Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 377: Squatting & Deadlifting Barefoot, Avoiding Cardio, Training Pro Athletes & MORE
Episode Date: October 5, 2016iTunes Review Winners! Kimera-Quah! In this episode of Quah, sponsored by Kimera Koffee (kimerakoffee.com, code "mindpump" for 10% off), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about squatting a...nd deadlifting barefoot, benefits of doing or skipping cardio, changes in gyms over the last decade and the way professional athletes train. Have Sal, Adam & Justin personally train you with a new video every day on our new YouTube channel, Mind Pump TV. Be sure to Subscribe for updates. Get MAPS Anabolic, MAPS Performance, MAPS Aesthetic and the Butt Builder Blueprint (The RGB Super Bundle) packaged together at a substantial DISCOUNT at www.mindpumpmedia.com. Please subscribe, rate and review this show! Each week our favorite reviewers are announced on the show and sent Mind Pump T-shirts! Have questions for Mind Pump? Each Monday on Instagram (@mindpumpradio) look for the QUAH post and input your question there. (Sal, Adam & Justin will answer as many questions as they can)
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Talk to the tax guy the other day and I've got some good news and bad news.
Okay.
Bad news for us.
Okay.
Good news.
Don't say that.
Good news for our listeners.
So I didn't realize this this whole time we've been building up this inventory of
clothes, of all the shirts and tanks and hats and all this cool shit, which is
nice because we don't have to keep rebying.
But I found, and I didn't know this.
Okay.
So this is a learning process,
that when we have inventory,
none of that is tax deductible.
None until you sell it.
Not until we sell it or give it away.
So that being said, and we're coming up on the final quarter,
what we're gonna do before we enter into winter
is do a 24 hour fucking fire sell.
Whoa.
We're basically gonna give these shirts away
for what it costs us to make the shirt.
So we're gonna close out of closeouts for everybody.
It's gonna be $8 a shirt.
Well, for just 24 hours.
Oh, Molly.
Yes.
We're not gonna get killed on that or what?
Well, we're gonna get more killed by it sitting there.
I see.
That's the headache.
At least we're gonna get our money back,
we can get out of our inventory,
and then we can move on to the next like winter line
and the new year.
So with your listening to this right now,
it's gonna be a 24 hour fire cell.
You can buy as many shirts and things that you want inside.
It's gonna be like a feeding frenzy.
And it's gonna be first come first serve.
So as soon as we're out of that size, we're out of that size, we're not gonna be like a feeding frenzy. Yeah, and it's gonna be first come first serve. So as soon as they were out of that size,
we're out of that size, we're not gonna be reordering it.
We're trying to get rid of all this inventory
so we don't get hammered on taxes.
So once you hear this episode, there'll be 24 hours
and then we'll shut it down.
You know it's cool about that.
Once we make room, then that means we make room
for something new, cool coming in.
Yeah, absolutely.
New stuff.
Move on to the winter line, but 24 hour fireself.
First time we ever do this.
For the shirts, A-box.
Yeah.
Where do they go to find them?
Mindpumpmedia.com.
Mindpumpmedia.com.
Right on.
Hurry up.
You know what scientists don't know why breast female breasts are considered sexual to humans.
It doesn't make any sense.
It's not like other animals.
One of the very few mammals
where the breasts always stay in large.
How do you figure that if we were,
if we fed on it, what wouldn't you think there's a core?
Why would you be sexually attracted to it though?
You're not sexually attracted.
You want that end of mate
because then they could produce more milk.
There's lots of theories, but they don't know.
They don't know why we consider that
a sexual part of the body
Well, is it really sexual or is we don't have that we want it? Yeah
Is there jiggling their night? I want that's what there's a lot of things I want that don't give me a boner
Yeah, I'm saying and no gee and there's gotta be something to be said about the fact that we
Covered up in the middle and you could do something I think if everyone walked around naked all the time,
I think there would be a whole different like arouse.
Yeah, I think so.
I think you're right.
We'd be desensitized a little bit, but of course.
I don't know.
If I grew up in an environment where women were always
topless and I'm a 14 year old boy going through puberty,
boobs still have some power.
You say that right now because you're a 14 year old boy
that boobs were covered up and to see a boob
when you're 14 years old was a big fucking deal.'s a me I think if we saw it every single day
I don't think it would be that big of a deal so if you saw butts every day it wouldn't be a big deal
If you saw naked butts all the time. Yeah, same thing too really. Yeah, you don't think you'd be a big deal
You know the gonna track the woman even vagina's if you saw vaginas all day long
And they were if everyone was naked all the time
I think it would take away from that, like. A little bit.
Yeah, and this is why Adam's like.
Like the gynecologist, I think.
You want to keep it from happening.
Well, that's a good example.
You think a guy know every time he gets ready
to go work on a vagina, get to rouse.
That's different.
Because he sees them all day long.
He's looking for, he's horrible.
He's a quote unquote issue.
He's a professional, that's different.
My God, we should hope so.
My goodness, Adam. What are we doing here? We should hope so. My goodness, Adam.
What are we doing here?
We're giving away some shirts here, please.
Sorry, cover them, cover up them titties.
Yeah.
With those shirts.
Let's give some shirts out so they can cover them,
take them.
Teeth them as steaks.
Well, the good news is we got 20 reviews last week.
Boom, boom, boom.
And so this, this calls for a song from Justin in a
Sounding like that one senior in Japanese
Yeah, that was worse
So we're gonna give away five shirts now five Five shirts. Let's do it. Five shirts
going out. First up is Sam McCree, Brian Urb, Z-Man 113, A-Jones 5566. Am I very favorite
of all? Adam's Liberian. Did we already give-shirt last time? No, we didn't get a free one. We mentioned it. We had to give him one just for his name.
I almost I could have swore we gave him a free shirt.
We did because you guys already made that was the joke last time.
Yeah, no, no, he's he read it, but he didn't give him a shirt last time.
Oh, sure. Yes. Oh, that's what happened. Yeah.
Yeah, I think it came in midweek and we were dying.
Library. Yeah, librarian.
Library. Library. Library. midweek in a We were dying library library library librarian. Yeah, Conan the librarian pretty fucking funny, buddy
So email yeah, I tuned to mine pump media
Dot com include your shirt size and your shipping address and we'll send that out to you boom boom
But I know shipping address. And we'll send that out to you. Boom boom. I don't know much. So much better. If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go. Might,
uh, might, up with your hosts. Salta Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
I think we sold fucking 300 plus shirts yesterday.
Whoah.
Are we almost out of stock?
Yeah, we sold a lot out of stock.
When does this, we sold almost all of those.
We sold all of the,
When does the sale go and affect for everybody else?
Right now.
Right now, it's in effect.
Oh, last night at five.
Wait, wait, wait, it's on right now
or what is episode air?
It's episode airs today.
Okay. General public gets access.
So we're posting later tonight.
We gave access to the four members.
So they got first dibs.
So right now, if they're listening right now,
they can go to mindpumpmedia.com
and buy the shirts for.
It's a fire sale.
Any of our shirts for how much?
$8.
Ocho?
Ocho.
$8 bucks?
Mind pumped, the Ocho.
$8 for a fucking craft, a professionally crafted,
and it fits good.
Oh, they're Jack Ferd shirt.
Yeah, that's actually a buff people.
That's actually cost on most shirts
and actually under cost on some other shirts.
So we're losing money?
Yeah, we lost money on the MP, on the MP TV shirts.
So we're like bad business people right now.
Well, not necessarily, I mean, I told you that we talked to the tax guy
and it'd be bad business if we were to hold on
to the inventory at the end of the tax year.
Yeah, you don't get to write it off unless you sell it.
Or give it away.
Or give it away.
So we're basically almost giving it away.
Yeah, we're just trying to get our money back.
Yeah, exactly.
So for eight bucks, you can get a brand new mind pump
or maps.
Ah, the apparel business.
Yeah.
And so many cash 22.
Very great.
They, the minute that we had released it,
they're flying right now.
So if they're, I mean, they're,
they're already as limited sizes on a lot of things.
So it went fast already.
So you better get on there and buy a bunch of them.
Yeah, if you're listening,
you probably want to pause the show and actually go to,
to look it up and see what's left because I know that. Here's the other thing too,
because there's some smart people out there. You could buy these shirts for $8 or resell them for
twice as much. You have a business. You have a business opportunity. Hustle. Get your heart
on it. That's funny that you brought that up. I watched a documentary last night called
Sneakerheads on Netflix. Great documentary. Of course you did. That feeds right into me. I watched a documentary last night called Sneakerheads on Netflix.
Great documentary.
Of course you did.
That feeds right into me.
I know.
Did you win in the search thing and you put head?
Well, no, no, no.
Sometimes I have to, I have to let Katrina know that I don't have that much of a problem
as she thinks I have.
And I'm like, no, no, no, listen.
I'm like, not even bad.
And it was great.
Oh, look at these guys.
It's like, it's like the hoarders.
Oh, dude. I'm actually pretty clean. These it was like these guys. It's like the hoarders. Oh
Dude, I'm actually pretty clean these dudes. Let me tell you there's some
There's some guys with thousands of sneakers like never even worn them before like they've collected like every single pair and God that's ridiculous every colorway of the Jordans. Well, it's called foot locker just by one
They to me. It's a little so I wear all mine. So I collect them and I take good care of them.
You know, knowing the back of my head,
if I ever got kicked out on the street
and I was absolutely broke that I could sell my shoes
and I could live off of them for a while.
Yeah, that's why you buy them all.
That's not why I buy them.
I buy them all to wear them.
But I mean, it's easier to justify
spending money on that when you know they're still value to them.
It's like buying a classic car
versus going out buying a brand new Mercedes.
I remember when I almost bought my S550 that I wanted
and I thought, man, it's a $110,000 car.
The moment I drive it off the lot,
it's gonna be worth like 50 grand.
And I'm like, I just have a hard time stomaching that
regardless if you can afford it or not,
where like things like the sneakers or like a Rolex watch or like a classic Camaro, like stuff like that, like you
accumulate value.
Well, yeah, some of it goes up in value, like my Camaro is worth more than what I bought
it for.
My watches are worth the same or worth more than I paid them.
Think about this too with classic cars.
Like, there's going to be a point where all these self-driving cars and like everybody's
driving everybody around
where there's gonna be laws for even driving yourself.
Right.
Think about how valuable those classic cars
are gonna be.
I'm gonna have those.
That's why I wanna get like a stick shift
and make my-
Dude, stick shift's gonna be all more gone already.
Yeah, it's hard to find them.
Kids don't know how to drive stick.
Adelaide, actually, do you know that they say
one of the best ways to prevent your car from being stolen? Is this just to give a shit? That's great.
No way. Is that a true fact? That's true. It's far, far, far. We've gotten to that point.
It's far less likely to be stolen. I have never heard that, but it makes so much sense.
I mean, let's be honest, the age group that's probably out at two o'clock in the morning
stealing cars is probably not some 50 year old guy right?
It's probably some young punk kid between you know 17 and 25 and you're probably I never
even thought of that.
Into me?
I'm buying sticks from here.
Yeah and to me I don't know about you guys but for me like if I buy a fast car or whatever
it's got to be a stick.
I have to have it be connected to it.
But you know what the technology is so good now
on the automatics that you're faster with the automatic. It used to not be that way. When we were kids,
stick was faster than automatic because they just didn't have the timing right and the technique.
You know the but now you get no listen, you get it like the Ferrari's the top align ones with the
paddle shifters. It's faster. They get faster quarter mile times than with the old school clutch and
stick, but it's just not a fun, it's not as fun.
Yeah, and you, I mean, you can debate that back and forth too,
because if you're a good stick driver,
there's lots of benefits to driving stick
because you have full control of that.
But if you're bad, if you launching is one of the hardest,
I used to race cars, right?
So I used to race my go illegally, not totally legal.
So I'm not talking like I'm a professional already,
I think.
So I do have a little bit of experience in that.
And launching is one of the hardest things.
I don't know how many times I got beat by somebody
who had a car that had way more horsepower.
I had way more horsepower.
But if you don't launch and you don't take off correctly,
I mean, half a second more of spinning your tires.
And a lot of these cars now have launch controls
where you hit a button and it just puts you at the right
Marry the news and then you take off and it launches it is cheating
I think I think if you if you are into that or into the sport there's a part of it that
That's just it well think about electric cars now, right? They're they're faster than anything off the line
It's a media it's immediate torque. Yeah, right. Oh, it's silly. I so I trained a guy Feel like it'd be like hunting with like an infrared, you know infrared dot like this is not right
Like you're where's this you're out there dear hunting and you see like this red laser beam on
Oh, dude, just wait you just wait till you cheating mother fucker like you can't do that just wait till people hunt with drones
Oh, yeah, oh my god, they're part of our or he hate seeking bullets, right?
Go around trees and go find your deer. Dude, they can't do that.
That's not fair.
It's a way from the sport.
It's a sport.
I used to train a guy who was the head engineer for Tesla and he took the fastest Tesla.
What is it?
The Model S, but it was the P85D or whatever.
The faster one.
The big one, yeah.
And right when they first came out, had me sit in it
and he just punches it, you know,
just punched the accelerator.
Your head snapped.
That power.
Dude, I never felt anything like it.
Well, it was different.
It was different power.
It was just smooth, but it's like immediate.
You get that rollercoaster feeling in it,
and it makes that G-forces.
Yeah, I remember Batman, the way the car sounded,
the newer Batman, that electric engine sound,
that's what it made.
It's pretty interesting.
It's very, very fast.
Never felt anything like that before.
And I'd been in some fast cars.
Yeah, there's a difference between that kind of power,
for sure.
I mean, there's zero to 60,
is like what, two and a half or three seconds,
something crazy.
Dude, it's silly.
You know, it's funny.
I had to get it back to here.
You're talking about hunting and how lazy you know, along those lines. Well, I went to Arkansas, it was so weird. You know, it's funny. I had to get it back to here. You're talking about hunting and how lazy
like along those lines.
Well, I went to Arkansas.
It was at my cousins a long time ago.
And I was a big fisherman back then.
And I was into fly fishing, all kinds of fishing.
And they took me out, we're going to go fishing.
And I'm like, great, cool.
Where's my fishing rod?
I'm like, oh, we don't use any of that. Yeah.
Like, like, barehead, get your, like,
barehand catching, then the other version for catfish,
then the other version was, they would take like this yo-yo,
like, they called it yo-yo fishing.
So they put it on a branch,
and then they would feed it down into the water.
It was basically like a snare,
and they would drive away.
And they'd come back, and a fish would get caught
and then it would go up into the overhanging branch
and it would be hanging there.
Oh, that's great.
I'm like, what the fuck?
That's not fishing.
What is it called when you fish,
like when you actually do fish bearing,
when you put like the bait or whatever,
like when you're fishing?
Oh, in a bites your hands?
Yes, what's that called?
There's a name for that.
Do you know the name of that?
No.
I don't know the name of it,
but that was creepy.
Somebody was telling us.
Cause I was reaching my hand in this like hole, and they have huge catfish, dude, and
they're like, all-
Did it fucking grab you?
Yeah, I grabbed one inside its mouth, and then I got weirded out, and then I let it go.
I see, I could not do that.
I could not put my hand in a dark, freaking cavern, expecting some sketchy to bite it.
I was a kid, too, so I was like, you know, I was a little more hesitant
Yeah, I would do that shit. You're afraid of the lockness monster
I don't want to swim. Don't take me monster
So did you guys know?
Apparently
Anything outside a neutral spine means you're breaking half. Oh God. It will snap you
You'll die are we bringing this up again?
Do that, too. Well, here's gonna be like the butter the joke
I told Sal we need to do like a video of like captain trainer stop
You're not a neutral spot. I have to play what Justin sent over because I believe when we just we just talked about this
Because of the debate you got into on your page and I was telling you you guys, I got on, I finally got on there after about 200 comments
or whatever and put my two cents in.
And what a lot of these idiots that were on there
that were arguing with you,
that they keep talking about neutral spine, neutral spine.
And anybody who's a place is so much stress
on the facets of the spine and the sheer force
of the blah, blah, blah, blah.
And it's like, people are not made out of fucking paper.
Yeah.
You can move in different ways.
Well, I have to say in this fucking way.
In these morons defense, here's the thing.
This is, this is how we were taught.
And that's why I have patients with it.
But what I don't have patients with is when they start
attacking you or they start talking shit to you.
When it's like, okay, first of all, I'm proud of you
for going through whatever schooling you went through
to get whatever certifications and whatever degrees or whatever level that
you are at in your profession now.
But you've obviously stopped continuing to evolve and reading because if you knew that,
you would know that any like all your guys that are on like cutting edge, all your mobility
specialists that are like now, right now that are like studying and doing that, yeah, that
are relevant right now would tell you
that neutral spine is something that has been debated
for quite some time now, and it was a hypothesis.
It's not even something that has any sort of like facts
or for sure, we're not for sure about it at all.
And the more and more we learn,
and when we look into this, it's like,
it makes more sense to train the spine
in its full articulation,
extension, flexion, and moving.
So you have control when you're in those positions
because in reality, when we move around all day long,
nobody's ever in neutral spine.
So here's actually Justin sent this over.
It was great. This is Dr. Spina,
so who's Spina, I believe, SPNA.
How did he say?
Spina.
I always say Dr. Spina, and it's not Spina.
It's Spina, and it's SP spina and he's one of the specialists and probably one of the leading guys
What's a gangster? I like this guy. Yeah, so do I badass. So this is
We wanted our patients and clients to maintain neutral spine all the time
Which means have a nice lumbar curve never get out of neutral spine, you know, you sit down
You just go to take a shit. It doesn, never get out of neutral spine, you know, you sit down, you go to take
a shit, it doesn't matter what you do, neutral spine. Now if you take a joint and you always
maintain it in one position and you ask any therapist is this, is that good or bad for
the joint? They'd say that's the matter. So then I say to them, then what do you think
is happening at L5S1, if you lock yourself in neutral spine all the time?
And then people start to say, yeah, I guess it's not gonna be healthy. It's like, okay, where is the most common area for
Degeneration or arthritis? It's an L5S1. I mean
It's it's right there. It's it's written in our genome in our code. Think about movement in general. Our brain actually provides us with happy drugs.
When we move.
Yeah, I think that's it. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, he says it very well there. Yeah.
You know, always constantly training and neutral spining and being afraid of moving outside of that is not only silly.
It's based on faulty theory, which we know now is incorrect, but it's also
promoting problems in the future.
You're actually making it more likely that these people will hurt themselves because they
build all this strength and stability in this one position.
It's too fixed.
And when they go in the real world and go to move, they're really strong in one position.
They move out of that and there's no more strength.
What ends up happening?
You create instability.
No, one guy on my page, and he doesn't have a super popular page but he should because he's very smart
uh... doubt me uh... is is instagram pages doubt me
i n c
he completely agreed with what we were talking about and he does a lot of his training around this and
when you go on his page you can see some of it but there are people that are getting it
uh... it's just that you those like him, and I'm pretty sure
because I looked at his page, I believe he's gone through
FRC.
So a lot of people that are on new, like new cutting-edge
science, or that people that are learning that are like
mobility specialists now, like a doctor brink,
or like a spina, or like the guy you just brought up,
these guys are reading like the new stuff
that's coming out right now with mobility and functionality
and physical therapy and all that stuff.
So, you know, that's, in the defense of these guys,
real quick before we go too far this week,
because now I don't wanna like, people go like,
what, so you're saying neutral spinal amits bad?
No, no, no, I'm not saying it's bad,
nor is Sal, no, it's Justin, like we're not saying
that it's bad.
All I'm saying is the guy got a bunch of people got on South's page a bunch of academia and knuckleheads
Got on there and started talking shit about the way he was teaching a a point and
The problem with with it is the the way that what they were all trying to say was that there was all this
Crazy stress on the on the spine
In the thoracic region.
And it was literally laughable.
It is.
It's very laughable.
It would be like saying that a cat cow is dangerous, right?
Yeah. You know, to do a movement like a cat cow, which is an excellent movement for us to do,
uh, is dangerous because of the gravity that's pulling down.
And it's just like the shearing feet.
Somebody referred to say it was shearing force on your spine.
Like, what the fuck? Oh, like, that's what I mean. So I mean, I referred to say it was shearing force on your spine. Like what the fuck?
Oh, that's what I mean.
It's like anything outside of that.
It's so horribly dangerous that you can never move outside of it.
That's the mentality that they have, which is so silly.
Well, and in fact, the times that you should actually go
in full flexion and extension would be times like that.
That would be a great way to challenge and strengthen
and articulate the spine is in a position like that. That would be a great way to challenge and strengthen and articulate the
spine is in a position like that. You shouldn't be doing that dead lifting 500 pounds.
We're uploaded with weight on your back, squatting, squatting with 400 pounds on your back.
Absolutely. We're concerned about neutral spine and you want you want to make sure that
that weight is evenly distributed. And it's not putting a lot of pressure in your stress.
But you've even seen strong men lift atlas stones. Yeah.
What's your answer to that?
Exactly.
They're completely rounded in the thoracic region right and forward and it's in its inflection.
So it's ridiculous to me to hear these guys.
And when they come out attacking, it's like, I'm okay with you coming in and like putting
your two cents in or asking questions or getting in a good educational debate about things and going back and forth with theories
and hypothesis,
that's a lot of this stuff still is
because we're always evolving,
but when you start talking in certainties
and you start attacking,
man, just, you're such a,
you make you look stupid.
I do like the fact that we tend to piss everybody off though.
We pissed off the bro.
We're just, we're pissing off academia.
So we're equal.
Equal opportunity, pisser offers.
Yeah, I was, I always am worried about,
I'm always worried about academia because I know that,
oh, there, here's a thing.
The bro science people, the supplement industry,
as much as they've come after us,
they're not gonna fight very hard.
Academia will come after us much harder.
They are the fucking...
Because of the tiggets, they're fucking,
like, it's like, they're gospel,
don't mess with what we say.
I mean, it gets ugly with them.
Yeah, and that's, and it's a little more,
I mean, smashing some bro on bro science is easy.
Same like, that's not challenging,
but it is a little challenging
when you've got academia
coming after because they bring up good points
and stuff that we believe for a very long time.
It's fucking in textbooks.
It wouldn't be there if it didn't have some sort of validation
or we didn't think it was true for decades.
So those people, when they come after us,
you know, it's a little bit,
a little more challenging to get your point across.
And you know, one thing that will always
reign true with our show.
And we've always said that, you know,
if there's something that we're wrong on,
you're better Dan Well believe that we'll come forward
and say like none of us have got egos in here
where if somebody comes out and says,
well, no, this isn't safe or this isn't right.
This is wrong for these reasons.
And you explain to me like, you know, like,
hey, this is why then I go, okay,
that makes a lot of sense.
I understand that.
You have a very strong argument. We're 100% open to listening to it. That's always the
case. You just have to, you got, I mean, there has to be a conversation. You can't just
make it a one way thing. You know, exactly. But look at his spine. It's not a neutral That neutral, ah! Ah! Wee-caw!
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It's the motherfucking croix!
The eagle has landed!
Quique-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-cou-c instead of heels and chucks. Excellent. It is an excellent question. Excellent question. So, so definitely, so let's start with dead lifts.
That's a little easier.
Deadlifts are best done.
Really?
With, yeah.
I'll let you get matters.
I don't think you'll get matters.
Well, let me start with deadlifts because deadlifts require a little bit less You know ankle mobility
There you know once you get a deadlift flat foot is it is almost always the best
So you want flat sold shoes if you go barefoot. That's fine too. It's a little easier to do them barefoot requires less mobility
A squat a barbell squat in very flat shoes and then barefoot
requires higher levels of mobility than the deadlift.
Excellent point. Which is why in the past I've used and even partially advocated for squat shoes.
That being said, the goal really honestly, the goal should be, and my position has changed a little
bit on this. Recently, your goal should be to be able to do squats and deadlifts with good form, with good way,
and good control.
Barefoot.
Yeah.
Ideally.
Now, that doesn't mean you're going to be able to do it now, and it doesn't mean you should
try it right away.
It's like the people that learn how to run, you know, people who advocate running barefoot.
It takes a long time to get you to that point because you're in shoes 90% of the time.
Your shoes likely have some kind of a heel to them, especially
if you're a woman, most of the time.
And so taking them off and going barefoot and then trying to do a big movement like a
barbell squat may put you in some trouble.
So you may want to start with some heel elevation, either some kind of squat shoes or nice
to lift weights and hiking boots almost.
And then slowly progress yourself to the point.
A little two by four underneath.
Yeah, two by four under heels.
So you can sit back and sit down
and your squat a little better.
And then over time, work yourself to the point
to where you can do them in completely flat shoes.
And then can you do them barefoot.
But you gotta keep this in mind when you're progressing this way,
as you start to progress, you're going to likely have to
regress the amount of weight that you're using.
You can't just go from squatting 200 pounds with squat shoes
to squatting, okay, now I'm gonna do barefoot
because you're going to run into problems.
What you should probably do is cut the weight in half
and perfect your form without that support
and then slowly build yourself up.
I'm in that process right now.
Like I haven't worn a weight belt or squat shoes
in maybe two or three months now at all, three months at all.
And I've backed way off on the weight
and slowly working my way up to my old, you know, strength.
And if I didn't do that, if I just kept the weight the same and just went with really flat shoes and no belt,
I'm pretty sure I would have hurt myself by this point. So that's kind of where I stand with some of that. Yeah, I'm a little mixed on the squat shoe thing. And how that got popular.
And really I only saw them specifically
for Olympic lifting for a long period of time.
Just because, I mean,
what are your thoughts on then taking somebody
and specifically focusing on, say,
box squats for depth versus,
crushing somebody with squat shoes and elevating the
heel in order.
Because really what you're trying to do is achieve more depth than yourself.
Well, you're saying exactly right, which it's a crutch.
So I mean, I don't know if you guys saw it.
So this is like the reason why I picked this question is because it's something that I'm
going through right now.
And because for a second there, we were, we were using squats and we were like, whoa,
this feels amazing
and you hit it beautifully because it's okay so I just I just recently did a post and you can see like I'm
asked to grass squatting and my form is far from perfect but it's got it's come a long ways in
the last two years but I'm still and in that picture I'm wearing squashes and I have a belt so and I
point that out you know I'm still wearing my high heels and my belt.
So, still have my crutch, but improving.
So, what had happened to me, I'm going out in the town.
So, when I, when I first started really getting back into squatting, I was in squat shoes
and I wasn't really able to break parallel.
So, my first goal when I started, when I really started getting after a map screen
was to improve my mobility and little bit after month after month after month I started increasing my mobility and getting deeper and deeper in my squats. And then I was progressing so
good I was getting so excited that I was like fuck yeah not only am I getting deeper now now I can
drop these shoes. So then I dropped the shoes and I'm going deeper and even now I was getting so excited
I'm like now I'm getting deep I'm in my chucks. And on top of that, I'm
starting to increase my weight. So I was squatting I think 315, which is not a lot of weight
for me. You're super deep, but it's it's good amount of weight. And it was enough that
I aggravated something in my hip flexor growing area. And I had done this multiple times
because I could I was progressing so fast
and I wasn't allowing my body to get caught up and adapt.
And I was getting overconfident with this newfound mobility that I had.
I was so excited that I could get that deep and I was so excited that I didn't have
to have shoes.
And then I started pushing myself with weight and depth and no shoes and I paid the price.
That's interesting.
So this is why you see me back in my shoes again.
Now I've got this and it's already helping.
I haven't aggravated it, I've completely healed
in that area and I've been able to get really deep
but I still kind of need my shoes.
So my goal again is to get back to where I'm getting in
that deep of a position with lighter weight first comfortable, but the ultimate goal is always flat shoes or
bare feet. Some gyms won't even allow you to squat bare feet. So obviously if you're
in a golds or a basic 24, they're going to come over and say some shit to you if you're
in bare feet. So Chuck's for flat shoes. Yeah, Chuck's are pretty damn close. But you know, you get you got to consider this. It takes a long time to progress mobility properly. It takes a while. Yeah. You'll see progress,
but like Adam said, you'll get you don't get overconfident and push things because you'll set yourself
up for problems. You got to remember this, okay? You think about all day long. How what percentage of the day are you walking around doing things in shoes?
And what percentage of the day are you doing things barefoot?
It's probably like 95% to 5% or something something silly like that. So to think that you're gonna go to the gym and just
boom progress right to
Barefoot or flat squat, you know flat-shoots, squats with heavy weight is inaccurate.
You gotta give yourself time.
And again, I'm gonna go back to the whole barefoot running thing.
Like, people, the barefoot running craze got real big about, I don't know, five, eight
years ago maybe.
And then people were, and then people were coming out of that bandwagon going, oh, I
first I loved it, but then I hurt myself.
So now I'm wearing these super, you know, padded shoes.
And the reason is it's not because running barefoot
is bad, it's because you didn't give yourself enough time.
Like you've got weak, underdeveloped feet.
You've got poor recruitment patterns for running barefoot.
And so you've got to give yourself time.
It takes a long time.
So I've given myself, and I'm giving myself
that much time to do so.
So first thing I did was I eliminated my belt.
Then I eliminated the shoes.
I went way lighter on the weight.
I changed my stance and little by little,
I'm working my way up.
Right now, the most I've done in chucks with no belt
for a single rep is about 320 pounds in the squat.
That's a good, maybe 60, 70 pounds lighter
than I would do with my squat shoes and belt.
And I know I can go heavier if I push the weight,
but I don't think my mobility is at that point
to where I can do so.
Otherwise, being there.
And what happened to me?
Yeah, exactly.
It was just so common for us trainers.
I mean, this is totally, I get all excited
because I know what I'm doing,
and I know I set a goal, I'm gonna get more mobile, I'm gonna get I'm gonna get a deeper squad and like and I don't know if you guys remember me
You know sending you guys pictures and talking like every week. Look at dude. I got a I got a six inch push
Yeah, six in stance. I'm deaf looking at well 275 on my back now
Oh three 15 and I just kept pushing it and pushing it and getting excited about my progression in in my mobility
And sure shit. I paid the price.
I'm getting a little bit of an epiphany here.
It's interesting, we talk about nutrition
and we talk about how people only use the metric
of weight loss or weight gain and how that's a problem, right?
Let's take that now and apply it to your workout.
When you look at your workouts and your training,
many of us, if not most of us,
solely focus on the metric of how much weight we're able to lift. It's us, if not most of us, solely focus on the metric
of how much weight we're able to lift. It's about, uh, I get by any means. Yeah. Like,
oh, I lifted more weight. Therefore, I've progressed. It is not the only metric. It is one of
many, many metrics. And if you used the same weight, but you moved down an inch further,
or you changed your stance, or you went from the same way to flat shoes, or you even
lighten the load, but went deeper with flat shoes, you didn't go down, you didn't
regress, you actually still progressing.
That is another metric you need to pay attention to.
You need to be just as excited about that progress as you are as if you added 15 pounds
to your school.
Also, Adam mentioned with his wrist positioning and being able to keep that tight fist in just every little checkpoint.
What tends to fail on your way down
into depth and into position.
Great point.
And then also coming out of the hole.
There's all these little nuance things
that if you really pay closer attention
to what's going on in these complex lifts,
you're going to get a lot more out of it. You know, right point, he's now he's referring to when we were demoing the behind-the-neck
shoulder press. Well, no, I talked about it someone on my page just recently on that same squat
that I'm talking about asked about my because he he's been reading books that we referred him to
and he was like, you know, they were talking Mark Ripto was talking about your wrist placement in
the squat and you can see my wrist are broken and he was pointing that out and asking me if there's benefits
to what I was doing and why I was doing that. I said, fuck, I'm doing it because I don't
have the mobility. Like, I should be there. You know, I want to be there. That's part of
my goal. And you know, it's unfortunate that, you know, I, very few people and I get a
handful of guys that get it in girls that get it that will comment and say stuff to me on
my page every once in a while.
But these are the things I talk about on my page.
I don't get a lot of like fucking kudos
because I'm not fucking Bradley Martin,
I'm not squatting 600 pounds and six foot three guy.
Like that's fucking super impressive and cool.
Like I'm always talking about these little things
that are going on.
It's like, you know, and people see me squatting
with 315 on my back.
Well, they see me do 405, so that's not impressive.
So I don't get a like, it's like whatever.
But I talk about what's going on.
This is a big victory for me, my depth,
my mobility, no aches, no pains.
I'm working on this and working on that,
and I talk about other things of progression,
but because it doesn't reflect in these huge weight gains
that no one gives a shit.
No one can't, it's not a big deal.
Stop details.
And I want people to understand this too, because a lot of you listening are aesthetic focused, It's not like no one gives a shit like no one can't It's not a big deal. Yes, it's a micro. It's not a deal.
And I want people to understand this too
because a lot of you listening are aesthetic focused
or just want to build bigger muscles
or get better shape or whatever.
If you progress the mobility, you'll get those as well
because your body's working differently.
It's moving differently.
You're doing things you couldn't do before.
So just increasing weight, yes, you get stronger
you build muscle, but also increasing mobility,
range of motion and control will do that as well. So it's not like Adam or myself who've
now backed off on our weight because now we're working on squatting without squat shoes,
without a belt with better depth. Now that we're going lighter, it's not like I've lost muscle,
it's not like my body looks worse. If anything, I'm noticing better improvements in the way my
body looks and the sides of my moves. We always kind of bring it back to the performance coaches
and these programs with high performance,
like Olympic lifting type athletes that,
they are using tools like going theometers
and things like that to measure,
have actual metrics for how much more range of motion
you've increased.
They're paying attention to these kind of details, and you just don't see that
in anything else, fitness-related, besides performance.
I feel like it's the micro-details.
People just want to take things on that, well, how much did I move today?
Where's my weight at?
It's so general,
but when you can really just stop
and this is why I think I'm more of a fan of like,
if you're gonna do a program and, you know,
and try and keep it as simple as possible,
if you can keep it to like, you know, four or five lifts
and just master those, like, you're gonna be so much better off.
Then doing just a bunch of them.
They just run around the gym like an idiot.
It's true, and you know, it's, uh, God, man, there, it, it, I always blows me away.
I tell you what, it's a huge ego check.
When you go and you start to focus on, uh, working on the mobility aspect of your
training because you do have to lighten the load.
Like, you know, when it comes to deadlifts, conventional style, uh, alternate grip for
me with the belt on. I could always pull
500 plus pounds. I get my body weight down to 187 pounds and I'm going to pull 525 off the floor.
Strong as shit, no problem. I had to take the belt off, focus on using a hook grip so that both
hands are pronated because I noticed having that alternate grip. I definitely had an imbalance because
I couldn't lift as much with my left hand
supernated as I could with my right.
So boom, red flag, there's an imbalance there.
I should be able to do both.
So I eliminated the ultrana grip,
but went to a hook grip and the belt,
I noticed that when I took the belt off,
I did not feel as comfortable pulling anything
over 450 pounds.
Oh, and sumo styled deadlifts,
I just felt horribly blocked in my hips. I just didn't have the hip mobility
So I completely stopped doing conventional deadlifts with an alternate grip and a belt when took the belt off hook grip
Sumo style deadlifting now
I don't go heavier than 400 pounds
But I'm slowly getting myself better and better and better and I know by the end of the year when I go back to my
Conventional deadlifts without the belt I'll be as strong if not stronger with a hook grip and without a belt and not only getting myself better and better and better. And I know by the end of the year, when I go back to my conventional deadlets
without the belt, I'll be as strong
if not stronger with a hook grip and without a belt.
And not only my seeing improvements in mobility,
but I'm building muscle as a result,
I'm using less weight.
So it's hard because there's an ego check, right?
Like I'm used to pulling five plates.
Now I'm down to four plates or three plates.
You gotta check your ego, but when you get over that,
when you start to get over that hump and just say, okay, whatever, I'm just going to work
on these two, you know, these, these things over here, your workouts really progress at
a new level and you feel the difference, you see the difference. It's just, it takes you
to check your ego and even at this level, and even as long as I've been doing it, it's
a tough thing to do.
Well, I think it's smart, it's a smart strategy for you to continue going along this fitness
journey too, because it's, man, if you or somebody like any of us in this room who've been
lifting for 15 plus years of your life, man, if you are solely hooked on weights and strength
gains or even like aesthetic gains, like that's, that could be a very daunting journey.
That's a long time to see incremental changes in strength
or a little bit better physique or like that.
So I look at it as, you know, like a big victory for me right now.
I'm not in the best aesthetic shape of my life,
but what I am right now, I'm in the best shape
with the least amount of work.
I've never been in this good as shape as I am
with the least amount of effort inside the gym,
which to me, that's a big victory.
It means that I've really honed in on the things
that my body is responding well to.
I'm not having to kill myself inside the gym.
I go in, I do some things that are super effective
and my body responds well to, and it's nice.
I have great balance in my life.
Now, I'm not in the best shape of my life.
So if I post a patient on Instagram or social media
and say, look at me, it's like, so what?
No big deal. But for me, it's a big deal. at me, it's like, so what? No big deal.
But for me, it's a big deal.
For me, it's a big win.
I think getting people to understand that
that there's other things that are involved
than just how shredded are you or how much weight
are you lifting.
There's other things that you want to be thinking about
that we're always trying to progress.
That being said, that doesn't mean that too.
We would knock somebody who's wearing shoes
or wearing a belt or things like that.
The goal ultimately is to not have to utilize any crutches or any tools like that.
Be able to do everything, barefoot, bare-handed, all that.
But you need to progress there because if you come in and you don't have the mobility or
the flexibility to do things like that, and because you heard someone like us on the radio
say, oh yeah, you want to be able to do barefoot, well, that could also get you hurt if you're
not ready for it.
It's true. And I think the key is to look at those things as tools and not as a crutch right there's a big difference there
It's a good point. It's a tool that you can use and use it wisely
But not as a crutch and at the end of the day
I you know what really convinced me at the end because I was always like always deadlifted and about heavy and at the end of the day
I thought to myself, you know what good is the strength if I can't summon it without my weight belt? You know, if I can't maximally
use all the strength that I have, that I know I have. If I don't have my big ass belt,
you start wearing your belt everywhere. That's what I'm saying. It's kind of, I don't
know. It's kind of interesting, right? Like, what if I got to live something? I mean,
I don't know. It just, it just felt, it didn't feel as if I've always had that mentality.
Yeah.
And it's just, that's something, especially if you're just starting out in the gym, I try
as hard as a can to steer people away from, you know, wrist wraps, belts, anything.
Like, you know, you need to build the pattern first.
You need to build the grip strength to even pick the weight up.
And if you don't have that, then you don't get it.
It's earned. Yep.
And your body will respond from then on out so much better than going up to,
you know, those tools that are meant for really high performance, really heavy weight,
you know, situations.
Well, like it's like that.
The golf analogy I've given before too, it's like taking somebody who has been
golfing for 10 years
on their own and then they go see us a professional teach them
and their mechanics and their habits are so bad
that they have to regress them and it takes forever.
You're far better off.
You get somebody who has never golfed in their life before
and you teach them good patterns and good mechanics
right from the gate, that person's gonna end up being a better
golfer than the guy who's been golfing for 10 years on his own
with all the poor mechanics that has to go back and take longer.
But it takes longer.
Yeah, and it's demotivating for a lot of people.
It's like I can see why people jump into that as like, well I want to see how much I can, you know, squat with a belt.
Let's get, you know, let's get heavier.
I got cut up on that.
Not to go too off subject, but I do want to make a comment on something that really just completely changed my thoughts on this particular tool.
And that's the power plates, the vibrating machines in the gym.
I used to make fun of them because I'd see people doing all these exercises and stuff
on them.
They have one at the club sport that we go to and I use it to get myself kind of ready
to do squats or deadlifts and that thing vibrates the shit out of you, right?
And I notice that it gets my central nervous system to chill and I can get into really really deep squats and positions with it that I normally would take me
10, 15, 20 minutes of warm-up just to get into and then I can get in my squat very amazing tool.
I'm gonna keep messing with that thing and have more comments on it later on, but so far, I'm sold on the, on the whole, you know, using it for
mobility, for mobility perspective. I don't know if I'm sold on spending $10,000 on one,
but I mean, interesting. Yeah, yeah, it's interesting for that.
Tali Array is asking, why no cardio for you dudes?
Are there no benefits exclusive to cardio that you might be missing?
I think the only one of us that gives that impression is probably Adam, because you always
talk about how you don't do cardio.
Yeah, I used to, on my posts, I used to be like, write all my stats and then at the bottom,
zero cardio.
Yeah.
Well, let me do that for a specific reason, let's be honest, because that was the hustle
for that whole community.
Thank you.
So that was the main reason why I make such a point of it is to be the counter of all
the people that think you had to do cardio to get it in crazy shape.
I wanted people to see that watch.
I can do no cardio and put myself in the most elite level of aesthetic shape and not ever
get on a fucking treadmill.
So really that is the point of it.
It's not to knock people who do cardio or anything like that.
It's just, you know, the fitness industry has given this impression with cardio for so
long that people think like, oh, if you want to lose fat, you do cardio.
But that's necessary.
If you want to build muscle, you lift weights.
If you want to burn fat, you do cardio. And, that's necessary. If you want to build muscle, you lift weights. If you want to burn fat, you do cardio.
And that's kind of like the formula for beginning in shape.
And that's absolutely wrong in so many ways.
And so part of my message of always kind of talking shit
about cardio and so on that, it's more along those lines.
I'm not knocking somebody for that.
Also though, you know, the other side of why I'm hard
about cardio is that when you do something,
especially intense cardio, because when we're talking about cardio, I'm assuming that we're talking about
either hit or like steady state or repetitive type of movement like that.
I'm not a big fan because I know that a majority people, especially those of us that are 30 plus
years old, have a lot of imbalances on their body.
And while they're running on a treadmill,
all they're doing is continually
to reestablish this poor connection that they have
and these imbalances.
And I think that that client who's spending
20 to 30 minutes doing cardio
would be far more beneficial to be doing mobility movements
and fixing into their imbalances.
They're gonna burn calories and they're gonna
fix posture alignment.
To me, that is way more important than cardio. I mean cardio sure you can argue that it's good
exercise for the heart, strengthens the heart because the heart's a muscle and you're basically
exercising it by doing that, but that's about fucking it. Yeah, I think if you look at cardio,
you can break it down into three purposes for doing the cardiovascular activity.
One, it's to improve, you can use Cardio to improve cardiovascular endurance.
So if you're an athlete and you play a sport or your runner or whatever, Cardio is necessary
to an extent to improve upon VO2 max and to improve upon your ability to recover between intense
bouts of cardiovascular activity.
Most of you listening are not in that category.
Number two, doing cardio because it burns calories I want to lose body fat.
Cardio on a minute-by-minute basis does burn more calories than resistance training.
However, resistance training is superior in altering your metabolism so that you burn more calories than resistance training. However, resistance training is superior in altering your metabolism so that you burn
more calories on your own.
So if you're just doing cardio to burn body fat, it's not a very efficient and effective
way to do it.
Resistance training is actually more effective.
Yeah, I saw a post this morning that said, you know, cardio is manually burning calories,
weight training is automatically burning.
That was Jessica. Oh, that's supposed to be it. Yeah, weight training is automatically. That was Jessica.
Oh, that's supposed to be.
Yeah.
At the training hour, the, the third reason you do cardio is to benefit your health.
Cardio vascular activity does have some health benefits.
However, most of those health benefits are in the, the kind of chill type of cardio
like going for a walk or doing a hike or doing a swim,
nothing super intense.
The super intense cardio is great for the cardiovascular endurance.
I can argue that you can gain good cardiovascular endurance with resistance training as well if
you want to cut rest periods and do conditioning type movements as part of your routine as well.
Calisthenics does that well.
Burpees does that well.
You're not building strength with those,
but you are building that kind of endurance.
I just think cardio is, I do cardio,
but I do it for meditative purposes.
I do it for just it feels good.
I'll do my reading while I'm doing cardio.
Sometimes I'll go on walks.
I'm not trying to build tons of endurance.
If I want conditioning, I'll do a separate routine
in the gym that's conditioning based.
I know I'm not building strength while I'm doing it,
so don't get me wrong, I'm not doing the whole,
combined 50 different weight training exercises,
type of deal, it's very specific,
but I'll do things like kettlebell swings or jump rope
or sledgehammer stuff, things like that to build
conditioning type endurance, but I'm not against cardio.
I do it pretty regularly, but I do it
from a more meditative standpoint.
I don't do it to get leaner.
If I want to get leaner, I adjust my nutrition.
Yeah, it's interesting how my view has changed
to coming from athletics,
and especially the hustle everybody has of cardio being the
answer to lose fat and like, you know, equate it to a lot of thermodynamics where like throughout
my day, like at least if my cardio, I got to burn another five to 800 calories here. So then
I can counter that to what I'm eating and then it becomes this catch-up game that people
are always playing with themselves. It's unhealthy. It's unhealthy to live that way. The argument for
just increasing activity all day long is so much stronger and so much more compelling to me,
much stronger and so much more compelling to me, especially for longevity, for joint proper function and health.
Here's how I look at cardio now.
So I'll do cardio.
And I'm one of the probably the guys in here that will do the most high intensity forms
of cardio.
However, I do that more as a skill.
So what I'm doing is I want to, like,
because I enjoy it, I'm gonna do, like, jump ropes
or I'm gonna, you know, sledgehammer, tire, strikes,
you know, I'm gonna do specific things
where I'm expressing movement and power.
It's all movement related because I want to be able to move explosively.
And so, I'll incorporate that and I'll phase in and out as a skill.
I'm going to work on this for a while and make sure my body can move and respond the
way I want it to.
And I've also found that as far as movement, I don't need to run and cut and do all these drills
Like I used to do in athletics. What's been more beneficial for my movement has been mobility and that that was a sort of epiphany that I had that
It showed when I went to to go playing this this dumb game where I'm like
I'm 36 years old and I'm played in a really high intensity
sport and well over a decade.
And all I did leading up to it did no conditioning, not only that, I had the flu for like a week
and a half leading up to it with no conditioning.
All I did was mobility drills, very light stuff.
And then got in and I was just blown away by the movement I was able to produce and I paid for it after I was done.
No doubt, but I performed at a high level, no injuries either, with no injury.
Yeah, no, that's really, that's what's really impressive when you think about that.
To be able to do something like that, that explosive and contact sport and not get hurt at 36 is probably the most, you know, the other thing about cardio is we talk a lot about Justin touched on
a little bit is neat, you know, neat is like he said, just far there's so much more coming
out as far as the benefits of that and just learning to be active all day.
If I had to choose for my client, you know, hey, one hour of cardio a day and then you
go to your desk and you sit at a desk all day long, you sit in your car all day long, and only a bit of real activity you have is
your one hour of intense cardio, or I have a client who at every hour goes and walks for 10 minutes,
I would much rather have that client who goes and walks for 10 minutes at every hour than the
one client who busts their ass for an hour. It's going to be far more beneficial for their body than
sitting in this fixed sedentary position all day long.
And not just from a calorie fat,
fat burning, but a mobility, neurological point,
there's so many things that are more beneficial
to just getting around and moving throughout the day
and it doesn't have to be a high intensity.
It's just one of those things,
it's like resistance training is very specific,
they're specific techniques,
specific things you're training, you're working on
particular movement patterns.
When you people schedule cardio,
it's like this mindless get on a machine and blah, blah, blah,
and do the same thing over and over again.
It's like, just go, go move.
You don't have to do that.
Like that's cardio is easy.
Cardio, you don't need a gym to do cardio.
Just go for a walk, go to the mall,
walk around for 45 minutes.
And really, no joke.
And even better than all those, like I said originally, which is I would much,
right now I would tell a client like I would rather you spend 20 minutes
repattering your connections that are poor.
You know, almost everybody is suffering from either upper or lower cross
syndrome and have these imbalances that I have a plethora of exercises for
you to do that are are with bands or body weight
or just some passive stretches that you're doing
that are going to help correct these imbalances
which are gonna be so much more for you with longevity
and feeling better and feeling healthier
than anything it's ever could compare to
getting on a treadmill and running for 20 minutes.
That's like ridiculous.
Not to mention what's nice is because I know I stop shit like I
don't do any cardio. No, I do. I just got I got ready for Maui and guess what I
get to do two weeks before going to Maui. I can get on a treadmill and guess what?
My body responds like a motherfucker to cardio because I don't do it because it
doesn't know what 30, 45 minutes of running on a treadmill looks like. So you
better believe when I go and do that,
my body starts responding like crazy because it's not used to it. It's not adapted to that yet.
Our bodies only take about two to three weeks to get adapted to whatever cardio modality that you're
doing. So if you're somebody who loves to get on the stair master, loves to get on your
elliptical or loves to do your treadmill, loves to do your trail run. Do something different.
All the fucking time, guess what? Your body has become so efficient at that.
You ain't doing much.
You think you're doing a bunch
because you might be getting hot and sweaty.
You ain't doing much.
And not only that, but over time,
adaptive thermogenesis happens where your body
slows its metabolism down to compensate.
Because cardio doesn't send the signal to speed up
the metabolism.
Cardio just burns calories.
Resistance training. Well, you could argue it sends the opposite signal. It up the metabolism. Cardio just burns calories. Resistus training signal.
Well, you could argue it sends the opposite signal.
It sends the opposite signal.
Resistus training sends a speed up the metabolism signal
because you're giving your body a reason
to have more of this calorically expensive tissue
called muscle.
Cardiovascular activity doesn't do that.
So constantly doing lots and hours and hours of cardio
every single day, it tells your body
that it needs to be very efficient at conserving calories. And it this through a burning muscle or not, excuse me, not burning muscle
but making you lose muscle because you don't really burn it.
You lose it and be just slowing you down in general so that when you do that cardio,
now you're at the same total caloric burn as you were before.
So you just slow down your metabolism.
And this is why people plateaued so hard with cardio
and they don't with resistance training in the same way.
So.
Chase Smith is asking, what changes have you seen
in the gym over the last decade?
Excellent.
I love this.
I've been in gyms now professionally for almost 20 years,
non-professionally probably 23 years.
And my first gym membership,
I think I was 16 years old or 15 years old.
I was in there all the time and I haven't stopped since.
I've been in gyms every single week since then,
since I was 15 or 16 years old.
For long periods of time, seven days a week,
lived in gyms, worked in gyms, worked with people in gyms,
and I've paid close attention to the a week, lived in gyms, worked in gyms, worked for people in gyms,
and I've paid close attention to the different trends
in the way gyms look.
When I first started working out in gyms,
this is what they look like.
And by the way, I'm in California,
and so we tend to be ahead of the curve.
So trends will happen here,
and then they start to spread everywhere else.
But when I was first in gyms, they had machines.
They had free weights.
They had a women's area, and they had a men's area.
The women's area had the same machines as the men's area except the weight stacked and
go up as high and the color of the upholstery on the equipment was different.
The women's area didn't have free weights.
It was just machines.
There were parts of the gym were segregated.
You had cardio room, free weight room, a machine room.
You had racquetball rooms.
It was all broken up and segregated.
Then I saw the next progression was no more women's only parts of the gym.
That fell out of favor.
And so men and women kind of started working out together.
Then I saw the hammer strength revolution.
This is where hammer strength came on the scene
and you saw plate loaded equipment was like the big thing.
I remember when they all started coming out
and it wasn't the weight stacks.
It was like who could get the most
plate loaded type exercise equipment?
And somehow this was better than machines,
it was actually the same thing.
It's just using plates instead of,
and they had different movement patterns, but it really wasn't that different, but it became the same thing. It's just using plates instead of, and they had different movement patterns,
but it really wasn't that different,
but it became the big thing.
Then it became big to have the whole gym be all in one room.
So gyms became very, very open.
Cardio machines used to be facing TVs,
and then all of a sudden cardio machines were facing
the freeway area,
because they discovered that people like to watch people
More than they'd like to watch TV when they were already. Yeah, and and so you saw some of that
now I'm starting to see
more
squat racks and gyms. I'm starting to see bumper plates, kettlebells, a little bit of turf in like 24-fitnesses throwing turf in
their gyms.
You're starting to see these jungle gym type apparatuses and gyms with TRX hanging off
of it and maybe a punching bag on one end and monkey bars in the other end.
So lots of change, gyms don't look anything like they did when I used to.
And now when I go into a gym and I see like an old Nautilus machine,
then nostalgia just washes over me.
And I have to use that fucking machine.
You know what I mean?
I'm like, oh my God, a Nautilus pullover machine.
I haven't seen this thing in 15 years, you know.
So it's like the old like branded supplements that you love.
I was like, oh, I gotta eat it.
Yeah.
Well since grandpa took that question and answered
pretty much fucking everything, Jesus Christ,
didn't leave anything for me.
I will say one thing.
So, you took just on a journey.
I mean, how accurate was that though?
No, no, you know, all but one.
That's why I'm gonna come in here and save the day.
Oh, I know, I know, I know.
We're about to group taxes.
So, this is, I think 24-hour fitness is a great place
to watch.
You wanna watch a company who is always trying to stay on the trends, right?
Yes.
They are a money making machine.
They, as far as their integrity
with how great of a company or trainers they produce
or that they could give two shits.
They're about pumping people in and out of that place
and making money and their fucking...
They were the first to introduce the body bug.
Matt, inter-roathed fish.
Yeah.
And they are good at what they do for sure.
And anytime I used to always tell people when I worked for the company, like someone would
say, oh, check out this new thing that's coming, I'm not even tripping because I know my
company, we're going to have that in our gym within six months.
And I'll remember like the firm, remember when like the curves trend came and the big curves
when the circuit training was like the
ill Nana.
Next thing you know 24 is a little bit of a whole 24 24 if it is makes the express zone.
They have an express zone now.
And it's the same thing that but it's colored blue and yellow and then it's a circuit training
with numbers and we always be some poor soul.
Like just stuck in one of those machines holding everybody up.
Still running their express.
Everybody coming up to complain.
Yeah.
He's not moving.
And the company would roll out pamphlets for us.
And we had this big old brochure that showed people
the science behind it.
We used to close people on how great it was.
But in reality, it was just brilliant marketing.
We saw the fitness industry or the fitness company
saw where the industry was going.
So they made sure they took care of it.
Then 24 of Finisys, which you see kind of right now, like your orange theories and all
these small little group type setting classes. So now they have this opportunity where you
can hire a trainer and five to 10 people can go go around with them and they teach these
little mini boot camps within the gym. And that's I forget what they call it now, but 24Finnes
does that also. And that's the kind of combat what you see going.
Sal touched on the grass now.
You see almost every 24 now has a grassy area with some tires and a bunch of CrossFit shit because why?
Because the big CrossFit trends going on and they know better than to just sit back and let them take all the people.
So they took the elements that people love about CrossFit, like flipping a tire or dragging a sled and they've now
Incorporated that and most all their time so this is the thing that dry that this is the thing that is so tough is
People see that you have a company that like like like a like a 24 that you know
Implement something like that and if you're a young kid who works for them, you know
You get fed all this information on like,
oh, this is the way to do this, or this is the net.
And it's like, it's really hard when you're in it.
When you're in it to step away and go like,
this is just like the new FAD.
And is this really more about business?
This is really what's best for my client.
The gym industry, the fitness industry,
besides supplements, they'll like work out part of the
fitness involves quickly.
It is a Fad driven industry. It is 100% fad driven. Luckily, we're
seeing science start to come in now a little bit. It's becoming more science-driven,
but that's still a tiny piece of it. It's still largely fad driven. I can... It's so
funny, like all these things are coming to my mind now, all the changes I saw,
like when you'd walk into a gym, neon, it was neon lights,
neon colors, and it was carpet. Then it turned into
sheet metal on the walls and fucking rubber flooring.
Robic studios used to be carpet and in step was the big thing, step aerobics. Yeah. Then they put, you know,
put floors, and then it was kick cardio kickboxing was huge.
Remember when cardio kickboxing was massive. And then it was body pump. It was weight training in aerobics type environment.
It was now it's soul cycle. And it's so now it's everything is geared around the UJ.
Heart rate because now heart rate all of a sudden. Yeah. Ilnana like, oh shit. I can see what Suzy over there is doing.
And you know, she's slackin'.
What about cardio machines?
When I first started in Jones,
it was, now they're like so.
Well, it was treadmill, when I first started,
it was treadmill.
Stairmaster and bike.
Stairmaster and bike.
Stairmasters were big.
That was like the big thing.
Bike is the hardest, that's why.
Yeah, I like stairmasters.
Yeah, better than fun.
And then you had, and then pre-core came out
with the elliptical trainer.
So impact.
That shit.
That shit blew the fuck up.
Whoever invented that man, the tread climber.
A millionaire instantly.
The elliptical.
Oh, no, no, no, no.
Remember the tread climber?
Yeah.
It came after that.
Yes.
And then I would break down.
Like, it was in a week.
Yeah.
All the time.
So you see all these different changes,
God, man, it's, I love it.
And then there's even trends in weights.
Like when I first started lifting out,
it was an iron plate with a lip and a hole in the middle.
And then it was all about the weights with the handle
that you could hold.
And then it became about the fucking hexagon weight
that sucks.
And now that's going away. and it's about the round rubber plates
It's become the big thing when my favorite is the old school frickin metal, you know, just clinging around lifting well all of us are old
I
My my fingers. Oh, I put it away. I love I love looking back at some of those old
Sometimes the simplest answers the right one. Do you remember though walking and it was neon. Remember the neon writing free weights and then you go to another one,
machines.
It's just if you're, you know, I think Chase is a trainer too.
So don't get caught up in all the hype, man.
It's it's changing now.
It changed back then.
It's going to change.
They're always, they're going to follow the money.
They're going to follow the money and you can't hate on them for doing that.
It's a, it's a, it's a billion dollar industry.
It's a billion dollar company.
Most of them.
Uh, and they're going to follow gonna follow wherever the trends are going.
Yeah, for a while,
Rackable courts were huge.
Oh yeah.
Those were huge than those fell out of favor,
then it was basketball courts.
Basketballs courts are huge.
Are they still huge?
Are basketball courts still a big driver of sales?
Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
Basketball is not going away.
That's definitely not true.
Cause all I know is every club I ever manage with the basketball court, all that
ever meant was fight drama.
Always have to break up, fight it out.
Sneaking kids in front.
Every time like, oh, we go, new club, basketball court, we have to question.
Benny B. Fly, what do you guys think about the way professional athletes currently train?
Ooh.
Sounds like a justic question.
Which one are we talking about here?
Well, he, he, uh, he, uh, he, uh, he, uh, he, uh, he, uh, he, uh, he? Well, he, he, I've seen some shenanigans.
He referred to the big, he said,
especially the big three like your NFL MLB.
And what do you say?
I think soccer or something else.
But for sure, it depends.
It depends on the team.
And it depends on the athlete.
Because I've seen high school programs that are legit,
you know, like a high school program that's got like a badass coach,
they've got a badass trainer in the, in the facility, like they're on top of their,
like kind of like American Olympic,
yeah, like cutting edge programming, like I mean,
and they're like, they're off seasons legit.
Like I've seen that even as low as the high school level,
but then I've seen as high as the NFL where some of these NFL players
They go out and they they're higher their best friend who just finishes NASM certification and he's personal training him and
Rehaving him from like serious fucking injuries, and I see the stuff that they have them doing and it's like mind-blowing
I'm talking like you know your Navarro Bowman type guys like guys at that elite level
That will go out and like hire a buddy as a personal trainer. Like, it's crazy. Some of these dudes,
they do that. And I don't know if that's because, you know, and I've, you've seen like,
I'm kind of giving back. Yeah, like, right.
It's like, you want to take care of your buddy, right? You know, I'm saying, and he knows more than I,
you know, in that profession. So you think it's a good idea to hire him, and you're already in
great shape, and you're already a badass. So what can your buddy really do? You know in that for profession, so you think it's a good idea to hire them and you're already in great shape And you're already a badass. So what can your buddy really do?
You know when you think about it if you're training a professional athlete
It's actually you know for for a long time. I thought it would be extremely difficult
But now that I think about it's easy. You take a professional athlete who's already kicking ass and all you got to do is not fuck him up
Yeah, you too much. No, no, no, no, just don't fuck him up
Well, this is why I kind of bring up,
I think Mike Boyle, I would probably say
probably has the best programming out there
as far as sports and athletics are concerned.
But his major focus is to just like prevention of injury.
And like his success lies on like,
you know, having an entire hockey team go through
an entire season and not being injured.
And that's what I kind of define as far as being a good trainer when you're at a very
high level like that. Of course, you want to reach new levels of performance, but typically,
at that point, it's more skills driven. 100%.
100% when you're talking about a professional athlete,
somebody who's in their 20s to mid 20s, they're pretty much piqued.
Yeah. I mean, for the most part, that's not to say that they can't gain a little bit more on their vertical
or a little bit more on their full throttle. They're redlining.
Yeah. Every time they compete.
So why the hell are you going to try and redline them in their training?
Yeah. That's stupid. Yeah, 100% so and you know
So it really depends you know, I remember the NBA
Aligned with NASM like I don't know over 10 years ago, and I know they have some pretty decent programming and some of it with some of their
Athletes and stuff, but it really does depend and I think it's a shit show right now. So I don't think there's one formal
Way of doing. Well, I think a lot too shit show right now. So I don't think there's one formal way of doing it.
I think a lot too, like these professional teams,
they're seeking like the ones that are smart
are really seeking like new wave information.
And this is why you see like smart companies like Nike
trying to pursue like groundbreaking information out there,
like you know, like Dr. Spanay,
I think he's actually intertwined
now with Nike and like they're trying to do things because, you know, science, it evolves
and especially in athletics, every little minute detail matters. And so if you can have an
edge on another team, so it really like the franchise itself, a lot of times is responsible
for this. Like they're the ones that are going to be out seeking
new information and people that are doing it right and a lot of times it they're just like
sticking with like old barnacle information
And then you know then you're seeing the results play out on the field so you know something you said just about skill
Makes a lot of sense because if you look at
So something you said just about skill makes a lot of sense because if you look at certain sports, you look at basketball, for example, what makes those athletes so good at what
they do is their level is their skill level.
It's not their strength and their speed.
Now are they strong and fast?
Yes, definitely.
But if it was just strength and speed, then you would have weightlifters and sprinters
playing professional basketball and they would be killing it, right?
It's about skill So if I took a bunch of professional basketball players and I magically was able to
Increase their strength by 50% boom your 50% stronger go on the go on the court now and go play
I guess what's gonna happen to their skill? They're gonna suck. Yeah, they're gonna suck because they're not used to moving
Right with that level it all tears it it alters their. And so that's a great point that you made.
It's injury prevention is number one,
number two, and number three priorities.
And it's not necessarily dramatically improving performance
because A, they're already at a high level.
And B, if we took them away from their skills training
and just improve their strength
and then they go back and play, their skill is off.
And I've seen this even myself when I trained in Jujitsu. If I took time off and then would lift, go back to Jujitsu, I they go back and play, their skill was off. And I've seen this even myself when I trained in Jiu-Jitsu.
If I took time off and then would lift,
go back to Jiu-Jitsu, I'd go back much stronger,
but my skill would be off.
Almost if I wasn't used to my new body, you know what I'm saying?
So I won't throw anybody specifically under the bus,
but I have seen this play out, you know,
professional football player, train like a bodybuilder,
and then go into the season and have
like the sheetiest season they've had.
Well, didn't Honey Romra, did he teach Vernon Dave, did he coach, uh, Vernon Davis for
a season?
What happened?
You know, I don't give a fuck.
I love Adam.
Did I ever tell you that?
Well, it's the same reason why I think it's a joke that he hired.
The freaking rock heart him to joke.
It's joke.
You know, it's it's come on.
Like what are you thinking?
It's the world we live in, man.
He doesn't pissed me off, man.
It's I love Vernon Davis.
I know.
And I love the rock too.
You know, but you know, sometimes we're misled and people just don't, they don't know.
And you can't knock somebody.
I mean, fuck your, you're not screwing those guys up.
They're as far as the bodybuilders.
I mean, they don't have to get out on a field
and play football, but people think that type of,
I mean, that's such a specialty, right?
To train somebody for aesthetics,
for a bodybuilding show,
and to train somebody for a sport,
I'll tell you right now, like,
I'm gonna have two different fucking,
you know, I'm a sport performance, I'm a I'm a support performance
about it. I'm a sports performance specialist and I still don't even consider that my specialty.
So even though I have certifications in that and I have a higher level than the average trainer
when it comes to training athletes and I've trained lots of athletes, I don't even consider that
a specialty of mine. It's something that I could do, but I don't think that I have this level of understanding
and ability to take someone like a Vernon, I would even want that responsibility. The goal,
the 100% goal with any type of training aside from preventing injury is to improve performance
in the respective sport. That means getting stronger if the strength translates to better performance. That means improving
mobility. If that new mobility range of motion contributes to better performance, if they don't,
then don't go for it. Just making someone stronger with poor performance or poor technique is not
going to benefit them on the field. And I think, like you said, Vernon Davis was a great example.
Yeah. What may happen there? Listen, if you like Mind Pump,
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Excellent.
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