ncimindpump.com and it's August 7th?
Yep.
Tomorrow.
Okay.
Oh, you got it, get in there.
And it's free.
So it's absolutely free.
If you want, if you can't make the time live
to where you can be in there asking live questions,
you want to at least register
because then you'll get the replay sent over to you.
So that's coming up.
So let's go.
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All right, back to the show.
Our first caller is Boz from California.
What's up Boz? How can we help you?
What's happening?
Good morning guys. Thanks for, wow, this is great man. I appreciate everything and thanks
for doing this. And like I said to Doug, appreciate him and all the admin stuff. You guys make
it fast and easy to get to you and you guys are awesome. Really appreciate that. Thank you. Um, so yeah, just a quick background.
I've been doing some personal training for the last year or so, uh, primarily a
full time dad. So kind of inside gigging for the last, uh, you know, however long
can't even remember, but this is the ultimate side gig. And I really
appreciate you guys, uh guys steering me into that and
providing a lot of
good content and confidence and just you know, I really get to bring to the table a lot of
cool knowledge not just about fitness but life and
Parenting and so you guys really make me feel special
You know to do that so cool. That's great, man. Thanks. I'll help you. Thanks guys. You got it. Yeah, so yeah, I got a client
17 year old kid senior year. He's going into senior year. He's a tennis player. So really unique with his sports playing style
You know, it's not a traditional
Wear and tear in the body. So I really want to dial him in
He's got one more year to just really have a lot of fun and be his best self.
So my question is he's brand new to lifting.
Like I just got him these last couple of months with summer,
but like Justin knows with the football guys
going back to school,
the schedules change and the workouts change.
So I really want to dial him in to have an all year round,
you know, anabolic performance style training program that he can really
depend on. And then, you know, I am I really want to make sure he has a good relationship
with fitness going forward. So like I said, he just started a couple months ago with me,
we've been doing just regular, you know, anabolic style one or two days a week, just technique
and form and just really trying to get them, you know,
connected to all the muscles. So we're about two months in and man, we've seen great gains.
He's put on weight, he's appetized, gone up. So super stoked with all those, all those
markers. My question is, is do I just stick with the anabolic stuff and keep continuing
to do like heavy, not heavy, but like teach him the big lifts and technique and form.
Or like I said, he does play competitive tennis probably about once or twice a month and he
needs to kind of be his best self on those days.
So my fear is over training them and getting him hurt and then really not pushing them
hard enough to we can see all the gains we can use this 17 year old kid.
He's about five, eight, one 50.
So great, great potential. So yeah, let me know what you guys think.
How much tennis is he playing during the week? Consistent like on a consistent basis?
100. Yeah, great question. So over the last two months, I've been able to have him put the racket down and just say, Hey, I want to send signals that are just muscle building signals. He's had kind of an off season. He doesn't really have an off season, but but now he wants to ramp it back up. So he's going to do at least, I think even
just for mentally two or three days a week, because I know he loves it. It's
his it's his passion. So I would say two or three days a week. And then I want to
do like two or three days a week of, you know, one, maybe one mobility session
with two training sessions or something like that. But the caveat is, is he needs to be his best self like on
Saturday and Sunday, potentially for like six hours at a time.
And that's every week or that's twice a month you said?
That's, I would say twice a month.
Okay.
So on a regular week, uh, one day a week of strength training is
what you want to stick to.
If he's doing three days a week of tennis, one day a week is about as much as I would do with him. You can always do mobility and you can
do that on any day. So you can add that if you want. But otherwise one day a week strength
training, you can't go wrong with a 17 year old kid with the big compound lifts. You can throw
in a little bit more athletic minded functional type of exercise, but I would wait because he's so
young he needs to build some good coordination and strength and a lot of what he's going
to get for tennis is from the practice.
That's right.
Skills training.
You're actually doing a really good job with him the way you're training him right now,
which is probably why you're seeing such great results.
I honestly probably wouldn't make much tweaks.
The only thing that I would adjust is literally based off a week to week and how he's feeling and responding to me. So I might train him once a week. Maybe sometimes I dip into two.
Maybe that second one looks more body weight, functional mobility type work. And then the other
one is like an anabolic type of a lift. But what you're doing is actually really a really good
balance right now. I would not do definitely not more than two, but the question would really be like,
is one or two where at?
Now on the weeks where he's gonna do
the six hour tournaments, I would back way off.
Oh yeah.
So that week I would do a very short
and moderate at most strength training session,
one, maybe.
On Monday.
That's it, early in the week.
Yeah, on Monday he has like a moderate intensity.
That gives him all the way through the entire week
to be 100% fully recovered.
I think he'd be great.
Yeah.
Wonderful, wonderful.
Because I know, I do know, he's a high school kid.
I know he's probably going once or twice with his friends
just to show off.
So I really like, I like that one,
maybe that once a week with me.
And then if he is messing around with his friends at the gym once a week like we're really kind of staying under that threshold, but I'm definitely
Like even the wonder once you know once a week we meet at the park and then we have one of those great parks
With all the pull-up stuff, so I don't even allow him to touch weights make more than once a week
Oh, yeah, I love it dude. No you're on point. I mean everything you're talking about
I don't really have a whole lot of critiques.
I do think like, if you wanna get a little more specified
with his training for tennis,
that's where he could kind of peer in,
you know, to more of like the priming sequence
and what's gonna be most optimal for like competition
versus, you know, his practicing.
So really bolstering those ankles, those hips, those shoulders, and,
and really getting a good solid routine with that.
So he knows like, here's my go-to, you know, before, uh, I'm going to
accelerate at full capacity.
So that way he's, you know, he's, he's just mindful of like getting
that right sequence established.
There's a, there's a, there's this idea that when you train an athlete,
that the strength training should really be designed
specific to the sport.
Like, okay, they're a tennis player,
so it's gotta look like this,
and these are the things we're gonna work on.
That doesn't happen till way later.
I mean, that doesn't happen till there's a really solid base,
they've been training for a long time,
and then you're moving a few things. with a young athlete. It's like, you know, if he's practicing tennis
Then all you got to do is build general strength
The tennis itself is gonna handle all the nuances of the lateral movement rotation
That's all gonna be developed through him practice
His practice your job is to get him stronger in general. Especially when you see that he has so much room to continue to improve on,
let's say a squat or a deadlift or something like that.
It'd be maybe be different because sometimes you see an anomaly, right?
Where a kid is just like impeccable squat, impeccable deadlift.
But so long as there's room for you to keep critiquing, improving his
foundational strength through those foundational movements, that's going give you your biggest bang for your buck than trying to do like
some very specific you know tennis strength exercise. There's a weighted tennis racket.
Right, right, right. Yeah that's awesome. That's perfect guys. I got one more little
follow-up kind of about like a game day. So like let's say he's got to play like
three matches in one day, you know kind of two hours a piece
I mean it's tough for him to even like wake up and eat breakfast
So I really have him loading up obviously the day before
And then you know eating whatever you can in the morning and then I'm my mindset's kind of like is he hate it?
Is he doing element like salt tabs like all throughout the day?
Is he you know just focusing maybe on hydration and nutrient replacement
or are you trying to shove a steak in there every now and then?
I would match his.
No, I would have him drink element and then in between.
Three packets you'd say?
I mean, each game easily.
That's what I mean, in between each one.
Easily. I mean, just all his water will have element. That's what I would do.
And then as he's in between games, some liquid calories, little bit of carbohydrates and protein.
You don't need a ton.
15 grams of protein, 30 grams of carbs,
in a liquid form.
So that's-
Especially if you did a really good job
of loading him the night before.
Yeah, that's it.
I mean, just enough to fuel each game.
What you don't want to do is eat a bunch of food,
and then an hour later have to go play.
Yeah, bog them down.
Yeah, you don't want to do that.
Yeah.
No, that's wonderful.
I kind of take the carb load approach.
Like a the football guys reminds me of high school.
We do like the pasta feeds and, and you know,
kind of get really loaded up the nights before and then game days kind of game
day. Yeah. But yeah, in between literally 15 grams of protein,
30 grams of carbs in liquid form. So it's like a half a scoop of protein,
30 grams of carbs could be anything. Gatorade could be
juice, whatever. And then that's in between.
I mean, good, like ready to drink protein shakes are perfect for this.
They can, but sometimes they're overkill because like 40 grams of protein.
No, no, yes. Like standard ones. You don't need some muscle building 40 gram of protein.
You just need the 20 to 30 gram of protein is probably where I'm going.
That's perfect guys. You guys hit all my points there.
That was excellent.
You're doing a great job, bro.
I mean, literally, I mean, you're on point.
You obviously been listening and paying attention for a long time.
Are you already in our coaching program?
I've done all the free stuff you guys have given out.
I did an NCI level one last year just because I wanted to add a little more to my depth
and help and stuff like that. But I've been teaching and I've been in education
and coaching for a long time I just and then you guys I probably listed about
four years of your stuff and then just lately with like the maps 15 I got 15 you
know how much we've enjoyed that as a family and like just I think the theme
right now is like you've always said Adam just let's do as little as possible
and get a lot of change and like keep the stress low and just keep the And like, just I think the theme right now is like, you've always said, Adam, just let's do as little as possible
and get a lot of change and like keep the stress low
and just keep the progress moving.
And man, you guys is, you know,
you guys messages are super clear for me.
And it's, and then I'm able to give it out to those people.
So I really appreciate it.
Are you following our good buddies?
All of our sports performance guys like Corey Schlesinger
and Paul Faber Fabrice Max Marzo
You have to write some of those down guys. Yeah, so I'll give those guys up. I'll give definitely
PJF performance that's one you got to be following him Brian Kula. Yeah, Brian Kula
and then Max Marzo and
Then Corey Schlesinger all those guys. I mean I would put them up with four of the best
Athletic trainers in the game. I mean they they are they're the guys who I'm watching Frank Oh, yeah
Yeah, I put those guys go to Franco. Yeah, Joe DeFranco is in there too for sure. Yeah that I mean that's those are all world-class
You know athletic trainers
That's perfect guys. No, I appreciate that. I appreciate all the content you guys give out for free.
And it's keeping me busy and keeping everybody confident.
Like I said, confident.
You guys just give us a lot of ammo at the dinner table.
So, pretty cool.
All right, man.
Thank you.
Keep it up, man.
Yeah, thanks guys.
Take care.
Who was it that we interviewed?
It was one of those guys that you mentioned
where they talked about with young athletes,
what they find and the data now shows us pretty clearly,
that if you take a young athlete, for example,
and have them focus on soccer all the way up
until they're an adult.
Oh, that's actually nobody I would mention.
That's Wes.
Yeah.
That was Wes.
Wes.
Wes, come on, Justin, you know this.
Yeah, yeah, Chad Wesley Smith.
Thank you.
There you go, there you go.
So the data for people who aren are familiar, if you were to take
young athletes and they had a let's say a propensity or a talent for a particular
sport, it's better off to put them in a lot of different sports and then have
them specialize far later like high school or even after high school. After high school, more resilient to these unknown variables.
Right, right. He actually recommended even in high school doing at least two
sports.
Yeah, because they find they do better at the sport that you want them to get better
at.
So they'll get better at soccer if they played a bunch of sports growing up than if they
just played soccer.
It just fills a lot of gaps.
And the reason why I'm bringing that up is strength training is very similar.
You get a lot of trainers that train athletes, younger athletes, and they think they have
to get really fancy with how they train them and it it's, oh, it's gotta be sport specific,
and it's gotta be whatever.
The best thing for a young athlete
is just get them generally stronger, that's it.
Now later, once they get to maybe super high levels
of high school, or definitely college and above,
then things start to get really specific
and specialized with training.
But until you get to that point,
their practice and their games and their sports are going to provide all those nuances,
your goal is to get them stronger and that's it.
I want a foundational base strength and then just quality sharp movement.
I mean, I always use the, especially when we're talking about athletes, they use the, like the basketball analogy of like, I, if I, I've got an athlete that I'm trying to make a great basketball player.
I'm not teaching him between the legs, spin drills and fancy passes. All we're really, I want him to be an incredible dribbler with his left, an incredible dribbler
with his right, like perfect form and technique, and you're going to drill that home for such
a long period of time so he has a solid foundation.
Then you layer on that other stuff later on.
But that stuff can't layer unless you master the foundation.
That's right.
That's right. Everybody wants to go, Oh, I
want to learn how to do that crazy move. And so they're
practicing that crazy move, but then they have terrible
foundational skills. It's like, no, like master, master the,
the foundational stuff first. And then when you start adding
all the create, like you said, creative, like exercises that
are sport specific to tennis, like that's great. And that's
why I brought the point up, like sometimes there I've seen, I've
actually seen it like a handful of times in my career
where you do have an anomaly kind of an athlete a kid that just the first time
he squatted he had better form than you like you just sometimes you see that and
then you can start to layer that stuff on a little bit sooner but most kids man
they could spend their whole high school career pretty much just getting good at
the basic move 90% yeah that's what I mean. Most all of them.
Our next caller is Dominic from Texas. Dominic. What's happening?
Hey guys. It's so good to see you. Thanks so much for having me on.
Really appreciate it. You got it dude. What's happening? How can we help you?
So I've got a little bit of an interesting question.
On the suggestion of Adam on a previous show, he mentioned around the time
that you turn 30, trying to go and get labs done and get a baseline for where you're at.
And I did that. I just turned 30 over the weekend. And I went and did all my labs. And
I got some pretty interesting numbers back on my testosterone. I kind of wanted to know what you guys would recommend moving forward.
So my total testosterone came out to 984 nanograms per deciliter which my doctor actually asked me if I was on anything synthetic because they thought it was pretty high. Free testosterone
was 268.6 and then basically kind of the direction I'm wanting to go is I've been training consistently
for the last about two and a half years or so.
I've lost about 160 pounds in that time.
And I'm wondering if I should shift my focus kind of away from the weight loss aspect and
more toward just getting as big
and as strong as humanly possible as much as I can.
Because I have those numbers, that's kind of, I don't know.
What direction do you think you guys would go
if I were a client of yours?
I mean, those numbers are gonna help you.
Get big or die.
Yeah, those numbers are gonna help you
regardless of what your goal are, right?
So healthy testosterone levels are,
are you sure that's your free testosterone? That's an insane, oh, that's picograms, nevermind.
Yeah, very high. You're going to do well going into cut or trying to get bigger with numbers
like that. So you're in a deficit right now and your testosterone's at those levels?
I was in a deficit for a long time. I'm kind of at maintenance right now, which I have I did a little bit of a reverse
Diet I'm sitting at around 3,000 calories
And 225 grams of protein right now, which is right around maintenance
I'm not really seeing much movement on the scale right now up or down. How tall are you and how much do you weigh?
Six foot five and right around 250 right now. Oh, so you're a monster. That's like a cut dude. Yeah. That's bro you're a big boy. Yeah I would do you know what your body fat's at?
No I've not done a specific test. My obviously my bioelectrical impedance
scale has me in the low 30s but I think a lot of that is loose skin just from the
the weight loss. I would probably put myself somewhere in the mid to high 20s.
Yeah I hear you. So if you went back up to maintenance now I would probably put myself somewhere in the mid to high 20s. Yeah, I hear you. So if you went back up to maintenance now, I would go.
And how long were you in a cup for actually?
I did the standard, you know, tracking app cut that had me.
I was just over 400 pounds and I was eating at like 2300, 2400 for a,
uh, about a year, year and a half. Whoa. You were over 400 pounds. Yeah. Wow.
Wow. You've made an insane transfer. Great job, bro.
Wow, incredible.
I would do a, I would go reverse diet.
I would go reverse diet.
Yeah, that's a no brainer.
And get really strong.
Yep.
And then your calories will probably climb over 4,000
for a guy your size, and then you can start cutting.
But slowly get there though.
You're doing, like the fact that you're at 3,000,
you're kind of maintaining, jump up to 3,250
or 3,300 for a week or two jump up to 3250 or 3300 for
Enjoy that for a couple weeks if you fit the feeling good, you don't feel like you're putting on body fat jump up to 3500
I would just keep
Incrementally getting up until your 4,000 plus calories because I think with your size and muscle mass
And if you're training running our programs, you should be able to get them calories up over 4,000. And keep this in mind too Dominic if you
reverse diet well and you get stronger and build muscle you you can very well
get leaner in the process. Now that doesn't necessarily mean you're losing
body fat pounds but if you were to gain ten pounds of lean body mass you would
be leaner as a percentage of your body weight.
So you could gain muscle, gain no body fat,
and you're getting leaner.
Remember, it's percentage that matters,
not the amount of body fat that you have on your body,
but rather the percentage of your body that is body fat.
So you could gain muscle in a reverse diet,
not gain any body fat, and actually get leaner
through the process.
How's your strength in the big lifts?
Pretty good.
I mean, I've only been really barbell training
for a year and a half or so.
So I'm deadlifting.
I can do like 405 on deadlift right now for three.
I can bench 255 in that three to five rep range and my squats right around 405. Yeah, you're doing great. I'm doing you right now, you have plenty of room to go up and you don't need to do it fast. You just, like I said, add 30,
go to 250 calories every couple of weeks
and just keep kind of lifting or increasing like that.
Yeah.
And yeah, watch yourself get like Sal saying,
get leaner, build muscle,
maybe even go up a couple pounds on the scale,
but actually get leaner while you do that
nice and slow and controlled.
And you can even interrupt that
with like little weak cuts in between.
So let's say I jumped you up to 3,250, oh you're feeling great.
So we go up to 3,500, by the second week at 3,500 you're like, I don't know, I feel like
I'm putting on a little body fat.
Okay, cool, let's run a one week cut, drop it all the way back down to 2,500 to 2,700
calories for one week and then go back again.
And you can kind of interrupt this kind of reverse, you know, bulk or whatever for a
while with these little mini interruptions
of low calories just for a week and then go back to it.
And I think we could, by doing that,
I think you'll really minimize the amount of body fat
you put on and you'll just keep putting lean body mass on.
Yeah. Okay.
Out of curiosity, Dominic, what kind of lifestyle
did you lead before and then after?
Like what prompted you to make these changes?
That's a remarkable transformation.
Well, I mean, before I was eating out two to three times a day, you know, eating, just
not paying attention at all to my diet.
And the big thing that prompted that, that was all during graduate school and I was getting
my master's degree and then just the pandemic and all of the things just added a lot of
stress.
But the big thing that kind of prompted the lifestyle change, my brother, my older brother
was diagnosed with stage four colon cancer and he ended up passing away about a year
and a half ago.
So I saw him and what he was going through and just listening to you guys over the years. You know, muscle is very cancer fighting. And that's that was a lot of what kind of shifted my focus, as I wanted to set myself up and be healthy in case that that is something that's genetically predisposed. I wanted to make sure that I was in a good place. And I was not when I was over 400 pounds so I wanted to to kind of set myself up in case something
like that happened. Good for you. Good for you. Sorry to hear about your loss but
I'm glad you're on this on this path so it's great to hear. I love hearing
success stories like this. Yeah. You're doing great. Yep. That's a nice slow
reverse diet. You're gonna love you're gonna love how your body responds. What
programs of ours have you ran and what are you running currently
right now? I'm trying to think of what we could, what we would send you
program wise.
Uh, I started with anabolic, uh, and then I ran symmetry.
I have, I've run power lift.
I've run aesthetic now that I'm on my second run of aesthetic.
Um, because right now the workload is less, I'm a teacher.
So I'm in the, in the summer months. I don't work as many hours
So I increased the volume with aesthetic
You know my wife's running maps muscle mommy right now I've not run I've not run strong yet that would be one
I like strong like anabolic advanced or anabolic. Oh, yeah, that's you. Yeah, which one you want
Let's try anabolic advanced that'd be cool. You got it. Yeah, you got you want? Let's try anabolic advance. That'd be cool.
You got it. Yeah. You got that with your calorie increase call.
That'll be fun to watch. I'd love to hear back.
I'd love to hear back from you after you run through that, see where you're at.
Okay. Yep. Check back with us. Real quick. I had a quick follow up.
Is that okay? Yeah, go for it.
So with me being in that dramatic deficit for so long, would it be wise to just stay
in this reverse for like a year, like 12, 18 months or should I just go until I feel
like I'm just stuffing myself?
You could literally do what I was saying forever, right?
You could just always be kind of slowly adding the calories when you start to feel like,
oh, I'm feeling lethargic or I feel like I'm putting a little body fat on, go on a little mini cut and then go back.
You can continually interrupt that kind of slow reverse diet and then you'll get to a
place, the perfect world is that we land you somewhere, say around 3,500 to 4,000 calories
where you don't feel like you're stuffing yourself.
You feel very satisfied.
It's very comfortable and natural for you
to eat that many calories.
You don't feel like you're depriving yourself.
And you can sustain that.
And then you just kind of hover around that calorie.
Ideally, that's what we want.
So I don't know how you feel right now,
if it feels like it's a lot of food
or it feels like you are restricting a little bit.
But ideally, I want to get my client to a place where
I'm starting to stretch them as far as how much they have to eat.
They're starting to give me that feedback of, Adam, this is a lot of food. It's
like, okay, cool. Let's cut back a tiny bit. And there's where I want to help. I want to
keep you kind of hanging out right there. That's the goal.
Okay. I could definitely eat more. So I'm all right with that.
Okay, good, good. Yeah. So I figured that you're a big guy. I imagine it's going to
be 3,500 to 4,000 is where you're going to want to be.
It's also pretty remarkable that your hormone levels
are where they're at with how much weight you lost
and the cut you went through.
I mean, I'm not surprised the doctor thought you were on gear
because those are pretty crazy numbers.
I mean, it's also a testament
of you're doing things the right way.
That's right.
It's a testament of the way you're eating
and training right now is the right way
and it's responding very well.
Awesome, cool. Thank you guys so much. Take it easy. All right. Bye. Yeah his his total is at the upper limit his free is actually a little outside that's how
high it is. Wow. Yeah for somebody. That's impressive. And the fact that you said
coming from being obese that's crazy. Typically what you see when you get somebody
who's lost that much weight,
especially if they just cut their calories
for a long period of time,
over-trained is depressed testosterone levels.
So.
Now, what would've been really cool to see
is where he was at when he was 400 pounds,
because it would be really interesting
if this is a response of him reducing body fat,
building muscle.
That's the other thing, if you do it right, you get a better body fat response.
So what I'm thinking is like, man, maybe he,
like I would have loved to have seen where his levels were
when he was say, you know, 28 years old and 400 pounds,
and then all of a sudden he started really taking care
of himself, and even though he was in a cut,
his testosterone levels went up,
because let's be honest, what he probably did
was he built muscle and lost body fat at the same time exactly so that's incredible. Our next caller is Nicole from
Maryland. Hi Nicole how can we help you? Hello. Hi well thank you so much for taking my question
and before I ask I just want to say like every other listener thank you so much for what you
put out there in the fitness world and specifically for all you do for women to break free from toxic diet culture and focus on getting stronger
and being healthier instead of just being skinny.
I really appreciate that and I know so many of us do.
Thank you.
Yeah.
So my question today is about coaching women.
So I am a coach for perimenopause and postmenopausal women,
and a lot of them really would like to build strength
and lose body fat.
And I always program deadlift variations and squats
into their fitness program,
but I was just wondering specifically about squats,
which are often a challenge
for their baseline mobility and strength.
So is it better to work with them on perfecting a deeper range of motion with their squat first
so that they're doing more of the ass to grass style and using lighter weights so that they can get there?
Or is it better to use heavier weights and have them not put their thighs quite parallel to the ground
and work on building strength that way before we increase their range of motion.
Cause I, it's a 12 week program.
So I really want them to be able to, um, see some gains and have some
motivation as they're building their strength up and wasn't sure which
way you guys would recommend.
Good question.
Yeah.
Both, both options are getting them stronger, but only one of them is
improving the range of motion at the same time.
So if you take somebody that can go down to parallel and
You're you get them to you know through mobility work and whatever be able to go down another couple inches
You've added a longer range of motion and it's it's
More resistance. Yeah, so so I would always focus on range of motion now Does this mean you need to aim for ass to grass with everybody? No, because for some people that might never happen or it may just
take a long time, but I like to get people to the point where they can at least come a little bit
below parallel. That's exactly, break parallel. That's the goal for me. I definitely don't want
to be loading a client, especially early on in a 12-week program, more and they can't even
break parallel.
If they're not breaking parallel, I'm not going to put an extra 25 pounds on just so
I can say, look, you're squatting 25 more pounds.
I'm going to express to them exactly what Sal said is, listen, if we can get an extra
6 inches deeper into your squat to where we're breaking parallel, you're stronger.
And so forecasting that as you start, so as you start the program,
teaching them that, that hey, a greater range of motion, even with the same weight equals a stronger
version of yourself. And so yeah, I could load you up and telling them this, you know, I could load
you up with another 25 pounds and you know, you squat down less than parallel and we could say,
oh look, but that's not going to help you. That's not what's better for you. And so
that's how I would communicate that. And so, but once I got somebody who's breaking parallel or more
Then I then I'm gonna play that game a little bit a little bit of both, right?
I'm always gonna be trying to get a little bit more range of motion and working on mobility
But I also if I'm if they're already breaking parallel, I would load them up
They don't necessarily to be all the way ass to grass for me to do that
No in a lot of times that times that's sort of the missing factor
of really being able to engage their glutes.
So you'll see a lot of women not really feel
any activity there in the glutes,
whereas to be able to kind of break that parallel
to get them to engage is what they really needed.
And so to kind of take them through that range,
obviously real gradually and like slowly loading,
but you know, really creating that stability
and creating that tension, especially in the bottom part
where, you know, we're weakest.
And that's why I like box squats.
I like having, you know, sort of a targeted goal
for them to achieve.
So it's just below that parallel to, you know,
slowly increase their tension and, you their tension and then load it appropriately.
So taking them through that gradual process,
you're gonna find a lot of success with that.
Justin brings up box squats.
A lot of people think that box squats
are relegated to power lifters or strength athletes
just because they use them quite often
to increase their numbers.
But I use box squat. I never trained a... I mean, 99.9% of my clients were everyday people
and I use box squats every day. And the reason why I like box squats is I could take somebody
slightly below what they can stabilize at. So let's say I have a client who can go down to
parallel, but they can't really make it down below parallel. I would get a box and set it below parallel because at the very least they could slowly
descend and control the descent.
Then I'd have them sit down, then I'd have them brace, and then I'd have them come up.
A lot of people use a box wrong too.
They use it as a bumping target.
Just hit the box and come up.
Sit down, pause, brace yourself, come up because it's the change of direction that people often
have the challenge with.
It was one of my favorite tools to teaching people
to be able to go lower with control.
Generating that force there from nothing,
that's everything, and they're gonna get
so much stronger that way.
This is also an area where I'll use elevated heels too.
It's not something I would've done as a young trainer
because I thought, oh, I'm crutching this person
because they have poor ankle mobility and I should just keep working on their ankle mobility.
Well, I can do both.
I can take somebody who can't break parallel because they're so limited in their ankle
mobility, show them what it feels like to bring weight all the way down there and control
that to the point of getting that good hip strength and that deep squat because you can
still get the benefits of that.
I'm crutching them by lifting their heels up.
I don't want them to squat that way forever, but to get them more comfortable with getting
down lower and getting their hips to generate strength and power from that lower depth,
a lot of times I'll elevate the heels just because that's normally the number one limiting
factor for clients, especially my female.
Wearing high heels and doing things like that, they're super tight in that area, and then
they can't get down any lower
and it's just because if I lift their heels up,
boom, all of a sudden they could drop all the way down.
But I'm communicating that, see, look at,
when I elevate your heels, look how deep you can get.
That's because we have such poor ankle mobility.
If we can work and fix that,
you're gonna be able to do that
without even getting your heels elevated.
That's where we wanna get.
Like I'm gonna communicate that to the client.
Perfect, yeah, I've been, I'm glad to hear you guys say all that. I've been doing exactly what
you suggested. I've been working with one specifically who's doing box squats and I've
been having her sit all the way down and pause, you know, rest there before she stands back up.
And I've been working with her first to get to parallel and then eventually a little bit below
parallel. I haven't tried the heels elevated thing, but I'll talk with her about that and see if she's open to that. I have
a feeling I'll see what she thinks about it, but that might be a good idea just to get
her feeling with that range of motion actually feels like in her body. Another thing I've
been trying with them is doing some of the resistance bands just on the off days so that
they are loaded less at the bottom and then increase the resistance as they stand up. That way it's a little bit easier for her
at the bottom of the squat and then more resistance at the top. So I didn't know if that was good
to continue doing kind of on those like pump sessions in between the workouts or what you
thought about that aspect of it.
I would like I would like to tell you when you do the back to the elevator
Sorry
I'm like stuck on wanting you to do this because an easy test for a trainer with no weight
no, nothing is to have a client stand up on your tippy toes and
Show me a squat like just demo that and I'll tell you 90 plus percent of the people will be able to go all the
Way down and sit their butts on their calves. That's a clear indication that this is not a hip issue
This is not it's like it's literally the ankles that are not allowing us to get down there
And that's an easy way without stressing them or making them feel weird and awkward by putting their heels on just stand on your tippy toes
And see if you can squat down with them and see if they can do that you getting them to do that is
Is going to show them that that's the
root cause and then that's where we need to put all our work. And then I'm putting most all of my
energy towards that. That one thing, this is why I'm such a big fan of the combat stretch and I've
talked about it at Nausium for the last five, six years, is because that right there will solve
probably 90% of your clients that are not getting below parallel. Just that alone. That's how
important that is. Awesome. Yeah, sounds good. I'll definitely do that.
Awesome. Thanks. Do you have your coach, do you have Prime Pro? That's a
really valuable program for trainers and coaches. I do have Prime Pro. I love it.
I use it all the time. Yeah it's great. I love it. Wonderful. Are you in our trainer
course? I'm not. I did the three day intro one,
but I haven't signed up for the actual course.
It's really cool.
Well good deal, we'll reach out to you.
Thanks Nicole.
Okay.
Appreciate it. Sounds good, nice to meet you all.
You too.
Bye. Bye bye.
You know, it is a good question,
because I know a lot of people,
when I was younger, range of motion
was not as important as weight on the bar. Yeah, it wasn't really as much of a consideration. No when I was younger range of motion was not as important as weight
On the bar. Yeah, it wasn't really as much of a consideration. No, I was like I just gonna go lift heavier and when I finally
And it was a bodybuilder that convinced me
When I finally lightened the load and did a greater range of motion
Muscle just came onto my body and I got so much so much out of it. Yeah that it's
adding resistance to a shorter range of motion is not going
to...
In fact, there was a period of time in the 90s where you had people experimenting with
partial reps because the theory was, well, you could just overload the body, right?
You'd have squat with so much more weight that's going to build so much more muscle.
And of course, it fell out of favor because it doesn't work.
Well, I just think it's near sighted.
I think, yeah, you get two benefits.
You get functional benefit,
and you also get the strength potential benefit.
You also get more chances to increase
your overall size of your muscle.
Like if you really focus on that range of motion
and getting strong,
because it is like a whole nother exercise
once you pass a certain range of motion
that your body recognizes.
And so in order to avoid dysfunction
and then also get stronger overall
and then build more muscle and maximize your potential,
I mean, it just makes perfect sense.
I mean, the reason why I'm drilling home the elevated heels
is because...
Because you like heels?
Yeah, totally.
Because I think more than 90% of my clients
that couldn't break parallel, that was why.
It's rarely ever something else.
Now there is 10% of the time when someone
has a unique situation.
Yeah, the majority you're right.
It's ankles.
It's like just getting them to be
able to improve their ankle mobility all of a sudden
improves their squat depth dramatically.
And that's such an easy test to figure that out.
And then if you see that they can like all of a sudden go all the way down, you know
what the problem is.
And now, and then instead of like, and this is what happens, a lot of trainers over complicate
improving somebody's squat because they see all the, they see the beginning.
Like, so what happens is they see the asymmetrical shift and the chest falling forward and not
breaking parallel.
So they see all these problems, but it's all stimming because they can't, as soon as their
knees start to travel forward a little bit, the body goes, it tightens up.
And then all of a sudden you see this dysfunction everywhere else.
And it's like, if I just lifted her heels up, now all of a sudden she can sit her butt
down on her ankles. It's like, oh, just lifted her heels up, now all of a sudden she can sit her butt down on her ankles.
It's like, oh, that's the problem is that's what's limiting her.
And then as I stretch her capacity,
then you see all this other breakdown.
And then the trainers get all focused on all the other areas
that are breaking down.
It's like, dude, if we just fix the ankles,
all this other stuff is going to go away.
And so I normally really try and drill that home to a trainer.
It's like, figure that piece out first
and really get them better there
And then watch all the other dysfunctions start to get better
Our next caller is Tyler from Tennessee. What's up, Tyler? What's up, man? Hey guys, how's it going today? Good
It's an honor to have be on the show with you guys
Um, it's awesome to ask my question and obviously looking up to you guys since I found you guys as a podcast
I'm a coach and trainer. So I love your guys' content.
It's helped me with my own fitness journey, kind of keep me away from the
shiny object syndrome and give me lots of resources to help my clients with as well.
How can we help you?
So the question that I had for you guys, um, at the time that
maps performance advanced came out, I hopped on that program.
I got it because I was kind of trying to condition back into my sport.
As I'm working through that program, I'm trying to figure out what a good approach would be
for sort of a year long kind of phasing of your guys's programs.
What do you mean by year long phasing?
That has lots of support.
So my sport, I kind of do year round.
And I'd love to kind of find a program from each of
your guys' different options that I can kind of pair along with my sport and going through
the whole year.
And this is for you Tyler?
Yes.
So much of this is dictated by the volume of the sport you're playing.
Period.
That's it.
I mean so when someone says I'm playing a sport year round, what's the best program for you? The first thing I need to know is like, are you playing your sport two days a week, five days a week? What's your off season look like? So what is all of your non, you know, strength training activity look like?
I would say in what I would say like my offseason for the sport and the sport too if you guys are familiar with
Jujy Mufu on Instagram
His big flipping and spinning and acrobatics. That is the sport that I like to do
Terrible sport for me to do. I'm like 6 2 and over 200 pounds, but it's a fun thing to do
So how often do you train do you you practice that? And what does that look like?
So I would say in peak season, which I tend to do outside on grass. So the biggest time of the year
that I spend the most on my sport is probably spring and summer. And that looks like probably
three to four training sessions a week, probably anywhere from like 30 minutes to probably two
hours. It's definitely not, it's more of like a hit exercise than anything.
I kind of do about of, of my sport.
I kind of rest, relax, and then I go apart similar to like gymnastics,
kind of tumbling movements.
Uh, it's a very technique based sport.
So I find that I have to do it a little bit just to maintain like my
air awareness, how my body moves in space.
Um, I mean, anytime I've tried to include weightlifting in the past,
it's been really easy for me to over train,
especially in my early 20s,
like when I didn't know any better,
I just would do like a five by five program
and train the same and I'd be like,
man, my joints really hurt.
Like it seemed like just like a sunk cost
to do weightlifting and I ended up just doing my sport.
Are you, do you compete in this?
No, it's just like 100% recreation.
Oh, all right.
Well, okay.
So here's the deal.
You gave me, you gave me a huge range, a huge range, uh, 30 minutes to two hours.
Um, you're training yourself and not competing.
It's all going to be based on what you want more of and what you're doing more of.
If you're doing, if you're really training hard at your sport,
then you're gonna do strength training maybe once a week.
If you're out there just practicing your movements
and keeping your skill and it's not super intense
then you can strength train more often.
This is gonna be, it's real kind of tough to answer
because the range you gave us.
I mean, I would look at it like this.
The sport and strength training,
I'm not allowing myself more than four to five days
of combined.
And so if you're doing three days,
three days or four days of practicing your sport,
you might be strength training one day a week.
If you're only doing your sport one day a week,
like say in the winter time, just to keep up the mobility,
flexibility, the skill, then I might strength train two days a week, like say in the wintertime just to keep up the mobility, flexibility, the skill,
then I might strength train two days a week. But you just have to balance that based off of the
volume and intensity. And what most people make a mistake of doing is doing too much.
You know, it's trying to do both and then you hit and then both suffer.
Let's make it a little bit more specific because, you specific because it could be three days a week, Adam, of 30 minutes like you said.
If it's intense hit, that's intense. Yeah, but I mean that's less than
like two hours. Oh yeah, well that's... If you're doing two hours, three days a week, you
shouldn't be doing nothing else. Maybe total time. Maybe we should look at total time.
If you're doing three hours or more of your sport, then you're doing
one day max of strength training.
At moderate intensity.
At moderate intensity.
If you're doing, so maybe look at it like,
I'm not gonna do more than four hours of intense workout
throughout the week.
And I'm based off that.
And I'm kinda, and an important thing for me too is like,
because I don't compete and it's more about the fun of it
for me, it's less about optimizing my training
to keep pushing the limits, but more of like,
can I keep doing this for as long as possible?
I'm turning 30 this year and it's for me,
it's more about, can I just do like my sport
for as long as possible?
And I know like maintaining muscle mass is important,
keeping up flexibility and mobility.
The sport is very like unilateral.
So it's a lot of spinning and rotating
to only one side of my body. So it is very like,ilateral. So it's a lot of spinning and rotating to only one side of my body.
So it is very like presents and balances, which is kind of why I wanted to get originally
into training. And I got interested in personal training because I was like, man, like this
is all to one side. I'm jumping off of one leg. So let me just ripping through one side.
So let me, okay. I'm going to throw something out here and here. I want to hear the other
guys, how they think about this. Cause this is obviously unique. If I could program you for the
whole year then I would probably put you on a symmetry type of program two days
a week and then you do your sport two days. That's kind of how I'd want to see.
That's how I think I envision like a nice balance of since it's not like
you're competing but you want to keep the skill up you want to be good at it
we don't want to over train so two and two would be a pretty good balance.
And then, you know, and maybe sometimes you,
cause you're really into it summer
and you're loving being outside, you go three,
but then you drop down to one of strength training.
And then maybe it's the winter time
and you only get to do one day
of your acrobatic training, stuff like that.
Then maybe I'll let you do two days
of actually strength training.
And so I would toggle between two and one days of straight training with two and three
days of this sport.
And I think a program like symmetry and or performance is probably the best balanced
program for you for like running your-
Yeah, symmetry or performance advanced and really incorporating those priming movements
and the mobility pieces in between just to reinforce and create that stability with all
this explosive movement.
Your biggest goal is how do you recover most optimally when you're accelerating all the
time and putting that kind of stress on your joints.
I definitely agree with Adam. I
think that's probably a good protocol. I mean, it'd be interesting to see how you would do
on like more of a 15 minute kind of like consistent touching the weights approach. If we were
to try that for us for a stint, you know, but you'd have to all base that off of your
recovery if that's like even a lot, you know, after doing that and then adding explosive movement.
That's what I was going to recommend because are you looking more to maintain, you said
maintain the skill. Is it more about the skill or the stamina?
Because that would maintain your strength and then you'd still be able to perform.
Yeah, because if you just want the skill, then you're better off doing a little bit
of strength training and a little bit of practicing your sport daily. If you want the stamina,
then yeah, you got to go out there and do an hour of it.
But if you want the skill, go ahead.
I would say like stamina's not too big
from a training demands.
Like if I was an athlete,
and what am I missing as an athlete?
I would say like my strength and my stamina
is perfect for the sport and anything.
My strength and muscle is more just like,
I'm trying to have my cake and eat it too and like be jacked, but also be athletic.
Um, you know, but I think, I think,
I think Justin might've hit the nail on the head.
I think math's 15 and then maybe 20,
30 minutes of practicing your sport after the workout.
You could probably do that five days a week and you probably be better off with
your skills doing it that way.
It probably be, yeah, be better.
Like your body's gonna be learning that.
Again, this is all like part of that practice,
like where you just keep reinforcing the signal.
So I ran through a performance advance.
I loved it.
I kind of was, I was coming off of an injury last year,
so I didn't do my sport at all for six months.
I tore my Achilles and I rehabbed that and then in basically my off season
when I was rehabbing that I just ran maps anabolic and actually just put on a ton of muscle on my
upper body just because I wasn't doing my sport which was kind of fun. And then as I got out of
my rehab and doing stuff that's why I got performance advanced. Started doing that,
felt great with it, started doing my sport like one day a week and then when I finished performance advance
I actually kind of intuitively went the maps 15 route and
Have been doing that to kind of lower my training volume and now I'm like doing my sport maybe two to three days a week
I like that for about a couple weeks and it's been feeling good
Mm-hmm. I like that Tyler view. Did you listen to the two interviews we did with John?
Um, I don't think so. No. Yeah, he's been on mind pump, bro. I
Didn't know you had him on my pump. That's actually awesome way before I started way before way
I mean we we put John wasn't even that big yet at that time
It was like I don't even know how many followers he was at, but he was kind of small.
We got connected through a partnership.
Chimera Coffee, who was a friend of ours,
knew us and knew them.
And in fact, I think we were probably
one of the first big platforms that he had came on.
So he's been on the show twice.
Oh, that's very cool.
I didn't know that.
I've been following him for like, since like,
I started this like 2010.
Yeah, that's awesome. Good guy.
All right, man.
Thank you guys. So probably like maybe something like in my off season, I kind
of focus like reducing my training volume, kind of maybe up in the gym if I
want to build a little bit of muscle in a weak area or just selfishly and then
kind of do maybe like performance route, 15 route and maybe something like symmetry as well
yep yeah absolutely we got something for you in the future too so stay tuned
very cool yeah and then um oh yeah I just gonna say thank you guys I really
appreciate the time you got a brother I'm calling him I think you guys see you
man we're gonna name that's what I was just you know keep saying sport what's the time. You got it brother. Thanks for calling in. All right thank you guys. See you man. We
gotta name that sport. You know keep saying sport. What's it called? He calls it acrobatic
something right? I don't know he calls himself the anabolic acrobat or something like that.
It's uh you know it's been a long time since I touched. How do you train that? I mean I guess
I just see a you know a picture of a grown man going out to the grass and just like.
Yeah, it's a lot of tumbling.
I'm doing my training.
It's a lot of gymnastics.
It's very gymnastic and very similar
and a very high skill, obviously, explosive movement.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's cool.
Crazy.
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Justin, I'm at Mind Pump to Stefano,
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Adam.
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