Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 480: Paul Chek- Controversial Fitness Pioneer on Fitness, Health & the Meaning of Life
Episode Date: March 27, 2017In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin interview Paul Chek of the C.H.E.K. Institute. Paul is an internationally-renowned expert in the fields of corrective and high-performance exercise kinesiology. For ...over twenty-five years, Paul’s unique, holistic approach to treatment and education has changed the lives of countless people worldwide. By treating the body as a whole system and finding the root cause of a problem, Paul has been successful where traditional approaches have consistently failed. Paul is a sought-after presenter and has consulted for organizations such as the Chicago Bulls, Australia’s Canberra Raiders, New Zealand’s Auckland Blues, the US Air Force Academy and other elite organizations. Get access to a free lesson at www.chekinstitute.com/mindpumphlc 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 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. Get your Kimera Koffee, Mind Pump's first official sponsor, at www.kimerakoffee.com, code "mindpump" for 10% off! Add to the incredible brain enhancing effect of Kimera Koffee with www.brain.fm/mindpump 10 Free sessions! Music for the brain for incredible focus, sleep and naps! Please subscribe, rate and review this show! Each week our favorite reviewers are announced on the show and sent Mind Pump T-shirts! Get Holistic Lifestyles Coach Level 1 Online- FIRST LESSON FREE HERE! Introduction to discussion with Paul Chek (8:24) Ego is the enemy (9:49) What does Paul think of people’s perception of him? (16:34) Paul talks about all the things he originated and got no credit for – ie: gut health, bulletproof coffee and the swiss ball (26:00) How did Paul get into the wellness/fitness industry? How his childhood/military/boxing days changed his life? (29:34) What advice does Paul give a team/athlete he takes on? (52:52) Paul talks about flow state (1:03:21) Chek Institute: Coach programs, Training programs and courses offered / Becoming a Chek Practitioner (1:13:28) Not selling out and sticking to his principles (1:17:00) What is Paul doing with social media to keep up with Generation Z? (1:31:20) What are some key things someone can take away from Paul’s knowledge? / 4 day rotation diet / Program design (1:39:36) What frustrates Paul the most about the state of the fitness industry? (1:51:21) Does Paul communicate differently depending on who he is talking to? (2:03:32) Discussion into dogmas / Final thoughts (2:05:30) Related Links/Products Mentioned Chek Institute Special for Mind Pump listeners! Get Holistic Lifestyles Coach Level 1 Online (First course for FREE!) Old school Swiss ball training video (Paul Chek) Nutrition: A Holistic Approach – Rudolf Hauschka (book) How to Eat, Move and be Healthy! – Paul Chek (book) Movement that Matters – Paul Chek (book) Huston Smith – The Roots of Fundamentalism (Documentary) Paul Chek vs. David Driscoll Debate People Mentioned: Dr. Clifford Oliver Ben Greenfield Mike Salemi Daniel Siegel Laird Hamilton David Driscoll
Transcript
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mind, mind, up with your hosts.
Salta Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
We are going to take our audience to the moon and back today.
We're gonna go on a ride, ladies and gentlemen. We need to do a proper intro for
For this guest that you're about to hear stuff We need to do a proper intro for this guest
that you're about to hear.
Do we do like, is this conduct,
do you like one of those warnings or it's like warning?
Warning, yeah.
Well, so a little history, Paul Check is,
he's like the godfather of combining wellness
and strength training and, you know,
different types of...
He's a straight up pioneer. He's a pioneer for all these things.
He's a pioneer and he's out there.
I guess that's the best way.
I mean, Adam said, what do you call him Adam?
Crazy, crazy Uncle Bull.
Yeah.
He's definitely out there, but this guy,
I love the guy, but yeah, it gets crazy.
I'm a, he's extremely controversial.
Like if you talk to people,
this is why I love him though.
I mean, we're definitely gonna ruffle some feathers with him,
which I think that he knows that.
He's not afraid of that.
Yeah.
He was saying things about the gut
way before anybody else was.
That's the thing.
If you talk to people that know of check,
you're gonna get one of two answers, either one,
he's a brilliant genius or two, he's out there and crazy.
And Paul is just one of those guys,
he's definitely very polarizing, but he is,
like people don't realize this,
he was using physio balls or Swiss balls
for exercise and teaching people how to work out on them
in the 80s.
This is way before any of us had ever even seen one,
oh Jim, he was talking about gut health
and its impact on fat loss, muscle gain, moods,
emotions, brain activity, way back
when we didn't even know that it really even existed
and it was called crazy for it, like people back then.
He's definitely ahead of his time, let's be honest.
Way ahead of his time.
And then on top of it, he's kind of a badass.
Like if you see the guy, when we met him,
he was, you know, how do you say 55?
Yeah.
55 years old and the guy is like.
Oh, it's physical.
He's as 20s, yeah.
He's built.
He's impressive.
And he could probably kick our ass.
I mean, a guy boxed for years,
and he's just a tough son of a guy.
I think one of the things that we have to point out too
that I was, I was at least incredibly impressed with.
So one of my things I always do when we get invited
to somebody's home.
So we got an opportunity to go to his home
which they is called the Heaven House.
And it's the most-
It's this working office, but it's a house.
Yeah, it's just beautiful.
So on top of a mountain down in San Diego
and overviews this huge valley,
he's got like I think nine acres or things what they said.
But I love to go to people's houses
and just go straight for their library and see a library
and eat those library.
It's like a library.
Yeah, it's something like the same thing.
Hey, you're a librarian.
Look at you.
My lip.
So I love to go straight to somebody's library and check out what they are reading, right?
And he.
His whole house is a library.
Yeah, the whole thing.
Fucking books.
And what is so impressive about what he does,
because here's what happens to a lot of times
when I look at somebody's like bookshelf,
as you see a lot of the same type of books, right?
They get, you know,
and this is where I talk about people,
you know, box and dogmatic, you know,
all the same philosophers or all the same,
you know, methodology or ideologies.
This dude is reading and astrophysics.
And conflicting people.
People that don't necessarily do it.
It is them.
And then, yeah.
Oh, yeah, I mean, everything from all the different
across the spectrum, all the different religions,
to all the different scientists,
to all the different philosophers, to all, I mean, just.
He's, I mean, God, I found now, after we had talked to him,
that he's self, much of his education is,
of most of itself educated.
Yeah.
And he's one of, on certain subjects that we had covered,
on an offer,
as many of you never talked to.
I mean, he, he, he knows the human body at an incredible,
incredible detail.
And then there's some stuff that he says to us, you'll hear in the podcast, well, we're just like, what the fuck just happened? Where do we go?
Like, I get super deep, like really quick. And we were like, whoa, and we put my seat
below. And weird, like, like, you will start the conversation about gut health or exercise
and it goes into the male and female energy of the spirits and you know quantum
physics and how crystals have certain energy charges.
Well I tell you what, if you can make it through the first 10 minutes.
The first 10 minutes, you'll see that right away.
Ironically we dove into a topic right out the gates that will probably lose a handful of
people if not more when they first listen.
But if you actually let him get in his groove
and us start talking to him,
I mean, once you start getting,
once you get beyond that first intro,
we get into some really, really great talk.
And he says some really punctual things at the end
that are just like very impactful.
So I mean, just give it a chance
is my sort of forewarning with that.
He's just, again, he's one of those people
that he's a trailblazer.
He's a trailblazer in many different areas of fitness.
Many of your fitness gurus and coaches
that you look up to, learned what they learned
from people who learned from check.
There's a lot of big names out there,
and I won't name them, who were students of his who went out and developed their own things
He's responsible for a lot of the stuff that we are now starting to put together. Oh your level of risk
I think what you said really sums it up well when you you said man, I'll tell you what
People can say what are they want to say about Paul?
But if I was diagnosed with cancer or some sick, oh, I'm going to Paul.
He's the first guy.
If I had something wrong with me and nobody could figure it out, I would definitely go
to Paul.
The guys worked with some, some huge celebrities and sports teams and done some incredible
things.
He's part of the Chicago Bulls during the fucking Michael Jordan.
Yeah.
That is like, it's just cool on its own.
But again, keep in mind when you hear him, he's going to talk about things
that you're just gonna be like,
what is he talking about?
And then he's gonna say things like,
oh my God, that's insane, that makes so much sense.
So he's just one of those people,
very, very interesting,
probably one of the most interesting people
I've ever really met.
You can find, let's see,
what do we have up here, Doug?
What do we have for plugging here Paul?
It's the check institute and
Is he giving our listeners a first free lesson?
Yeah, they have a course called the holistic lifestyle coach level one online course and he's giving all mine pump listeners a free
First lesson on that course and you can find that at
first lesson on that course and you can find that at www.checkinstitute.com check is spelled CH-E-K so checkinstitute.com forward slash mind pump H-L-C
write that down and go on there. Well this will be in our show notes so you go
straight to our website go to the show notes and there'll be a direct link
right to this so there we go. If you driving, you don't have to write it down.
First course is absolutely free.
You'll get some great information.
That's the first lesson of the course.
It's absolutely free.
Now, if you want the full course, it's 15 lessons,
and for the next seven days,
you can get it for a substantial discount of $197.
That's $150 off the full price.
So that's for the next seven days until April 2nd.
And then after that, it goes up to the full price of $347.
Some of the most respected trainers that I know have gone through his courses and just
talked about them.
Two of the elite trainers that we are bringing under in MindPult Media.
They work Stephanie and Mike both are.
They both worked under him for a little while. And so great
information. Check it out. Buckle your seat belts. Yeah.
This interview gets weird and awesome. Fantastic.
And you're not going to understand some of it. So meet Uncle Paul.
Have a good time listening to a mind pump interviewing.
Paul check.
Chicago Bulls were the first professional sports team
to hire me to integrate Swiss Ball training
into their conditioning for their team in 1991.
When you see millions of dollars being made of things
that you originated, for example,
the whole concept of putting butter and coffee
started right here in this room.
So I got up, I ran across the ring
and I hit him so hard it felt like my hand went right
through his head and I knocked him out and detached his retina and he could never fight
again after that.
If you're doing, for example, CrossFit and your body's out of balance, you have muscle
recruitment problems and you've got core problems and you're doing what now is highly specific
strengthening, you have skipped 4 key stages of development
and you're going to get hurt. You're just going to be a good looking hurt person. I don't
have anything against the sport. That would be like having something against a knife.
I would just say before you start juggling knives, you ought to start with oranges.
You have to go test an idea to see if it works before you can have an honest opinion about
it. But if you don't test the idea and you think you have an honest opinion, you don't
have an honest opinion, you have a fear-based dogma.
There's people right now that are listening to the show that have already turned it off
because they heard spiritual, they heard this, they heard that, and then right away they're
turned off by that.
I'd be excited if it stirs up a lot of controversy, I'd be excited if people find themselves
being triggered because using them were triggered, someone put their finger right on
our growth potential.
We had the therapist come in we did a we did a whole test on air and she'd like just psychology or so yeah test and it was great because it was actually really interesting to
get into narcissism and the difference the different levels of it like that it's not all bad like
everybody makes it sound like it's so bad to be
someone there's different types of narcissism, right?
So I thought it was pretty fast.
In fact, this is-
The whole process is pretty revealing.
I mean, it was like pretty accurate, I felt.
Oh yeah, no.
Well, they picked in each one of us.
She was saying how you need to have a good healthy level
of narcissism if you want to be an entrepreneur or a leader,
because you kind of have to believe in yourself
for a little better than, you know, and that you can do those types of
things.
Right.
I had no idea.
Well, the ego is paradoxically that something that a huge amount of old and new religious
and spiritual literature tried to get rid of, right?
It's all about abolishing the ego.
The ego is the bad guy, but what people don't realize if you had no ego there would be no mechanism for love
If I didn't know who I was, how could I know who you were?
And if I don't know who I am and who you are, then where do I send love? How does love move, right?
Love requires a subject object relationship. If you had no ego, then you're pure subject
so metaphorically, God can't love as God, because God is everything,
everyone, and therefore there is no sense of other.
Can you understand?
So the ego creates the illusion of other.
The more spiritually evolved a person becomes with the more enlightened they are,
the more they realize that the ego is a functional illusion
that allows me to love, sell, add them, Justin, Doug, or my wife.
But if my wife and I were one organism, it would be like the left hand and the right hand
of an organism.
And I don't think your left hand and right hand spend a whole lot of time making love
to each other because they're part of the same organism. When know, when you're walking your left leg has to go back.
So the right leg can go forward, right?
So the organism's all part of itself.
But if I say to you, hold this up in front of yourself, go ahead and do that.
Now tell me what you're looking at.
My hand.
There you go.
You just used a possessive, right?
We all do.
My hand, my back hurts, my body's tired. Instead of saying a hand. Or just hand. Yeah. Right? So the point
that I'm making is even in our relationship to our body, we perceive ourselves consciously as separate
from that which we possess as a body. So the ego is what actually perceives that it has a hand or a body
and perceives that it has somebody or something to love
that creates the subject object relationship.
I say, love is the flow of energy and information
from self to other,
through empathic or compassionate connection.
So if there is no self and other, then where would love go?
So the point I'm making is that narcissism is a term that actually means
too much amplification of the ego process, too much self orientation,
too much over focus on the self, but it all stems from a subjective value system. When
is too much love and not enough love? I'm just going to ask you, how do you define
where's the point, the breaking point where it's too far, right? Well, the breaking point
is very simple. You have to clearly establish what your dream is. So, what is your dream
for yourself? Maybe, what does that mean? What is my dream for the next six months of my life?
What is my dream for my career?
What is my dream and my relationship with my partner?
Maybe it my wife or my husband, right?
Once you know what your dream is,
then you have to have established values.
So my contribution and the relationship is
my values on spirituality are, my values on spirituality are my values on food are my values on rest are my values on movement are
Once you have those values, that's a statement of what's valuable and important to you and then they have their values. So if your focus on the relationship is so overly oriented toward your values that you cannot
engage their values, then you have narcissism as a pathology that creates separation in
relationship.
If you have so much focus on your body, that you actually lose touch with the soul or the
spirit of the consciousness within it.
In other words, if everything is all about your muscles, but you're not aware that the person that's looking at the muscles is what's really the thing that's
the most important, because until you get to know that, all you have is muscles. Right? So,
if the narcissism takes you away from an integrated experience of the spirit or the soul or the consciousness of
yourself, the dreamer, and you get trapped in the dream. All I can think about is
my next workout and my 32 servings of turkey a day and my pills and anything that
gets in the way of that, that pisses me off. That's narcissism. But if you say,
well, this is my goal and you make that clear to my partner,
how do you any train this much in the gym?
I'm trying to win this bodybuilding
or this athlete competition or whatever it might be.
This is how much time I can devote to our self.
What would you like to do on these days?
And she says, well, this will work for me this.
And then anytime there's a relationship,
there's gotta be a compromise,
or there's no relationship.
So if narcissism is pathological, it stops that process of relationship where you
actually harmonize, identify what's important for your partner because it's
their individual dream, identify what's important for you because that's your
individual dream, and then identify what's important for the relationship, which is the collective dream. If either individuals behavior is exiting their ability
to influence the flow of energy into the relationship,
then the relationship starts to die to the degree
that you're not present in the relationship
because you're still in the gym
or still looking in the mirror or dot, dot, dot.
Yeah, in my experience, I found a lot of people
who talk about the disillusion of ego or getting rid of ego,
it becomes that that's actually reflection of big ego.
Where they identify so much with eliminating ego,
eliminating all these things that they identify with it.
And it's actually the opposite.
It becomes their own dog.
It becomes the opposite.
I probably no better way to open this episode
than going right into some of that.
And I'll tell you that.
Super deep right away.
Right away.
Whoa, you're just plucking into the matrix.
Let's be honest, I mean that defines Paul,
I mean, such a unique guy for sure.
Well, Paul, you've been at this.
You've been in the industry of fitness and wellness
for a very, very long time.
32 years.
32 years, very, very long time. 32 years. 32 years, very, very long time.
You, from what I know of you, you've talked about things
before other people did gut health and the influence,
your emotional health and how that connects your body
and pain, all these things.
And at the times when you were talking about them,
we're talking about in the 80s and 90s,
it was very polarizing, I can imagine. You were, you know, I'm sure people called you,
you know, woo-woo or a quack or everything. Everything. And you still, even to this day, when
I bring up your name, I will get to one of two responses, either very extreme sides, right? Very polarizing, either brilliant individual,
who's a trailblazer in wellness,
or crazy, has no idea, it's just all over the place.
How do you feel about that?
I feel that that's quite to be expected.
If you look at a rainbow as a scale of consciousness, the bottom of the
range.
Not a lot of people do. Not a lot of people look at a rainbow go of consciousness. So that
takes some skill set or some understanding.
It's really looking at it from as a vibrational reality, right? An enlightenment experience
is one where the male and female, the opposite polarities like light and dark, for example, female dark male light, which is the basis of the Tai Chi symbol, you know, Yin emptiness, Yang fullness, something measurable, wayable, a house amount and a car that would be a Yang expression of projection of energy in form, Yin would be the womb, so the concept, the archetype, the idea of, and the space
with which to create it. Okay? But in the womb of Yin comes the production of
something tangible as Yang. So my point in prefacing that is that consciousness
is only possible when you have those two polarities. To quote Edward Edinger,
a famous union analyst in psychiatrist, consciousness is a psychic substance created not blindly,
but in living awareness of opposites. So you could say that there's two kinds of consciousness. For lack of a better term, God consciousness, which is the
all, and that consciousness is like a flat line. So if you draw a line, that would represent the
absolute. The absolute is everywhere and nowhere simultaneously. It's like an infinity is everywhere
and nowhere simultaneously. But the absolute contains all possible infinities. There's can be lots of infinities, you know, the infinite life of an ant versus the infinite life of a star, for example.
So consciousness is the unmoved mover, but anything that's oscillating up and down as a polarity,
like your heartbeat, oscillates up and down. Your inhalation is yang, you fill up your exhalation in.
So if you were to sign wave your breath, it would look just like a heartbeat, wouldn't it?
If you look at an electron sephilogram, when someone's thinking, you have oscillation of polarities.
So consciousness cannot be aware of something and become conscious of it,
unless it's moving and changing its state from relatively positive to relatively negative and interestingly if your eye, if an eye doctor, paralyzes the
muscles of the eye, you can't see because the eye has to keep moving in
cicades in order for you to consciously pick up something from your
environment. What I'm saying is that consciousness, if you just use a vibrational
structure, goes from completely unconscious at the bottom, I can only think about my immediate survival needs,
food, sex, water, safety, all the way up to the highest level, which is consciousness of what is
important for the survival and the sustenance of all living beings, not only in the world, but the world as a participatory
element in a cosmic play of reality.
In other words, the earth can't be separate from the sun.
Where do you find most people fall in that range?
Well, studies show that about 70% of people fall
Studies show that about 70% of people fall into what's called the magical, mythical level, which relates to traditional religious ideas, which is based on what is written is the word
of God, harsh judgments.
This is, for example, why we have Donald Trump in presidency because the majority of the
people that voted for him are polarized to these harsh ways of relating.
Get rid of the Mexicans, close down the borders, keep drilling for oil.
Nationalism, nationalism, which is segregation, right?
So it's not integration, it's segregation.
It's a move backwards, really, in the evolution of consciousness, which always produces pain, which produces more consciousness, right? So it's not integration, it's segregation, it's a move backwards really in the evolution of consciousness, which always produces pain, which produces more consciousness, right?
So to answer the question is how do I deal with how well I just am aware that anybody is going to have a different viewpoint of my teachings based on what their belief system has room for based on their own development. And I'm sure every one of you at this table could tell me,
if I asked you, what were your opinions on any number of topics 10 years ago,
and have any of those opinions changed now,
you'd probably be able to write me quite a little laundry list of things that you
no longer would put energy into as a belief that you did 10 years ago,
because you've
just become more enlightened and realized I was not adequately informed or I wasn't aware
enough.
So my reaction to those people is, one, I feel sad because a lot of the negative opinions
come even when I'm talking about simple things like food, water, sleep, balancing, and exercise
program rebuilding your body. I'm talking about simple things like food, water, sleep, balancing, and exercise program,
rebuilding your body, which is really just scratching the surface.
The topics like this, you're not even getting into that.
Well, I mean, like a lot of what you're saying is going to go way over the head of a lot
of people who are interested in making themselves feel better, lose weight, build muscle, whatever.
And hearing you talk, for those are listeners who don't know what you look like,
they're probably thinking that you look a lot different than you do. You're actually a very
well built, very strong gentleman. You lift weights quite a bit. We actually... How old are you? 55.
So he looks 35. And he's very, very built more like a a body builder than a yogi,
which the way you're talking would make someone picture that.
We walk through your gym and 200 pound dumbbells.
Well, we would love, I mean, it's a place we'd love to work out.
And it's like, it's almost like dichotomies, you know,
like, and that I think, do you think maybe that's where it's coming from
where you'll talk about things that people will connect with.
And then you're going to talk about these other things that say,
okay, though, that's okay, so that's totally.
How's this person talking about both things?
How's it giving weight to both of these things?
For example, let's talk about, now it's much more popular, much more accepted now when
people talk about gut health.
But you were talking about gut health when?
I started doing a lot of work with gut issues and everything involved with it
from food intolerance testing and food allergy testing and digestion elimination whole food eating
in 1989. In 1989. I still have records from all my original tests on people. And let's be honest,
if we could go back in time, if we had time machine, we went back in time, and we brought up gut health,
and how the gut communicates to the brain
and influences our emotions,
and could make us feel anxious or stressful,
and how the internal microbiome influences
everything from chemicals to hormones in our body,
they would have laughed.
And you probably did.
How were you able to communicate that?
And were you able to communicate it in terms like, for example, today we know it's the microbiome.
We know that there's a, you know, the lymphatic system connects the brain. Or did you
understand it through different means? Or did you give a shit? Because you had your,
your mindset on what you wanted to learn and where you were. Well, I had to give a shit
because I'm a professional therapist. So, and I'm also an educator. So my, my give a shit because I'm a professional therapist. I'm also an educator.
My give a shit is that when people come and pay me money for help because they need help
and they're investing money in it, then it's my job to use analogies and to frame the
information in a way that is meaningful to them.
So if I'm talking to an electrical engineer, I'll use electrical type explanations
for how things are happening.
If I'm talking to a plumber, I'll use plumbing analogies.
If I'm talking to a race car driver,
then I'll try to correlate things that are happening
in his body, how does hydraulics work?
Well, that relates to circulation.
How does internal combustion work?
That relates to metabolism.
If your fuel ratio is wrong, then you're dropping performance. And so if your fuel ratio is wrong in here,
then you drop performance because metaphorically, the fire is not optimally balanced. So,
you know, I want to just take a brief segue on this topic and say, I went through just
as much bullshit and stress and
Accusations when I brought the Swiss ball into the exercise industry. I was the first guy to develop this
This is true by the way now we all we've all been in fitness for I've been in fitness professionally for 20 years
These guys almost just almost as long and I we remember when the Swiss balls came into the gym
Poppular and it was like this big deal. I started that.
Then that was how, when did you start using those?
I started using 90 something.
No, I started all my research and development on Swiss balls in 1988 and produced my first
videos.
Chicago Bulls were the first professional sports team to hire me to integrate Swiss ball
training into their conditioning for their team in 1991.
So, if you-
This is way before we even knew that they existed.
Okay, so this makes me want to take a little bit of a left here because we've had a chance
to tour with you and already the house and I kind of knew a bit about you because of
all the YouTubes I've watched, the things I've read on you,
but I had no idea how many things that you played
a huge role in in this industry now,
that being a guy who was a part of that
and seeing that, I didn't even know that was connected to you.
How much does that bother you?
That you started a lot of these really good movements,
and you don't get credit for it.
Well, the ego part of me can bleed a little bit now and then,
mostly because I have to make a living like everybody else.
Takes a lot to admit that.
When you see millions of dollars being made off,
things that you originated, for example,
the whole concept of putting butter and coffee started
right here in this room.
Oh, get the facet.
See, this is the thing.
I developed all that.
I taught Lerid Hamilton that.
He talked all over about it, and then he
got into a relationship with bullet proof,
and it just boomed from there.
But I've been teaching athletes that since 1990.
I did all sorts of research into how to slow caffeine down
and studied this extensively.
And only after I developed all this,
did I find out, for example, that they use yak oil
and teas in Tibetan places like that.
So I just got confirmation.
But what I was really trying to bring up is,
we're talking about gut health,
but when I brought the Swiss ball into the industry,
I literally had guys walking up into me in the gym,
telling me I was a fag.
Well, but people criticizing me,
I had gym owners telling me to get that fucking play ball out of the gym.
That's for pussies.
And, you know, I had very well-canned answers for people like that.
You know, I'd say, okay, look, I just did 20 reps with a 180 pound dumbbell over that Swiss ball right there.
Let me see how many you can do.
Well, most of them wouldn't even try, the ones that did Couldn't even hold the weight usually
They fall right I have to watch them that fall off the ball like a kid that couldn't walk
I met constant resistance, but remember there's three phases an idea goes through first. It's violently opposed
Then it's accepted with scorn
Then it's used as if it was theirs. And I have watched many of my ideas.
That's going through this.
That's got to be crazy.
You were listing more than I had no idea.
Like the bulletproof coffee and stuff.
I mean, Dave Asprey makes it seem like it's something that he creates.
Well, I mean, and some of the stuff can be confirmed.
There's some old videos of you doing squats on Swiss balls that are baited way before gyms
had these things. I saw some cable machines
out there too and you're describing like your involvement with that. We see that now
in free motions and that's a pretty common place. Let's talk a little bit about you. How
did you get into this? How did you start with this? I saw a picture of you at 12 years
old with a better physique than I've ever had in my entire life. You've been doing this
for a long time.
Yeah.
How did you get into this?
What motivated you to be so passionate or even some people would even say obsessive about
learning the body and the mind and how they all integrate together?
I'll have to give you a synthesized version of that, but my real father died when I was
eight, but my mother and father had split up three years
before that.
Unfortunately, my father was quite an abusive man.
He was a professional drag racer and a competitive dancer and used to take off with all his dance
partners and treat my mother very poorly.
My mother had three children by the time she was 18 and then was left on her own and then
married another man who turned out to be
a very, very dangerous and scary man.
And we were raised on a farm,
and he was very, very physically abusive
and very, very dangerous.
I mean, visits to the hospital were not uncommon.
And he pointed his finger,
and if you didn't get it done immediately,
and there was any back talk or anything else, it was scary.
So what happened was as I lived in this pressure cooker of an environment where I was work
physically, extremely hard.
As a young man, I could outwork multiple grown men and anybody that ever came to my farm
and worked with us was immediately shocked that these
kid little kids could outwork the adults, like lifting hay bales, for example.
The paradox of all this is that I had so much survival fear and the need to protect
my mother that I felt I had to make myself strong and I got myself into boxing and martial arts as quickly as I
could.
And it was really my fear, my survival fear, that not only drove me to make myself stronger,
but my mother's a yogi.
So my mother's mode of coping with all this was the practice of yoga and meditation. So my mom's extremely holistic and artistic,
you've seen her sculptures, and on the other side, my father was very violent, but also
a genius. He was a special effects man for universal studios. He can build anything. He's a master
farmer, he's a master with animals. I mean, he's got a lot of talents. He's just a dangerous farmer, he's a master with animals, I mean he's got a lot of talents, he's just a dangerous dude, right?
So through my mother, I was getting all this education on food, nutrition, and a balanced
lifestyle, and our teacher was Paramahansa Yogananda, who believed in exercise, and a lot of
the things that I teach today were part of my foundation.
And from my father, I got the discipline to get shit done and learn to solve problems
practically and effectively, immediately.
But the drive to survive that and the pain of being controlled like that and like almost
living in a prison camp environment, when I went to play sports, when I was in boxing,
when I was in football, when I was in motocross, when I was in hockey,
all that emotion, now I had a place where I could hit back,
and now I had a place where I could do stuff that was legal.
So paradox, my anger and fear, channelled into athletics,
got me to be a celebrated athlete,
and that's one of the problems.
If we use our anger and fear, and it carries us too far,
we come to the point in our life where we're realizing
it's causing us more harm than good on the inside,
but we're afraid to let go of it
because it's got us so much love and so much success.
And that's one of the...
You connect with it.
That's one of the crises I have to help a lot of athletes
through.
So what I'm sharing with you is that my drive to be fit
and to be strong came from two things,
one, the need to protect myself from my father,
but two, the desire to win and also was fueled by the fact that my anger and emotion channeled into
boxing and knocking people out, which is really what I wanted to do to my dead, but I got
to practice on someone for when the big day might come, made me a successful athlete,
and to be a successful athlete means you want to keep winning. And for me, that meant study every damn thing you need to study.
Whether training, diet, meditation, I don't care what it is,
find out how it works, test it, and if it works, put it to use,
and keep doing that.
When did you free yourself from those chains?
When did you free yourself from that being a major motivator
and you elevated from that being a major motivator and you elevated from that.
The big change came when I joined the United States Army and I was going through basic training.
And I watched how, you know, in my basic training cycle, four guys tried to commit suicide
because they couldn't deal with the stress.
People were getting sick left, right, and center, breaking down of complete exhaustion and,
you know, just literally dying on the vine.
I was always getting in trouble for trying to help these guys.
I'm sorry for them, but basic training for me
was I got fat and basic training.
I gained eight pounds.
I'm like Jesus Murphy, I'm getting out of shape in here,
and I thought it came here to be with the tough guys.
So that was the beginning of it.
Then I went into the 82nd Airborne Division,
which is the same shit, but twice as intense.
And even then, they were dropping like flies, and they couldn't kill me, and I were always trying to do it.
And I had a realization.
My father prepared me for the toughest situations in life, like nobody's business.
And these mamas boys here, and the kids that grew up in households where everything was just so rosy can't deal with the realities that they just
signed on the dotted line to go face in the name of the United States military.
And they're mentally unprepared, they're emotionally unprepared, they're
physically unprepared. Also, I learned over the years that I had a unique way of
seeing and relating to information and problem-solving
that was very, very practical but very, very integrated, which my father was the prime
source of. And my mother's also quite intelligent and very artistic, so you put those two together.
And I woke up one day and just realized it was a painful internship, but it gave me everything
I needed to fulfill what I came
to this planet to do, which was to help people find what health really is, meaningfully.
So at that moment, you shifted your motivation from almost like the resentment and anger
toward your father to almost being grateful that you went through all those trials and
tribulations as a kid.
Yes, there was a... It's a hard thing thing to go how old are you at this point?
It was 22. There was an event that I'll share that really was the pinnacle moment to this.
I fought on the Army boxing team but I also fought in the 82nd Airborne Division Championship
of the 30 fighters on our boxing team which was ranked the third best team in the 82nd Airborne Division Championship of the 30 fighters on our boxing team, which was ranked the third best team in the world only
Buton beaten by Cuba and Russia at the time of the 30 guys 29 of them were paratroopers. So once you enter into the 82nd Airborne Division boxing contest, you've got to fight all the guys in your own boxing team if they're in your way class.
And it's a tough go. It's against the military law for an officer to box in competition because if he gets
beat by an enlisted man, it destroys morale and respect.
So somehow, some way, a captain got approved by the general of the 82nd Airborne Division
to enter into the 82nd Airborne Division boxing tournament. And none of us knew who this
guy was. Did they feel like they were the confident he was going to whoop everyone's ass?
Of course they were. And so as the story would happen, you know how
tournaments go, a big huge tournament with like 150 fighters, you're watching who keeps
moving up the pyramid, right? So I keep noticing this guy, I can't remember his name,
but he's knocking everybody out
before the second round's over.
And I started watching him.
And every time I would knock someone out,
he would knock someone out.
This went on for like three days.
And sometimes we'd fight two or three times in a day
for this tournament.
So I got all the way up there and I thought,
oh my God, man, this is gonna,
so the main event was me against this guy.
And this guy was a very skilled fighter.
And he gave me a flash knockdown in about the first round.
And he hit me so hard that I didn't even know where it was at.
And my whole left arm went completely numb. I couldn't move it and I thought I am in trouble here and I'm fighting on one of the best boxing teams
in the world and sparring three weight classes up and three weight classes down.
And this guy just hit me as hard as a heavyweight boxer and I'm like I have to do something and I knew
lots of generals were betting on me. My wife was there, the whole boxing team was there.
So, the moral of the story is, I got up and it was the first time in my life I felt like
my life might be at risk because this guy could hit so hard, I didn't know he might just
take my head off, right? And so, the week before we'd been practicing a technique that's
rarely ever used because
it's dangerous, but if it works, it works.
And that is when they ring the bell, and especially we use it if you get taken down and get
counted out because that's when they least expect this out of you, as soon as they ring
the bell, you sprint from your corner across the ring and hit them with the hardest right
hand or whatever you
want to throw at him but make sure you don't miss. So it's very unconventional to
run in a boxing ring. But instinctively I knew I had to knock this guy out right
away because I didn't think I could take too many more hits like that from him and
he was really fast. So I got up, I ran across the ring and I hit him so hard it
felt like my hand went right through his head and
I knocked him out very bad and detached his retina and he could never fight again after that holy shit and so
When I went into the changer and I had a complete emotional breakdown because for the first time in my life I felt I crossed the line of sportsmanship and hunted a man and
I realized that the intensity with which I
hunted him was the same intensity that my father had developed in me as a
survival mechanism and that he had just gotten hit by my father. And I had a
spiritual crisis because I could no longer distinguish between survival
necessity and sportsmanship because my life was in survival
mode in a sporting event.
Does that make sense?
Absolutely.
So I couldn't find the distinction anymore and it scared me so bad because I could have
killed the guy.
I mean, it took him about three minutes to wake this guy up and he was convulsing three
feet off the ground.
He was in such shock.
And I knew it was scary even for me.
I'd never really hurt someone that bad
in a boxing match before.
And I broke down and cried.
I just, and I promised myself, and it's even emotional
for me to talk about it.
I just said, I'm never going to box again.
I have to convert this energy into helping people.
I cannot, I cannot let fear
govern my actions, govern my choices, force me to exercise and do all these
things which are ultimately only energizing more fear. And I told the coaches I was
going to leave and they said we want you to stay and be the trainer because
however you see I also represent the United States Army in triathlon while I was fighting on
the boxing team.
So I actually was on two military teams.
I trained six hours a day in a boxing ring and trained four hours a day for triathlon.
And they could never figure out how the hell I could do that because the boxers couldn't
handle the boxing training.
And the way I ate was different. The way I lived was different.
And they always just thought I was
like some weird hippie dude that could hit really hard.
So they weren't about wrong.
They weren't about wrong.
Yeah.
So they said stay and we'll make you the trainer.
And we'll let you run the boxing, all the training,
all the fitness, all the nutrition.
And I asked them if I could do massage for the fighters
because I wanted to do that because it had been so helpful in my triathlon training.
So I actually took on the role of caring for the fighters, organizing their diets, managing all their gym training,
working with the team physician to care for all the acute sports injuries and chronic injuries we had.
So I studied with an osteopathic physician for two years and I did all their massage therapy
and no one had ever been a massage therapist for a boxing team before.
So there was all sorts of criticisms called gay and people messing with me and I'd be working
on guys and they'd walk by and stick their fingers up athletes, rectums, just to kind
of be silly.
So it really created like this turmoil in the military
because it was so unusual.
What year is this?
1984.
That pinnacle moment where I hurt that guy
was the day that I had to make a decision
about what I was gonna let govern my sense of who I am
and what I use my life force energy for
and what I'm going to create in the world.
And that's the day I realized not only did my father give me everything I needed to protect
myself.
He gave me the motivation to learn to protect myself.
He gave me the discipline to get a job done and not complain and to stay focused under
pressure. not complain and to stay focused under pressure, but I also realized that spiritually I had to
channel that energy into creating more connection, more harmony and more unity because the pain
that it caused in me to face the fact that I just ended a guy's boxing career and could
have killed him just because he scared me.
It sounds like you had, you had, you had 22, you had trained half your life to become tougher,
to protect yourself, to become aggressive, to be fierce,
and it expressed itself fully, and you did it,
you did it, and afterwards you realized,
well, that's not what I thought it would be,
and that's probably why, I mean, that sounds like,
well, you can also see too, I mean, that sounds like... Well, you can also see too.
I mean, you can just tell the emotions it brings up when you share the story.
You know, how much of this do you still feel that you have to work through?
Like, is this something...
I don't feel like I have to work through it.
It was a very, as you said, a complete experience.
It was kind of like an orgasm of self-realization that was full of
both awakening, but the realization of all the pain that I had caused myself to try to
accomplish things that ultimately were not taking me in the direction of a greater sense
of unity with the whole of your life.
Closing your door, opening of another thing.
Yeah, I was getting more and more trapped into individualism.
If I'm stronger, I can do this, if I'm faster,
I can do this.
But I work with power animals,
and one day I was working through some challenges,
and my first shock or power animal is the bee family.
And I went to my bee spirits, and I said,
you know, this is the problem I'm having.
And what do you suggest? And the bees gave me an image of
the whole hive working together to make honey. And the the bee spirit said to me, just this few words,
nobody can make honey alone. And that was the message. No one can make honey alone.
And I realized that the further you go into individuality, the more you believe you can
handle issues with strength, power, and show.
But the further you go into making honey or sweetness in your life or something meaningful,
the more you have to let go of individuality and enter into relationship with
others because you can't accomplish anything truly meaningful by yourself or we wouldn't
be here right now, would we?
Now, knowing that and knowing what you came from, how hard is that?
Because, you know, being someone who had kind of a rough childhood myself, you know, it
kind of forces guys like this to be very independent.
You know, now you, you, you had this happen to you, you're making this transition.
Was it a smooth transition? I mean, did you, this boom, that happened?
And you totally like, oh, I'm going to all of a sudden align myself with it.
They're like, my, did people and grow and continue this path?
Or did you struggle with this, you know, you know, wanting still to do things
your own or your own way and independent and not allowing others to or let go like you said
It was a shift in intention
It wasn't the case where I had
To then go find out how to live in that new way because my mother raised me that way, right? I watched my mother get beat up and
My mother get beat up and
Go sit and meditate and not lose her composure and and do her best to have empathy and compassion
Knowing that this man himself was broken and that that was the partnership she'd committed to so she spent 24 years doing her best
to credit
create light in the darkness and
to create light in the darkness and use her art to express herself and her creative pursuits to move that energy.
So I learned that and I learned about the importance of diet and the importance of exercise and
the importance of meditation and she sent me away to spend time with the monks on my
15th summer.
So I spent a summer with monks going deeper into the
techniques. And so by the time this event happened, I already had the
the spiritual foundation and the awareness, but I just hadn't reached a pivotal
point where I made the switch and orientation from exercising and living well and succeeding in sport or
in academia or in my career where before my orientation was man I could make a lot of money
and I can buy a big house and you know if I'm stronger no one's going to kick my ass
and you know fuck all these tough guys I got something for them and you know just kind of that that harsh young man need to feel safe and feel meaningful in the world.
You know when you're young like that power says something right. So for me it was
just a realization that I saw clearly that if I continued to project myself in
that direction it would take me into more and more having
to hurt people or more and more having to win at the expense of somebody else becoming
a loser per se.
And I'm not against competition, but there's a time when winning actually turns out to be
losing in the long run.
I'll give you a good example of that, a painful one.
My brother and I used to fight a lot.
And my brother didn't handle our upbringing as well as I did.
And he committed suicide when he was 34.
And when my brother died, I spent a lot of days and a lot of nights crying and remembering
all the times when we were fighting and I beat the shit out of
them, but I could have stopped because I knew I had the situation under control. And so
when you see that that quest for individuality, if you look at it as a knock-on effect, it leads that person into isolation and separation and fear.
He was heavy.
And he could not bridge to the spiritual side.
He got too isolated and too alone and too trapped in drugs and became part of the hell's
angels and went at downhill from there.
And so when I saw that I had the chance to use the same amount of life force and I could
still keep myself fit and I could still compete, but that my intention was to use my knowledge
and my experiences to help other people have positive experiences that would enhance their
life instead of detracting from their life and their relationships.
It was almost as though I had to go through that experience to kind of knock me into the
next quantum shift of where I needed to go through that experience to kind of knock me into the next quantum
shift of where I needed to go to fulfill my life legacy.
If I would have been too successful as a, I was very successful as a stock car racer.
I could have gone pro, but spirit guided me out of that.
I was very successful motocross racing.
I was successful in sport.
I was successful enough in boxing, but I was not good enough fighter to
turn pro without getting my brain scrambled because I like to fight too much and I started late.
Most of the guys I was fighting had 320 fights under the belt by the time there were 20.
So I started boxing at 12. So that's a huge difference. That's like trying to ski against
someone who's really good that started when there were three and you started when you were 12. That's a lot of
important years you're missing out on. So it really, what I'm sharing is if it's
not clear is that I already had the background training, but I still was using
the fear as the motivation at an unconscious level and still trying to succeed
by being better and stronger and pushing
the underdog down.
And I realized that in order for me to really get a meaningful message to people and help
people heal, that I had to help them over the same problems many times that I had.
And the first thing I did when I really made this realization, as I said, all the boxers
down in a circle, this is when I really made this realization as I sat all the boxers down in a circle.
This is when I was their trainer.
And they all had a lot of respect for me because one, they watched me competing and training
for triathlon and I won the Army triathlon at Fort Bragg and my wife won the Women's
Division.
So they already knew this guy some kind of weirdo because for him to train like that
plus do what we do in the gym. He's from another planet. So I sat down with the boxers and I said, and there was 30 of them at that time. I said,
how many of you right now have painful, unresolved issues with your father and really wish you could
have kicked his ass when you were at home. Guess how many
hands went up? Probably most of them. All of them. 29. Only one guy did not have
those issues. So as I started looking into this I saw all of us were there for
reasons of fear and all of us were there to try to create safety but we were
empowering ourselves to create safety with fear.
And the problem is, is when the ego gets too narcissistic, you get what we had on the boxing
team, we regularly had problems with them going out at night, going to bars, getting drunk,
and beating the shit out of everybody in the bar.
And the next thing you know, the cops are showing up at the boxing arena, looking for
these key people, and we often had to try to hide these guys so they didn't get put in jail. And this is a big problem because now you're using highly evolved fighting skills
to go to a bar where people don't really have a chance against. You'll be like fighting someone
with no gun when you have a machine gun. And so you see that it doesn't know how to contain itself
without spiritual awakening, without meaningfulness,
without an understanding of the importance of relationships.
And so we're right back to how do you make honey where you can't do it alone.
So knowing this, we have a ton of athletes and competitors of all different sports that
listen to the show.
And we've already learned so much of all the athletes that you've impacted. What advice do you give when you take on a team or you take on an individual athlete
in this what we're talking about right now?
Since that's probably true to about 80 plus percent of people.
A lot of the motivator is fear driven.
What do you say to them?
Well, there's a number of pathways I take.
I do a very comprehensive assessment
to see what their belief systems are and what their most stressful events in their life
have been to see how their, their psyche got formed. So, will you, will you change your
message then if, if I'm, if I'm somebody who's like, for me, I have, I love listening to
someone talk like this. I'm not close minded, a very open-minded to hearing almost anyone
speak about anything,
but that's not common.
A lot of people, there's people right now
that are listening to this show
that have already turned it off
because they heard spiritual, they heard this,
they heard that, and then right away,
they're turned off by that.
So when you meet an athlete or a person like that,
how do you deal with that?
Well, what I do is I look at where
their structure stage of conscious development is at.
So there's several different models you can use,
but there's also what are called values memes,
which are a meme means ideas, an idea about values
that's been studied in their strata,
just like a rainbow.
Again, the rainbow strata.
So all the way down at the bottom,
you have beige in Claire Gravesves model which is just pure survival. Someone who's got a disease and in bed is
in beige. Anytime you're wounded and can't take care of yourself you're at the
beige values level. The next level is purple which is family and tribe. The next
level level is red which is personal power. So here you see someone going
against the chief or against the parents or against the military a rebel someone who says screw
You I'm doing it my way and this is where a lot of gangs are centered in the red values me
Then you go out of there to blue which is where all organized business and religion is
So people that are in red usually create so much stress and so many enemies and so much fear that they have to turn to Jesus
Because they are afraid they're gonna die and they need to make sure that they're not going to go burn in hell.
So you see a lot of the gangsters jumping up this, why you see all this talk about Jesus
for example.
And even in athletes, you see a lot of talking about Jesus and God, but they don't realize
it because their fear of what they're creating makes them hope that God is up there and that
God is this or God is that. But the point that I'm making is that I can tell by talking to somebody and hearing what's important to them where they're at,
where their value structures are at, where their psyche's at in their own psychic development,
and therefore I have a saying I develop for my students, always tell a person exactly what they want to hear,
but give them what they need. So if you say to me,
Paul, my dream is to win a kickbox in contest. We'll call that the red values meme. I might be
aware that they're too self-oriented or narcissistic and it's causing problems in their relationships. Maybe
they're not getting along with their girlfriend or they're not getting along with their coach, which is very common.
So the next level up is blue, which requires a lot of people to work together and to have
systems in place to accomplish things so that energy flows efficiently.
So I simply say to them, okay, well, if you want to accomplish this, who's cooking your
food?
Oh, my girlfriend, okay.
Who's boxing gym are you training at?
Sam's boxing gym.
Who's your coach?
This guy.
Who's your trainer?
This guy.
Do you use massage therapy?
Yeah, I love massage.
Good.
So what I do is I show them in a few minutes.
They cannot accomplish the dream.
I say, well, if you had no coach and you had no trainer and no one cooking your food, and
dot, dot, dot.
Could you accomplish this objective?
Well, most of them would say no. Well good. So you see now you need to be aware of the fact that the way you've been managing yourself is producing a lot of pain in all these key relationships because you're so self oriented that you're actually defeating your own objective which is to achieve a championship. So I take them one step up and say, look, this is how the next level of consciousness works.
These are the people you have to have on your dream team.
They need to each be aware of what your dream and goal objective is so that when they're working with you,
they're also contributing and you need to be aware of what their dreams are.
Because then you know what you're contributing to.
So if this guy's dream is to become a celebrated trainer,
well, you know if you become a celebrated
athlete with his support that you can shine some light on him and say he was one of the
keepable to help me make it. Now you're inspired to train because the better you do, the better
they do, and you know what makes them feel good, you know what makes them feel loved. So
now the athlete's orientation goes from totally self and screw everybody else that won't sustain my narcissistic childlike attitude
Very typical of a professional athlete and you go to say wow now
I realize that without the guy that makes the boxing gloves and about the guy that runs the gym without the lady that cooks the food and without
Dot dot dot I got nothing. Yeah, and these are the people I've been shitting on
So I take them there.
And each level up comes with its own unique set of challenges.
Spiritual growth and development is no different than physical growth and development.
If you walk in the gym and you've got three plates of side and you're supposed to deadlift
eight to twelve, but you can do twenty, it's time for more weight on the bar.
Well, when you're growing spiritually, if you get to the level of narcissism and you learn
how to handle that like I described, then God says, if you get to the level of narcissism and you learn how to handle that, like I described,
then God says, now you get to deal with the challenges of real relationships. Instead of just telling everyone to fuck off and punching them in the face,
now you've got to do the work to create honey together. And so now the spirit bar gets heavy. Now you have to go from,
you have to make an interesting transition from willpower to won'tpower.
Where I used to say, fuck you, get out of my way, I'll smack you.
Now I have to slow down and say, wait a minute, what's my dream?
And is that going to create what I want?
What's the idea of that?
So you have to learn to use the brake pedal.
First, we start off with the gas pedal, we crash into everything.
Then we have to learn to use the brake pedal, slow down, think ahead a little bit, and be really clear on what our destination is, so we're
not going sideways to the destination, but narcissism as a concept means I'm only interested
in what I want, but I forget there's several other people in this bus with me who also
want to go places, right?
So it's a transition. And I did want to kind of go back to, you know, now you're
the boxing trainer for your division. United States Army boxing. Now, where do you go from
there? Because obviously now you've got courses and issues. So there's a process. At this
point, are you developing your theories? and did you know that this is something that you were going to
eventually put together and to a business and teach others and certifications or where did you go from this from this point?
I always had a strong intuitive sense that
my life's work would be oriented around
exercise and health because of there there were the only things that I
exercise and health because there were the only things that I truly felt passionate about. In fact, I hated school. I never finished the ninth grade, never...
Which is ironic from a guy who's surrounded by books and loves to read and research.
Well, I'm going to tell you a funny story on that. When I was 22 on the way back from the
Army AUSA-10 Mile Run at the Pentagon, which is a big competition amongst Army running teams. All of a sudden on the bus I stood up
and screamed, Hallelujah! Woo! And they looked at me and they said, what's the big
deal? The race is over. And I held up the book. What was it? Nutrition,
Nutrition, a holistic approach by Rudolph Ballantine. 479 pages. It was the
first book I read covered a cover in my whole life.
Oh, wow.
And so they said, what's the fuss all about?
I said, I just finished my first book
and they all thought I was just completely lunatic, right?
They couldn't even believe it, right?
And they said, well, what is it?
And I showed them they go, you're really sick, man.
And I found that when I was studying,
this is how the soul works.
You get that charge when you're moving in the direction you're supposed to be moving,
your heart turns on and you lose track of time.
What do you think it's already interrupted?
But what do you think about people that refer to that as like the flow state, right?
When you get it.
Well, that's what it is.
Okay.
The flow is when the consciousness of the individual, the heart of the individual and the instincts
of individual are all dancing in harmony. So when your gut instinct is in line with your heart's love and your
ideas are polarized to those motives, you lose your sense of
separateness, you lose your sense of time, you know many times I thought I'd
only been studying something for an hour
And it had been eight hours and I hadn't even eaten and I forgot I even needed to eat crazy, right? So you're you know, you're deeply
in this state of
Oneness with something that's far greater than your ego could perceive
but it only take sometimes it takes longer for people to be aware for, throughout running and they have a one-nest state, they think it has something
to do with just running and they like to run.
But when you pay attention and you learn to induce one-nest states with other things,
be it painting or studying or yoga or preparing food or whatever it might be for you, you realize that the knock on effect
of being in those states is that you have greater sensitivity to when you're moving toward or away
from what your heart is pulling you to do and as long as you live true to that and you're honest about what your
needs are in a relationship, you find that everything starts to harmonize around you that
people get along better and they appreciate what you're doing, where if they don't appreciate
what you're doing, it's like, oh, he's addicted to studying or he's addicted to exercise and
then it becomes a painful in relationships.
So my point is those one-ness states actually go from something you induce with exercise or X or Y or Z
to something that brings you into a state where all of a sudden you realize that your questions are answered very quickly in that state.
For example, if I'm in a one-ness state or a peak flow state when I'm painting,
and I look at the diagram or the thing that I'm painting or I'm working on stuff from my work,
and I just hold the intention of asking my soul, what's next?
And all of a sudden I get a vision that I realize that in that one-n-estate,
I can get answers to questions that might have taken me a year looking through books
and doing research on the internet to find the answer to. Or I get pointed in the right direction and I know, oh, wow, I got to go look
under that rock. I never realized that I needed to go there. Now did you start feeling this with that
first book? Is that when you start to? No, I felt it. I felt it in meditation with the monks
many times. And they're so powerful. 15 years old. He's getting to go hang out with monks.
So where are they?
Where are they located?
Yeah, what is this?
Well, my parent, my mother switched from Christian science
to the Self-Realization Fellowship, which is Paramahansa Yogananda's gift to the west of yoga.
That's a philosophy based in Eastern yoga, the principles of yoga, but yoga for the mind,
yoga for the heart, there's several yogas, but they're all mixed together.
We would travel to the temple in Vancouver from Vancouver, and it was a whole day over,
and then stay overnight and come back.
So we often do that on the weekends.
So I got this week by week, just like going to church and indoctrination, but learning to meditate, learning to breathe, learning how to move
your body, the importance of moving and breathing, the importance of diet,
things that are very pinnacle to my whole system now. But then when I was 15, my
mother sent me away to a summer camp where I got to spend several weeks with
them on a daily basis, and that's all you did all the time.
You lived with them all day.
You meditated with them, you ate with them, you worked in the fields with them, you did
everything with them.
I had very deep meditative experiences, even as a young child.
And interestingly, my first full-blown Samadhi, which means total union with all that is,
happened when I was 35 in a sort of a strange
and unusual situation.
I was teaching check practitioner level three
and two of my students from Australia said,
Paul, we'd really appreciate it
if you could show us how to meditate while we were here.
We're having a hard time meditating
and wanting to know if you'd be willing to teach us.
So I said, well, the Self-Realization Fellowship Gardens are right a mile away.
We're yoga on to actually wrote the book, The Autobiography of Yogi,
and where the monks go and live and train each other and offer services to the public.
And there's a phenomenal meditation garden there sitting benches on a cliff
overlooking the ocean with surfers
and dolphins and everything else.
So I intuitively knew I'm gonna take them there
because there's a bench that I like to meditate on there.
And it's right overlooking the ocean.
So I took these two guys who had never meditated before,
spent, you know, 10 or 12 minutes just talking them
through the basics about breathing
and how to work what you do with your mind and things like that.
And it was on our lunch hour, we entered into meditation together and I went full blown into a state of complete super consciousness, but no identity of self.
I was just one with everything and all of a sudden I realized with conscious awareness,
oh my God, I am one with everything and I got afraid.
Like, where's my body? And I realized that my body was sitting on this bench.
So I was, you can't really describe and words the experience, but it was as though
the whole universe was looking back at the bench as opposed to me looking out at
the universe. And I came back into my body with just bone, and I shook like in it.
It was like I didn't know what reality I was in for a minute.
It took me a second.
I was actually almost panicked.
It was such a shocking experience.
And right when I jumped, those two jumped, and they both looked at me and said,
they're twin brothers, and they said it simultaneously, Paul, what just happened?
We were completely gone, one with the universe.
And we don't even know what that is.
And it scared the hell out of me.
And they realized that right when I came back,
they came back.
So the paradox of it is I had my first samadhi,
which takes people sometimes years of meditation to get to.
And at the same day I had one,
these guys on their first try to meditate with me
had that experience,
but typically when you meditate,
this is why people meditate in groups.
They would say this would be group flow.
Well, it would.
The ability of,
because I know how to meditate,
it just happened that the
fruits of my practice brought me to to show we say the orgasm of it all, the very day that
they were there. So they got swept along in the current. And it was a very profound experience.
So that you know, that's beyond the peak state because in a peak state, you're still there.
Do you know where those guys are at currently now? Have you communicated with them?
One of them I know, unfortunately, the other one committed suicide and had some challenges
and the one that committed suicide was a bodybuilder and it was, shall we say very deeply caught in narcissism. And the one that committed suicide
was the one that wasn't very academic.
He was more, shall we say, kinesthetic in his natural way
of learning.
His other brother was very academic.
So his other brother could handle the depth of my training
and could ingest it and digest it. But his brother felt so inferior because he had a hard time understanding it and they were constantly measuring themselves off each other.
So he kind of drifted away from practicing the things I was teaching, and got more and more into bigger muscles, more power,
and never really could follow the flow. It was just the world wasn't the right place for him to make it into that.
Do you find this is somewhat of a common theme with people in search of this?
Because it's almost like there's this fine line when you start talking about spirituality and flow and consciousness.
It's almost like this pain drives them, but it can many times it can succumb to it.
Yeah.
It's like you either totally make it or go the other way opposite, right?
You can, but you know, those are the extremes.
Like if you look at statistics, right?
Well, if you're doing a statistical analysis of what's the effects of 79 grams of white turkey meat on bodybuilders.
Will you study 500 of them and you'll have a bell curve?
Three of them said it made no difference at all or made them worse and
37% said they felt much better and gave them better mass and then you have some range of everything in between.
So humans are the same way.
better mass, and then you have some range of everything in between. So humans are the same way.
Some are on the left of that curve, some are on the right of the curve, and some are
somewhere in between in that rainbow spectrum again.
So there's always a range of receptivity and a range of readiness.
And then there's also the real issue that freedom, Oshos says, freedom's the most dangerous thing you'll ever experience.
So when you have an experience like that and you realize you are more than your body and you realize that God is unconditional of
and you realize that God doesn't want anything from you because God has everything including you, right?
You know, one of my favorite sayings to say to people is people used to ask St. Francis of Assisi all the time what is God?
And you would say what you are looking for is what's looking. Okay, so when you get that and
you truly get that, then there's no need to ask questions about God anymore, but it really brings
up the importance of this thing called love and this thing called we, because if you realize what God is, you realize that everything that you're looking at is the physical manifestation
of that thing we call God. And to look for God is an admission that you really don't understand.
The word means yet. So the point I'm making here is that with an experience like that comes
a level of awareness that if you embrace it makes you so radically different
than almost everybody else
that you now have to go the path of a pioneer.
Pioneers are easily identified by the arrows in their backs.
So what do you do when you go back and tell your mom and dad
that you don't have to go to church to find Jesus
because I found them on the cliff looking at the seals with Paul.
What do you do when you find that you don't believe in things like maybe you were anti-gay
and all of a sudden you realize God loves being gay, is God loves being homosexual or heterosexual
or transsexual and you used to stand at rallies and scream at people and be abusive to them.
So if a person's not...
It could be very scary for somebody who's not ready for that.
If a person doesn't have enough spiritual courage to transition from one behavior and belief
system to another, and they have a lot of self-judgment because if they transition, now everybody
that they were Cluclux clanting with says wait a minute. What are you doing? You're
Now now you're the outcast and now if you don't have enough confidence to be at
peace with yourself as your best friend and
Love yourself and meet your own needs and not have to have mom and your daddy or someone rescuing you
Then the journey into spirituality and freedom is extremely hard to endure.
Just reminds me of a message that we always like to give with working out.
Sal says this a lot, which is, you know, don't work out because you hate yourself,
but work out because you love yourself. Yeah.
And how many people are really motivated, honestly, when going to the gym,
because they're disgusted in how they look or how they feel.
And that's really the main motivator.
And really the main motivator should be because you actually love yourself, you want to take care of yourself.
Paul, when did you start formulating and putting together what you teach now that's organized
together? When you teach the check practices or the check institute or training?
Yeah, I have the check practitioner program which focuses on the first three phases of it focus on proper physical
assessment anatomy physiology functional anatomy
Digestive everything you need to know about the basics of how the body works and how to design exercise programs for every level from injured people all the way up
You know, it's very comprehensive and then the holistic lifestyle coaches. how do you focus on diet and lifestyle,
how people organize their lives?
What are their dreams and goals?
Do they have goals?
What are they eating?
What is their body's unique individual needs?
Do they know how to have a relationship with their gut?
So they know when their body is saying, don't eat more of that versus just reading a recipe
and eating it because it says someone paper or reading a pill prescription and taking it instead of checking in with what the
body wants because the body will guide you to health.
So the HLC goes into all the things that you need to know in order for corrective or
high performance exercise to actually work.
So you can't have one without the other, but our culture isn't ready for fully holistic
integration.
So I had to keep the two apart.
So the first three years of training, I teach you to be a master mechanic, but then I blow
your head right off on the fourth year and say, now guess what, I need you to forget everything
I taught you because you're believing in numbers too much.
Now we've got to look at why that rib hurts, why the heads forward, why the penis prematurely
ejaculates or won't stand up and get to the real issues and to do that, you have to go out of your
intellect and into intuitive relationship and into a relationship with the person sitting across
you. In other words, instead of them being an object, you're working on, you have to develop a
relationship with them and get
inside and see where their hearts really wounded and what their real needs are and what their
real fears are and what their beliefs are and why they're having a hard time creating
something that isn't so painful all the time.
Now what percentage of people do go one, two, three and then just say I'm not doing four,
like that's just...
I would say only about 2%.
Well, there's tests that you have to go through.
You have to send in case histories,
live case histories that I can follow up on
to demonstrate your effective use of the training
to get into level three,
because it's a very, very advanced course.
And then level four, you have to do the same thing
or I won't let you in the course.
And most people aren't disciplined enough to do the actual work and study, and they don't
have enough bravery to stand alone as a check professional when what they're doing is
so radically advanced and different than everybody else because people criticize it.
Whenever they're insecure about someone that has that much knowledge and power, they attack them.
So if a check practitioner or a HLC practitioner
isn't rooted enough and doesn't have enough connection
to other check professionals,
they often fall back into the fold
because they can't take the pressure of being different.
In other words, they would have just stopped
using a Swiss ball when they started getting criticized
as what I'm saying.
Over the years, how many people would you say
have taken your courses?
Probably now, 12, I don't know, 12 or 13,000,
the advanced training courses,
but countless thousands in my lectures and workshops.
Now, we've talked off-air,
and we've talked about dogma and how that's not good,
that's bad, in any form or any way of thinking.
And a lot of the people that follow your courses will refer to themselves as checkies and
do develop these groups.
And from the outside looking in, sometimes it can almost seem like they're identifying
so strongly with it that it comes across that way.
Do you find any challenges with that, with seeing that or hearing that, or is it just
interpreted wrong?
Well, like any program, just like we talked about that rainbow values, I have people in my
program all the way up to level 3 that are at any level of those values.
So maybe they're taking this training to be a bad ass and to show everybody else how smart
they are and to make a lot of money versus someone who's at a higher level, which would
be the ones that typically make it to level four, which have already crossed through the realization that there is no
eye without we.
And therefore, what I should be doing is not only working to create my own dreams, but
to support others in creating theirs.
So you see that there's a sort of stratification of consciousness and the ones that are at the level where they realize that in order to fulfill their own needs
to achieve and to create, they need more information than they climb up until they reach that sense
of satiation or realize that Paul put a package together and there's none of it that's useless
because it's all there for a reason. So those are the more tapped in.
But I'd say only about 3% make it to level four,
probably only about 15 or 20% make it to level three,
probably about 60% make it to level two
in the check practitioner program.
It's like a pyramid, you know, each level gets narrower
as you go up.
I've had friends who were from the medical field, physical therapists and, you know, doctors who've
taken, you know, level one, two, and it's very based on, like you said, measurable, tangible,
physical things, you know, it definitely wouldn't be out of place in Western medicine. But then like
you're saying, when you get to four, it's very, very different. It's completely different.
Do you think that maybe why some people don't go into that? No, the real problems level
three, because it takes a fair bit of discipline of using the materials that I teach
to be effective enough to turn in a case history that shows me that you're actually applying
everything, but our culture has a fast food education mentality. So they take courses and
they dilute themselves into thinking that they're an expert, the week they walk home with
a certificate, put it on the wall, but then they don't actually do the work to practice that, to change their practice, to
do the evaluations and do the real work that produces authentic experience.
So what happens is they operate on the intellectual kite of the certificate, but don't do the real
work of integrating that, and the first person I challenge them all to integrate it with is themselves.
And I'm watching that very, very carefully.
And so those people distinguish themselves as separate from the others because they,
when they turn their case histories into try to get to level three, it's as obvious to
me in 10 seconds where they're at.
And if they don't want to do the work to do another case history,
which means go out and practice it, then they won't come to the class.
So a good example is one year I had 39 people apply for check level three,
and I only accepted nine.
So as my wife, as the numbers woman reminded me that's something like 3,600 bucks ahead. I just lost, you know,
probably about 100 grand. And I said, honey, I know we need money, but I refuse to sell my soul.
I may not be here to educate the masses, but I am here to create masters. And I know any one of the check level four practitioners
in the world has the power to not only educate,
but help countless thousands of people,
and anybody that didn't do the work
is usually still struggling to try to make a living
and can't figure out why they're not making it, you know?
Do you often find yourself at odds with the business side
of this?
Yeah.
But you said,
didn't you get offers from supplement companies
and like major money came your way
to kind of be involved with, but just decided to pull out?
I wouldn't get involved because, you know.
You name dropped people like Bill Phillips
and so I mean these are big, some of the big movers. Yeah, I didn't have any offers like Bill Phillips. I mean, these are some of the big movers.
Yeah, I didn't have any offers from Bill Phillips.
I wrote for muscle media.
Dr. Conley offered to build an entire gym at my design.
This is metrics.
Yeah, that metrics is very good.
So that I could oversee the rehab and conditioning
of all the metric sponsored athletes, which is many millions
of dollars at the time. But I could not ethically align myself with a company using Aspertain because
I had done tons of research on it. So in my meeting with him, I said, I'm willing to work
with you under one condition. You need to take Aspertain out of all your products. And
I said, I can give you a stack of research as high as you're ceiling showing it does things like burn holes in people's brains.
And he said that's all bullshit.
I'm not going to take that stuff out of there.
And I said, well, it isn't bullshit because 150 scientists can't be wrong and none of
them are on the payrolls of an Aspertain company.
So they're not, you know, prostitutes scientists are considered the modern prostitutes because
you can pay them to get any result you want.
So I just got up and walked out and that was it.
And there's been other opportunities just like that,
but I can't let money dictate my moral principles
or ethical principles.
Yes, I have to make a living.
Yes, I have a business to run.
But the reality of it is if I wanted to get rich I could repackage my material and just
make it all about having flat abs and big muscles and being a badass and I'd sell truckloads
of stuff.
But I can't.
I don't, that something inside me starts to die, the instant that I move
in that direction.
Well, I also think that you're, your level of awareness and understanding.
You know already that even if you made all that crazy amount of money, you wouldn't be
fulfilled.
It wouldn't be rewarding.
It wouldn't, it wouldn't be short-lived, you know.
I've always, I've always trusted in whatever word you want to use.
The universe will, will use that.
But my life experience has brought me
into many painful and scary places.
And when I felt trapped and alone and got very still
and asked for help and for guidance
from whatever it was that was listening, I always got it.
I always got the direction.
I always came up with
ways to make money. I've had money come to me in large sums when I never
expected it from places I never expected it. You know out of the blue I'll have
some rich athlete or something hire me for you know fifty thousand dollars
where the therapy or something. And I found that the universe is always there to support me
as long as I am sticking to the principles
of supporting people in the world.
And I don't have to resort to challenging my ethics
in order to get money.
So my spiritual relationship is that we're not alone,
and we are part of a much, much bigger process, which is ultimately driven by
the grand total need for collective awareness of what we all are.
Once we come to the realization that we are all expressions of the same thing,
I mean even if you use a standard scientific model, if the big bang is correct,
which I don't believe in at all, but since it's a standard model,
you realize we were all in bed together at the beginning of all of us.
I'm serious, right? We were packed together with a density that the whole universe itself could fit into a teaspoon, right? So if that's not incestuous, and so all
I'm saying is when everything blew apart, incest is best. Came a
partners. You understand the concept? Everything blew apart in this big bang, but
everything that seems to be separate, that planet over here, it all came from one point.
And so even if you use an outdated old materialistic model, if you look at it from a spiritual perspective,
that materialistic model is actually a model of spiritual unity that says everything that
is or can be known or will be came from one point in space time and one location and that means every one of us is brothers,
sisters, aunts, uncles, whatever the hell you want to call it.
We're all relatives.
We're not different.
And so when you realize that you have a choice to either contribute to the illusion of separation
and meanness or money, money, money, or focus on doing the things that make you feel
love because power and position and money without connection is a death sentence.
And I work with a lot of very rich people.
At one time, I had 10 billionaires flying their own jets to see me for help.
So I'm very indoctrinated to the spiritual challenges and the real challenges of wealth and abundance.
And they're as deep and painful as poverty. It's just the whole thing flipped over back and deeper.
Maybe deeper, right?
It can be deeper because you have more choices. So there's more to confuse yourself with.
Is that, you know, bringing it back to the business, is that, is that still a challenge for you in the sense that several times now
you've brought up ideas or concepts that you originated that are now that became bigger
you talked about the coffee we talked about the Swiss ball and yeah another things and
it's it sounds like maybe someone's listening can say wow he sounds like he's angry that
he didn't get credit for it no No, I'm not angry. It's
You know, I or is that a struggle? Is that a struggle for you to see it and go? Oh God I should get credit for that or I couldn't it is emotional at times because I
Only expect the kind of respect that I would give somebody else if you study any of my courses
There is a long trail of references. I reference reference reference. I made a habit of always sending any new courses to the people
who were key contributors because I referenced their material to ask, am I misrepresenting
you? Are you at peace with how I'm sharing? And always got amazing positive responses from
all over the world. So my philosophy is never cap a knowledge well.
Right. Don't be disrespectful to the source of your own abundance and to the source of your own personal growth or
intellectual growth or professional growth and
Penny and I spent probably 35 to $50,000 a year on lawyers just to write cease and to cis letters of people writing making videos, and starting programs that were just ripped off right out of my stuff. But there's
lawyers always said, you know, they'll cost you more to sue them. Most of these
people aren't, they don't have enough means to make it worth the lawsuit.
Does that happen a lot? Does that happen a lot from people who take your courses
and then go off and... Yes, it does. It happens at a very alarming rate.
And what do you want from them? Because you do see some
dissess, do you just want either accuracy or credit or reference? Just all I
want them to do is to follow the standards that are given in academia if you're
in a university for referencing appropriately, for respecting copyright laws.
For example, I've seen many books published that have art that I created and
paid for to have an artist's draw based off my own drawings.
And it's in their work, but it has no reference to me.
And they know who I am because I know who some of these people are.
But the key point that I'm trying to drive home here is that Penny and I reach the point.
And my wife's always been the one to kind of be my chief medicine woman.
She says, you know, plagiarism is as fine as form of flattery.
She said, be happy that they're stealing your stuff.
That's very true.
She says, your material done poorly is better than most of what's taught out there.
So, it's hard when you have an overhead and it can get tough at times and you don't have,
you know, big money supporting you and it can be stressful when you see people.
I remember one girl was making like $20,000 a month off of an ebook that she was very good at marketing, but it was just stolen right out of my material almost for batom.
And so we both reached a sort of a situation where we made an agreement to just stop spending money on lawyers and just focus on doing what we do best and that's taking what spirit gives me and what I can cultivate
and teaching people how to use it, putting it into play and putting our energy on abundance
instead of lack. So yes, there was a fair bit of pain to get to that point of realization.
But was that one of your more recent, I guess, growth periods?
That was probably, I don't know where she's at that's probably been since about
Probably around
2005 I think we just realized it was an endless stream of stress and expense and
Could see that lawyers were the only ones winning
Well, that makes sense of I mean around the internet boom when it would probably became yeah super apparent
Right, I was happy probably left and right.
And it was probably getting thrown in your face all the time.
Yeah.
Well, what's interesting too, just moving,
you know, with technology, you know,
copywriting and patenting things at good luck,
you know, you're not gonna be able to anyway,
moving ahead, so, you know,
business is finding ways around it.
Yeah, and business is trying to, you know,
find ways to, you know, for business is trying to find ways to,
you know, for example, one of the models now,
I know you have a YouTube channel, for example,
is just to give out information,
which I always have.
And gain a large audience,
and then that can be monetized quite easily,
and it doesn't matter if people copy or whatever.
Yeah, and that brings up an important point.
One of the challenges, probably the biggest challenge
to my system is two things.
One, I require that the individual do the work on themselves as an essential element of
coaching or guiding other people, or you really don't know what you're trying to get people
to do.
If you've never gotten yourself off sugar, gluten, or caffeine, and you're telling someone
else to do it, you haven't really got any idea how hard this can be and how it affects
your relationships, your every part of you is touched by these things for many reasons.
It takes a real commitment and a real discipline. So if someone's taking the training, like I said,
for the wrong reasons, if they're looking for a, you know, ego paper, they're not going to make
that transition. They're just interested in controlling people for money. But if you're interested in helping people, then you have to have that sense of confidence
within yourself that you're authentically offering them something that works, and it
is possible to make that transition off a gluten-office sugar or out of a screwed-up marriage
or whatever it is.
Very few people are willing to do that, so that's my first barrier to my system is I heavily emphasize do not go out and do things to people that you are not willing to do for yourself or you're actually putting them and you in jeopardy and you will have very false expectations of these people and you will often think that they're not complying or that they're you'll blame it on the client when really it's not that the client's not trying the client's scared to death and doesn't know how to do it and you're making them go too fast and you're not giving them nearly the support they need to make a transition of that significance.
The second thing is that it is a lot of work to do this amount of study and grow yourself with the understanding of anatomy, physiology, diet, lifestyle, hormonal, limbic, emotional,
psychological. I mean, one has to be fairly honestly interested in the depth of what a human
being is and what human life is about, and not just dealing with it at superficial levels,
which already separates a grand majority of the people that could be my students out there, just like you see a strata from
religions of heavy polarity like Christianity, Islam and Judaism, but by the time you get up to Zen Buddhism, which there is no God, and there's no one going to rescue you, and there's no one going to burn you in hell either, right? But
either, right? But the transition from a daddy in the sky, which means your psychological development is out of a child, to nothing in the sky but pure potential that says whatever
you create is what you get back. Be wise about how you use your awareness and your intention
is a transition of significance. So, you know, you've got a few people up there. We'll call
the Dalai Lama, the leader of that consciousness. And then down at you know, you've got a few people up there. We'll call the Dalai Lama, the leader of that consciousness.
And then down at the bottom, you've got all the
people preaching in church that Jesus is going to come burn you in hell, but as long as you pay us enough, you'll be safe.
So, Salis made a comment about, you know, your YouTube channel stuff.
You know, Generation X is proven that, you know, social media is going to drive the future of business.
Generation Z is going to demand it.
What are you currently doing within your company right now to handle that?
A lot. We are faced with a pretty monumental task because
most of the work that we teach requires hands-on training with an
instructor. And the cost of flying and the trouble of flying and the cost of
food and the cost of hotels and the cost of time-off work is quite
prohibitive for the model that I kind of developed, you know, many years ago.
So we've been working with web-based technologies on, and I've been working with live online seminars,
where you can see me and I can see you the student, and I teach you just like I was in a classroom,
except you're sitting in your house in Germany or Switzerland or Australia, and I'm sitting in my office right here,
and we've broken up, like we did each move on the health, we did HLC1 online, which is
a comprehensive version of how to eat moving the health.
And we broke it into 15 shorter lessons.
So a person could sit there, do that little lesson, get whatever they needed.
And if they have questions, they can either contact the institute or hire a mentor or whatever.
And I've been finding that I can do just as good a job.
The only exception is I can't show you how to mobilize
an atlas or check the integrity of the anterior
cruciate ligament hands on.
So what we've been doing is we've been taking as much
of the education as we can, putting it into
either prepackaged online training sessions,
and then we have mentorship meetings with instructors, or they come in for hands-on training for the
material that they covered online. So now that you've gone through the theory of it, and you've
seen us demonstrate this, you've tried a few of them with your partner at home, we're going to come
put you through the training hands-on and test you, but that brought the number of hands-on group meetings down significantly
because they can do about 90% of the training remotely.
So I'm also running mastery groups now where people that want to develop themselves to
their capability, whether it be a holistic lifestyle coach or a check for quadrant coach, which is my most recent and most comprehensive program, or a
patient I do, I probably do 90% of my work through Skype, and I've been doing that
for years all over the world, and people come to see me maybe once every three to
six months, usually for two to four days at a time. And then I do deep personal work, such as healing work or
shamanic work, or the things that I can't do without them here, but I do all the development and
the progressive day-by-day growth in development through Skype. And so I am just feeling
overjoyed because I, Penny and I traveled the world for 20 plus years non-stop,
giving hundreds of presentations worldwide, making it around the globe at least twice a year every year
for a very long time, and I just became completely and utterly exhausted of moving so much,
and also just got tired of constantly outputting and being in front of so many people all the time,
and having to really struggle to do my
Tai Chi and find a tree in the middle of some cement disaster of a city like New York to meditate with or
trying to find food and so the technology timing is beautiful because right now the technology works well enough
that I can do a fantastic job coaching people at a distance
and it's at a time when I don't want to travel, but I've been testing these groups and the
results are phenomenal.
It literally is like I'm just coaching you right here, but you're just through an electronic
window.
And so we're all working to make our courses much more accessible and easier in smaller chunks.
One of the things about my courses,
they're very intensive.
You know, they range from five to nine days long
and you're getting more information sometimes in a day
than you get in a university in a year
when it comes right down to rock solid stuff.
You gotta know not just theory and fluff.
This allows people more time to digest
and we set up these mentorship groups
to guide people along and forum so they can talk to each other and get questions answered. So it's
a it's a transition but I'm excited because the technology is there to support
it and I'm working at getting more of my core information out to the public
things like my book, how to eat, move and be healthy, movement that matters, you are what you eat,
audio books, the last four doctors, ebook,
I got piles and my whole PPS success master program
is 12 online lessons, helping you address
the 12 most common challenges that stop people
from achieving their dreams and being healthy in life.
So I'm excited because it's a time
that I'm ready to stop moving and
output and on my own terms and the world is ripe for that right now. So we're digging
it. What are a few just key things you could tell someone like a listener who is not familiar
with your courses and your
philosophies that you can tell them on let's say nutrition. What would be
it because you mentioned sugar, glutinous, glutinous, and I know you use those for
illustrated purposes and I do know you talk a lot about those things but what are
some key things that you could tell someone like okay here's some easy take
away when it comes to diet. And if you would compare it to what most of the
industry is talking about, because I feel like
You know a lot of it is different and it's hard for you hearing some a lot of it now I mean, you know avoiding gluten now is kind of gone mainstream
But I mean how long have you been talking about avoiding gluten for yeah, but even the people I feel that are doing that
It's like a fad versus yeah with 90
98 yeah, exactly. I mean what are some good key things that someone could take away?
Just sort of...
Well, I start with what Western price identified to be the very source of what caused disease
and native tribes that first made contact with white man.
And that's what we call the four white devils.
So, pasteurized dairy, white sugar, processed sugar, white flour, and sodium chloride, white table salt.
Those are the four, I call them the four devils, that's my name for them. So if you get rid of,
if you get off of pasteurized dairy and onto raw dairy, then you're getting food with enzymes in it, and that's important.
If you get off of processed table sugar and start using natural sources of sweetener,
whether it be stevia or fruit juice or honey, or there's many things you can use.
I mean, I could give you a long list of them, but switching from synthetic or highly processed
to natural is critical because there's nutrition in it.
And there's a whole rainbow of options, you know, from hardcore healthy to somewhere in between.
And then if you switch from sodium chloride, which is actually a poison to the body,
so, you know, sea salt, salt in its natural state, has typically got at least 40 different minerals in it,
and up to 40 plus trace minerals, trace elements, nutritional elements from the ocean itself.
So when you take sodium chloride, you're actually using one molecule.
There's nowhere in nature you can find a sodium chloride molecule all by itself and eat
it.
So when someone goes to tables from sea salt, high quality sea salt, they're
getting a wide variety of minerals and they're getting a wide variety of trace elements
that help regulate the hormonal system for one in the body and it actually becomes a source
of nutrition. So because those four are kind of the foundation of the standard American
diet, which we call SAD standard American diet, Crap, carbohydrates, refined foods, additives, and preservatives.
So the standard American diet is sad crap.
That's great.
Is that yours?
That worked out too well.
You know, I don't know.
I've had that in my slideshow.
It might have come from Dr. Oliver, who's a great physician and nutritionist, and who's
helped me build my programs years ago. But it's a fact. And so do you see that the simple transition is stop eating
pasteurized dead anything because it's dead. Milk is the first one because that's
one of the most common food allergies and intolerances in the world actually,
not just the United States. Go from dead salt to real minerals because those are critical hormone
regulators and many other things. Go from white flour to whole grain, but now I would say get a
food intolerance test to make sure that you don't put gluten containing grain in there, and if you
have a gluten intolerance, you better take all grains out to your gut heels because once your gut starts to leak then you will create antibodies against any
food you're eating because there's nothing keeping them from moving into the bloodstream.
The gut wall is permeable, right?
I actually did a gut, I actually did a food intolerance test during a period of time when I was having
very bad autoimmune issues.
And I was intolerant to, oh, whole array of foods.
And I took a test later after I had taken them all out,
I allowed my gut to heal.
And I was surprised to find that there were only
a few left over.
And I did not have intolerances to many of the foods anymore.
I had experienced exactly what you're talking about.
And the ones that last the longest, in other words,
if you were to stay on a four day rotation diet
like I teach and then retest yourself in another six months,
you might find another one of them,
or two of them drop off, and then another six months later.
But sometimes you reach the point where the immune system,
like for example, eggs, dairy, beef, chicken,
eggs, dairy, beef, chicken, the more of rice is the most common thing that people are allergic to in Japan, for example.
The more a person eats any food, the more likely they are to develop immune reaction to
it if their gut's leaking.
The number one cause of leaky gut syndrome is stress, which is out through the roof today. So the point I'm making is you can reach a point
where the immune system becomes so sensitized
that no period of time will allow you
to ever eat it again.
It's just like it's too indoctrinated.
You've gone too far.
You've gone too far.
And then now there are some energy medicine techniques
that have been tried and some people claim
that they work well, I've just never seen
any evidence of it in my practice.
What is the four day rotational diet that you're talking about?
That's in my book how to eat moving me healthy. Basically because it takes on on average 56 to 72 hours for a food
stuff to go from mouth to anus. So you have two types of timing. You have retention time which is if you eat
red beets the last time you see red in the toilet
would be how long you retained the beat. The first time you see the red beats in the toilet
would be a measure of transit time. How long it took to get from mouth to anus, but once
you eat something, it gets strung out through the digestive process as the body works with
it and, you know, manipulates it and some things move faster. So that red beat, if you take a red beat, chew it up, it'll first show up in about 14 to
16 hours in a normal body and in the last show up in 56 to 72 hours. And while
it's in your body, your immune system can react to it for as long as one
atom of that stuff in your body, your immune systems shall we say monitoring it? So a four-day rotation diet is built so you can eat
Anything you want from a list of foods on day one so you might have a pork day on day one
And I have genetically
Developed it through taxonomy
So that in the four days each of the foods on any one of the four days has no genetic similarity to the foods on the other days.
I see, okay.
So you eat, let's call it chicken on day one, beef on day two, pork on day three, fish on
day four, and only then do you go back and eat any of the meats or vegetables on any of
those other colors.
You can eat beef all day on beef day.
You can eat eggs all day on beef day. You can eat eggs all day on egg day. You can eat
squash all day on squash day and your favorite romaine lettuce all day on the day that it fits with
the flesh that you're on. That way because of that it's a four day rotational cycle but the
the retention cycle ends in 56 to 72 hours so it means that your immune system gets a 24 plus
hour break from exposure to any genus of food, and that calms the immune system down, so it doesn't
keep on putting posters all over the wall, wanted, bad guy named chicken, right? The more you stimulate
the immune system, the more it becomes like the FBI putting pictures of your face all over, wanted with a reward,
because it wants to get you out of there, because it's considered a threat to your own survival.
And the longer that goes on, the longer it takes in rehabilitation to get those foods back,
but many people have overstimulated, so they reach a critical point you can't come back anymore.
So you must cringe at the way bodybuilders eat with the same foods six times a day every
day.
Yeah, bodybuilders and everyone else.
You know, I saw research once, I saw two independent research studies years ago and it
was very shocking.
And this is the kind of way I work.
I look at a lot of different angles on things.
One research was looking into exercise.
How many exercises did the average person know?
They found the average person.
If they interviewed them and had them demonstrate
how many exercise they know,
the average person in society knew 10 to 12 exercises.
Found a completely different study
that looked at thousands of people's diets
and found the average person only eight, 10 to 12
different foods their entire lifetime.
So there you see the mind's capacity to handle novelty.
It's very limited, unless your parents or your elders
or your influencers guided you there.
So once a society gets programmed into this kind of
minimalistic thing, and if you talk to Ben Greenfield,
you probably, I'm sure he talked about, we need a lot of variety for nutrients. We have to have a wide
number of varieties. We used to eat with the seasons, you know, you, you, if you're,
if there's a pheasant, there you get it. You don't say, well, I'm waiting for the
duck. You take the pheasant, right? So we're constantly getting a flow of nutrients and
we moved a lot for a long time in human history. We're in nomadic. So we're constantly getting a flow of nutrients, and we moved a lot for a long time in human
history.
We were in nomadic, so we weren't eating from the same soils.
Here, if you go to Safeway and you buy pork, it was probably raised in the same commercial
farm for the last 100 generations of that animal, eating commercially raised farm animal foods
that are full of fungal micotoxins that are the
low-grade foods that can't be sold to human because they're too nutritionally deficient.
So you're eating an animal that's already sick and already deficient.
Now, if you keep eating from the animal, it would be like a farmer who never checks the
composition of his soil and checks the microorganism population to see where the imbalances are
and adjust it.
So the food gets less and less and less and less nutritious. And so how do people expect to be healthy with
those kinds of nutrition problems? Then they go get drug by doctors and get surgeries instead
of looking at the real deal. So the importance of the rotation diet is not just about excluding
foods. It's about, I love it when people have a lot of food intolerances because I say fantastic. Now you get to go to Hindu markets and Chinese markets
and Japanese markets and find out all sorts of vegetables and fruits and
meats that you never ate before. I think, oh, I can never do that. Okay, good. If
you don't want to do that, then you don't need my help. You're committed to being
sick and just take the drugs and go that path. I'm cool
with that if that's what you want. But you either take this as an opportunity to learn grow and become
wiser or you take an opportunity to become less conscious, more drug and more disabled. Right?
And so many people are blown away when they find out, you know, what ostrich tastes like or what
eel tastes like and all these things and all these neat vegetables
they never heard of and their health gets great and they learn that there's so much more out there and they get so
excited and I say good now let's just look at that same principle in the rest of your life and it
makes it obvious. It's okay. I've been being dogmatic and restricted with my spiritual beliefs, my
exercise beliefs and practices dot dot dot right. So a health crisis is actually probably the greatest spiritual opportunity you'll ever
have because pain is a great awakening of consciousness because you have a real motive to change
your behavior and be observant.
Excellent.
Yeah, that makes sense.
You follow that same philosophy with exercise rotating? Yes, it's much more scientific than that, but as a general rule of thumb for a general
population, yes, you'd want to, like if you look at my book, Howdy, Move and Be Healthy,
I have example exercise programs that are, so when you do your question here, is the
more total stress you're under, the easier your exercise program should be in the more oriented it should be towards balancing your internal systems or harmonizing biological oscillators, which are the brain, the heart, and the gut.
The more fit you are, the more vital you are, the more healthy you are, the less you're total stressed, the more oriented you are to being able to work out, which means to spend resources, right? To work out literally means to spend, to push energy and resources out of you.
Like, if you're going to light a fire, you've got to have some gasoline to run it with.
And the more the fire burns, the more gasoline it takes.
Gasling being fuel.
But if your diet and lifestyle is not replenishing the fire and you keep the fire burning,
well, then the fire just burns out.
And that's called adrenal fatigue or chronic fatigue or any number of chronic diseases. So the orientation that I have
toward exercise is one, the best exercise in the world is the one you'll do regularly. So we've
got to start there, right? If you can't get someone to do something they like to do, the exercise
is really another task or another item
on their to-do list, which is irritating.
So first I get them to do something
that they love enough to do regularly.
Once they've gotten the habit of exercising
and they know how important it is and how good it feels,
then I see now let's improve that
and look at exercises that will bring you movement nutrition
or that would be better for your internal state or would
be better for you to increase muscle strength or muscle mass because you need it because
you're a park ranger or a police woman or a policeman or a nurse for example who's got
to move people off of gurneys all the time.
Depending on the level that the individuals at, whether they be a seriously injured person,
or whether they be a seriously competitive athlete, those two need the highest levels of complexity
of exercise science.
And Mike Sulemi is an example of someone who had a very, very complex challenge, one because
the sport is brutal and requires very, very intense training that most people,
if you want to do what Mike did and where, you know, a world championship type event,
there's no room for farting around. So it takes tremendous discipline.
And you have to learn a lot and you have to learn a lot of self-management tactics. And so I
taught him about monitoring his morning heart rate, which is technique that I developed,
and how to read that, and how to adjust his food every day,
based on his feedback. I taught him my system for managing his
hormonal system, everything that he talked to you guys about.
That's the basic system that I developed over years from monitoring
and managing elite level athletes, and even serious amateur athletes.
So I put all that together, but the key point that I'm making is I can make it very simple
when simplicity is the first and most important thing. But if you're injured, sick,
or you're trying to achieve high ranking positions such as an Olympic medal or world level
competition, then the complexity has to be there to meet the demands of the
environment.
Paul, when you look at the current state of the fitness industry right now, what frustrates
you the most?
First of all, you know, some consider me the father of functional exercise because I
was one lecturing on all this stuff back in the day where there's nothing in machines,
Jim's but machines, and I was showing them the science of human movement
and how this would ruin athletes and how it did.
In fact, one of the professional rugby teams in Australia
when I got there and analyzed their whole team
because there were the top 10 players injured,
I took one look at these athletes
and I said, I need to see your gym.
They said, why?
I said, because these guys have all the common motor problems
and injuries that come from machine training and not functional exercise
And they both the two guys that were the doctor and the therapist. I mean the strength coach both stern white
And I go, okay, just hit the nail on the head. So we walked out in their gym and they had
Quarter of a million dollars of sidebacks and you know, what was it? Nautilus and and
One of the the lever lever ones I can't remember.
Hammerster, yeah.
Oh, yes.
And they were so proud of that.
And I said, this is all shit.
This is why you're getting your ass kicked.
And this is why your athletes aren't rehabilitating.
And I gave them demonstrations to prove it.
I did things at 185 pounds that the strongest athletes on their team couldn't even come close to doing.
I aww. And it freaked them right out. And they said, how the hell are you doing that?
I said, because I know how to train. And this is not how you train. This is how you make poor investments in expensive athletes.
And they said, what should we do?
I said, well, my advice to you would be call your,
the team that gives you the most trouble,
tell them you're expanding your facility
and you're bringing in a bunch of new equipment
and offer them this equipment at half price.
And that's exactly what they did.
Lo and behold, that team bought it.
It did. It's this true story.
It's awesome.
And so then we moved in a bunch of custom-built cable columns,
Olympic platforms, Swiss balls, medicine balls, dumbbells,
and I taught not only their professional team,
but their entire farm team how to lift weights properly.
And taught them every basic lift as part of my consultation for the team.
And, you know, so the frustrating thing is that we now
have gone from using machines and very, very functionally
inept exercise technologies to using highly complex
functional technologies that require very careful preparation
with mass people that are not ready for it
So maybe they crossfit well, you know crossfit is
One of the categories where people do not know what they're getting into but they get swept into the hype and to the group thing and the raw
raw raw the go-go-go and and there's the ego needing to establish safety for itself,
right?
That's in our story, that's me when I was still trying to learn to beat my dad up to
feel safe, right?
So there's always some kind of ass kicker motive in there, but that comes at the expense
of not being prepared in the human body's very complex.
So when you take a bunch of people eating four white devils and shit food
and can this and microwave that and fast food this
and steel bars and metrics and all this bullshit,
really poison, and then trying to exercise
at a level that requires professional preparation.
You have to go through the stages.
And technique, too, right?
I got pictures of people in classes like that, CrossFit or otherwise,
that look like they're about to die, yet they're in competitions, and everyone's cheering
them on. I'm like, this giving birth is less painful than what I'm watching here with
these clean and presses. So I, to make sure you're clear, I don't have anything against
the sport.
That would be like having something against a knife.
I would just say before you start juggling knives, you ought to start with oranges.
Right?
Great analogy.
And then go to a knife juggling contest, right?
And so CrossFit and some of these, you know, even programs like PX90, they're very, very
dangerous to do if you're not developed.
So you get, you know, a term I coined actually is the fit sick person.
You get people that are very fit and look good in the mirror, but on the inside they're exhausted, burnt out,
and they're a functional medicine field day, right? And they make functional medicine.
We see people like that all the time.
Well, that's because the world's full of them. So my point is,
the pendulum looks like it went from here to way over here.
Yeah, yeah.
So we went from people not even knowing
what a medicine ball was or how to use dumbbells properly
to riding down the road in the back of a push up truck
doing a Swiss ball push jacks on top of four balance boards
while holding the kettlebell bottoms up and calling that exercise and
you know
it's just like you know so
Contorted but it's so classically American. I mean only Americans could take yoga and turn into combat yoga
You know just like completely inverted have to body weight through heat. Yeah, just you know
You know, it's just like completely inverted. It is halfway through heat.
Yeah, just, you know, it seems as though our culture
has an affinity for self-inflicted torture.
And it's almost like the more you can show someone else
how much torture you can take the more of a hero.
It's a marvelous syndrome, yeah.
You know, it's just like, this is non-productive
and it leads to a lot of problems,
but the good news for a guy like me
is it always brings a spiritual crisis.
Because what do you do when you're, when you can't get your muscles to keep growing, when your
dick won't stand up, and you could squat a thousand pounds, but you still can't get along
with your wife and kids, right? Now, there's no answer for you in the gym anymore. And
if the church counselor can't straighten you out, then your health gets worse and worse and your sense of self-esteem gets worse and worse because the sort of, I'm a bad-ass, you're a house
of cards.
You're a paper boat, as Oshawa would say, right?
And so it brings a spiritual crisis.
And that's the perfect time for me as a teacher to have my hands on somebody because they've
already thoroughly tested bad
ideas. So it's easy to show them that there's better ways to do it.
I get called out a bit because I get frustrated when I see you brought up the machines and
there's this wave in this generation now and especially with social media that anybody
can become insta-famous or they have a million people following them because they look sexier, whatever.
And it's tough being professionals in the industry
and seeing some of these people providing information
to the masses, you know, teaching them how to do
a sideways chest press on a fucking hammer strength machine.
Like, what are you doing, you know, and then I go in the gym
and you start seeing it duplicate all over
And I'm like, oh my god, we're going backwards. Yeah, and but you know that the paradox of that is is that if you study
Consciousness and you study physics and quantum physics
Only the people that resonate with that are attracted to it
Understand that like if we start talking about deep spiritual practices
that are a long ways away from Christianity, Islam, or Judaism, we're going to lose a lot
of people because they're not there yet. So the point I'm making is consciousness is
stratified. So the same way people grow to be more enlightened in how to love their
partner or more enlightened in how to garden or more enlightened in what God really
is. They grow more enlightened with what exercise really isn't how to use it. So the, you know,
pain is the chief motivator. It's just a fact. So when people are at the level of, I
got to be somebody different. I got to make sure everyone in the gym sees me. I'll dye
my hair red. I'll shave half my head, and I'll do the double back-sided dog
twister with a twipple, fuck on it.
Or something, you know.
Can I write down something I want to try that?
You know, so the point that I'm making is you see
there's that real need for attention,
which is using indication of a broken family situation
like I described my own to be.
And then they come to an impasse where that doesn't work anymore
So that you're saying the next time that I see a kid doing a sideways chess process
I should walk up and say how's your relationship with your mom?
Just fucking just right breaking down right there
Start crying inside the gym. I'll tell you what Paul talking to you
You just carry those with you when you do.
Talking to you, do you find it difficult to...
Because I got to imagine you blow people out of the water sometimes.
Like, you've got answers to simple questions
and then you get very complex.
And do you find people go, okay, I don't want to listen.
You might just, I just blowing me out of the water.
Is it, is that, do you find that difficult
with a lot of people?
Or do you communicate differently
to depending on the individual that you're talking to?
Yeah.
Yeah, are we having a different conversation right now
because of who we are, what we are searching versus.
Yeah, to some degree,
it depends, you know, as many types of conversations,
if I'm having a conversation with a client,
then I have to be very careful to make sure that the conversations most likely to inspire
the person to move in the direction that they have come to me to move, which is what
I call their dream.
If I'm talking to a group of people and I'm giving an electron how to eat, move them
be healthy, and I say, I got news for you, the way you're eating could be the biggest factor
in whether or not your spine is stable and your abdominals are ever going to be visible. And they might
think that's pure bullshit. All you got to do is exercise like hell and you'll have a
great washboard, but they don't seem to realize that they've been doing that for years and
it hasn't worked. Or they have the washboard, but they can't shit. Or they, you know, or
their dick don't stand up, you know, which is very common. So the, the, yes,
you do get this stratification. And you know, when I start talking on deeper concepts in
conferences, you'll see three or four or five people just get up and walk out of the
room. But I just know that they're not.
Do you say some shit to them on their way out? Or do you just want to go? No, I, I don't,
I don't want to minimize the chance of them coming back when they're ready.
You don't say something like your mom loves you.
Yeah.
No.
There's deeper meaning in the world.
Yeah.
No, I say.
It's not your fault.
I say dragon poking for those that want to poke this dragon.
You know, so when people get cocky and concoctures and thinking they know it all, I usually
ask them questions that if answered honestly make it clear to everybody in the room. They don't really know what they're no at all. I usually ask them questions that if answered honestly, make it clear to everybody in the room,
they don't really know what they're talking about.
Who's speaking to that?
Who has challenged you most?
What interview?
What conversation?
Who is, who is, oh, there was a guy named Dave Driscoll
in Australia who's got like three PhDs.
Oh, you know, we all know Dave Driscoll.
Is that where Dave Driscoll is?
I think, did I get the right name, Dave?
Yeah, I think so.
Yeah, yeah, Dave is all right.
Yeah.
I think so in Australia, yeah. Yeah, that's right. Yeah.
I think so in Australia.
He works for Met, no, Gatorade.
He was violently opposed to my system and worked for, I can't remember the name of the big
personal training organization over there.
Already we have motive, right?
Yeah.
And so he was upset because there were about 60%
of the education that this company was using
and they have 2,000 trainers at the time
was coming by way of the check institute,
but he was trying to sell their educational system.
So he kept going to the owners and saying
how bad my system was and it was really upsetting
my instructor, my chief instructor over there, Donald Carr,
because the owners were actually starting to believe the guy.
And he was telling him how much money you could make if you just would sell this stuff and get rid of this check stuff and stop the trainers from thinking that way blah blah blah.
So we had a meeting where Donald said, Paul, I'm really worried because the owners are now telling me they want me to cut back on the check education and take more of this guy's education.
But this guy's stuff is everything we teach not to do.
I don't want this to happen.
What do I do?
I said, no problem.
If he's so confident in himself, ask him if he will be a willing to debate me publicly
and we'll make it an event and we'll invite people and we're going to film it.
And if he beats me on film, then we'll share it with the world.
If I beat him on film, we'll share it with the world if I beat him on film we'll share it with the world
what we had the debate and he asked me
did you film this?
yes
oh fuck yeah we need this
yes we have to be all the
I'll finish this all the way
yeah yeah yeah
this will be the show now
show now
yeah so I
I
and he contacted me by email and asked
could he bring
five other PhDs with him
shut the fuck up
oh no I said bring 50 oh yes bring 50 bring everyone Alan asked, could he bring five other PhDs with him? Shut the fuck up.
Oh no, I said bring 50.
Oh, yes.
I said bring 50.
Bring everyone.
Yeah.
I don't care.
You know, I'm, I didn't say this out loud,
but inside myself, I am not debating debatable principles.
Water is fucking necessary.
Food needs variety.
I mean, nothing that I, nothing I'm debating is rocket science, right?
It's just everything that's so important
that nobody wants to pay money to learn in a university.
So they bury it under a pile of bullshit and fluff
and occasionally some good stuff.
But anyhow, so none of his guys showed up.
We had 250 something people show up to the debate.
And I won at a vote.
I think it was 83% voted that I was the
winner and the rest voted for him. And then he rescinded, he had a lawyer rescind his
contract so that we couldn't show the video.
Oh damn it. Oh damn it. So Paul, a lot of people say that you are dogmatic about health
and fitness, that you got to do everything perfect, and this is the way it's gotta be.
Yeah, define dog health.
What is that?
No, define dogma first.
Yeah, right?
Well, a dogma is a fixed set of beliefs.
So if you study the science of mind,
you can look into Dr. Daniel Seagull's work.
He's probably the psychiatrist who's done the most
to help us understand the mind of anybody so far.
First one, to give a definition of mind.
He says, mind is an embodied process that regulates the mind of anybody so far. First one to give a definition of mind. He says mind is an embodied process
that regulates the flow of energy and information.
And in his teachings of mind, in the middle,
he shows a river and a boat going down the river,
or yeah, that's one of his models.
And he says, in the middle of the river of mind
is integration, one bank is rigidity
and the other bank is chaos.
So rigidity and dogma mean the same thing.
So fixed ideas that are not adaptable
to changes in the environment,
or remember, the only universal constant there is is change.
So when someone's ideas do not leave enough flexibility
to adapt to a changing environment,
they become rigid, dangerous, and that's a dogma.
But I want you to know that the actual function of dogma comes from all the way back in the
beginnings of religion, and it's attempt to keep that which must be practiced as a pure
form, pure.
There is some purity in human.
Yes. Okay, so there's some there is some purity in yes, yeah, if you if you want to study There's a documentary by Houston Smith on the
The nature of fundamentalism which is dogma and and so what Houston Smith who is one of the most respected
Experts in world religion and someone who I studied extensively shows is that
dogma in its original form was the church, fathers, and mothers being very
clear about what must be practiced authentically in order for you to get the spiritual growth
and development that the religion intended for its people, the growth and development and
integration of people.
So when people say I'm dogmatic, yes,
there are certain things I'm dogmatic about
if you take anybody and you do not restore optimal flexibility
and make sure that they have adequate stability
for the tasks or exercises or practices or sports
they want to engage in and then progress them
into baseline levels of strength, into functional strength
and then to sport specific strength,
somewhere in there, if you're doing, for example, CrossFit and your body's out of balance,
you have muscle recruitment problems and you've got core problems, and you're doing what
now is highly specific strengthening, you have skipped four key stages of development, and
you're going to get hurt.
And you're just going to be a good looking hurt person.
Wow, did we just become best friends? I know. Okay, so the... Finally, somebody said that.
Yeah. Okay, so do you see that my dogma is based on a lifetime of study and treating
thousands of people from fat old ladies to yogis and meditators to the best athletes in the world
with world records and taking people out of medical retirement and hard
evidence that my techniques work, undeniable, and many, many letters and books and you know read
Laird Hamilton's book, he talks about my work with him right in there and many others.
So I am dogmatic about that which must be kept pure. Like drinking half your
body weight announces a water and realizing the best solution for pollution is dilution and
water is nature's chief solvent is something you can't get around. You know, if you want a party good
party, but eat good food and drink good water so that the party doesn't kill you or you don't get
to party more, you get to party less.
So if you want to party, let's do it right.
And let's get clear on what you need to be dogmatic about Monday to Friday.
So you can enjoy the weekend, right?
So a dogma actually has a very specific function of stabilizing concepts, ideas,
or energetic structures that need to be in place.
You could say carpenters are dogmatic about having a good foundation.
Well, anybody that says you don't need a foundation is either living in a bubble, theoretically,
or literally.
Or a shitty house.
Or they don't know why they, why their doors don't fit and their windows don't fit, but
they got a million dollar chandelier hanging over their dinner table, right?
But they got a cheese whizandelier hanging over their dinner table, right? But they got
cheese whizz as a foundation on their house. So I am dogmatic about what is important to be dogmatic about and when it comes to assessing people's bodies and designing exercise programs properly
and assessing what's wrong in people's lives, there are certain necessary steps. And if they're missed,
no matter what you fantasize you're missing essentials and
Basics or basics because they have to be adhered to and when you look at UFC fighters and the best boxers in the world and the best athletes in the world
In interviews after they've won the championship or the world record or the medal
How many times have you heard him say I stuck to the basics?
of the metal, how many times have you heard him say, I stuck to the basics. Yeah, every time.
Right.
The greatest fighters always say, I stuck to the basics.
They didn't say, oh, I learned the double twisted dogfucker and practiced that until I could
impress everybody.
I said, I need to do that.
It's level four.
It's level four.
They say, I drilled the basics.
When I was a boxer on the Army boxing team, we used to spend hours to your arms were dying, doing the same thing, same thing you do in a beginning boxing class with the
best fighters in the world.
JAP, they called out numbers. One, JAP, two, one, two, three, one, two, three, four. And we
did this information for hours. I'm like, it's like the old saying, the young kid says,
I go to a martial arts mastery,
he says, I wanna become a badass.
And the master says, okay, fine.
Today we're gonna begin with the front snap kick.
He teaches him a front-cut snap kick
and he says, I want you to do a hundred of those.
He does a hundred.
He waits and waits and waits.
The master comes and the master says, how did it go?
He said, good, let me look.
Okay, you need to do some more.
Another hundred.
Well, he does this about five times.
Then next day, the kid comes back.
He does the same thing.
The third day, the kid says to the master,
he said, can we do something else?
I'm just sick and tired of these front snap kicks.
The master says, no, 100 front snap kicks.
I'll be back in a while.
And the kid says, well, this is just bullshit.
I'm not learning anything.
And the master grabs him by the next stuff's his head in the fountain and waits till he's
about to drown, pulls his head out of the fountain and says, when you're as hungry to learn
as you are for air, come back.
I think that was Mr. Miyagi, right? Who was it?
Who was it? Mr. Miyagi was that aggressive?
Who was it? Bruce Lee that said, I don't fear the man that knows 3,000 kicks. I fear the
man that knows one kick, 3,000 different't fear the man that knows 3,000 kicks. I fear the man that knows one kick,
3,000 different ways or something like that.
Bruce Lee said, I do not fear the man who's tried
a thousand kicks once.
I fear the man who's done one kick a thousand times.
That's the one right there.
Very good.
So that's a dogma.
What is he saying?
You must do something 10,000 times to be a master of it.
And if you're not, then you don't have a good dogma as a foundation.
So you know how to throw 48 different kicks, but you don't have subconscious mastery of them.
And when someone's moving faster than your nervous system can process,
if you don't have unconscious mastery, then you can only be out consciously.
Well, I got news for you.
You don't have time.
A good fighter will hit you three times before that impulse gets from your brain to your
hands.
Now knowing that and explaining that very well, how do you not become dogmatic or so attached
to that dogma where you allow yourself to have a cheeseburger and a french fry ever once
a while because you're not so hell bent on everything has to be this.
How do you allow flexibility or what does that look like to you?
Well, what explain that? Well, that that really really goes to what it means to be a healthy person.
And if a dog must stop you from living and being creative and playful,
then you are losing the essence of life itself.
So everything becomes outcome oriented.
I have to do this.
Everything's A squared plus B squared equals C squared,
and there's no creative impulse in there.
There's no, everything's always trying to become
a work toward an objective,
but it takes all the awareness away from the process,
and life is a process. Life is not an outcome, but it takes all the awareness away from the process. And life is a process.
Life is not an outcome, it's a process.
So if a person needs the freedom of eating donuts once in a while, and the stress of not
eating the donuts is actually more detrimental to their overall psychology and physiology than
the stress of eating donuts within a range of manageability than I say eat the donuts. But when the donuts
are actually stopping you from accomplishing your dreams, goals, and objectives, then it's
no longer a functional dogma or it's no longer even functional play. It's now some form of
So, some form of distraction, some form of addiction, or some form of medication. In other words, what was playful now becomes some sort of medication, and then you always
have to look for what is it that they're medicating.
And that's where the deep work that I teach the more advanced practitioners comes in,
because that really all behaviors are the expressions
of beliefs, so you have to get to the beliefs.
So in other words, when someone's using things
for reward and play to the degree that it's stopping them
from achieving their objective,
it's no longer reward or play, it's a delusion.
So my philosophy is you can do anything you want.
And a healthy person is not someone who has a perfect body or a perfect skin or any idea like that.
A healthy person is someone who realizes that the way they manage themselves either increases their ability to engage life and create meaningful relationships and meaningful outcomes in their pursuits or it's getting in the way of them.
So if drinking a glass of wine at night makes you feel rewarded for your day and gives you a little loosening and a little sense of freedom or smoking a joint that's good.
But if it gets to the point where you're smoking joints and drinking wine for breakfast and your body starting to fall apart and your dick doesn't work or your sex drive is gone or any of the things that are meaningful to make life
go, now you're not healthy anymore.
I feel like you've seen a lot of non-working dicks.
Well, you know, if you look at it.
Well, that's party.
I mean, I think that's a sign, man.
It's a sign of sympathetic stress.
It's sympathetic overload.
It's a key indicator that a male is under too much stress.
A woman loses her sex drive.
So she doesn't have a dick to stand up.
But if a male is under too much stress, it shuts down the reproductive system as a coping
mechanism because why would you want to reproduce another living organism in an environment
where the parent organism cannot survive?
I literally just talked about this.
The only thing that will affect my libido is poorly is stress.
The only thing.
Everything else is no problem.
I connected that, for sure, once I hit my 30s, I totally noticed that.
In fact, it's something that I know if I ever noticed that in our relationship, I always tell
Katrina, like, take me away.
It's time for a vacation.
We need to get away.
My dick's not working.
I need to be stressed.
I know that and I can feel it.
I can sense it and that's something that I make sure
that I get away and do that reset, you know.
Well, I have to say, Paul, you're easily
one of the most interesting people
that we've interviewed and that I've met.
And I know we have a lot of listeners who are,
like it, just like I thought, very polarizing.
We're gonna have listeners that are gonna be like,
oh my God, great information, awesome.
He gets it, and we're gonna have listeners
that are gonna be like, what is he talking about?
And I appreciate that.
I actually appreciate that quite a bit
because it's gonna spur conversation,
it's gonna spur debate.
We welcome it. It's going to spur conversation, it's going to spur debate. We welcome it. You know,
a lot of what you say, especially in regards to things resonates with us for sure.
Well, especially in regards to exercise and nutrition, there's a lot of stuff that we've talked
about on the show. A lot of the other stuff that you go on is definitely beyond the scope of some
of the things we talk about, but I found also very fascinating and thought-provoking whether
people agree or not. I think it's important that we provoke thought, debate, and
discussion with them people because that's where we're growth happens. So it's
been pleasure having you. Thank you for letting us into your home. We truly appreciate it.
My pleasure. And just to close, you know, people don't realize this, but conflict is an important part
of a healthy relationship. Like if we don't really explore each other's ideas and work
on each other in order to make us demonstrate evidence that those ideas work, then there
is no legitimate growth, right? You
know, you have to go test an idea to see if it works before you can have an honest opinion
about it. But if you don't test the idea and you think you have an honest opinion, you
don't have an honest opinion, you have a fear-based dogma, right? If he's right, then I'm wrong.
Well, what if you're both right? What if what you're doing is right for you and what he's
doing is right for him, but until you talk about enough and experiment enough, in other words, open yourself to the
natural conflict as long as the conflict is in the spirit of higher intelligence or higher
wisdom or growth and development. But if the conflict is all about screw you, you're
wrong and I don't like you, then you might as well just go back to the Christian crusades, and now we're back to damaging kind of dogma.
So my only reason for saying that is I'll be excited if it stirs up a lot of controversy.
I'd excited if people find themselves being triggered because using when we're triggered,
someone put their finger right on our growth potential.
Excellent. Well thanks, we'll sign off with that.
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