Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 248: Most Social Media Fitness Authorities Are Idiots
Episode Date: March 3, 2016In this age of social media anyone can hold themselves up as an expert. A ripped body and/or a fancy title goes a long way towards establishing "authority" in the marketplace. Just because someone loo...ks good or has a PhD does not automatically mean they 1. know what they are doing or 2. can help you achieve your goals. How do you distinguish the charlatans from the sages? It begins by questioning everything. Sal, Adam & Justin dive into this topic and provide some guidance in navigating this murky world. Please subscribe, rate and review this show! Learn more about Mind Pump at www.mindpumpmedia.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mind, hop, mind, hop, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
Let's talk some motherfucking shit. That's what I want to do.
I want to find some people to pick on and pick on them.
Adam's in the mood again.
You know what I've been in the mood again?
You know why? Because you remember last time that we were on
like a negative kick we were told
for like four or five episodes in a row.
I feel like we've been way too fucking positive for a while.
Come on man.
Come on man.
I feel like we're two.
This is fitness and wellness.
We're a little too happy.
Little too cum baya for me.
You know what you know why?
I need a roughness and fitness.
I know why you're irritable right now.
Why you say that?
Cause it's super warm in here again.
Oh, I thought you were gonna say
because I lost my keys.
Yeah, you did lose your keys.
Yeah, I'm kind of fucked right now.
That's what it is annoying.
And I am somebody who lost the keys to your Prius.
Yeah, I think somebody stole them.
Somebody saw my key leash and they're like,
oh, that's, I could probably
call a spoiler.
I'd sell that.
So somebody stole my keys.
So I think, I think people need to understand why you're my,
my publicity, you stole my keys.
Oh, fucking get you.
They're like, it's Adam.
Here's a, here's, this is, we need to,
we need to sell people this.
We need to tell people why you're so paranoid
about losing your keys.
I don't think I've met anybody
who's had their car stolen as many times as you have.
Yes.
How many times have you had a car stolen?
Well, it's been officially stolen twice.
So two different cars were stolen.
What do you mean officially?
Well, I mean, I've had my car broken into a lot of times.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, a lot of times I've had a window busted out
or somebody pop into it and get still my CDs
or whatever I had in there and steal my stereo.
I've had that happen a bunch of times on different cars.
But I've had two vehicles completely stolen.
Both those times.
Right in front of your house, right?
Yeah, right in front of my house.
One of them was a gated community
that my condo that I had before the house I'm in now.
Did you ever find them?
The cars?
Yeah, so what happened was,
so I had an Acura Integra that was in 1998.
It was actually the first car room.
And it was all tricked out.
So I had literally,
Oh, you had the rice rocket?
Oh, yeah.
Fast and various was definitely our generation.
And one of my favorite ones.
Was it Type R or was it just regular V-Tech?
No, it was also back cave.
Oh, so you know you're in type R.
Oh, flings.
Listen to this guy.
Is it Type R?
So I had a VR6 Volkswagen.
Okay, so the LS.
The Kaser is speaking another language. The LS Volkswagen. Okay, so the LS are speaking
in another language. The LS, the LS, so the type R is completely custom
already and you can't do any upgrades to that. It's already got your, your
basic bolt-ons, like your upgraded fuel rail, your big or intake, things like
that. I don't know. You can't do much. Mine is an LS, but my LS was, I mean, it was
poor. But that's still the V-tech.
No, no, it's not a V-tech.
That's a GSR.
So GSR, it would go in LS, GSR, and then type R.
Got it.
And the GSR, it's still sounding like this. Rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr You know underdrying your pushing at least 170 horsepower
In a Burnout the front tires. Oh totally I so the front mice
Stereo system I had and every time I shift in a third this the stereo would come flying out of the dash, you know
And you thought it was because you were so fast. Oh, it was like look how fast I am babe too fast
I'm not the stereo out of the fuck so anyways, and it was bright red
It was like I said it was completely tricked out. I probably had about seven white rims
I did at one point. I did oh shit. I'm calling all of it. I had in keys when I got still on so the in keys
I'm a niddo's on some 40 series tires. They're on paper pretty much so you have a sway bar
I did have a sway
This is excellent. I had every upgrade
This is excellent. I had every upgrade. This was straight up.
No, I didn't have Nause.
I didn't have Nause.
It was port and polished.
And I port and polished it so it would be ready to take Nause.
So that was eventually going to be an upgrade too.
That's it.
Like it's in all hands.
It was.
It was all in and the outside was all done.
It was all I had ground control springs on it so you can lift it up and down and shit
and stereo system all in it all done I had a big old five and a half inch
that's like I had a big dunk exhaust that was five I mean it was couldn't get
more rice rocket down for sure so my buddy and I have got 25 miles of the
gallon yeah right it was actually you know what that, I don't know, which one breaks my heart
more because both these cars I loved a lot. That one, it sucks because it was my high
school car, it was my first car. I did trick it out, I did very good care of it. It lost
the garage space when I bought my new truck because I brought a lifted Chevy that was
really nice, which was my second vehicle that's stolen. And that was a pretty bad.
Man, you went on the other side of the spectrum.
I did, and I had a bull the same time,
so it was really fun to drive.
So I'd have, you know, I see you're the,
basically the wizard, and you're trying to cover
the entire spectrum.
Yeah, you're a punter.
You've got the rocket, and you've got the lift of truck.
The rocket, I mean.
Yeah, so that was the first one to go to the demographics.
It got stolen right out of my gated community
and they didn't find it, they didn't find it for,
well, I come out right, I call the cops.
Cop pretty much tells me, oh, sir,
these are stolen all the time,
you'll never see this car again.
I was like, so I'm heartbroken.
The shitty part about this is because I bought
the brand new truck and I had just,
and so I had both of them on my insurance.
I put the fucking integral on liability
because I never drove it and And I had it on.
And so I lost everything when it was stolen.
Well, check this out.
Two weeks later, I get a phone call and it's a tope company.
And the tow company says, we have your car.
And I'm like, what?
And I'm like, is it drivable?
Is it still as well?
The wheels on it and they're like, oh, And I'm like, is it drivable? Is it still as well, the wheels on it and they're like,
oh yeah, wheels are on it.
Looks like, I mean, we can't obviously start it,
but we can look in it and see it.
Looks like everything's there.
I don't know, it looks like the stereo might have been
taken on my go, of course, and the stereo's
gonna get stolen, you know, that was the first thing.
I figured that's what they were there going there for.
I was more concerned with the motor,
the motor had the most amount of money in it.
And so I'm pretty excited.
I'm heading to the to the to the to yard
and I'm like, get out of my car and I head,
I'm running up and I'm looking at it through the fence
and I'm like, oh, shit, my wheels are still on there
and my exhaust, fuck it, they didn't take the time
to take my wheels, my exhaust off.
Dude, maybe they just stole my stereo, fuck it.
I was just getting a new stereo, I'm like tripping, right?
And I get up there and the key thing's kind of fucked up
so I can't start it. And
then I was like, well, let me pop the hood and see if they did get into the hood. I
pop the hood. And they have fucking strips. Oh, I don't have anything in there. Anything.
I mean, they emptied space. Got it. It completely got it for all the parts, you know? And
I heard that hurt. That hurt really bad. And I was just like, man, that's pretty shitty.
And so I had to, I had to pay for the time that it was there because I got towed there,
right?
So I had to pay for that.
And I had to pay for this car that fucking doesn't run.
I have liability on.
I'm not going to get anything for it to get back to my house.
I pay it back to get to my gay community.
Well, long story short, you know, during this time of like, what the fuck am I going to
do with this?
I was driving my other vehicle.
I'm not worried about seeing from my house.
It got towed three times from my house
for sitting in my sitting and not moving.
Somebody called it in as an abandoned vehicle.
And so three different times I had to go pay for it
to get towed out of the tow yard
and then towed back to my house, I'd have paid again.
And so finally, I literally give it to,
you know who Lawrence, Lawrence bought it off from me.
What?
I hooked him up.
I remember that, he drove that.
Yeah. Whoa. Yeah, yeah, yeah. He bought it from me what I hooked him up I remember that he drove that yeah
Yeah, he bought he bought it from me and I gave him a fat deal because he had he had a mechanic come over and say how much would I have to spend to fix this up and I literally I think I gave it to him for like four
So did you race and shit at night? I do think at night you're a
I did all that see I had a VR6 full swagger. Yeah, so it was a my I actually had a
I said six cylinder.
So it was a little bigger.
It was a little bit bigger.
Just like most things on me.
I'm a puppy.
Yeah, although I probably would have smoked you.
But yeah, no, I'm a puppy.
Yeah, I stuck with American.
I had a 56 GMC truck.
Actually, my truck, I sold to this guy in Denmark.
My first truck that I had bought when I was in,
yeah, with all places, Denmark, Denmark apparently is in the hot rods.
And 400 big block Pontiac engine in there,
ratchet shifter, I was like lighting them up everywhere.
Do you have a canine air filter?
Yeah, just and always has to out test us,
throwing us.
I'm getting really fucking sick in terms of it.
Just like, I mean, it was hard bring hold it back at the stop light.
I was just lurching the whole time just like that Tim the tool man Taylor of our show
Dude every time we do something we bring some up and he's got to put hair and balls on
I'm sorry, but you guys are all talking cars and I'm like waiting for my turn
You know what I mean? And I was just gonna get run over with this little rice rocket as anyone had
Yeah, I'm by the way when that's had one stolen. I mean no one else that he is no never um yeah yeah I yeah well I don't have as many pissed off X girlfriend
that's what I think the problem no now I've had two cars keyed also which that was probably that's
like that's it bro that's it yeah you mess with girl they will care if you're a dude if you're a
dude and you ever kiss a one's car you deserve to get your ass
Whoops some day
Massive that's a bitch move of all bitch moves for sure definitely so Adam you wanted to talk about
What do you want to talk about personal trainers for fitness?
Well, here's this has been on my mind because it's was a good transition
You like that was super smooth wasn't awful. Oh
because it's- It was a good transition.
You liked that, it was super smooth.
It was an awful, orstable.
Yeah, it was, it was, it was, it was, it was, it was,
we're done, we gotta, we gotta work some lube in there somewhere.
That was in a good DJ.
Was Doug waving you down over here?
No, no, no, it was, it was, it was,
I just felt like it makes me ask of that somehow.
Yeah, you're gonna have to do something special there, Doug.
Quick, quick, yeah, it is like we start,
hey, yeah, we're talking about trainers.
Here's our transition to fitness now.
Yeah.
So lately, I've had people that I've been helping out
like as far as fitness and nutrition and coaching and stuff.
And it just, it's so hard for me.
If you know me already and like we've known each other
for maybe a year or more. And you hire these coaches,
you know, these men's physique, bodybuilding coaches
to help you with your nutrition and your workout program.
And I know this is my own ego,
so I know this is my own thing that I have to work on stuff,
but I also feel like that's why I have mine pump
is so I can let my ego go and fucking talk shit.
So I'm going to, is it's like, dude, you got somebody like me who,
you know, I'm not claiming on the smartest guy in the room at all, but I will tell you that I
definitely know more than about 99% of all these online. Which to be honest, is not that another
hard. No, it's not. It's not that impressive. And just because most all of none of, I don't think you didn't none of us do this, right?
None of us list our certifications that we all had
and show like that because to us,
that shit doesn't even matter.
The, it's, it's, first, if you haven't gone out
and continue to further your education and fitness,
just because you have one or two,
or even three national certifications at that
or a kinesiology degree,
or even a fucking doctor at that,
that does not trust me.
I've fired so many doctors and masters that worked for me like it's just because you got that
went through eight years of school doesn't all sudden qualify you to make you as a good personal
trainer and being a personal trainer is a lot different than being a fitness celebrity who gets
in fucking great shape and then all of a sudden thinks they can coach the world on how to do it also because they figured it out for themselves.
In fact, that's probably one of the biggest fallacies that I see in a drives me crazy.
Yeah, I would say when it comes to fitness because it's probably because it's such an evolving
industry, right?
It's constantly evolving.
You're constantly learning.
My philosophy now is very different than it was say five years ago.
And five years ago, and five years ago
I had been in the industry for a very long time, right?
I think the best teachers in this industry is experience.
It really is.
I've learned far more from training thousands of people than I ever did in any course
or any book that I ever read.
And as you train lots of people and work with lots of different kinds of people everything from young to old to you know great
Muscle bullying genes so bad muscle bullying genes to injuries you you tend to become you tend to learn how to work with different situations and
Even there's even a lot of fitness professionals that have very high educations
PhDs for example, but they were never personal trainers.
They trained themselves, they were athletes,
they were very fit, then they went and got an education
and whether it be exercise science or kinesiology.
And then all of a sudden now, I'm a PhD,
now I can train everybody.
And I've had a lot of same thing, Adam,
I've had a lot of trainers come in and apply to work there.
I look at their resume and they've got bachelors or masters degree in kinesiology and advanced
certifications through NSM.
They start and they've got a good kind of, they can get started.
They're good vocabulary behind them.
But there's still beginners.
There's total beginners.
Well, I feel like it's totally backwards, you know,
coming from getting my degree and going through
academic world and trying to really further my education
as far as, you know, the human body's concerned
and movement, it's just so funny,
because like if I was to do it again,
I would go 100% into the movement, it's just so funny because like if I was to do it again, I would go 100%
into the experience, dive into that, you know, it brings about this thirst for really identifying
what's going on and like having these as a part of your newfound vocabulary that's applicable.
And so I don't know, for me, it just having a base, you know,
going through college and everything else was great.
It did help for me to get a solid understanding,
but at the same time.
But you were nowhere near ready to be a trainer.
No, graduating with your name.
And I recognize that.
It was such a new thing for me to step into again,
but I was hungry for it at the time.
And it was only once I started going through the process that it all started to kind of come back
to me, some things, you know, from lectures and courses that I had taken. But even then, like,
it's still trumps, like the experienced trumps, all of that combined.
Yeah, I would say if I ever started a certification,
it would be a mentorship,
is how I would design it.
Yeah, absolutely.
You would do some book work,
but most of what you'd learn is you'd go underneath someone
and you'd be a mentor for a year
and make a little bit of money
and then graduate into becoming a master.
I, just knowing what I know about fitness,
that's really the only way you can learn well
in terms of how to work with people and train people.
And here's another thing on that topic.
Doctors don't know much when it comes to exercise.
They don't know much when it comes to diet. They don't know much when it comes to diet.
And I have to say that because I've had many,
many clients come to me and say,
my doctor's putting me on this medically,
medically approved, shake program to make me lose you.
Do you know how much nutrition a doctor is required to have
in their entire schooling?
Not much.
One semester.
Yeah, not much at all.
One semester of nutrition is their requirement for an MD.
That is, are you kidding me?
Like one semester of nutrition,
there's not one national certification
that an average trainer would take
that it doesn't cover more than that.
Right.
Or exercise, I've had,
I can't tell you how many times I've had clients come in
and say, well, my doctor says I can't,
I shouldn't squat anymore
or I shouldn't lift anything above my head.
Clients that those that listen to our show and also train with me know this because they know I had my biggest pet peeve or doctors giving that shit out.
Exercise it by yourself.
I don't come out and prescribe fucking medicine.
So don't you fucking come and prescribe exercise and movement for my clients because
they will always, it reminds me of when you when you did first start as a trainer
When we first started off, you know, we learned we did not learn true biomechanics
You know, we learned safety and percussion and how to teach someone a basic movement
But to be always bowed on the safer side first versus range of motion or what may be ideal for that person.
So we were taught to do a lot of these exercises in a shortened manner and it's so crazy to me
that we were teaching and they still teach that way because they know and they know that in the
30 plus population, which is 80% of the people that buy personal training have all these
postural deviations, most common syndrome is upper-cost syndrome
So they know these people already in these deviated deviated positions and they're smart because they wrote these
certifications in books and so they know if we're gonna teach people how to do an overhead press
We're gonna tell them that they should come down to 90 degrees because more than likely that their client has a you know
Accessively protracted shoulder girl. It is not gonna have the same range of motion
as somebody is, and if they try and depress
their elbows all the way, their shoulders all the way down,
they're gonna get this excessive arch
and they're low back, and so safety
will have them stop at 50 degrees.
Well, I think they're, think about it.
About 90 degrees.
Think about all of the compl,
you know, how complicated it is,
training a client now.
Now, we take for granted because we're doing it for so long,
but like you're saying, when you notice something
in a bench press or a squad or any kind of a movement,
you can pick it apart depending on the individual
and change the movement.
And there's so many variances that it would be,
it's very difficult, it would be very difficult
to create a certification or a course
that would cover all that without a long term mentorship.
You know what I'm saying?
Like when you talk to doctors or surgeons, a lot of what they learn is when they do their
residencies.
You know, that's when they're doing the fucking learning, man.
They're out there and they're in the ship.
And all the variables just present themselves to them and they have to react and you know,
it's really that that response and you know, being quick on your feet and you learn from doing.
You do and I'll give you another example.
I've gotten a debates online and you'll see Mr. Fitness celebrity or fitness PhD even
will say, I'll give you an example.
High intensity interval training, superior to steady state because look at the study burns more fat,
shorter period time, that's it, case closed.
But there's no experience applied to that.
Now, I know as a trainer that yes,
the study's gonna show that,
but there's gonna be lots of people
that high intensity interval training is gonna be too much
and it's gonna push them over the edge
and they're not gonna do well with it.
And, or let's look at long-term success,
or let's look at, you know,
that study might only cover six weeks or eight weeks,
but this person is gonna be working out
for the rest of our life.
And a lot of people can't do that kind of, you know,
cardio for the rest of their life.
So there's all these variables and factors
that come, you only learn with experience.
Well, it's the same frustration too, I see with like,
I, you know, I've trained this guy that was like 400 something pounds.
Like, you know, he was very obese.
And the first thing that they're going to do is they're going to bring him to this weight
loss clinic that's involved right there on site with the hospital.
And so they got doctors managing this thing.
However, all they're doing is restricting them
to like 500 to 1000 calories
and then giving them like these bars.
And it's just like, I got so pissed off
because there's no like logical progression
for these people.
It's like, no.
And the thing is they want like an immediate success
so they want to see it.
They want to give them like here,
you know, you're losing weight, you know,
things are happening for you or whatever,
but they're just crashing, coursing them, crash diet.
They're not teaching them anything.
No, they're treating it like, like a lot of things
that Western medicine does.
Western medicine does some things very, very well.
If you get a broken bone, you need surgery,
you have an infection, you want
Western medicine. Nothing beats it. That's why it's the most successful form of medicine
in the world because with that emergency shit, it's awesome. But that's how they treat
weight loss and fitness. They'll take someone's obese and they'll say, we need you to lose
weight right away. We know exactly how many calories are in this shakes that we make. So
it's measured and here you go and you're in this room, you're not gonna leave,
and we can watch you lose weight and we saved your life.
But there's no long-term, at all, long-term success to that.
And with Western medicine,
they ignore or completely forget anything
that doesn't have some kind of clinical testing.
Even though logic will tell you that you should,
you know, eat whole natural foods
and you'd be hard pressed to find a doctor disagree with that,
but yet they will prescribe these shakes
because this is what the clinical studies show
that you need to have this many calories, it's controlled.
And that becomes kind of the issue.
I remember, I mean, in fitness being taught that you should never do things behind the head.
So like you should never press behind the head.
You should never do a pull down behind the head.
Behind the head.
You shouldn't do pull-ups, you know.
Behind the head.
And now why, why did they say that?
Well, it's more risk.
That's really about it.
It's more risk.
But if you have the shoulder mobility,
and you can do it,
and you can move in a way where your shoulders are moving in a safe manner where scapula is moving with the shoulder, things are
loose, things are stable and strong, that's fucking fine. No matter fact, pretty much any movement that
you can do that you're stable, that you don't have glaring muscle imbalances and that you could do
under your own control full range of motion is fine.
Any motion is good.
Is it ideal?
Well, if you're a frickin' gymnast and you want to do a back band where you're literally
folding yourself backwards and half but they're totally in control strong, no glaring muscle
imbalances, there's nothing wrong with them doing that.
It's not bad for them.
Now, if I fucking did a back band, you'd get a call 911 because I broke myself.
But that's kind of the, where you learn through the books
is they teach you these types of things
that are not really true when you go and apply them.
They're not true at all.
And I've had many clients where I've worked on
shoulder mobility and worked up to the point
where we can do something like a behind the neck press
and gotten fantastic results, of course,
under my supervision.
Well, again, it's blanketed to cater to your general public,
which is an inherent problem on its own,
because what you're doing is you're lumping people
into one thing.
And anything with a human body,
whether it's nutrition or fitness related or exercise, it really is just
determined on an individual basis. This is what's going on in my body. This is how to best optimize my
situation. And for them to be able to write that in such a way that you can take a certification for
this, they're going to make it so all
the precautionary parameters are in place. So that way, it's going to be generally good,
but it's not like built for, you know, optimization.
Well, think of this. And those of you guys that are listeners and are already going through
maps, you'll totally understand and get this. Everybody else, this is how maps evolved.
Something that was so important to us
and that we knew was gonna be extremely challenging was
how do we make a program for the masses?
How do we create something by not putting everybody
in a box and not being like all these other tools
out there that are, you know, claimed to be
these super smart fitness professionals and then they write these fucking generic programs that they say
is everybody should do. And oh, do this is the best for this? Or here's my weight loss program in 60 days
or 30 days. And it's all geared to the sales aspect. That we all knew that would be easier. We knew that
if we did my transformation or Justin's transformation or Doug's transformation because we've all
fucking transformed our bodies like Crazy Cell and said,
this is our weight loss program, follow it for the next 60 days
and our program with this and do that,
we would sell a hell of a lot more.
But what maps is all about is the,
and we've always created it to have all this flexibility
and the ability to be creative and change.
And you get to really see that as you evolve
into maps performance.
So those that have started maps in a ballack already kind
of see it, then you really see it when you get
to maps performance and you're really going to see more
when you get into the next map.
So, you know, that's the whole idea is to guide people
through this fitness journey and to educate you along the way.
So we give you these little bits of exercises.
And then we explain the how and why that we do movements like this.
And then we allow you to have the freedom to,
okay, maybe I would rather do this movement or this movement
because this is more conducive to my body.
And that's the idea.
The idea is that we guide you through training programs,
teach you how to program design yourself,
and how to evolve around what best suits you,
what are your goals, what are you trying to do with your body
and to learn you to learn?
Because ultimately, if we're gonna really impact this industry
and we're gonna change things like we all believe
we're going to, we've gotta do it a different way.
We have to have a different approach
and I feel like this is the best way to do that.
Well, it is.
A lot of those fitness celebrities
you're talking about on Instagram and Facebook,
they put out a program that they know, like, okay, if people follow this, they're going
to lose weight.
Which everybody wants to feel and see, right?
Right, and so they'll say, okay, I know for a fact, if people follow my program, which
includes four days a week of cardio and includes a six day body parts split and the diet
includes low calories and, you know,
they're gonna be eating, you know, this particular way
and specific, I know if people fall this,
they'll lose weight.
And yes, they will, lose weight.
But are they going to, is it a long term program?
I challenge you right now, if you're somebody who's listening
and you more than likely, I know there's definitely
a good percentage of you that are listening right now
that follows some fitness celebrity,
some big name out there
That has programs and does all that stuff and scratch your head for a second and ask yourself one
How many people do you think that person is personally trained one-on-one with a person standing in front of them?
You know and then the other question you have to ask yourself because I know you if you've gone through some of these programs
You're like well, fuck it worked. I definitely lost some body fat and I felt great
when after I did it, yeah, well, no shit.
The question is, did you sustain that?
And did you continue to progress?
If you did, if you did somebody's program
and you saw six months great results,
a year great results, a year and a half,
and two, you repeated again.
Yes.
Did you go through the whole cycle
and then repeated again and be good?
And see, yeah, exactly.
And see yourself PR and see progress in the world.
If you do, maybe you've found somebody.
Maybe you've actually found a great trainer
that knows how to program,
dying to teach you, how to program for yourself.
But I haven't seen one yet.
And I know a lot of fucking fitness celebrities.
I know a lot of people with programs out there
and the problem with all of them,
they're all geared towards the sales aspect
is how do I sell, they all have catchy names to them?
They all are, or they market to,
are you know, beast modes, super intense.
And if you don't, if you fail, that's the other way.
It's that you go so extreme that if you succeed,
yeah, no shit, if you're doing that much volume
and eating that little, everybody is gonna see
their body change.
So that's obvious.
And then the ones that fail at it go,
oh, fuck, I guess I'm just not meant to have a body like that.
I know hardcore enough.
Well, you know, you know, the backlash, like we were talking about like certifications
and doctors and all these like, you know, red tape and parameters, you know, the backlash
to that is CrossFit.
They came out because they were just like, you know, hey, we're sick of like all these
like at the academia, like, telling us to do these like single leg balance.
And like we want to just throw weight around again and get back to the basics.
And I got that.
You know, and I got excited about that.
They just got way too aggressive, and then they're just, like, so blatantly arrogant.
It's the fact that they're hurting people that, you know, they let that get in the way
of, you know, their ego got so massive that they can't, they can't go in and revisit things and change things. And this is where I have
a humongous problem because this is the way that I feel about a lot of people in the academic
world. They get this like, like, perception of dog complex, bro. Yeah, it's the complex
thing. It's like, it's that, that's the's the way, and then they have to hold on to that,
because that's pride.
That's something that, of course it's hard to get your doctor,
and of course, of course it's a lot of work,
it's a lot of hours, it's a lot of time in reading books
and due diligence, and it's very impressive,
it's very respectable, that's a very hard thing to accomplish.
But can you always learn from somebody else?
Absolutely.
And if you're gonna start shutting down
that you can't learn from other people,
then, you know, you have a big problem.
And you have a big problem if you follow people like that.
Well, rule number one in fitness is this.
This is rule number one.
If you're a fitness professional and you're listening,
never, never underestimate the individual variance that you see in people. Never underestimate that
shit because there will be someone. So many anomalies. There will be someone. And that will
in different ways, right? Yes. And they will defy whatever law or rule that you thought in your
head of, you know, in your head, like everybody gets great results when they do this. And then you're
gonna have that client that just fucking gets hurt and doesn't respond to it.
But you're gonna be stubborn and hardheaded about it,
and you're gonna keep pushing them
to do that particular thing.
Never underestimate that,
because individuals can vary dramatically.
And there's of course, there's general things that are true,
but there's suspectrum that's white as hell
from person to person.
We were taught forever.
Every certification I ever took taught me had a squat, a particular way, and they were
all the same.
And I have now learned that not everybody squats that way, and that's okay.
And the crazy part, it's now that we know and we understand now, it seems so duh and obvious.
We were fighting our own bodies, natural, and senseless.
He said it was so silly. If you you asked me do I think that my my
Femar and hip socket looks the same as Justin's and looks the same as yours
I would audit I mean I could attend years I was hit no I don't think that
I'm so sorry why would I why would I think we squat the same if those if those important muscle
If those important bones are our bone structure is different. Yeah, I mean it's like duh
But we weren't we were taught a certain way for so long
that we were taught this dog mind.
And I think that's why we're also passionate about it
because at one point, we were sucked into that.
At one point, we were all 20 something years old.
You become so, you become so,
you believe the illusion so much yourself.
You have to if you're gonna sell yourself, right?
It is, dude.
I was so blind to it.
It was my belief. And I pride him even back then I had pride in the fact that I wasn't one of those people
I was not one of those followers
I was not one of those people that would just follow something just because someone else did it and yet there I was
Yeah telling people to eat six small meals a day telling people that he won or more grams of protein per
To you know per pound about him and knowledge. Yes It was like it was incredible how blind I was and it took my own self-discovery
My own body to reject shit and to fucking shut down for me to finally step out and say all right
Maybe what I thought was true
Isn't and that was a fucking amazing moment. That's a great place to get to. If you can get to that moment where you're you're
willing to grow in your knowledge as a person, you know, just things that you know that you
hold true right now that are standards, you know, revisit them. Like you'd be surprised
that like a lot of things will once once you dig deeper, how many things will
surface that you hadn't really took the time to evaluate.
And the other thing too is you've got to not be afraid to stop doing what you're doing
and try something else.
Because that was the big thing that I can think back.
That was the big thing that prevented me from discovering more truths about how my body
responds to what's about fitness?
That's a great way to put it right there.
It is, more truths.
It's not like this, something else was false.
Right.
For example, that what you just went through
and you mentioned this with the foam rolling
and the stretching, it's not that foam rolling stretching
is not good for you before you start at all.
There's still, there's a side.
There's another way that we discover.
Yeah, there's another way that happens,
and in your case, happens to work at better.
Yeah, better. And that's what I mean. Like, for example another way that happens in your case happens to work at better. Yeah, better.
And that's what I mean.
Like, for example, you know, in the past,
I would not, not eat one and a half
to two grams of protein per pound of body weight
because I was afraid that if fights didn't do that
for a week, I'd lose all this muscle.
And as illogical as it sounds,
like it would be, it would never come back.
You know?
Like, oh fuck, now I've lost it and it's gone forever.
The reality is I should have what I should have done
is I should have tested it.
And then I would have blown my own fuck in mind
instead of waiting for my body to retaliate.
Well, that's what I'm saying.
Like you gotta try different things.
And your defense on that one,
because I do want to,
because I know someone's listening and says,
well, maybe your body's different because I want to, I do want to, because I know someone's listening and says, well, maybe your body's type's different
because I used to think it was coming off
because I literally would see my body weight shrink
because I was in a deficit.
And if I did hit the protein, I also went to that
and I would shrink down.
But a lot of that was just, I was not filled out.
A lot of that was sodium and stuff like that
and water and things that I didn't really realize until,
and so I got into competing and yes once again
This is something that of course I've learned through schooling and all the certifications
I I understand the importance of water. I understand how sodium works in the body
I understand all that stuff but until I actually had to apply it to my body and see that it was like
Whoa, and that made me such a better coach and a better trainer that now when I talk to somebody
I can I can not only yes
I knew before that sodium and water and you get water
retention and a lot of times I could have this something to do the scale but now I'm so more precise about it
I could literally tell somebody like you're gonna hold X amount because I've attracted that detail to myself
Then and it's such a comforting thing for them to know that I'll say hey, guess what?
I know I told you to eat like this and do this tomorrow
You're probably gonna be holding on to a little bit of water and you're just gonna see the scale go up
I don't want you to trip. It's supposed
to and then they're like, and it goes up like point five. You only get that from experience.
Yeah, exactly. You don't read that in a book, nowhere. You don't get that. That's something
that you we've learned through, you know, testing it through ourself. I just I'll talk about
this too, which I think is a great time to reiterate this. Something that we have, we have
to be careful on now that we have created ourselves
as authorities in this industry. If you've listened to us for 240 episodes, you obviously
know that we know something a little bit about fitness. So now when we say something,
everybody jumps on right away. And we all had a talk the other day about, you know, we
got to be very careful of explaining to people. Sometimes when we're doing stuff, it's
because we're actually experimenting ourselves. So we're just trying to, we're constantly trying to learn, we're trying to learn more, it's because we're actually experimenting ourselves, so we're just trying to learn more. We're constantly trying to learn more.
We're trying to learn more.
We're always pushing the limits.
An example of that, sounds running a ketogenic diet of that, ketogenic diet right now.
Example that for me, I'm running my modified version.
It's definitely not ketogenic because I'm not 100% no carbs, but I allow fruit into my
diet and all what I want fruit-wise when I feel like I need it, but I am running a super high fat
and a moderate to low protein intake
that's kind of similar, you know?
So, you know, we're always doing different stuff of that.
Right now, I'm actually doing a lot
of different mobility work.
So, I've been really the two focus things
I'm focused on right now is shoulder and hip mobility.
And I've been incorporating different exercises
that would never do on a regular basis.
I try and post those on Instagram.
I just did one other day.
I do stuff right now, different dynamic.
And I'm doing different moves.
I'm trying different things for me.
And then I'm assessing how I feel when I work out
in my day, when I walk around and I move.
And noticing if I'm generating more power in my squat
or I get more comfortable in the hole,
there's things like this that we're always messing with.
So just because I come out and say,
like, this is what I'm doing right now.
It doesn't necessarily, I mean, always remember that.
We are none of us are ever saying this is the best way.
Well, we had someone, we had someone
on the forum the other day comment and they said,
you know, I've been listening to your episodes
and so I started a ketogenic diet.
I did it today and I got really sick
and I threw up in the middle of the night
and I couldn't sleep.
I guess my body just need to adjust to the diet.
Like that was their response.
So I've luckily I saw it right away and I went and commented and I said, listen, rule
number one, listen to your body.
If that's the kind of reaction you're having, it's probably not for you.
It's not something you need to adjust to.
Either go into it's much slower and see how you feel or don't do it.
And that's something that took me a long time to learn to be able to say to people.
Because, like I said, you get stuck in that dogma.
Look, I'm 100% confidence in the MAPS program being one of the most effective workouts out there.
But I always have said this.
It's going to be more effective for most people, not everybody.
But I could confidently say about 80% of the people that do it, it'll blow away be more effective for most people, not everybody, but I could
confidently say about 80% of the people that do it, it'll blow away anything that they've
ever done, because I know there's probably a 15 to 20% of people out there that might do
better on a body parts split, traditional type of routine, although they probably already
know they're doing good on it, and they probably would never even look into getting something
like that, but you get my drift.
Yeah, yeah.
Like eating, I mean, for instance, on those lines,
like I do a lot better with like high fat, high protein,
and very low carbohydrate.
And my wife, like she does not, you know,
do well with like lowering her carbohydrates.
It really affects, she gets headaches,
you know, it's just, it's just really, really bad energy
and gets affected.
And it just ruins her whole day.
And I'm like, well, you know, this is something.
Unfortunately, it's not like, you know,
preparing dinners and all these things
like you eat together, you know, ideally
I would have like things just on the fats
and the proteins.
And, but, you know, that's how I respond.
And I had to realize that.
I can't like me being the trainer and her being the nurse,
you know, like, come on. And then she's giving me the pushback. And, but, but it's true, though. It's like we,
we're very different. You know, I, I, I sleep. I'm like a million degrees and she's freezing.
And it's like, ah, so I can't win something that I learned, you know, and I'll share with you
guys. So I try, we'll try and do this when, when we do this, when we test ourselves and, and I'll share with you guys. So I try, we'll try and do this when we do this, when we test ourselves and feed back. Here's something I learned about the ketogenic diet.
When I'm trying to follow ketogenic, and if I'm teetering, and I feel like I can feel,
literally feel my body do this because I get headaches, I get really tired. And what I think in
Sal, you can chime in here if you actually have some fucking study that you probably read and remember.
Because I probably read the same one I can't fucking regurgitate the way it is full well. So no, I appreciate it. That's why we have you here.
So what I notice is this is let's say I'm going about my day and I've decided I'm committed to a ketogenic type of diet.
I'm eating this way. So I start off, which is those that don't know, high fat, absolutely no carbohydrates, and
then your protein is moderate.
What I found was I would get these headaches or I'd feel tired and I would think, this
isn't for me.
It's not working for me.
Then when I was tracking my food and actually really paying attention was going on, what
was happening was I was not pushing the fats high enough.
I wasn't making the same way that I used to make an effort to get
X amount of protein or shoot at a certain point of carbs.
I never had to focus on like literally trying to get more fat into my diet.
I thought, well, I'll just eat fatty foods.
I'll always make a fat of your choice every time.
That's just how I was going to go about it.
That was not a good approach because what it ended up doing
was, and this, this is what I think I felt, Sal, and this is the part where you could help
me out here is I really, I think I felt my body confused on, am I supposed to be using glucose
or am I supposed to be using ketosis?
Because it's too high.
Yeah, and it's wondering like it's, yeah, it's like, it's it's looking for because it what happens when we get go into ketosis now
Our body is using ketones for energy versus glucose is this primary source of fuel correct
Mm-hmm. So what I think is happening is I'm not giving it any glucose because I'm starving it of carbohydrates
But then I'm over over saturating it with protein and under eating it with saturated or under eating fats.
So it's not getting a good source of energy.
And so I would notice when I went, okay, I'm going to, I guess I'm going balls of the wall
on this fat, 10 pieces of bacon, six eggs, one ounce of organic cheese.
Like that's now or in some steak or something would be all that would be a breakfast.
And you feel better.
Oh, I feel much better.
And I feel satiated.
I feel great.
I wouldn't have any dip. It was. Well, number, much better. And I feel satiated, I feel great.
I wouldn't have any dip.
It was.
Well, number one, like I said, is listen to your body.
When you're, you know, if you're working
with a professional fitness professional,
and they don't ask you how you feel, yeah, yeah.
That's a red flag.
Big time.
Because every time I train a client, every single time,
the way I begin their workout is,
how did you feel after our last workout?
Which this is the same.
And this is all feeling today and like,
that's it.
This is also the creation of the forum.
And why we built that was, we knew that,
okay, we're gonna roll this program up,
but if we're still once again,
gonna make sure that it has so many more moving parts
and abilities to evolve it,
we need to have this ability for people to access us and tell us their feedback
and say, great point.
Say, hey, guys, I noticed whenever I do this movement,
I feel this way, or post a video, could you check my form?
Now it allows us to say, oh, wow, we noticed that,
you know, your body's in this way,
you need to sit back more on your heels,
you're not able to rotate your hips out enough,
you're bending down too much, we can start to critique,
and we can probably give the head start to help them
learn more
about their body and send them in the right direction,
which may mean they got a change from our program a little bit,
but now it's directed in the way
that's really gonna benefit them.
Yeah, and well, one of the main problems,
like for me being functionally, you know, training based,
looking into online training, it was just like,
you know, where do I begin?
How can I train somebody from a functional standpoint with the tools provided today virtually?
I mean, it's pretty difficult because all I'm focused on is how your movement is, the
quality of it, where I need to address and balance.
These are things I need to address imbalance. And these are things I need to see.
A good trainer, a good fitness professional,
a person that's helping you with your fitness and health,
is not a teacher, it's a guide.
It's very different.
They're not telling you specifically what to do.
They're guiding you because of those individual variances.
Now think about yourself as an individual.
Think about all the things that can influence
how you feel, how you move, how you eat,
how you sleep, everything.
Everything that, everything from what you had for breakfast
to the argument you had with your husband to,
I had a sleep good last night,
to have three kids, to my job is stressful,
or it's not stressful, or I go for walks during the day,
or I don't, or I'm predisposed for this particular autoimmune issue, it's not stressful or I go for walks during the day or I don't
or I'm predisposed for this particular autoimmune issue, I'm not or whatever.
There's literally a million different types of variables.
So you want an instructor that's a guide that's going to listen and help you listen to
your body.
I have another individual that I'm working with virtually and she's extremely experienced
in fitness, very, very fit, knows quite a bit about what
she's doing, but she's dealing with metabolic damage or journal fatigue and some gut issues.
And so I'm helping her on this, and she decided to do a fast, a bone broth fast.
And this is recommended by some gut health experts to help build the gut, reduce inflammation,
especially if you have something like leaky gut syndrome.
She was on it for five days.
I contacted her and I asked her like, you should if you're a good trainer, how are you doing
how are you feeling?
I'm so emotional.
I can't stop crying.
I feel so sick.
I'm nauseous.
Any bit of food in my mouth, I want to throw up.
And so the
fastest, supposed to last seven days. Now she's like most of us, you get stuck in
that dogma. This program says seven days. I just need to take to it. I need to
tough it out. I need to tough it out for two more days. This is my body detoxing.
It's my body telling me that it's getting rid of all this bad stuff. My
advice to her was, it sounds like you need to stop.
Yeah.
Why don't you slowly reintroduce food one at a time,
see how you feel, and always listen to your body,
listen to what your body's telling you.
And this is what I mean by being a guide.
I'm not stuck on one particular method or methodology,
method or dogma.
You have to listen to the body and listen to the individual and how the body's responding. method or methodology, method or dogma,
you have to listen to the body
and listen to the individual and how the body's responding.
And you can do that to yourself as well.
If you're working with a trainer,
pay attention to yourself and don't forget
that the internet is in a very valuable tool.
There's so much information out there
that you can learn from.
I got a DM the other day from.
I have a gate properly.
Dude, I got, well, the more you practice, the better you got.
I can find almost anything on Google now within two seconds, but I had a doctor contact
me the other day on a direct message on Instagram. And he's like a big fan of your show.
I love mine pump. You mispronounce this word and this word. And I can't remember what they were.
And so they called you out on that?
Well, I'll tell you why. This happens to me all the time. I've I train a lot of surgeons and I'll talk to them about an article that
I read on a particular medication or surgical procedure. And they'll correct me on the pronunciation
of a word. Why? Because I've never heard that word being said. I've only read it. And so
this is true. I've only read these words because I'm constantly trying to learn these things.
I've never heard them being said. So of course I'm going to sometimes especially
been on you for especially medically because a lot of stuff is derived from
Latin and shit.
So it's like super.
I mean, right.
And so it's just, you know, I do a lot of that.
Why do you just do what I do?
What?
What do you do?
I do say real fast.
I just blended all together.
I just blend the woman together.
But I wait. Did he say that properly?
Yeah, you know, what do you want to do with that?
Exactly.
But yeah, that information is there and it's available to you
and you can learn and read about it,
but you just gotta be up and mind it.
Look for a guide, don't look for a trainer.
Look for someone who's got experience working
with a lot of regular people.
Chances are you're a regular person.
You're not gonna, you're not any different than anybody else.
Yeah, but that's really hard. It's, it's tough
because you see this guy or girl and they're in phenomenal shape and they're inspiring
and it's, you're drawn to that. Yeah, you're drawn to that. And you know, it sucks and this
is true. And I think you guys, I think you guys will agree with me here. If not, please
speak up. If I were to talk about some of like the most like intelligent well-read trainers or people that I would look to
for mentorship or to learn from
I would hate to say this but 80 maybe 90% of them don't look like I want to look
That's that's really when you think about that right there
That's and it was one of the hardest things I had as a as a trainer as a head trainer
With a staff of these trainers underneath me that I was developing and you want these really intelligent guys and girls
And what I would what I was finding when I was hiring them was like I felt like I got either or I was like
I either got the super pretty guy who's super ripped and the chick that look but doesn't know shit
His dumbest rocks and then I but then I got the other guy who's like, you know,
going through his kinesiology degree,
he's read all these great books, he's learning, he's, oh,
perfect, he's super smart, fat as fuck.
You know, I'm just like, it's crazy, but there's, it's,
it's, it's very true.
It's, you, they tend to, uh, people tend to,
if you're a trainer and you're successful because the way
you can get yourself in shape, you tend to spend most of your energy and your time growing in that area and that area
only, those that are really, really intelligent, send a cent spend and that all their time
in that world that they neglect the other side.
It's rare to find somebody in the middle and it makes it very tough for the consumer
because you hear this one really smart guy telling you all this good information, but then you look at him,
you're like, fuck, he doesn't, I don't wanna look like him.
So if he's preaching this, that this is the way,
even if that's the, I'm gonna find the other way then,
cause I wanna look a certain way.
I determined a long time ago,
and for those of you who are listening
who are fitness professionals and trying to build your business,
if you build your business based upon the way you look,
number one, if you're the 1% of
the 1%, and you're super model, good looking, fine, but the chances are you're not.
Even if you look great in your super fit and you can get yourself 10,000 followers on
Instagram, if you're known for the way you look, that is super ineffective at selling any
product or selling any type of training or building any kind of a brand, because it's
very fleeting
Eventually you get older and nobody and you and you're not gonna look the way that people want to look and no one's want to listen to you
Not only that but you have no influence you have zero influence like how much influence do you have if you just look good
Versus if you're the one that came up with the idea is that changed we can see a lot of flavor God right
Craig Craig our boy a little shout out to our boy Craig
Capriso. Actually, he just did a pariscope the other day on
something very similar that of asking yourself the why he was
venting. He was frustrated that he was heading over to the
gym. He was after he left the funeral and then he had to go
home after the reception and stuff. And then he went to work
out because he's right in the middle of, you know, cutting
hard. You know, he's got a 20 pound cut. He's already like 5 middle of cutting hard. He's got a 20 pound cut.
He's already like 5% body fat and he's got a 20 pound cut right now ahead of him to get
it under the weight so we can do clap men's classics.
And you can see he was frustrated because he's like, what is this all for?
I challenged those of you that are listening to me right now and it was a really good little
rant that he went on because it is true.
We don't, a lot of people don't realize what the why what the why is, you know, and they search after getting in there
Self in this crazy crazy peak condition that's not even really sustainable for a long time and they get there and it's like
What I do with it now and in my industry what I deal with they actually think that's the end all you get super ripped
You get on stage you get you work your way up. Yeah, I work your way to professional level and then I'm gonna make all this money
That's a joke. Yeah, it doesn't work like that at all in fact, I don't know very many and I'm talking guys that are sponsored up
What's Adam's fake laugh?
Favorite it was kind of scary you know
My favorite these guys are sponsored up and don't be fooled you guys
It's my favorite. These guys are sponsored up and don't be fooled you guys.
They don't make shit for money.
And I mean, literally the 1% of the 1% of the 1%
are making decent money being sponsored by some company
and all these magazine shoots.
You know, most of these people,
they aspire so much to be like these guys.
And then they get there and it's not what you think it is.
Well, I think too they get caught up in the hole.
I have this many followers.
I have this, this is gonna guarantee me success
and I'm gonna make all this money.
I'll tell you something.
If you're going to social media route
and you're known for your ideas and your information
and you have 10,000 followers,
you're gonna be far more effective with that 10,000
than so and so who's just known for their looks
who's got let's say 50,000 followers.
So be one of those people.
Take fitness seriously and promote real,
true information and help people with your ideas.
Looking good is great.
And if you look good on top of it,
that's a home run.
That's a kicker.
Yeah, but focus on the real information.
Become a guy.
Yeah, just be careful. I mean, be careful right away when I see someone crazy super ripped to be honest with you.
I'm always skeptical because in my experience in 15 years and 10 of those years developing
trainers, the ones that were super ripped, nine times at a 10, weren't the best trainers.
So now there is there are those anomalies.
I'm not saying that there's guys out there that are not badass, badass at looking badass and
then badass at actually teaching people how to be badass. But let me tell you, they are anomalies.
They are very rare. And so don't be fooled just because they have a million followers.
They look super badass and that, you know, they, and they're super inspiring to watch and
watch their videos and shit. Toby fooled more than likely.
They're not the one I'm talking about.
It's the same thing.
It's the same thing with athletes too, though.
I mean, the most badass players that you've grown up watching and what, you know, insert
sport, look at how many of them could be a coach.
Very little.
I mean, they is very little, very selectively, or even be a commentator for that batter.
Yeah, right. You know, I mean, they're just little, very selectively or even be a commentator for that better. Yeah, right.
You know, I mean, they're just very good at doing what they're told. You know, it reminds me of, it reminds me of
this thing, it reminds me of this saying, the guy in the gym with the biggest calves probably doesn't work out as
calves. All right. Right. And so I think I think a lot of these people that are that look the way they do,
they were, they were, they were one kind of the genetic lottery. Yeah. And they apply some principles and boom, they look ridiculous.
Right.
And so that may be why they never learned some of that important information.
It was easy.
It's don't be, don't be fooled by it.
Don't, don't buy any cookie cutter or anything.
And that being said, don't forget to what's out.
Leave us five star rating and review on iTunes.
You can find us on Instagram at mine pump radio.
You can find me at mine pump sal.
You can find Justin at mine pump Justin.
And you can find Adam at mine pump Adam.
And if you're interested in checking out the maps programs
that we've talked about on the show,
you can go to mine pump media.com.
Dot com.
Thank you for listening to mine pump.
For more information about this show
and to get valuable free resources from Sal, Adam, and Justin,
visit us at www.mindpumpradio.com.
Until next time, this is Mind Pump.