Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 473: Full Body Workouts vs. Splits, Identifying Food Intolerances & Embracing Artificial Sweeteners
Episode Date: March 15, 2017Kimera-Quah! iTunes Reviews! In this episode of Quah, sponsored by Kimera Koffee (kimerakoffee.com, code "mindpump" for 10% off), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about the advantage of f...ull body workouts over splits, how to identify food intolerances and adopting artificial sweeteners if they were proven to be safe. Get our newest program, Kettlebells 4 Aesthetics (KB4A), which provides full expert workout programming to sculpt and shape your body using kettlebells. Only $7 at www.mindpumpmedia.com! Get MAPS Prime, MAPS Anywhere, MAPS Anabolic, MAPS Performance, MAPS Aesthetic, the Butt Builder Blueprint, the Sexy Athlete Mod AND KB4A (The MAPS Super Bundle) packaged together at a substantial DISCOUNT at www.mindpumpmedia.com. Make EVERY workout better with our newest program, MAPS Prime, the only pre-workout you need… it is now available at mindpumpmedia.com Have Sal, Adam & Justin personally train you via video instruction on our YouTube channel, Mind Pump TV. Be sure to Subscribe for updates. 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)
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Did I tell you guys what I did yesterday last night?
What?
I went to the movies.
Oh, you did not go see what I did.
We did.
You saw fucking 50 shades.
Me and Jessica went to go watch 50 shades.
Darker.
I think it is.
Is that what?
Can I give us the synopsis, please?
Worst movie ever.
Really?
Shit.
Cause you saw the first one.
It was shit.
It was shit.
It was shit.
Cause I'm thinking this, this is what I'm thinking.
Like, we're gonna go to a movie, we're gonna get horny, we're gonna go home, it's gonna
get weird.
But if you had your safety right there.
Yeah, no.
So, but the movie is so bad, it's so horribly done and the main character guy, he's actually
a psycho.
Like, in real life of a guy acted like that you'd be like the fuck away
You saw the first one right the first one wasn't even as bad and the first one was bad
But I does it um is it like a was really team?
Does it is it literally as part two or is it like a different story different people?
This is how bad it is we left the theater 40 minutes in oh
We left I can't on one hand how many times I've done that it's be a pretty bad
That has to be the second to his eyes
That was fucking tear you walked out on that well that's because I was scary sleep was in Seattle
I was there was mutants like fucking raping people is like what the hell is going on
You me out here
No that this wasn't bad in that way it was just terribly done. It was a horrible movie. I heard that going into it
I was so sure It was so shit.
It was so shit.
We hung out, what?
You and I hung out on what?
Saturday?
Friday, right?
No, Saturday.
Saturday we hung out.
And you guys, I was told Katrina, I was like, yeah, ask them if they want to go see Logan.
And tell them, oh, we want to go see fucking 50 shades.
I'm like, come on, really?
So we didn't go to the movies because you guys wanted to go see that.
We were.
So he was, I mean, he was too psychotic in this movie like he's super controlling like in the beginning like some paint some artist
Did a bunch of portraits over so this pictures of her and this gallery and she goes in there
She's like oh my guys like shock like oh you put my pictures up or whatever and then he's like so one person
Just bought all the pictures of you and of course who do you think it is? It's the fucking main dude, right?
Mm-hmm, and then so she sees him and she's like, did you buy all the pictures?
She's like, and this is his answer.
Yeah, because I don't like other men gawking at you.
Like get the fuck out of you.
Like if a guy said that, if it, you know what I mean?
I grew up in like, you're a fucking creator.
You could have said something better.
Like, I think you're so beautiful.
I want to, no, no, no, I don't want other men looking at you.
And that theme continues in the movie.
I'm just gonna say to you.
Then he finds out where she works
and he buys the company she works for,
so that she works for him.
Like, it's just a weird well now you say now you say that
But don't you feel like maybe maybe the person who wrote this probably depicted the character more closely to what they really would have
Been like versus how you would have done it since you probably wouldn't have been that type of a creepy guy
Wouldn't think like that someone who's a creep probably does think weird like that. I think the person who wrote it
This is what I think I think what they're trying to do is depict this dominant,
submissive kind of relationship and put it out
until like this is how, you know, he dominates her
in a real world too.
And people who are really in that world say it's the worst
depiction of how that world really works.
They say it doesn't represent the reality.
I mentioned this before, but the secretary,
I think it's an older movie with uh oh yeah good movie jay jill and uh you jill
and hauled or his sister what's her name that's not the secretary you getting something
else confused is that what it's called no it's what is secretary yeah I think that's it yeah
oh there's another one that there's probably something else you're thinking about yeah yeah
something else it is that sort of relationship where like one is like submissive and but it's very
playful.
It's not like this weird psychotic fucking, you know, slain.
I just don't, I just don't, it just, it felt bad like watching it.
It's like this guy's a fucking creep.
He doesn't act very well.
The movie's made poorly.
The poor girl, I don't know, I just didn't, we walked out 40 minutes dude.
I haven't done that in forever.
Did it like ruin sex for the night too?
Or is that oh actually?
We don't need to show you what a twisted fuck he is right?
It's like he was a terrible movie, but man the sex was great afterwards. Oh
God
Hey, I don't need to go and L. Doa was interesting. Yeah, tell us about that. So so check this out
I think I was I want to cough all over. You know, we talk about we talk a lot about tension and
connectivity and how important it is and we talk about the joints and mobility
and the joints and the muscles, but rarely, if ever, do we ever think about the
fascia? And, you know, I thought about that. I thought, God, you know, how little
attention we focus on or we pay attention to fascia,
but fascia is extremely important.
By the way, the ligaments and tendons
are considered fascia that made up of the same.
Well, you gotta know the reason why we don't
is because there's still a lot of unknowns.
There's still a lot where not-
That's what I thought too.
But there's actually quite a bit of knowns.
Like, they're okay, wait a second.
Now, so before we go into this,
then I gotta challenge you then,
because this is, I didn't get a chance to meet the instructor, but in, you know, what we talk about on Mind Pump,
a lot, a lot, a lot, a lot, a lot, and with our experience with academia and, you know,
people like this is they got, they learned something new, there's, we've, we've, we've evolved
in science, we know something, and then they become very dogmatic, and then they sort
of speak in certainties about things that we're not certain about. I'm not going there. Things that were not certain about.
I'm not even going there. I've studied a lot of fascia. Yeah, no, I'm not even going there. They definitely I don't care what
Certification or course you take you're gonna get the impression that it's the be all-end all that's just what happens
Yeah, okay, so you go to still feel that right? Yeah, if you go to stick it. Okay. Okay. I want to hear your opinion on that if you go to El Dola
You go to you know, but you know, Wim Hof, all these different methods,
they're gonna come, it's gonna come across as like,
this is the Bialindal.
That's not what I'm saying.
What I'm saying is, I made a few connections
in my mind myself through listening to these courses,
and I did, I mean, I realized like,
fascia is connected, like, from head to toe,
your fascia's all connected,
in very, in much more direct ways than even muscle is.
Like muscle, muscles overlap and stuff,
but they have clear insertions in origins
whereas fascia is all intertwined.
So it's like this big long chain that connects
from the top of your head to the bottom of your feet
and act and learning how to activate those lines of fascia
and create tension along
them with the right central nervous stimulation or the right intention, or with through tension,
will create what will cause joints to separate a little bit, will create space in the spine,
will change or help promote muscle recruitment patterns.
So now that I understood the concept it makes Incredible sense now they have their own patented what they call El Doas which are techniques
But I think it's the concept that's really important and I don't think it's brilliant in the sense that it's something like they they invented
I think it's brilliant in the sense that
It's one of those things that we all kind of overlook a little bit
So this is why I control this pretty much with your own intrinsic way of connecting to
that as opposed to like having, because this is where you're trying to get a spinal adjustment
or you're trying to get realignment.
So you're saying that you've been able to access and control and get this kind of attention
response.
Well, not only that, but how you position.
You position. You have, you at the position.
Very important.
You have to position.
There are spiral lines of tension
that go through with the fascia.
And so think of it this way, like.
So look at you.
We have a stop here right here where you're at,
because I'm so glad you did this now,
because I've been waiting for to talk to you
about a lot of this stuff,
because like I said, I've read a lot about fascia,
and I've always been interested in it,
and there is.
There's to me, there's stuff that we're just not certain about. So do you know that this, this little bit of science
and information, this is what, uh, honey has taken to do his FST training. Yeah, but that's
stupid. That's exactly this is why I wanted you guys so bad to watch all of his stuff because
he took something and they're not even doing it correctly to get the real benefits of how
you need to position the body in order to really elongate.
No, because what they're doing, what Eldoa is doing, first of all, fascia is very fibrous
and tough.
Okay.
So when we, if someone says, well, I'm a loose in your fascia with massage, like you're
not, you'd have to fucking hurt someone, like severely to do something like that.
It's incredibly strong.
But if you use the muscles and movement that are connected to fascia, right, it's all
directly connected and you use the muscles to activate so that you create lines of tension
throughout the fascia, you can create different decompression areas or areas where there's
more compression.
And so it's not that different from when we use prime to prime the body and
activate certain muscles. It's exactly the same concept. But now what we're doing is rather than
just looking at muscle function, we're looking at lines of tension throughout fascia. And so it's
just another step. It's another layer. It's another tool. And I'll tell you what, it's fascinating. I
did some of the LDoes myself and I was putting these positions and you can feel with some of these literally from head to toe
How you're creating that space. It's really and it's I mean
It's and it literally is from head to toe like even your eyeballs
Even where you focus your gaze will cause tension within fascia, which then connects all the way down to your feet
You know through these different chains and lines of tension
So it's really and you can look up by the way there's you can look up, you and lines of tension. So it's really, and you can look up, by the way, there's, you can look up, you know, lines
of tension on fascia, they've drawn that up for the last 50 years.
You know, Grayson, Adam, you will have that.
Yeah, so this is, and here's where I, okay, yesterday, after you guys all left, I hung out
with some of the Mind Pump guys and fans that were from our forum and listeners that flew
over here and drove up from Southern California to come to this.
And we talked, I got a chance to share some stuff about Mind Pump and where we're going
and business stuff.
And then we got into Aldoa.
And I got to ask them all, what was your experience like and what did you like?
And they were all going around.
Danny was sharing some of the things that he was challenging the teacher with and stuff
as far as his theories and what he thinks. So the thing that I was most interested in when I'm excited to
hear from them in the future, I asked them to please share with me on our forum your experience as
you go to teach this to your clients and you start to apply this because my biggest concern with it
this because my biggest concern with it is that there's such specific cues that you have to do to get yourself in these lines of tension and not only that, but each individual will
have a more difficult time with each one of those cues.
So it's very...
Well, so here's what it is.
Okay, so we work with muscle.
I would consider us experts on muscle function
in the applicable world, right?
That's what we do very well.
We understand tension and muscles.
We understand activation recruitment patterns.
So when you do an extra, once you understand,
and I'm sure, I don't know if you guys remember this,
but I remember as a trainer, there was a switch
at some point where I went from knowing exercises
to really understanding muscle function to where I went from knowing exercises to really understanding
muscle function to where I can look at any exercise or any movement.
And I can see how to get you to use the muscles the way I want to, rather than just knowing
the exercise, right?
Once you understand the lines of tension with the fascia, that's all you need to know.
Like then, once you know the lines of tension, now you know how to turn the body, articulate,
move certain things.
So I'll give you an example. If I have a rope, like, you know when you look at a rope, a
rope is twisted, right? If we look at just a regular, you know, twine piece of twine or
like a legit classic type rope, it's twisted. And if we pull on it in that way, we can pull
on it that way. But because of the way it's twisted, we're not unraveling the twine or whatever to give us the...
It's twisted in a particular way.
If I untwist it or unwind it and then pull, I'm creating different line of tension and
it might create more of a direct line of tension.
So that's what you do with the fascia.
So for example, if I extend my arm out and my hand is internally rotated, my fascia's
twisted one way. If I unwind it and then extend my wrist and bring my fingers back or whatever, now I'm
unwinding that fascia and now I'm creating tension in a more direct way.
And so once you learn that with the body and how to position your body, now you can create
incredible recruitment patterns and central nervous system connections to the muscles that are attached to the fascia
that get it to,
in case it's as you want.
Now take your trainer brain and shut it off
and think like a consumer,
and this is what I was trying to talk to these kids about,
was I can't wait, I wanna hear from you guys
when you apply this on your people,
I wanna hear how much of a game changer,
this is, right now I know everyone's excited about it, right?
But you gotta understand that internal rotation
of the shoulder and anterior pelvic tilt
and then internally pronating your foot
and internally rotating the femur, okay, listen, okay, listen.
You digest that, you see it and it's all of us,
light bulb goes off and it's all of us.
Lightball goes off and it's like, holy shit, right?
But what we know from training so many people is how challenging
that is to teach somebody and then for them to connect.
Now some people will.
And I asked these guys, right, so we were sitting around
and I asked them about, you know, that their experience
and a couple of them were like, you know, you did a
video on YouTube with Stephanie a while back and Adam, I picked up on the Q's, I could do
it.
I was like, yeah, that's great.
That's awesome.
So you could do that.
Now, pay attention to all the clients that you're trying because you guys will train 20
people in the next couple of days.
In those 20 people that you teach this to, how many of them actually can articulate
what you're trying to get them to do,
and really feel a difference.
And then also on top of that,
now really put the work into apply it
so they see the benefits.
Oh, I think this is the first exposure
for everybody who was in the class.
It's the first time it's gonna be up.
It's a process.
There's no way.
It would be like taking a bunch of...
Yeah, I'm interested. I'm very curious.
I'm very curious to hear.
If you're taking a bunch of people
who don't understand,
how to correct the basic patterns that we see forward head
and forward shoulder, anterior pelvic cell,
posterior pelvic cell.
It takes a while before you really understand,
I don't find languages completely shift
because you don't wanna make it more relatable
and make it more about what you're feeling and you know just like kind of cue them like so yeah I could see I could see them taking
that information and then start to sort of formulate their own way of digesting it and then present.
And what I like about it is it's all active and what I mean by that is we now know that if you can
activate your central nervous system and activate tension the way you want it.
It's far more effective, especially in the long term than if you do anything passive.
And Eldoa was all active. It was all you creating the intrinsic tension with your body
to create these lines of tension or to take advantage of these lines of tension to do what you want.
And that's what I really liked about it. It wasn't like they said,
oh, here's your fascia here. So we're going to use it to do what you want. And that's what I really liked about it. It wasn't like they said, oh, here's your fascia here.
So we're gonna use your stretch your fascia.
You know, I'm gonna manipulate you
and put you in this position.
It was you doing it yourself
and that's where the benefit comes from.
Oh, for sure.
So that being said too,
I'm curious to hear your opinion on what I already know
he said without even being there.
I know he's shit on foam rolling, right?
Well, I'll tell you why.
And yeah, I wasn't there when I talked about it. I know I know you why. And yeah, I wasn't there when he had to say it.
I know I know I wasn't there.
I didn't hear what he had to say because.
I guarantee he did though, did he?
I think he did.
And here's the thing with foam rolling.
And we already know this.
We've already talked about this with foam rolling.
Foam rolling.
Somebody who really understand this is why we talked
and way back when, I don't know if it was me who brought up
or one of you or whatever, it doesn't matter.
We talked about it. It was this, was when you were,
when more and more stuff was coming out about fashion,
really, really, truly understanding it,
we started to realize that, is the foam roll really doing
what we think it's doing and it's not?
I think the foam roll has benefit.
I think the way we explained it was wrong.
So it's not, it's not my old fascia release,
we're not breaking up adhesions, We're not loosening up fascia.
So if we go from that standpoint, yeah, foam rolling stupid because that's not what it's doing.
But we do know for a fact foam rolling will change recruitment patterns. It will
alleviate pain in the short term. It does activate no-see receptors in the target area,
which will cause pain relief. And I hate to, people think,
oh, it's only localized pain relief
because of the pressure.
Here's the thing, if I can give you pain relief,
you're gonna move differently.
Now I can get recruitment patterns that I want.
So, sure, the way it was explained before, no.
It's not that how it works.
However, does foam rolling have a place?
Absolutely.
That's the tool.
This is the analogy I give it now,
is it's like chiropractic work
without you actually going and doing the strength training to fix the imbalances. So if you were to
just do foam rolling, it's like what people who go for their pain when they get adjustments.
When they get adjustments and that's all they do is they get adjustments. And so if because I know
there's people that right now they're listening, they're like, oh my god, foam rolling changed my life because I took away so much pain that they're having.
The problem was, they don't realize that they're not fixing their issue because they're just,
they're getting pain, they're getting relief, they're getting pain, they're getting relief.
The only way of fixes the issue is if it changes, it helps you change the signal that you've
either sent or that you're going to send with correctional
type exercise. That's it. So we use foam rolling. We prescribe it in maps prime, but the
way we do it is we prescribe it in conjunction with the proper movement to actually fix the
issue. It's targeted and the way we use it is to. This is part of why.
The prime is revolutionary. This is why we were so excited about this was, you know,
when you talk about
the fashion, what we're learning about that, and like the foam roll and understanding how you would
utilize it as a tool, the importance of priming the body, the importance of fortifying these good
patterns. Yeah, yeah. So all these things. So, man, I mean, I just did a post on the forum, you know,
I did your guys' favorite maps program. And think we're almost anybody who own prime said prime
And then a lot of people of course loved red because red was the the baby, right the original so
Prime it this is what prime is all about man
This is also just the pinpoint the you know the super loud signal that your body's you know sending and where you're receiving that
Super loud signals and I were trying to reroute that signal or dampen it in some way to where you get
temporary relief.
And like you said, now you can sort of apply the proper movement process to kind of support
that new routed signal.
That being said, I think he actually shit on it completely where it doesn't, he thinks
he- I guarantee they did. I think he actually shit on it completely where it doesn't it thinks he I guarantee they did
I I don't I wasn't there to hear it
This is the dogmatic part that I don't like about like I said where you but here's a thing
I learned some shit when you're when you're really bought into something and you really know it at at depth
It's it's hard to not you know
I mean you almost have to dive in and like be like this is everything
To learn it all and then towards the end you said you see people say, oh, that was a great tool
And you know what I learned very rarely do you see an instructor who's like super into what they're doing and passion about it
Who doesn't you know that's his tool right and so that becomes a tool for everything so if you go if we talked to
Which is so bad, dude. That's so bad. You're a teacher, dude. You're a teacher.
Shame on you.
Shame on you.
I know you're defending right now, but I'm like, no.
No, no, I'm not defending.
I'm playing.
I'm shame on you.
I mean, that's to me, like, when you're an educator, if you're in that position, you're
already in an authoritative position, right?
And on top of that, you're intelligent, right?
You're teaching others a subject.
Like, I feel like you have this, I mean, I feel like that you should have to be
versed enough to know more than just your own,
your own fucking dog.
Well, no, I think otherwise you say shit like that.
I'm like, come on.
I'm pretty sure, you know, most instructors in these realms
are probably have a lot of experience
in other areas as well.
I'm just saying, it's hard like,
if there was a, if there was a, you know,
someone teaching, you know, a
kin stretch or someone teaching kettlebells, like, if I go up to a kettlebell instructor
and say, man, how do I work on my delts? They're going to show me kettlebell shit. People
just tend to look at their toolbox, they have their limited tools.
But this is what's wrong with the industry. This is back to what's wrong with the industry
and why I love what we're doing right now is because
It's I always want to caution people whenever we teach something new or we express something like this because there's always going to be a
Wave of people that go try it and then out of that out of that wave of people that go try
There's going to be a portion of them that then identify with it and attach themselves to it and then it becomes their Bible
Well, and that's the problem. As long as they're open to being integrative
with other processes, but there is something to be said
about being a specialist in something.
And so, him knowing this deep knowledge
in this particular subject is important.
And so, it may still come across that it's the end all be all,
but as long as there's know, there's different scenarios
where, okay, there's an integrative process where Nike can translate and bring this tool
into this situation, or, you know, it pairs well with this or X, Y, Z. You just have to be
able to bring up, you know, other methods as well, and open to it.
I think people like us, we're mavens, right? We get these people, these specialists, and
we take, you know, the important stuff, We get these people, these specialists, and we take the important stuff,
and we know how to apply it,
and we understand how they're doing.
I just find it's one of our responsibilities,
always decotion.
That's to me, to me, I feel like our responsibility,
as we bring specialists on that we are all excited about,
that we always remind people and caution people
that you will probably hear certain things in there
that maybe we don't 100% or agree with or on board with, but a majority of this information
is extremely good and beneficial and is going to add a ton of tools to you.
If you're a personal trainer and you want to be a really good trainer, you should definitely
take courses that specialize in particular things, El Noah being with the fascia,
and how to activate the CNS to get what you want
with the fascia, I think it's brilliant.
I think it'll put you, especially right now,
it'll put you head and shoulders up.
A lot of people here.
And I know, look, I know trainers who are very good
that I respect very, very well,
who've had clients that they've had issues with,
where they were able to fix most of their problems, but there's that one issue, that one neck pain, that one piece of've had clients that they've had issues with, where they were able to
fix most of their problems, but there's that one issue, that one neck pain, that one piece
of back pain, that one whatever, that they just can't seem to iron out, you know, iron
out, and the Eldoa fixed it, and it's not because the Eldoa is the answer to everything,
it's because it answered the one thing that they weren't looking at, which was fascia.
You know, it says that one area that they just didn't know, and now, oh, here we go, we
can address this.
Great, great announcement. Boom, absolutely. Absolutely.
For sure, right?
Is it Bird time?
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It's the motherfucking thru-
The Eagle has landed!
Our first question is from Brandon Fowler 13.
Why is full body done three times a week better
than a split done five times a week?
Definitely somebody who's gestuting into us.
Yeah, let's be very, very, very clear.
For the 100% for the vast majority of you, vast majority.
Probably, I would say around 80 to 90% of you, will build muscle
and get stronger, faster, more efficiently and effectively, training your entire body
doing an entire body type split versus a traditional, bros split or bodybuilder split.
For example, very basic full body split would be to work the whole body Monday, Wednesday, Friday,
Versus Monday hit back, you know, Tuesday hit chest, Wednesday hit shoulders, you know, arms on Wednesday, you know, that kind of thing.
It studies have improved several studies. Many studies conclusively have proven this.
Strength coaches will agree with us across the board. We've seen it as trainers. It just way more.
I wanted to kind of, you know, pose a question out there as to why you think like, and this
may be, you know, related to this, I'm pretty sure it is like teaching the body how to
adapt. Like it's way more efficient to teach the body how to adapt in a full body routine
because then you don't easily like go into overintensified exercises for one portion of your body.
So versus damage where when you get it into the split routine, it's like chest day, destroy
the fuck out of your chest, right?
And you're going to, like, more cases than not, you're going to overdo the volume, you're
going to overdo the intensity because that's the focal point for that one.
But it's not just what you don't do. It's a lot of it is what you do. Like we completely for some reason.
There's a lot, we could say here, bro, I'm glad you picked this question because there's actually
a lot of reasons why this is true. We could, we could, for some reasons a long time ago, we forgot
that frequency, how often you train up up an area. It's the first word in the fit principle.
Yeah, fucking frequency is first.
It's so important, and it's so important
for all forms of adaptation.
Like if I wanna learn how to fucking dirt bike ride,
really, really well, am I gonna learn better
doing one day a week of five hours of dirt bike riding?
Or am I gonna learn better if I do one hour a day
for five days in a row?
Like it's just work your brain.
There's only so much your brain can learn.
There's only so much information your body can produce.
There's only so much stuff.
Stop right there, stop right there.
Stop right there, because this is a part
where people get disconnected.
They don't realize that how important the adaptation process
of us building muscle is.
So many people identify and have connected
to the fucking breaking down rebuilding bullshit.
Like that, that's been, I mean, I preached that forever as a trainer.
I mean, that's what you used to tell people, right?
I mean, I know you guys did too.
It was damaged, right?
You tear and break down.
That's how you used to explain it.
You tear and break down, you eat food, you replenish, you grow, you build muscle.
So you say that enough time to people, they read it enough magazines, they hear it all over
fucking social media.
They think it's the end all be all of building muscle is to break it down and then rebuild it. And in fact, it's the lesser of the two adaptation and
actually frequency that that whole concept of actually sending the signal to get the muscle
to build and develop that is superior to the breakdown idea. Because both are important,
they both are a part of us building muscle, but where I think why it's such an
epidemic is that we've been preaching to people for so long, that it's about how much you
break down and what you eat and when you eat it to recover to build, that everyone's
just totally forgot all about what we're really doing, which is creating a new adaptation
and how does that process work.
You're, you're, you're, you're, you're, you're, you're teaching your body to learn something
number one, but you're, I'll give you some very easy like these are the things that right now guys and girls that do body parts blitz
It'll make sense to very very easy
number one if you do
15 sets for a body part once a week 15 sets for back on Monday
I can hit my back on Monday Wednesday Friday and do five sets each day
I'm doing the same total volume, but I've worked out my back three times this frequent.
So boom, right there alone, I've added a new variable that I wasn't doing before.
That's number one.
Well, explain that, okay, because you do this really well.
Explain the importance of that because of how it sends a signal and how that's going to do.
We know now for, for fact, that the muscle building signal that you get from lifting weights last for about or peaks around 48 to 72 hours
And then it starts to drop and it starts to drop very very quickly
So if I hit my back really hard on Monday
I've got this loud muscle building signal, but by date, you know two or three
It's sharply drops even though I'm still recovering even though my muscle and I'm recovering, the build muscle signal has dampened radically.
And it continues to dampen.
But if I hit it now, I find it peaks at 40,
it's same at two hours, it starts to drop, boom,
I hit it again, and then it starts to drop, boom,
I hit it again.
Now I'm at the muscle building signals loud.
So that's number one.
Same volume, same action, everything's the same,
I'm just hitting it three times as often.
But now there's some other factors
that come into play.
If I work out my back on Monday, 15 sets, the first three to five sets are going to be
my big, heavy, compound, effective exercises.
After that, I'm kind of fuck, I'm doing cable exercises and squeezing and pumping movements
and all these finishing movements because I'm tired, I'm exhausted, my muscles aren't
really, they're not going to perform like they did in the beginning of the workout.
Well, if I split that up over three workouts,
I tend to hit more effective exercises
because you'll see people who hit chest,
three days a week tend to do the big pressing movements
more often than someone who hits chest once a week
who's got all these cable, sideways,
hammer strength, press, and all this other weird shit.
So that's another big one.
Well, here's another one adding to that.
Also, imagine, okay, and I use like the, when I, when you split it up, I actually don't
split it up in different exercises.
I just say, imagine 15 sets of deadlifts for, and, uh, or, you know, on one day or five
sets of deadlifts Monday, Wednesday, Friday, right?
Are you going to do 15?
Well, exactly.
Imagine on set 10 of deadlifting, how fucking gas you are and how much you're pulling.
You're not pulling your heaviest weight at red 10, but if you did 5, 5, and 5, all three of those workouts,
you could be pulling, you'll feel so much stronger, so much, you'll be able to hit, you're gonna be
able to hit the weights harder, get more volume out of the workout. And it opens you up to other variables
that you can mess with. For example, if I'm hitting, if I'm doing five, you know,
three days a week of, again, we'll focus on back, you're of back. One day may be slow,
controlled, grinding, heavyweight. One day may be a pumping day. Another day may be power.
Like, I can do all that effectively on three days. I can't do that all effectively all
in one day because I've lost the ability to maximize that. Like, if I did five sets of
heavy grinding, by the time I go to my power movement team, I've lost it. I've lost the ability to maximize that. Like if I did five sets of heavy grinding,
by the time I go to my power movement,
I've lost it.
I've lost all that.
So all the way around, there really isn't anything
that's, you know what you'll get the benefit from a split.
The only benefit you'll get from a split is you'll be able,
you'll get better specific muscle endurance.
Not general muscle endurance, by the way,
because a full body I'll argue will give you better
general muscle endurance because you're squatting
You're deadlift in your benchbell on the same day
But specific like I can get my biceps to handle 15 sets on the one workout a little bit better
I mean if you're on testosterone
You know there's there's ways that like this is appealing because you know, you can really just
Get into that damage and and it's still challenge it
Yes, I was a dad. I still would challenge it and this is why that's and it's still challenging. Because I was a dad.
I still would challenge it.
And this is why I feel popular though.
I think they get away with it.
Exactly, that's why.
They get away with it.
I mean, I've done both on testosterone
and it's far more superior doing a full body.
And it's for all those other reasons that's going on.
I am telling you right now, if you're listening,
this is all you gotta do.
And look, worst case scenario, what's the worst thing
that can happen?
Worst thing that can happen is you switch to this,
you figure out it doesn't work for you to go back.
Big fucking deal.
I can tell you, just try this, take your total volume
for the week, okay?
All the sets you do for chest,
all the sets you do for back, shoulders, arms, legs, core,
whatever, divide it up into three full body workouts. Just do that, I promise you, most of you for back, shoulders, arms, legs, core, whatever. Divide it up into three full body workouts.
Just do that by, I promise you, most of you listening around, blow your fucking mind.
After one or two weeks, you'll never go back.
Everybody does, hey, everybody.
You'll notice strength gains immediately.
Most people come back and be like, holy shit, by the end of the week, I was lifting 10
more pounds and I was at the beginning of the week.
It's a trip.
Yeah.
I always just think of it because, you know, just hammering my legs, like how inefficient
I was the whole rest of the week and I would hit my legs early and you're just like,
fuck, you're just walking around, like, you're so demotivated to then go, like,
lift and just do, like, a regular workouts.
Well, this goes part of back to why it drives me crazy, dude, all the beast mode and all
the intensity driven shit. Like, I hate that stuff so bad
because this is why people struggle with this concept
because they don't feel the same way.
Like they've failed from hammering the fuck out of themselves
for so many years.
So the only people I ever hear that we tell the go full body
is they don't get that same fucking I crushed myself
after a workout feeling it's different.
You know, it's a different feel than that you're you're actually lifting smart now so they
they connect with that fucking beast mode so much that that's what they
stop doing it because they're like oh I don't feel crushed like I felt when I
hammer a one muscle for fucking one out and I will say this stupid you probably
we don't recommend going to failure a lot anyway but if you're doing a full
body you definitely shouldn't go to failure because you're going to failure a lot anyway, but if you're doing a full body,
you definitely shouldn't go to failure
because you're going to failure on your lips,
heavy hard lips, three days a week for the same body part.
You can start to get issues with connective tissue
and your joints and stuff.
Stop two or three reps short of it.
That's the only one piece of advice I'll give you.
If you do this, just stop about two reps short of failure.
But go ahead, take your fucking exercises, split them up over three days.
I promise you, most of you listening right now will blow you away.
Mark Wolves, best way to ID and intolerance.
Oh, he's probably talking about a food intolerance, Doug.
Yes.
So a food intolerance, so here's the thing, it's still hotly debuted.
Debuted?
I don't want to debate it.
Debated it. I made it myated, I made it my word.
It's shaped for word.
I know, I did it.
It's hotly debated in the medical community
as to whether or not intolerances actually exist.
We know what food allergies are, and they're easy to identify.
You eat a food, you get an immediate reaction, hives,
or you can't breathe, or you throw up,
or worse, you know, anaphylactic shock.
I mean, that's a very easy thing to identify.
And there's particular antibodies that we identify
that are connected to that.
Now, there's other antibodies that we can identify
that will point to an intolerance.
An intolerance is not an immediate strong reaction.
In fact, intolerance is tend to take a little while
to build up. So the symptoms
are harder to identify. For example, I'm working with the client right now who's dealing
with acne, skin issues. And that can be a sign of a food intolerance. However, acne's
not going to show up on your face immediately after eating the particular food that you're
in intolerance to. It can take time.
And if I stop eating that food, my acne's not going
to clear up right away.
So it could take some time to identify that.
It would be more of an allergy if it was immediate, right?
Versus intolerance is yeah, like a chronic.
So you got to think more in terms of like what you've been
eating consistently over and over and over and over.
And the only way to really do this, or how I do this with clients is you first you have
to be consistent about what you're eating period.
You need to have some sort of structure.
So if you really care about digging into this and trying to get to the bottom of what could
cause what could be causing inflammation or water retention in you or whatever, you
could be there could be lots of signs, you could be headaches, could be sleep related,
could be skin related, could be whatever, right?
So whatever your thing is that you have,
that you think that could be caused by an intolerance,
you first gotta take a snapshot of like, okay,
here's all the foods that we're eating.
Then I'm gonna tell a client like, okay,
we're going to eliminate one thing.
We're gonna get rid of that out of your diet,
whether it be dairy or whether it be process foods
or whether it be artificial sweeteners or something that has been linked to or can cause.
Okay, even though we know that.
Does it be common?
Yes, it's common, common.
Because we're at with all this.
And then what I'll do is we'll just eliminate it
and then we'll assess.
And you wait, yeah, we wait.
We wait after a couple of weeks of doing that.
And I hear their feedback and they're like,
okay, Adam, I feel just a shitty.
I don't know, okay, well that's not it.
Go ahead and put that back in.
Now we'll take something else out, you know,
and you just,
Mark's when you reintroduce it that you really see.
Yeah, or you're right, yeah.
The hard core way to do it,
the real hard core way to do it
is to eliminate all the common intolerances
all at the same time.
And then go off of them for like a month or two
and then introduce one for three to four days,
five days, seven days, or whatever,
and then see what happens and then introduce it.
Is that part of the elimination diet?
That's how elimination diet, yeah, yeah, it's a protocol works.
There's a test you can buy and take,
it's called a pinnacle test, and it's a blood test,
and it looks at, I believe, IgG antibodies.
I think those are the ones associated with it.
Can you get that through Amazon?
I'm not sure.
And they're kind of expensive.
Now, the problem with the pinnacle test
is they're not totally accurate, however,
it's way better than a guess
You know, I'm saying and I did I did a pinter test and it actually helped me quite a bit when I was identifying mine
Food intolerances can change too
Just a 24 me go over that at all. No, no, no that you can get on that
That's different. Yeah, you and they can change like if I eat lots and lots and lots of food
with you know, that, and I develop an intolerance
to it because I'm eating the same food over and over again, and I eliminate it, and it's
been a year since I've really had it in my diet and then I reintroduce it, I might not have
a tolerance to it and intolerance to it anymore.
So here's some of the signs and symptoms you want to look for when it comes to intolerance.
Anything autoimmune.
So anything that's an autoimmune issue
can be linked to some kind of a food intolerance or the food intolerance can make it
really, really bad or worse. So skin issues like psoriasis or eczema, asthma,
bowel issues, indigestion, gastro-reflux, constipation, diarrhea.
These are all common things that can come from food intolerances. And, once you eliminate these foods, see how those particular things react, but you
have to give it some time.
That's just one of the other things.
I do want to remind people, by the way, I do want to remind people that we have the
30 days of coaching. This is something, in case, especially, we want to remind people, by the way, I do want to remind people that we have the 30 days of coaching.
This is something, K, so especially when we're talking
about stuff like this, because we do cover some of this
when we get into nutrition.
And when you go through the 30 days of coaching,
this is absolutely free.
So as soon as you go to MindPumpMedia.com,
there'll be a pop-up, and it says,
free coaching with MindPump, you register for that,
and then every day you're gonna get dripped in email and we just we honed
in on one topic at a time.
So like protein and then cars and then gut floor and like each day there's a topic with
bullet points.
And then on top of the bullet points, you're also going to get videos where Irmina, some
of the podcast episodes were right where we talking depth about this subject.
So I mean definitely go on there, sign up.
If you're not signed up already, take advantage of that.
It's 30 days free of coaching with us
and exactly how we talked about clients.
That's what it helps.
Last question.
Adam Castro.
What happened to Doug?
What happened to Doug's voice over?
Perfect study.
If a perfect study came out that shows artificial sweeteners
are perfectly safe
and have no detriment.
Would you change the way you eat?
Okay, thanks Justin.
Would we change the way we eat
if artificial sweeteners came out
and it showed like irrefutable evidence,
perfectly safe, no detriment whatsoever?
I wouldn't, and I'll tell you why.
Yeah, I already know why, and I think we all have the same way.
All the foods that are artificially sweetened,
what benefit, there's really nothing else
they can give me that, I mean, maybe if I want a sweet
or something and I don't want sugar
and I know it's perfectly safe, I'll have it,
but just, there's really no other benefit
to those foods, typically.
They're not, they're usually heavily processed
or there's no like real nutrient benefit.
It's usually a quote unquote, you know, shitty type of food.
So I'll pretty much eat the same way I do now.
Do I think this is gonna ever happen?
No, I think it's super, I don't, I think it's going the other way.
Yeah, I think it's super irresponsible to assume that you can consume anything
and it has zero effect on you.
You know, I mean, it doesn't do anything to your body.
I think that's irresponsible.
I think we're finding now with studies.
We used to think that sucralose completely,
for example, went through your body.
Well, now we know.
That's not true.
Well, actually, some of it gets stored.
I would say, I mean, he even describes like it's,
it's safe or has no detriment on the way that you eat,
but is it benefiting you? Is it giving you nutrients? that you eat, but is it benefiting you?
Is it giving you nutrients?
You know, like, is it giving you things that,
you know, like, your cells are craving for?
Is this part of like, you know, a chemistry
that you need to thrive with?
And I just don't see any of that, even with sugar.
It's like, it's not one of those things
that I'm looking at, like, you know, oh, sweet.
That's, that's nutrient dense, you know, that's, you know, that's something I'm seeking out, you know,
not so I'm sparingly, you know, even thinking about it. So I, even if it's like he said, right,
the study comes out totally not. And the reason why I wouldn't is, so since I've been like in
two to eating, I haven't been tracking for quite some time now. The process that, how I do this is,
I've made like a list of all these foods
that are beneficial to my body,
especially the ones I know I don't get on a like a regular basis,
like let's say like bell peppers,
you know, I'm trying to target my digestive enzymes, right?
So that's something that,
so instead of like eliminating or not allowing certain foods,
I'm actually targeting foods.
So I'm every day I'm trying to go after things in my diet. Now that being said, I still
have things that have artificial sweeteners in there that do. I just don't
fool myself to think that it's okay or in whether it is or not. It's not giving
me anything good. It's not an ideal thing. I should be consuming. It's not on your
list of foods that you're going after. Yeah, I'm most certainly not going after it.
I'm most certainly not making a habit
that it's always in my diet
because it isn't beneficial.
So I don't sweat about it if I decide
to have a diet coke one time
or hey, I've been out at somewhere for a long time
and someone has a quest bar
and I open it up and eat it.
Like I'm not fucking freaking out
or I'm not like that little bitch who's like,
oh no, I can't have that.
I won't eat that.
No, it's not like that. But what I am not doing either is I'm not like that little bitch who's like, oh no, I can't have that. I won't eat that. No, it's not like that.
But what I am not doing either is I'm not fooling myself
to think that it's fucking beneficial at all.
Well, here's the way I look at it.
I don't eat lots of sweets anyway,
but if I want one, I'll get one, right?
Yeah.
Does sweet sweetened with sugar taste better
than sweetened with artificial sweeteners?
Right.
Yes. Like, there's no fucking competition. with artificial sweeteners. Right. Yes.
Like, there's no fucking competition.
Like, artificial sweeteners definitely are better than nothing,
but they don't compare to real sugar.
Sugar just tastes better.
So if I'm going to have a sweeten,
since I don't have it all the time,
then I'm just going to have it with fucking sugar.
Dude, on that note, the argument then is the low calorie.
I was just going to say, that's such a, you know what?
It's such a good point.
Well, that's because they wanted every day. Yeah, exactly. I know. That is say, that's such a, you know what? It's such a good point, so. Well, that's cause they wanted every day.
Yeah, exactly.
I know.
That is such a good point because, you know what?
You should have it with real sugar,
and the reason why you should is because you should eat it
as much as you can keep it.
Keep it in your diet without it
of fucking adding a bunch of weight to your body.
If you have real sugar, you can have real sugar
just fine throughout your day,
or throughout your week, or whatever, and it not make you fat.
If it's making you fat, you're probably abusing it.
Yeah, if it makes you sick, and if you're eating a shit ton of it,
that's a problem, but like, I don't have sweets every day.
I just don't.
I have them every once in a while.
So when I do, I'm not going to be like,
ooh, I want something sweet.
I'm going to go for that Splenda flavored fucking cupcake. I'm going to get the real cupcake.
Dude, I swear this all comes back from that whole dessert thing, like that concept of
dessert, like having to have dessert after a meal. It's like, why am I rewarding myself
for eating fucking food? I don't get it. Congratulations, you're a food.
Yeah, he did. I get that cupcake. Yeah.
Here's some more food.
Do you know the truth?
I think the reason why we're so passionate about it
because when you've trained so many clients
and you've had this discussion sitting with someone privately
and you're trying to help them through all this,
the reason why we speak so passionately.
And I think people think that we demonize
artificial sweeteners.
Or it's like, no, what I know is that 90 plus percent of the people
I've ever sat down and talked to about helping them out with their eating the reason why they do all these things because they want
Them in their diet all this if you have to fight to keep it in there. That's a problem. Yes
Get out of here. It just just just admit that you don't want it in your diet and you know
It'll show up, but like it's not ideal
Yeah, and let it be and let it be a natural thing that checks you don't want it in your diet, and it'll show up, but it's not ideal.
And let it be a natural thing that checks you.
Don't demonize it.
Don't fucking be all weird about it
if it happens to come in.
Because what happens is you look at something
that's a sweet and you think,
instead of it being a treat, like it should be,
you think, oh, it's got no sugar
because it's hard to fish the sweet.
I can have this every day.
And then that's what they do.
They have it every single day.
Yeah.
And the supplement, of course,
the supplementary need this.
Take advantage of this.
They need this.
Right, take advantage of this.
And listen, I hate to say this, okay, but this is true.
There's a massive conflict of interest
when you are a fitness professional
or a fitness celebrity or whatever
and you're touting how perfectly safe
artificial sweeteners aren't how great they are
and you sell products sweetened with those things.
It's just a huge conflict of interest,
and of course they're gonna say that.
Why wouldn't they?
Why wouldn't they say?
They'd be stupid, because if they have to,
because if they didn't,
then everybody's going to question,
why do you have something?
Well, look, all you gotta do is look,
mark my words, we got about five years,
and you'll start to see this, you already seen it.
We already had lots of people report to us
from the Arnold Classic Convention saying,
I couldn't believe how many booths for
more natural products or products, sweetened naturally
versus artificially were coming out.
I think that you're gonna see more and more companies do this
because consumers are asking for it.
They're saying, no, I don't want that kind of stuff.
And we got some studies coming out like,
the stuff on sucralose and the gut flora
and aspartame, you know, and how it affects the brain
and certain things, like, as more and more stuff comes out,
more of it becomes available because of the internet,
you can see less and less people want those
in their products, they're gonna want more things
that are sweetened naturally.
Well, I think people just don't realize
that there is such a thing as healthier foods.
And I hate that there's people out there that are realize that there is such a thing as healthier foods.
And I hate that there's people out there that are saying that there's no such thing as
good food, bad food.
Yes, there is such thing as healthier food than other foods.
It's a fucking fact.
And that's what we know.
And there's still a lot that we don't know.
There's still so much we're learning because we have not been able to completely take all
the benefits that's inside of a bell pepper
or avocado or whatever, and then put it into a wrapper.
We haven't.
Sure, we can take the macro nutrients and say,
oh, the protein.
No, we know.
The protein's matching.
We've talked about man's called swollen.
Yeah, right.
It's not anything you need in the powder.
It is not the same.
There's a reason why that is, and it will forever be that way.
Oh, I shouldn't say that because you know what, maybe.
Yeah, who knows?
Yeah, who knows?
Maybe one day we figure out how to do that,
but we're not there yet.
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