Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 477: Steps to a Deep Squat, Why Some People Can Eat Crap & Stay Lean & Working Through Insecurities
Episode Date: March 22, 2017Kimera-Quah! iTunes Review Winners! 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 reason ...why some people can eat crap and stay lean, something they recently felt insecure about and how they worked through it and the steps to progressing someone to a deep squat. 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)
Transcript
Discussion (0)
So in this episode coming up, we got really deep
in a question.
A little mushy today.
The girls got wad podcast girls, of course.
They always asked to do to us.
They like to fuck with us.
They asked us a really good question
about our insecurities and how we handle them.
And one of the things that we really,
the common theme in that conversation was
that it's really important to have people around you
with a community.
That you can talk with
about these things and be open with knowing you're not being judged. You know that the advice you're going to get
is going to be coming from a good place and it really helps you become aware of all these different things.
And you know it really pops into my mind talking about that was just this the forum that we have.
Oh yeah. The private forum. I mean that's's, and I don't know if we even,
it really intended it for to go that direction
at one point, but I think that people,
so many people connected with each other
when we first started it that they felt so comfortable
with sharing these things and they wouldn't share it
with even their other friends or family.
People saying they're engaged in like,
all these like, mega-lific life People saying they're engaged in like all these like
mega-lithic like life moments,
they're all sharing here because it's like,
it's just a free format for people
that just help each other out.
Become a very strong community that's judgment-free, right?
I mean, I feel like everybody is there.
Well, it's, there's that, there's the support factor,
there's the information factor,
people sharing such great information,
debating great ideas, and I love seeing that
because people are respectful
and they just wanna get to the truth.
And so it's just kind of the vibe, right?
It's the culture of the form
where people are really just trying to get
to the truth of whatever question.
And at the end of it, people come out learning something.
I learn every day going on our forum.
Absolutely.
It's an awesome community.
We're not going to keep it open for new people forever.
It's just a reality.
We don't want to, I'm not trying to get it to 10,000 people.
At some point, we'll create something else that, you know, where we could grow that.
But this core forum right here, we keep raising the price because more and more people are
signing up.
And the price will be going up again next month.
We are going to be raising the price again, so we're going to close out on the current
rate for it this month.
We're also giving away free forum access if you enroll in the RGB bundle, which is Maps
and Obolic, Maps Performance and Maps Esthetic, 9 months of exercise programming, or if you
enroll in the step above that, which is the maps Superbundle,
which also includes maps anywhere, which is our equipment free workout program, and maps
prime, which we also talk about in this episode, which has a compass, which helps yourself
assess, and then teaches you how to prime your workouts.
So if you enroll in either one of those bundles, you get four of them access for free.
And by the way, once you're in, you're in for life.
You pay once, and that's it.
Regardless of how high the price goes up
or however it changes your in for life,
you can find all of this at mindpumpmedia.com.
T-shirt time.
Let's fly out of shirts out.
Yeah, we had 20 reviews this week.
Oh, okay, back on top.
Yep, back on top.
It's like goodness.
I like it in depressed.
I thought you liked bottom.
Ooh, sorry. Hey. We're giving away top. It's like getting depressed. I thought you'd like bottom. Ooh, sorry.
Hey.
We're giving away six shirts.
Only on Thursdays.
All right, so I'm gonna read these off.
We got dirty doof.
That's a dirty doof.
Oh yeah.
Winner.
Handsome Han.
Winner.
Wow, I like that guy.
Flashethan.
Winner, we got some good ones.
Flashethan. I want to sign up for that. I'll I like that guy. Flash a thon. Winner, we got some good ones. Flash a thon. I want to sign it for that.
I'll let this one in here. Organ vibrator. Whoa.
Organ, play me a tune there. Did you say organ or organ? Organ. Organ vibrator.
Organ vibrator. And finally got bags. All of you are winners. Send your name. The one I just read to iTunes at MindPumpMedia.com.
Send your shirt size, your shipping address, the one I just read to iTunes at MindPumpMedia.com,
send your shirt size, your shipping address,
and we'll get that right out to you.
Thank you.
If you wanna pump your body and expand your mind,
please only one place to go.
Mind, mind, pop, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
Blaming on the Doug, yeah. Yeah. Hey, what happened? We on the way to Reno
We must have we did a whole like a series of 80s 80s cartoons and so night
You had a ton of them in your your role of the extra what happened brother? Jalusum
What do you mean? No, there were TV show or TV shows? Yeah, no shows
He shows yeah, just had a ton of jingles. Did you lose them already?
Well, you know, it's one trip me out the most I'm banking them all dude. I was bosom buddies guys are my bosom buddies
Yeah, yeah bosom buddies for most of our listeners because I'm sure none of them
It was an old very popular TV show where there was these two guys the premise is fucking stupid
But anyways, it's a cross dressed well hold, an apartment is so hard to find in New York,
apparently during this period of time,
that they finally found this perfect apartment
with the perfect price, but,
but it was in a lady's only.
It's in a women's only building.
So in order to get the apartment,
what they do is they pretend to be women.
And so they dress up as women when they're there.
And Tom Hanks was in it.
Tom Hanks was on the guys.
Oh, that's right, he was, yeah, yeah. I didn't remember Tom Hanks was in it. Tom Hanks was the only guy. Oh, that's right, he was, yeah, yeah.
I didn't remember Tom Hanks being in it.
Oh yeah, man.
It's the funniest show ever,
but it would never work today because of that.
Oh no, people would freak out, dude.
Well now you just be like,
oh, they're just looking for an excuse
to dress up like girls.
You know what I mean?
It would never work.
It was hilarious.
Remember they'd answer the door when someone
would ring the doorbell?
It was easy, it was.
Yeah, yeah, that would never work no
Would you guys do this weekend? What do we do this weekend? Where we together this weekend?
This wasn't this wasn't this Reno. What were we do? Where we just at we just for together
Reno come we're back. Yeah, what do we yeah? What day we get back came back on Friday? Oh, so we had Saturday and Sunday
Jesus to what did we do in Reno? came back on Friday. Oh, so we had Saturday and Sunday. Jesus, dude.
What did we do in Reno?
We were just here, everything.
Seriously, I was trying to plan something
with my buddies the other day,
and I'm honestly, and they get so mad at me.
I don't know our schedule.
I have no idea where we're supposed to be.
I feel like one, we're here one day,
that way another day,
someone's coming in another day.
Like, this has been, I mean,
talk about quite the experience right now.
This is just, I've never had anything that I've done
that requires this much flying in and out
all over the place.
I'm enjoying it.
Don't get me wrong.
It's awesome.
Yeah, I really, but it's also can be challenging for it.
Yeah, I mean, and I can't imagine you guys with kids
and stuff like that and family at home,
how much how challenging.
It's like jockey, it's a jockey race.
I'm, I mean, luckily I'm blessed with a good family
and then my girlfriend watched my kids
for the first time last week.
Oh, how'd that go?
Yeah, I was like, she's a wizard with children.
I mean, that like literally, she's a wizard.
I've seen her work with, I've seen her with my kids,
I've seen her with kids and her family.
I've seen her with like when we're out
and there's like a random kid, like they seen her with my kids, I've seen her with kids in her family, I've seen her with like when we're out and there's like a random kid,
like they just connect with her
and she gets my kids to do shit
that would normally require,
she gets them to do it easily.
Stuff that requires me to become gangster.
Like when I'm like,
she's, yeah, I'm gonna give you three seconds
before I, you know, secretly beat them.
No, she's so, you know what it is.
God, I had a crazy realization this weekend.
So, she's just super effective.
And I think when you're raised a particular way,
and then you have your own kids,
you don't realize that there may be some things
that you're doing that are ineffective or wrong
because it's so hard-wired.
It's so hard-wired, you just don't realize,
I'll give you an example.
In my culture, so my family's just soian.
And in my culture,
a lot of hands are thrown around.
Yeah, in my culture, you feed the fuck,
and you force feed your children.
You just do it.
And we all joke about it.
I like grandma making you eat all this food,
and if you don't eat, she feels offended,
and she feels like you have to eat more.
Too skinny.
But it's in our culture to the point where dinner time
is stressful for everybody because if the kid doesn't eat,
then you, you bribe, you threaten them, you know,
well, you can't eat this unless we stay there
until they finish the entire play.
Yeah, you know, it's that whole thing,
but it's so ingrained in my culture that I've now
connected it with like that means I'm a loving parent.
Like if I give my kids something to eat
and they're like, I don't wanna eat this,
if I don't make them eat it,
I must not love them.
And it's this really deep ingrained thing inside of me.
Oh yeah, I can totally identify it.
And it sucks because I didn't really fully realize it
until recently, because I was talking to my girlfriend
about this and she's like, you know, I'm watching your daughter, you know, and she's over my parents' house.
And my mom is like, you know, obviously she's old school. And she was like getting my daughter
to eat all of her chicken. And she's like, and I can see how stressed out your daughter is about it.
And she goes, if she does eat it because you're pressuring her to eat it, what are you accomplishing?
You're not, what you're doing is you may eat it, you're, what are you accomplishing?
You're not, what you're doing is you may be setting up a bad
relationship to food and I was like, holy fuck.
Like, I am totally doing that.
I'm totally creating this bad relationship by doing that around me.
I had a moment like that because my son's birthdays today and...
Oh, happy birthday.
Yeah, hey, my buddy.
You're telling me, you're telling me. You're telling me from my reach to Italian all of a sudden. Happy birthday My buddy
You're telling me
Your for kids gonna be so fucking confused
Yeah, he just doesn't know He's all the above probably But yeah, no, so we were at my in-laws house,
and we're going through the same process of like,
okay, there's all this food out there.
And my youngest, he eats so much food for breakfast.
We realize, Courtney and I both realize
that this is our time frame with him.
He does best at eating as much much of the calories the calorie bulk of
the day is breakfast.
And so eating dinner like dinner is like this weird social thing, right?
It's this this pressured situation where you have all the families are together and we're
all kind of celebrating the birthday.
And so you expect the kids to behave a certain way.
They have to sit still.
They have to like never talk, you know, they have to like eat all of their food
that they prepare for them because, you know,
it's, and I get it,
because there's a lot of love that goes into preparing
these foods and wanting these kids to enjoy it,
not stuff, but I know, my son's like,
he ain't any of it.
He's not, he's not gonna eat any of it.
Oh really? Is he super picky or what?
Yeah, absolutely, but he just doesn't eat dinner
at all. So here's. So, here's something that this that happened this weekend that was so
effective that my girlfriend did. So, she's been reading this book on communicating with
children and how kids learn best. And one of the things is one of the things that she did
is she gives them an option. So, she said to my kids,
like, okay, I made lamb, I made broccoli,
and I made rice, and my daughter'd be like,
well, I don't like lamb.
I should be like, okay, you can choose to eat something else,
but you have to prepare it yourself.
Here's what we have in the house.
And of course, we don't have shitty bad foods in the house.
I was like, okay, your options are,
fruity pebbles, and I said something like,
I have sardines, I have two to fish,
and I have chicken, and I have chicken,
and you can prepare it yourself and eat it.
And so my daughter, my daughter is very strongweld,
very, very strongweld, which I love.
I love that about her, it makes it difficult,
but I love that about her.
So my daughter's like, well, I'm not eating lamb,
so I'm like, well, you can prepare yourself some tuna fish
and eat that, so, you know, it's up to you, and she goes, fine, I'll eat tuna fish. Now, I know damn well, tuna'm not eating lamb, so I'm like, well, you can prepare yourself some tuna fish and eat that. So, you know, it's up to you and she goes, fine, I'll eat tuna fish.
Now, I know damn well, tuna out of a can is fucking disgusting, but she chose it.
So, I said, no problem, so I went along with it and I said, okay, so she got the tuna,
I helped her open the can, she did the whole prep, put it on the plate, sat down in front
of it, and she fucking ate it.
And I know she didn't like it, but the reason she ate it is because it was her choice.
Because it was her choice.
She said she would.
Absolutely, it's smart. And I know she didn't like it, but the reason she ate it is because it was her choice. She said she would. She said she would.
Absolutely, that's smart.
And not only that, but I'm not creating this anxiety
like situation where the stressful situation
where they develop this potentially bad relationship
with food or eating time or whatever.
The other thing too is like if they don't eat lunch,
like I'll pack them a lunch and if they come home,
they used to get in trouble.
I'd open their lunch and be like,
you didn't eat your lunch, you know?
And now it's like, what's the big deal?
Like, they don't want to eat, fuck it. Yeah. And that's, you didn't need your lunch. And now it's like, what's the big deal? Like, is anyone eat?
Fuck it.
Yeah.
And that's, you know, fine.
Yeah.
You're not going to die if you miss one meal.
Yeah.
What?
Isn't it so counterintuitive?
Like, it's so counter to our message of like how we now as adults were trying to like
portion out and like cut down on the amount of food.
But, you know, meanwhile, you're trying to stuff your kids
with like as much as possible.
Like it in a beast kind of mentality.
You can't tell me.
You cannot tell me that that is not gonna promote.
That's my realization.
Like I totally realized like,
holy shit, I am promoting the exact opposite.
You know where that comes from?
It's that famine mentality.
It's the old school.
It's like my parents generation where they, it was passed famine mentality. It's the old school, it's like my parents' generation
where it was passed down to them that like,
no way, you have to lick your plate clean.
You know, for you to leave this table.
Well, I mean, not that many generations ago,
like my grandfather's generation,
and Sissley were very poor, like very, very poor,
and you didn't always have great food.
So sometimes you had food in front of you
that looked, it was plain or gross or whatever.
And it was like, eat the hell out of it because who knows?
Yeah, you might not get another meal another day.
And so they developed this, that's a real thing.
They developed this like manipulative like culture
of how you manipulate your children to eat.
Like you time them, you create a race.
Like who can eat the fastest or you bribe them
or you punish them,
all around food, and it hit me like a ton of bricks this weekend
when I saw that and I was like, wow, that was effective.
And I'm like, holy fuck, what I'm doing,
not only is not working, it's doing the opposite
of what I want to do.
And there's nothing like as a parent.
Let me tell you something.
There is nothing like realizing you're fucking your children up.
I swear to God, like, you hit a moment,
you're like, what the fuck am I doing?
Oh no.
Yeah, I said, oh shit.
I've been doing this.
Yeah.
What have I done?
Yeah.
So yeah, that was that.
This weekend, I actually had an opportunity
to spend some time with a child therapist, right?
So she did.
Oh really?
Yeah, yeah.
So I actually, it's funny we're talking about this right now
because I love when I meet somebody like this
and she's, I get to ask her, you know, what's your favorite part of the job and some
paradigm shattering moments for.
And you know, when I meet someone like this, I'll absorb as much information as I can
and then I'll take notes in my phone and they'll go back and research some of the stuff
that she gave me and start reading myself.
And so she told me one of the most paradigm, paradigm, shattering moments for her in her career was reading Dr. Mary Ainsworth and it talks about the attachment theory. And
it goes right along the lines of what you guys are talking about right now about the, there's
they break it up in four different quadrants on the type of attachment that the child has
created because through the relationships and how that is deep rooted in all of us.
And it really shapes who we come as adults.
And she told me, you know,
reading to her stuff, you'll enjoy some of that.
So I've already started research and looking into it.
So I'll let you guys know when I pick it up.
But I love this stuff.
I think that one of my favorite things to do
when I meet people is to kind of learn about their childhood
because I think you, it tells so much about a person.
Learning about someone's childhood
and their library of books, to me,
like I can find so much out about a person like that.
And it's crazy that so many parents,
especially young parents, you know,
people that have kids in the early 20s,
it's such a scary thing I feel like because, you know, you're having kids in the, you know, they're early 20s. It's such a scary thing, I feel like, because, you know,
you're having kids at such an impressionable age, man,
that that five to seven year olds, like, this,
they're really, they're really shaping,
you're shaping their mind at that time and,
and she's no pressure.
Well, you know, it's funny.
Oh my God, I'm in love.
Well, she actually, what she said though,
was and she made, she was careful when she's sharing this
with me, she's like, you know, and, you know,
I'm not to say that, like, you know, and not to say that,
like, you know, scary way,
because it's impossible to be a perfect parent.
She's like, it's possible to make every right decision.
It's not about that, but just being aware of that
and being mindful that, you know, you're shaping a mind
that you're really, you're forming an adult right now,
you know, from five to nine years old,
the things the way you communicate,
the relationships they build,
the relationships they have with food, like you guys are talking about will form
them for the rest of their lives.
And I just don't think a lot of parents, especially young parents that have kids, really think
about those things.
You know, they're so caught up and they're still figuring their fucking selves out.
You know, you're 25 years old or something.
You still haven't fucking fully grown up yourself and you're still trying to figure out your
way. Meanwhile you've got a kid who's five years old that you're shaping and forming them.
Like sometimes you've got to stop and think about it before you just yell at them for doing
something or scold them for this or take something away from them or not spend the time
to explain to them why you're doing these things.
All that shit matters.
This is why when parents become grandparents,
they're like so excited to become a grandparent
because it's literally,
they learned all this shit.
Well, because I think what happened.
What is so pressure?
Well, from talking to my parents
and my kids, other grandparents
and other people who are grandparents,
I'm very curious with this process
and because there's this common theme, right?
When you're a parent, you're stressed out,
you're running all over the place,
and all of a sudden become a grandparent,
and you're like, oh my God, it's even better
than when I was a first apparent.
And part of the reason is,
I think when you first become a parent.
You're more attention.
Yeah, you forget to be present.
And then it's gone, and you're like, oh my God,
I totally missed out on all that time.
Now I get to, you know, kind of revisit it again.
I read a quote, I can't remember exactly what it said
but it was something like kids are really kids do a really bad job of listening to what you're gonna tell them
But they do a really job of copying you or observing so in other words
I think 90% of the battle is just be what you want them to be you know, I mean well
That's like 90% of it. A lot of the lines that another thing that we, she shared with me, and I asked her about,
and she talked about what she called motivational interviewing.
And she said that, you know, something that is showing a lot of progress, right, in their
field, is actually, instead of like telling somebody like, no, don't do this or trying
to like force kids in a direction is actually finding the
things that motivate them and helping them break down why they enjoy that so much and encouraging
that direction based off those things versus you need to do this or I want to go this direction
for, you know, like because you're supposed to or like that.
Well, let's discuss the things that actually really motivate you and then let's break down
why you like doing that stuff so much.
What is it that you enjoy, son or daughter that makes you want,
it drives you to do these things and helping them connect those dots,
even at a young age?
I think that's the part that we're a lot of people just miss out on.
And that's why I love when you guys share your guys's interaction with your children
because I think that you guys are very aware parents.
And I don't think there's a lot of that, man.
I mean, I grew up in a home where, a home where my mom had me a 20 years old,
and my dad commits suicide when I'm seven years old,
and then she remarries into an abusive relationship.
So my poor mom is like, she's fucking in a whirlwind,
and I'm this kid that's kind of growing up in all this.
Well, you were thrust into becoming a parent.
Exactly. And that's actually the role that in all this. Well, you were thrust into becoming a parent. Exactly.
And that's actually the role that I have
with my own mother and father is it's a reverse role.
It's really ironic.
And I totally am grateful for that
because it forced me to mature at a very young age.
But I mean, a lot of people don't know
how to pull them separate themselves from that
and like pay attention to like,
hey, my relationship, and I think you guys do a really good job of that. So I attention to like, hey, you know, my relationship,
and I think you guys do a really good job of that.
So I really like when you guys,
I know my in pump is so fitness related,
but damn dude, I feel like so many people,
and being a kid who grew up in a home like that,
you know, it means so much to me to hear guys,
like you guys share that information with the,
you know, thousands or fucking millions of people that are listening to the show.
Well, when you look at the whole other learning process, you know,
well, it's just going through like the learning curve of being a parent
and mistakes that you make and, you know, like you said, it's,
it's really just about acknowledging that you don't,
you don't know everything and like you just have to be real mindful about what you say,
what you do, and just kind of observe your child's behavior
and see that it's a reflection of yourself.
You know, like everything you're doing,
like their patterns are just a mirror
of what you've established.
Yeah, I mean, it's crazy.
You know, part of that conversation I had over the weekend
when my girlfriend was, you know,
she made this interesting point and she said,
if you just, and this doesn't matter if you have kids or not,
it's just, if you just try to be a little bit better every day.
So every day, I'm just gonna become a little bit better
of a person.
Over time, you become a great,
you become a really, really good person.
If you treat parenthood like that, where every day I'm gonna try and be a little bit better, a little bit better, you become a really, really good person. If you treat parenthood like that,
where every day I'm gonna try and be a little bit better,
a little bit better, a little bit better,
you end up becoming a pretty awesome parent.
And just to take it back to fitness,
I know Adam, he mentioned we're fitness show,
and we are, but I'll tell you what,
when it comes to all the issues that people have
with food and exercise, I think you could bring it, and it comes to all the issues that people have with food and exercise,
I think you could bring it and really bring it all the way down to things that may have happened in childhood. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100%. 100 for the too much or they find themselves binging or they have issues with ballooning and weight and then dropping tons away or whatever, you can really usually take that back to something
that happened, some kind of insecurity or something developed through childhood.
And so that was one of the things for me that was big.
I thought to myself, you know what, I got to be very open to the fact that I may be doing
this completely wrong.
Well, that's what I think that's what inspired us a lot
with this show is that, you know, we all battle our own
insecurities.
I mean, we're dealing with our own stuff that, you know,
we've had since we were kids and it took 30 years
to put it together and realize like, holy shit,
like, you know, this is really the driving factor.
And I think that you can't avoid that, right?
I think that's, it's inevitable that's going to happen to everybody.
Everybody's going to have some sort of a driving insecurity.
And I think the trick is to be aware of it and then to know how to use it.
Like, I feel like there is some strengths behind that.
I mean, some of your, some of the greatest athletes and the greatest minds
that I've personally have met and sat down with, like, some of these guys,
like, part of why they're so successful in this other areas
because they were so driven from an insecurity.
So it's not like it's all bad
that comes from an insecurity.
I think it's just having control of it
and being aware of it.
I think that's the ultimate goal.
I mean, the attitude you can grow.
Yeah, you know, having that growth mindset.
Exactly.
I think grow from it, right?
To learn how to harness it, to understand that,
hey, this is what motivated me for most of my life, but it's not my end all be all. I think I broke my own self. I think I broke my own self. I think I broke my own self. I think I broke my own self. I think I broke my own self.
I think I broke my own self.
I think I broke my own self.
I think I broke my own self.
I think I broke my own self.
I think I broke my own self.
I think I broke my own self.
I think I broke my own self.
I think I broke my own self.
I think I broke my own self.
I think I broke my own self.
I think I broke my own self.
I think I broke my own self.
I think I broke my own self.
I think I broke my own self.
I think I broke my own self.
I think I broke my own self.
I think I broke my own self.
I think I broke my own self.
I think I broke my own self.
I think I broke my own self. I think I broke my own self. I think I broke my own self. I think I broke my own self. I think I broke my own self. Caw! Caw! Caw! Caw! Caw!
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It's the motherfucking Caw!
The Eagle English landed!
Que coix!
What?
All right, first up is Carlos Benitez.
Why can some people eat like shit and stay lean?
Hmm.
That's a good question because I hear this
from people all the time and I observe this
as a kid myself.
And when I went through personal training school
or the fitness world, I went into it
thinking to myself like, man, like, you've got some people
that can eat whatever they want.
And they stay skinny.
And then you've got other people that barely eat.
And then they get real fat.
And what the hell, what's going on?
Someone has a fast metabolism.
Someone has a slow metabolism.
That was the language that I understood at that time.
And then I went to, you know, get my first certification and they taught us
that it was calories in versus calories out.
And it was all about how many calories you burn, how many calories you
eat and that was it.
And then I thought to myself, wow, those fat people really lie, you know,
their liars like they just eat like a ton of food.
It's crazy.
We all went through that.
I went through that.
Yeah, and that skinny people, they eat a lot of garbage,
but they don't need a lot of it.
Like they eat it when I see them, right?
But then they don't eat tons of meals.
And I would kind of rationalize.
And is that true for some people?
Definitely.
Is it true for everybody?
No.
Then I'd realize and learn later on that there are genetic
variances between individuals. There are, and we're identifying now, things like
the microbiome that influences this, hormones that influence this, can you
affect your metabolic rate to the point where you can slow it down, cause damage
to it through your lifestyle. Yes. Is some of that affected by your genes, yes.
And then I realized that the the
variances, the differences between individuals can be very dramatic.
But you do want to remember that most people are somewhere in the middle.
So when we are truly talking about someone that just can eat just a ton of garbage and just stay
lean, that is an outlier, that is not the average person.
Most people, if they had a lot of garbage,
would gain lots of body fat and just not,
they would look like they had a lot of garbage.
There are outliers though,
that make up a small percentage of the population
of people where they eat, you know, whatever they want
and, or they eat not well at all,
and they maintain themselves pretty lean.
A lot of us were like that when we were young teenagers.
I remember, especially when I was 13, 14, 15 years old,
those early teen years where I wanted to,
because remember I had insecurities about being skinny,
so I wanted to gain weight.
And I know I ate a lot of food.
You guys know my personality.
Oh God, at that age you are fucking moving like no other man.
But see, here's the thing, like I did a little bit of judo,
but I wasn't athletic.
Like you guys played a lot of sports.
Like I did a lot of reading and watching TV.
And I do some stuff outside, but I wasn't like outside playing
hard all the time.
But I ate a lot like in the morning, I would like,
I drink half a gallon of milk,
and he massive bowls of cereal and have all these eggs. And would like, I drink half a gallon of milk,
and he massive bowls of cereal and have all these eggs
and that lunch I'd have like three sandwiches
and then dinner I'd eat everything.
And if I ate like I ate when I was 14,
if I ate like that now,
I would easily be 30, 40 pounds overweight.
So I experienced that myself,
but no doubt that had to do with the fact
that my hormones were,
I probably had the perfect hormone profile
to just be lean.
Well, I think why we are drawn to the question naturally is we just got off of hanging out
with Rob Wolf and talk about a fucking great dude to pick his brain when you get into
this type of a topic because one of the things that he mentions is just how we don't take
an account, when he talked to a nutritionist and dieticians and stuff
that they don't take account of their ancestry
and where they came from.
And they're like,
In evolution.
Yeah, in evolution,
how is that not accounted for?
And how can you not see how obvious is that
different types of people respond differently
to all different types of foods?
And so, you know, and like Sal said,
there's always gonna be an exception to the rule. There's going to be that guy that can eat whatever he wants, barely
touches any weights, muscle builds on his body. Well, that's where we always talk about that.
Genetics always play the number one rule. Like, you know, what dictates this person to be this way
or that way? Like, genetics are always going to be a major factor. And then like, you know,
movement, activity, things like that, also another major factor. So, but I think for the most part,
there is a general rule for all the things that we talk about,
but I think you can't focus on those people.
I think you can't, I mean, everyone's probably met somebody too
that was like, you ever met somebody who was just like,
fucking brilliant, they were brilliant at a,
I mean, just the way they're probably even trying.
Yeah, without even trying, like he wasn't working any harder,
or studying any harder than I was,
but like things just came together for them,
or that you talk about people that can play like the piano,
they just start playing,
and without hardly any practice or playing a swarming,
there's definitely these components,
and I think a lot of that goes back to our ancestry,
and how we've evolved from our parents, grandparents. And there's a complex amount of variables
that will sort of trigger or sort of express
these types of genes, right?
So depending on what kind of card hand you're dealt
and you have this hand that there's a specific formula
that will definitely optimize this hand.
God, that's such a great point right with her, which you're saying because this is something
that we don't talk a lot about that people don't realize.
This is a, and I remember I saw a great TED talk a couple of years back.
This is a major factor of the evolution of what we've seen in sports.
Everybody knows, especially if you're a sports watcher, everybody knows if you watch
basketball or football right now and you compared to what it was 30 years ago
Holy shit like the athletes are just
Freaks well then a lot of people like myself used to think like oh, that's because of steroids and you know that type of stuff
No, what we've gotten really good at is learning how to figure out body types that were specific for the sports
Like what Justin's talking about picking the best athletes for sports
Yeah, these people were already genetically ideal for this.
Then they put all the time and work and effort
and training into it,
and that's what's make them look almost superhuman
in comparison to the average person.
It's like, they were already built to fit in this category,
and now we've learned to like enhance it.
And the sooner that you can figure out
this very specific formula,
the more, you know, the high performance you're gonna be
further on in life.
I know a lot of the super athletes out there
that I've even been blessed to meet,
they've figured out when they're really, really little
what they're good at, and they fine tune and sharpen
that very specific way to optimize their movement,
to eat all the stuff at a very young age.
So I see two lessons out of this question.
Like the first message and lesson from it is,
and I hate to say it this way because, you know,
it sounds kind of cliche,
but don't like, don't worry about other people.
That's number one, because people are so different
that if you worry about other people,
you're not going to figure out the best
way for yourself.
It just, you just can't do that.
And there are, I mean, you know, Adam brought up ancestry and evolution.
And I'll give you a couple examples of extreme or more extreme versions of that.
For example, Native Americans.
Native Americans, diabetes rate is something like two or three times is high,
as everybody else, when they eat the same,
when they eat the same Western American diet,
you know, the typical American diet,
their diabetes rate is much higher than if you have a Caucasian,
you know, from European descent,
even like the African American with lactose intolerance.
Yeah, and extremely high.
And there's lots of theories to it,
one of them being that they were hunter-gatherers for much longer.
And so they were not exposed to high levels of starches and these types of things and
sugars.
And then when they eat the typical American diet, their body responds much different.
Now, this situation, those people may do better on a higher fat, moderate protein, lower carbohydrate diet.
Now in the flip, you can put low carb higher fat diets
on some people and they might have a polymorphism
that gives them at a control triglycerides
and cholesterol, that exists too.
So you really figuring out what works best for you
and I hate saying that because it sounds
like such a general question, but it's very, very true.
So, you know, someone might be shitting it, but it might work for them, you know.
The other thing too is like, appearances don't tell you everything.
There's a lot of people who are under way.
They don't tell you much at all.
Yeah, who are under way or at normal way, who have horrible, horrible health.
There's a, I mean, spontaneous death from heart,
where your heart just stops.
Like that happens at a higher rate amongst the hardcore athletes
than it does amongst the regular population.
You know, inflammatory markers were just starting to learn
how to read them and what they mean.
We're just starting to really break down
different, the different particle sizes within cholesterol
that tell us what those types of things,
you know, could potentially mean. So, there's so many factors, the different particle sizes within cholesterol that tell us what those types of things
could potentially mean.
So there's so many factors,
it's almost impossible to answer specifically.
Really just focus on yourself and just understand
that you're, although there are general truths,
and they'll direct you in particular directions
to try things out, you're so different and so individual
that the only way to really discover what's gonna work best for you on all levels everything from a psychological level to an adherence level to just what feels the best and what gets you the leaner
It's like asking why am I not Brad Pitt, you know, I mean yeah
You know, I should be Brad Pitt. I think that
You know part of to what I get really passionate about is these genetic anomalies that are out there that are spreading information.
And, you know, I'll tell you right now, the guys that are sitting in this room, like no one in here is in a genetic zone.
We are pretty close to average, as average can get, you know, and then have squeezing high and average. Well, and we struggle with all the same things
that our listeners do.
I mean, which average?
But I feel like that average plus.
This was an important piece to putting this trio together
also was, I mean, for marketing reasons,
it would be awesome to have a genetic anomaly
sitting right next to me.
You know, some guy that just eats Taco Bell
and looks fucking awesome.
It would be a lot more famous.
We would.
We would.
Or if he was like a super badass hot chick, you know, like that would just be awesome.
I would just want, I think you just want me to be hot.
No, but I mean, that's, be careful.
I mean, and I think if you could take anything from answering this quite, I'm the, you
know, caution you on where you guys get your information.
And, you know, is this guy or girl that's?
You know what sucks from this?
I'll tell you what sucks.
Social media creates this distorted version of vision
of just how many of these people exist.
Right.
Like if I go on Instagram and I'm looking at fitness people,
it gives me this distorted image that this,
what makes up normally makes up, you know,
1% of the population is everybody. Like, I'm looking through and I'm like,
oh my god, everybody's just genetic freak.
Let's look at that.
It's probably like 20 men and 20 women
that have like over a million followers, right?
But that's like who everybody looks at is like,
oh, I should look like this.
I just, just look, it would be like me looking at
and the NBA always, and judging be like me looking at the NBA always
and judging my basketball skills based on the NBA,
not realizing that I'm looking at such a small sliver
of the population of the world.
Like, look outside, stop looking at social media,
look outside, walk around outside, odds are
if you're working out a few days a week
and you're watching what you're eating.
You're taking a park at Disneyland.
Oh, that's what America looks like.
Oh my God.
Hey, both truth.
I can say truth right there.
You know, it is.
And think about the fitness celebrities that we follow
on social media and ask yourself,
how many times you've been sitting at Disneyland
or great America, one of these big theme parks,
like Justin said, and how many times
is that body type walk by?
Like I can't even think of, I don't,
and I tell you right now,
it doesn't, when it does, I remember.
Oh my God, yeah, right.
It would stand out like a sore thumb,
but when you're attached to them,
we're attached to them on social media
and they're all connected to the same people
and they're following all the kind of same pages,
it starts to come up in your feet all the time
and we get fed this information like this is,
or this is the norm,
or this is like, this could be possible for me,
if I just do some of these things of this guys do it or this girl's doing and
Reality they're nothing like you
Next up girls gone wad podcast. Oh our girls something you felt insecure about last week or month and how did you get through it?
Wow, you got me you're gonna go deep here. Yeah, wow, okay. I'll give you the first one that comes in mind
We're filled with insecurities. So it shouldn't be hard for us to put it
Yeah, so many why don't you go we can totally fuck with each other
I'm really open up like why don't we name each other's insecurities?
How about we take that love would be hell of a fight? Let's turn into a fight
Yes, no, so
I'll tell you the first one that just comes in mind is this last probably three weeks or so
Man, we have had a lineup. We have had a lineup of you know PhDs specialists and authors
That are just fucking brilliant. I mean brilliant brilliant men women. And that can be intimidating. That can be very intimidating when, especially when I don't know them ahead of time and their
first impression is meeting me, you know, the first time they come into the studio.
And I, you know, I'm totally somebody who, after a scenario or a situation like that happens,
I try and reflect like how I handled myself and this and that.
I totally evaluate all this.
You know, and I still act like a little school girl
with some of these guys and girls that come in
and we get a chance to meet and it's a,
it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a process
for me right now, right?
Like, and the insecurity part is feeling intellectually
inferior to these guys and girls that we,
because you're, I mean, you're talking about
some fucking brilliant minds, man.
And, you know, I'm a pretty confident guy,
but it can be very intimidating
when you're sitting in these interview situations
with some of these people.
And, you know, the way I handle it is,
I gotta do it, you know, it's part of the job, right?
So, I'm kind of forced into it.
And, you know, what I have, what I don't think I am completely yet,
is totally myself.
I still don't feel like I have 100% been comfortable
where I'm all the way me.
And I think part of that is the growing process
of mind-pump growing and us getting bigger
and becoming a bigger name in the industry.
Like, you know, some of these names now actually know who we are when we reach out to them,
which that definitely eases that, that, uh, in that insecurity feeling, you know, but
what I find myself doing and I told, I think I told this to you guys the other day is,
you know, imagine somebody like a Paul check just walks in or like a Tom Bill you or
someone like that just comes walking in or a Rob Wolf.
And I'm sitting down and I feel like I have to sell myself
to them in the first 20 minutes and that's my insecurity.
That's me feeling like I'm inferior to this person I'm talking to
and I'm trying to tell you how cool I am.
And it's so obvious to me because it's not normal.
I'm not that guy.
I'm not somebody who's like that, but I do find myself getting like that.
And, you know, it's tough.
And I try, I catch myself now and I just kind of shut up and then I redirect and probably
ask them more questions.
But I think that's probably the most glaring one to me right now.
I know we're riddled with tons of insecurities,
but that's something that's been on my mind
in the last couple weeks,
since you asked the last couple weeks or a month
that I've been dealing with.
And part of that is reassuring the confidence myself.
And one of the things that makes me feel better about it
is it's a really neat thing.
And I love noticing or watching this transition
is we'll be interviewing
these guys right and you know some of them may not have a major background on my some
of them may have never even listened to our show or maybe just listen to a little bit of
it so they don't really know much about us.
And it's so cool to sit with these gentlemen in an interview because these people will
be going back and forth and they're all super intellects and you'll notice they'll go
one direction or another direction,
and between the three of us, there's always one of us sick and really carry that conversation
deep with them, and you can always see the transition that they make, right? Because no matter how much we try and set it up,
we, the tattoos, the six foot three, you know, 200 pound dudes, standing in front of these people,
right away, we look like meatheads, and you can't help but think that we get judged that way.
And part of me feels like I'm trying to sell myself
on how we're not.
There's more to us, right?
But once we get into the interview and they get going,
you can watch this, you can watch them change.
You can see their demeanor change,
and it takes about 30 to 45 minutes.
It's fun though.
It is, it's awesome.
And I think the meat hand. I love blowing people's, you know, and I think the, me and-
I love blowing people's, you know, perception.
Yes, and I think, I think-
Or just blowing them.
Part of, whoa.
We'll leave that up to you.
So, part of why-
That's just an interesting-
I'm gonna get it in turn for them.
Part of me working through this insecurity
that I have of, and what I've noticed is,
and this is, this goes across the board
with these super intellects, you know, supreme athletes, I've been around, billionaires, I've noticed is, and this goes across the board with these super intellects,
you know, supreme athletes, I've been around,
billionaires I've been around, it's amazing.
When somebody is like, like just so dominant in an area,
they tend to be really off somewhere else,
either super socially awkward,
no self-awareness or emotional intelligence
or common sense, but then they're fucking brilliant
in this area.
And when I, as soon as I noticed that and I recognized that, I realized, oh, fuck, dude,
I'm doing all right here. Like, you know, and I shouldn't feel so insecure, just because this guy is so,
or this girl is so smart in this area. So, well, keep, well, also keep this in mind. Like, at some
point, you're going to meet someone that doesn't have that, someone who's going to have everything.
That shouldn't change how you feel
about yourself or your confidence for yourself.
And here's something you wanna consider.
This is something that I've insecurities or things that I've been personally focusing
on for myself for 10 years, I mean, deep and heavy and hard.
And one of the things that I more recently learned was the moment you really realized that you're having an insecurity and you're stressing about it
You're actually working on it at that same time. So you know, Adam you just shared yours
And what's really been your insecurity, but at the same time, you know, you've been doing a lot lately
Read you've been doing a shit ton of reading a shit ton of reading. Oh, I didn't share that. Yeah, that's I mean
And so so you're taking something that you've identified as an insecurity and you're
turning it into something that's motivating and you're also revisiting the actual insecurity
portion of it.
Because yes, it'll motivate you to read, but if you never finally realize that there's
no need to be insecure about that, then that's the ultimate goal.
But at the same time, you're also, you know, working
on things.
And I think that's where insecurities, probably, why they exist in the first place, right?
They're kind of motivations, like motivating factors to make you, you know, pursue different
things.
If you use them correctly, I agree.
I think, at a great point, I mean, fuck away.
I didn't even touch on that.
I literally just, because you've been, you've been like a reading fanatic lately and you've
been listening to books at like two-time speed and
Trying to learn how to speed read and all these different things you can just get more information
So I think with which is I think is excellent
But you know one thing you got a reala one thing that we should all realize everybody should realize because this is all different
It's different different areas right all of us have most people have this in some way where you're in front of somebody for whatever reason you feel inferior, right? Or you think you're
inferior. And one of the most impressive things anybody will ever notice about anybody is confidence.
And confidence can't be faked. And it's funny because literally the second you realize that you're not
inferior and that we're all just men, we're all just people, we're all humans.
That's when it comes, it just comes out right away.
Where the people person meets you and right away,
they're like, oh, like, oh, we can all relax here.
Yeah, we can all, it's all good, you know,
it's all, I did that, that particular one
that you're feeling at them.
I had that a while ago because I would train these surgeons
and these like scientists and I had some, like a real smart group of ago because I would train these surgeons and these like scientists and
I had some like a real smart group of clients that I would train and when I start training
I was like, oh fuck, this is like a surgeon.
I need to talk like a particular way and act the same way.
And you know, then we became friends and everything and then we would go hang out and I'm like,
they're just regular.
I mean, yeah, they're very smart.
They work hard, but they're just regular people and they're weird like I am and, you know, they're not perfect like I am and that helped me a lot.
For me personally, you know, right now I've dealt with quite a bit in my life, but right
now my biggest insecurity has to do with being a father.
And this is because I, you know, that little over a year ago, maybe a year and a half now, actually, got divorced.
And my children are very, very important to me.
I love them more than anything.
And going through something like that, one of the first things you think, you know,
and one of the reasons why people will stay in marriages for far longer than they should,
like I did.
And again, I'm not saying anything bad about my ex.
It was definitely mutual, but we stayed in it way too long.
And it's because of the guilt of what you would do to your kids.
And what, you don't want your kids to have to deal with a divorce.
And you don't want your kids to have to deal with, you know, dads not going to be here
and going between two different homes and all that stuff.
And you know, once I got out of that and the divorce, you know, it's final and, you know,
you still have that, like, I need to be the best father I possibly can because I put my
kids through this thing, this horrible thing.
And I'm slowly realizing, like, I'm not gonna be able to protect them from everything.
They're gonna have to go through this life, right?
Life has got some shitty situations.
There are also opportunities also opportunities for growth.
People tell me I'm a great father,
and it's funny because when you have an insecurity
about something, nobody could tell you other one.
Oh, that's right, it's so true.
You know, like, if I feel like I'm fat,
if I feel like I'm skinny,
if I feel like I'm not attractive,
or I'm not smart, like everybody around me could tell me,
no man, you're not, you look good, you're smart, you know?
And if I don't believe it myself, it doesn't matter.
It doesn't matter.
Everybody in the world can tell me I'm a great dad,
but if I feel like I'm not, you know,
like if I feel guilty because I divorced,
I got divorced with her mom and, you know,
and I'm not as organized because I'm trying to
organize this whole like, you know, dual custody thing
and you know, they're school
and I'm trying to do all these different things
that I wasn't necessarily involved with before.
Like, it doesn't matter what everybody says,
I have to like understand and learn that about myself
that I am doing a good job.
And part of the reason why I'm doing a good job
is because I care about it.
Like, that alone will tell me that I'm doing a good job.
So that's what I've been dealing with more recently.
It's a very difficult one.
It's a very, very deep one because it's not dealing
with just me.
It's dealing with someone who I value more than me,
you know, which I don't even know if that's the right thing
to say or do, but it's true, like you value my children.
So it's so much more difficult than like,
if I was dealing with my own insecurity,
I think I'm gotten pretty good now at like,
okay, I see that, let me work on that.
But now when someone else is involved,
especially my kids, oh boy.
That's been a very, very difficult.
Is there something that you,
you're doing currently that is helping this
or that you find that helps you not feel this way
or that you're practicing or?
So the time I spend with my kids now
is much more quality than it was when I was married
to their mother because I took
it for granted.
I took for granted that I live with them all the time.
They're always there.
Now I read them, I read stories to them at night.
I spend, we have movie night together, we play board games together.
I really want to connect with them, more than just be around them.
Whereas before, because I was always around, like I said, you just take it for granted.
So objectively, I know I'm doing all these different things,
but what makes me feel insecure is the guilt.
Right?
The guilt of not, you know, that we got divorced.
The guilt that now my kids have to live in two different homes.
And I've disrupted their normal routine
that they have to tell their friends, you know,
what's going on and that. You know, all these different things that, and like, let me put
it this way, like, this is how bad it is. If my kids do anything, like at school, like,
if I get a report card and I see that my kid didn't do three assignments, do you know
where my mind immediately goes? Oh, it's because I got divorced. Oh, this is like, they're
too stressed out because of the situation.
That's gonna be hard to disassociate.
It's very difficult to disconnect,
to disassociate that because now I feel like
that's the cause of anything.
Like, oh, she's acting up.
I know, maybe it's because, you know,
the whole situation is stressing around
or what's going on.
Do you find yourself catching that though now?
Like, much more.
When it comes up, it pops up, you're like,
no, no, no, shut up.
Much more now. And it's just something I comes up and it pops up, you're like, no, no, no, shut up. Much more now.
And it's just something I'm working on,
but initially, you know,
and like this is true of all,
I think all insecurities, you're not aware of them.
You're not even aware that you have that insecurity.
And now I'm aware of it.
It's true that you're talking about it
because now it's like,
it's one of those things.
Yeah, that's just gonna be a reoccurring thing
just because it's so deep and grain
and you wanna be the best, you know,
especially when kids, you know,
you reflect on that, like, you wanna be the best, you know, especially when kids, you know,
you reflect on that, like you wanna be the best,
you can be around them, but yeah, you can't be so,
like, that's just one of those things,
you can only beat yourself up so much.
Well, I feel like too, there's an area here
where you can almost argue that there's a lot of positive
from it too.
Are you kidding me?
Of course.
I'm telling you right now.
I'm telling you right now, I'm telling you right now.
Objectively speaking, if I step outside of it, which I've done a lot of meditating on
this, a lot of thinking about this.
Objectively speaking, I am a much better father now than I was before.
They have a much better relationship with me now.
So you need to tell yourself.
Then before.
And I do.
And I do.
But part of the, like, I'm in the phase now I've identified it, and now I can work on it.
I was in the phase where I didn't even know it existed.
Which where most people are.
I feel like most people have insecurities like this,
and it drives them to act certain ways,
which unfortunately are to blame others,
or to point to, you know what I'm saying,
and to react to things.
First is to objectively pull yourself out,
assess that, hey, that's just like,
I mean, that's exactly how I see myself
from these situations, and I go, okay, well,
I feel inferior because intellectually,
one, remind myself, and then two, do something about that.
And that was partly, you brought up
the voracious reading right now, well, that's...
God, I love it when he uses big words.
Stubborn. So rolls enough as tons. So, so those, those are things that, um, you know, I think
are really good from that insecurity. I mean, it's an insecurity in being aware of it and
then reminding yourself that, no, that, no, I'm not. But then also, what can I do about it to
improve that? And I think that's the same also what can I do about it to improve that?
And I think that's the same thing that you've done as a father.
You just got to remind yourself that man, I am a fucking good father
and I'm continuing to be a better father because this just made me aware of areas
that I can continue to improve on.
So I think that's the real challenge for people is to be able to do that.
I think so many people are afraid to look in the mirror,
man, when it comes to shit like that.
What about you, Josh?
Yeah, for me, I think for me, the most,
the reoccurring theme is that I just don't,
I feel really insecure talking about myself in general.
Like, I, I,
You're insecure about this question.
I, like, honestly, I don't,
I, like, I avoid a lot of topics that revolve around
myself, even when I'm at family functions, when I'm, you know, amongst the group of friends,
like I tend to, I tend to steer the conversation sort of away to where I don't have to sit
there and explain everything I'm up to, explain who I am and what I'm about and all these types of things.
And so, you know, just being on the podcast, obviously,
it's one of those situations where I'm under the fire
and I have to get better at this.
And I feel like I have definitely grown quite a bit with that
as far as expressing myself and that I do have opinions
and I do have a way of thinking that is unique
and I'm not just absorbing everybody else's ideas.
Like I really have a lot of my own ideas
and I don't have to back away from them.
And I think that that's something I've come to realize
that everybody has their own voice
and it's just a matter of time for me to be able to express it the way that I want to.
What makes you uncomfortable about talking about yourself?
I have no idea. I think it's because there's a lot of the authority growing up that...
Do you feel like you're boasting or you're bragging and you don't like to do that?
Yeah, because you are. You have the personality. You definitely have the like anti Showboat and you typically hate those guys. Yeah. Yeah. No, I do that's why I'm so surprised we're friends
You guys like it's really bizarre
But yeah, no seriously like I don't like I've never been that guy that's like I fucking own you
You know like unless we're in the middle of a game and you know, I also up to your face, but
Like I don't I just don't I don't carry myself that way. I, I tend to, I tend to want to
just hang out and like be the friend that's like there, you know, for people or whatever. Like,
I don't know, I just don't like centering things around myself very often, but I've really been
taking steps away from that and trying to pursue what defines me.
And I guess I was just,
it just didn't seem appealing to me.
I didn't really feel like my own unique individual,
grown up, I had a lot of what you can't do,
you can't do this, be humble.
Everything grown up was about being humble and that's the way that I was sort of raised.
So getting outside of that is really tough.
And there's a lot of friction there for me to understand
like how to do that and not be a douchebag.
Well, you don't want it to prevent you from being able
to self-examine.
You know what I'm saying?
That's where the problem, not talking to other people about yourself, that's fine.
There's nothing wrong with that.
But when you have a problem, when you have an issue, when you're troubled, when you're
sad, when you're stressed, when you're anxious, when you feel like you just can't, yeah,
I bury that shit.
Right.
Like, you want to be able to tie, especially like your wife, like that's your partner,
right?
That's a very hard thing for a lot of people to do.
I was like that where it's hard for me to tell this person like, I'm weak right now, I can't do this.
And when you're not able to do that, it comes out in other ways.
And many times it's more destructive.
Well, I'll tell you, you know, I'm talking about the wives for the partners and getting to,
you know, I always like, okay, what are some actions or things
that people can take away from this?
I don't know if I've shared this on the podcast or not,
but something that Katrina and I are both very similar
in this area where we're very driven,
we're very motivated, we don't want a lot of little bullshed
bothers us or slow us down, right?
But because of that, we also have trained ourselves
to suppress things that could be bothering us or suppress things that, right? But because of that, we also have trained ourselves to suppress
things that could be bothering us or suppress things that we do need to talk about or do
discuss, but because we don't think they're a big deal, which is like, oh, we move through
them. But then when it happens, that starts to build up. And then there's this silent animosity
for one or the other or something ends up exploding over some bullshit, right? So something
that it's been like huge for us in the last two months is,
you know, talking about I've been reading a lot. Well, one of the things I always go, so
I'm reading on my own and then I'm also reading with her. So, you know, we, and we've made
a goal because we know how crazy we are. We know how crazy we are with our schedule and
stuff that we say, okay, the goal is to do this as much as we can, right? I mean, if we
can do this every night,
that would be awesome.
But we're not silly.
Like, we know that life is gonna happen.
We have a lot going on,
and I know with you guys with kids
and shit going on, it's tough to commit to that.
But what we agreed upon was, hey, listen,
we'll never let a whole week go by
that we don't spend this time learning together.
And what happens when we do that,
it's amazing the conversation that gets promoted from that. Totally, totally nothing to do with maybe the book that we're reading, but because
we're being so mindful and present. And what's going on in that space? Yeah, exactly. We're in that
space together, right? We're getting those that like followed Stephen Kotler and stuff like that.
You know, well, the first book we read together was Rise of Superman and getting into flow state.
I truly can feel that and it's an amazing powerful
tool that we have created for ourselves by just putting that discipline of, hey, you know, hey,
it's been almost a full week and we have not done this together. We're making time. We're gonna
make time. Now, I like to make more time, but the bare minimum, we're sitting down for a minimum
of an hour or two hours every single week where we're going through this. And it's amazing the conversation that gets stimulated
from that.
So if I can give that to those that are in relationships
and couples is, man, you know,
put, make time for each other to be mindful and present
and easiest ways to go through like a book for me.
Here's a tool that I've been using more recently
that has been so effective because we said this about
you know identifying your insecurity or an issue.
This first step is becoming aware of it.
Sounds easy, right?
It's very difficult because you're in it.
You're in it, you don't see it.
It's just, you're living it.
So it's very difficult to go from not aware to aware.
Once you're aware, then you can make the changes and then you can see it. But before you become aware of it, so it's very difficult to go from not aware to aware. Once you're aware, then you can make the changes, and then you can see it, but before you become aware of it, it's very,
very difficult, and it feels impossible. And one thing that I've been doing, rather
more recently, is there's certain people around me that I trust fully, and that I respect.
Like you guys, I trust and respect you you guys fully to the point where if you guys
were to give me an opinion on something, I would definitely give it, wait, I would definitely
say, well, you know, that's just and said that or Adam said that or Doug said, like, I'm
going to give weight to that because these are men that I trust with my life. These are
men that are intelligent and who, you know, probably have a really good opinion.
And there's other people around me as well
that are like that.
And so what I've done to kind of hijack the whole
becoming aware thing is I am starting to learn
to just trust people.
And what I mean by that is if one of you guys comes to me
and says, you know, Sal, last week you were,
I don't know, you're acting like an asshole because you're blah blah blah.
Now, my immediate thing is to be like,
no, I'm not, like, what the fuck you're talking about?
You're being an asshole, like,
because you're not in it, you're in it, right?
So you don't even know that you're being an asshole.
You're in it and you wanna be defensive
because you're being told that you're doing something
that may not be good or accurate or whatever.
But to kind of hijack that,
and initially you'll have that response,
but what I've done now is I'll have that response then I'll wait
For myself to have that response and I'll go back and be like okay, I trust this person
I'm gonna take what they're saying seriously and look into it and many times I'm like holy fuck they were right
Like that person was totally right
I am doing this this particular thing or I am
Motivated by this particular insecurity and boom awareness right away.
So I think that's what's important about having a really
close partner and friends and people around you is
sometimes you just gotta trust them.
You know, if you're having, if you have issues with food or
body image issues, for example, and the people around
you're saying, listen man, you look really good.
And you know, be open to ask those questions.
Yeah, around your significance.
But just believe it.
And people that, yeah, you trust.
Like, I think, I think from my perspective,
that's a big step, you know, from being able to come to you guys
and be like, hey, you know, how do you guys feel about,
you know, the way I interacted with this person or, you know,
like, having that conversation start so that way, you know,
that sort of assessment can,
process can start.
Excellent.
Hey, before we get into the next question, Doug,
I wanna remind everybody that we're having
the Barefoot Specialist certification here,
this coming weekend, Saturday and Sunday,
this is training on imbalances and strength
and connectivity of the feet
and the ankles, and let me tell you,
this is huge, especially coming from someone
who's been in training as long as I have,
you don't learn this in your normal certifications.
I don't learn anything above,
or I didn't learn it, I barely learned a little bit
about the ankle, I know a lot about the knees,
the hips, the shoulders, the back,
and nothing on the feet, and let me tell you something,
makes a huge, huge difference.
Oh, not to mention too that you get all the same CEUs
that for your NASM, your AFA, NCEA, so all the big ones.
So this is, so those that are trainers and are listening.
So even if you're not a trainer, I think this is a phenomenal
certification.
The CEUs.
Yeah, so it's happening that this weekend was what is the 25th
and 26th
Here at mine pump media you can sign up at mine pump media.com under the events calendar. That's correct excellent
All right, our final question is from young crazy fool
How do you progress someone into a deep squat? What are the steps to getting there?
Okay, there's there's a few things. I think we need to, I think first, you force them.
Yeah, well, actually, you know what, that's it on them.
This is, this is a really good question
because I think, you know, we've talked a lot,
especially in the last year or so,
I put a lot of emphasis on watching me,
you know, go from, you know, squatting at 90 degrees with my belt and
choose to be able to go barefoot sitting all the way down.
You just can't go from there steps.
Yes, there's a lot of steps and a lot of time to do that.
Now you could do it, but a lot of people will have all kinds of stuff going on and you're at risk of injury
if you try and progress yourself too fast.
And so I typically pick an area
and it's normally foot ankle or hip
that I'm really gonna address first
and see how much more travel with good form does this allow me?
So in other words, form does this allow me?
So in other words, where does it break down? Yeah, so, and those are the areas that are common, right?
The hips, ankle foot, that's where,
when you're talking about a deep squat,
that the limiting factors are typically
somebody has poor hip mobility, poor ankle mobility,
or poor foot connection.
So, in my opinion, those three areas
are the main areas that I'm looking at.
Now you can technically address all three
at the same time, that's totally fine.
Like that's how prime was designed.
Prime is designed to help people look, assess their squat
and then address all those collectively.
For me, it worked really well by taking an area
and really getting, like, you know, I took my hips first
and it was a lot of 90, 90 work, a lot of the work that we put up on the YouTube channel.
So if you're not subscribed to that, subscribe to that.
This is the type of stuff that we drop on there.
Well, let's not go too far from prime because this is the sole reason why we've created
prime or even highlighted the fact that people need to reassess their movement in general. And like going through that process
and going through the checkpoints,
it's very important to get it back in tune
with your body and the processes that get you
into certain positions.
So you have to really slow down.
You got to slow down.
And this may be something that you want to progress, you always want to progress, but
you might even need to progress even further and address very small patterns that are
hardwired in you that you need to break.
This is something like Adam's mentioned ankles or hips or wherever the breaking point is
or the main source of the dysfunction.
We got to get to the root of that.
Just to give you some bullet points, because how do you get someone to progress into a deep
squat is very individual, obviously, but there's this general answer, and it's really break
the movement down into smaller movements or smaller ranges of motion
and practice the squat.
So what do I mean by that?
Well, let's say I get somebody who goes into a half squat,
anything past a half squat and shit breaks down.
What I'm gonna do is I'm going to get them to master
and perfect that half squat plus an inch.
Like I might make them go just a tiny bit lower.
Master that, master that, practice that.
Once they've got that under control,
now we go another inch and we practice that.
So this is where it props, you know,
tend to come and get handy, right?
So if you have like a TRX, you're holding on to
or you have a box underneath your butt
that you're trying to achieve, like as far as the height is concerned.
So basically put goals out in front of this process
and really like master that skill of getting down
into depth and then control
and adding muscle tension and support.
So you gotta learn all these things,
you gotta teach your body that you're supported.
And you wanna identify like, is it a strength issue?
If it's a strength issue,
they just practice with good control and tension in shorter
ranges of motion that become longer and longer over time.
If it's tightness, let's say the person gets down and they can't go any lower because
their hips are tight or their calves are tight or they don't have good mobility in particular
joints, then the rule of thumb is first gain passive range of motion.
So this is where static stretching is really effective when it comes to correctional
type stuff.
So if I take someone who's hips are just, they're just too tight period.
They can't get into a deep squat because hips are too tight.
The first thing I'm going to do is I'm going to try and passively get better range of motion
in their hips.
So this is where I'll get them in a stretch with their hips and I'll hold it for them and get that range of motion in their hips. So this is where I'll get them in a stretch with their hips and I'll hold it for them
and get that range of motion.
Once I've established range of motion
through me doing it for them,
then I try and connect it to where they do it.
Then I try and connect it with strength.
So this is like this progress of this process,
excuse me, of progression where I'm going range of motion
passively, range of motion actively,
control within range of motion with tension and then movement within that new range of motion passively, range of motion actively, control within range of
motion with tension, and then movement within that new range of motion.
You follow that over and over and over again, and regress every time you notice something
breaks down.
Like, okay, wow, we've got down to a full squat.
Now I'm going to put a little bit of weight on you.
Oh, looks like it broke down again at the bottom.
Take the weight off and go, or keep the weight on and go up a little higher and progress you down, you know, different ways you can regress.
But it's breaking it down into smaller and smaller pieces.
This is, it is hard to like really get into this because there is so much, and I totally
left out like thoracic mobility.
I don't know why I did that because that was another limiting factor of mine, right?
So I started and the order that Salis saying exactly what happened to me was like, okay, the first thing that was the major limiting factor, which I think
is going to be very common with the majority of people that 90 degree squat or less.
So the hip, just the hip mobility and the ability to get in there, right? So the stretching
the 90, 90s, things like that, mobilizing the hips, starting to do mobility work so you
can strengthen in those areas without any weight, nothing like that at all.
And then once I got like, okay,
now I've got the hip mobility,
then I started to notice that my ankles
were a limiting factor and my thoracic mobility was,
because as you get down deeper to the squat,
you'll see people tend to round forward even more.
And so just because you're down in a deep squat
because you open your hips up,
doesn't necessarily mean it's safe for you
to start loading the back yet,
because now you get deeper than 90,
and then now I'll send you see
because of the limiting thoracic mobility,
you round forward,
and now you get this rounded lower back
because of how tight you are
and the limiting factor up there.
And, or you start to notice you go deeper,
and you rock forward onto the front of your feet
and your heels start to come off the ground, which is why you see people want to use squat shoes to
kind of cheat that so they can get deeper into their squat.
So addressing ankle mobility.
So there is a lot of individual, individuality in this, but there are some major areas I
think that are super common, which is the hips, the ankles, the feet, and then I left out
the thoracic mobility that you should be looking at, which is
all stuff just so you know, I mean, this is what, this was a lot of what motivated us, one
with prime. So even if I'm, you know, I'm not trying to sell you on my prime, if you don't
want to buy prime, then go to the YouTube channel and subscribe to that. And we've created
pay, playlists that like, and you'll see like anything that's probably in the white or the yellow is going to be stuff that you're going to be really wanting to focus on so we did a lot of stuff in maps white and my and maps yellow which is maps prime
That really addresses these areas that we're talking about and start looking at these
mobility drills and exercises or tension movements that we just did a tension series,
like all these things are going to improve the depth in your squat if you start incorporating.
Yeah, one of the things that I worked with a lot of like special populations, like older
people over the age of 65 and 70, and my goal was always to be able to get them to do a squat.
One of the things that I would do is either, I would start them depending how out of shape
there were, how decondition they were.
I'd have them practice just sitting down in the chair
with good form like they're gonna get into a squat
but not actually doing the squat part.
So I actually have them slow down,
try and control so they don't like just fall in the chair.
So that was one regression I would do.
And one a couple steps later would be
I would get them to master a lunge,
a stationary lunge while holding something for balance.
Because I knew that that front leg
was essentially doing the squat motion.
Once I could get them to master the lunge,
then I moved them to squatting with a broomstick
across the front of their shoulders.
Because it's easier to master the front squat
than it is to master the back squat,
because you don't need as much of the mobility and whatever.
And I'm not using resistance, it's just something real light.
You know, I even had these like padded like five pound bars I put across the shoulders,
getting them to practice that.
And then some of them we never got to the squat.
We never got to the back squat.
It's just, I just continue to slowly progress them, but we just never got to that point.
Well, when you talk about somebody who's that old for so many years of their life, they
have created imbalances. It's, you know, very, very tough to get got to that point. Well, when you talk about somebody who's that old for so many years of their life, they have created imbalances.
It's very, very tough to get someone to back squat
because back squat.
Back squat.
Back squats require shoulder mobility, spine mobility,
I mean, so many different things.
Yeah, I argue, I mean, that's why it's the best, right?
And that's why too, I think,
we used to say this a lot on our show early on
and we haven't really addressed this.
So it's a good time to say this that,
you know, if you have problems squatting, do not just,
especially if you're fucking young, and by young, I mean, less than 50, 60 years old,
like, your goal should be to get to the point where you can do a deep squat, even it's
with no weight on your back.
The idea that this is a very normal, functional movement we should all be able to do I can't even stress that enough like the amount that that will contribute to
Your ability to move yeah the amount of muscle you can put on your lower body how tight and in
Conditioned your upper body is
You're just your overall functionality like the amount that just being able to get into a squat without weight with good control,
the amount that that will contribute positively
to all those things is tremendous.
We're not even talking about
going into the gym and doing hardcore, you know,
heavy back squats.
So if you can't get into a squat with no weight,
just sit into a squat, feet flat,
good connectivity through the feet
all the way up to the back, then that should be your goal.
And I promise you, the process of getting there
will make you better at everything.
And everything, 100%.
It makes you better at everything.
100%.
So check this out.
We put up a brand new video on YouTube every single day.
So get on the subscribe.
You will learn a ton.
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