Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 481: Adding Barbell Snatches to Workout, Disengaging Lats During Military Press & Explaining Fasting & Food Tracking to Children
Episode Date: March 29, 2017Kimera-Quah! iTunes Review Winners! In this episode of Quah, sponsored by Kimera Koffee (kimerakoffee.com, code "mindpump" for 10% off), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about why there a...re no barbell snatches in MAPS programs, how to prevent over-engagement of lats when doing military press and explaining fasting and food tracking to children and teens in an image conscious world. Get our newest program, Kettlebells 4 Aesthetics (KB4A), which provides full expert workout programming to sculpt and shape your body using kettlebells. Only $7 at www.mindpumpmedia.com! Get MAPS Prime, MAPS Anywhere, MAPS Anabolic, MAPS Performance, MAPS Aesthetic, the Butt Builder Blueprint, the Sexy Athlete Mod AND KB4A (The MAPS Super Bundle) packaged together at a substantial DISCOUNT at www.mindpumpmedia.com. Make EVERY workout better with our newest program, MAPS Prime, the only pre-workout you need… it is now available at mindpumpmedia.com Have Sal, Adam & Justin personally train you via video instruction on our YouTube channel, Mind Pump TV. Be sure to Subscribe for updates. Please subscribe, rate and review this show! Each week our favorite reviewers are announced on the show and sent Mind Pump T-shirts! Have questions for Mind Pump? Each Monday on Instagram (@mindpumpradio) look for the QUAH post and input your question there. (Sal, Adam & Justin will answer as many questions as they can)
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's the final four days.
So we'll say uh...
You know what? I think I've had a country voice.
Yeah, yeah.
Maybe that's what it is.
Final four days.
It's the final four days.
Traveling that fortress.
It's rough. It's the last four days.
My god.
I think I'm better at country.
I think, you don't think so?
I think maybe.
Um, you're...
It's closer.
It's bad.
It's less bad. It's still worse. It's less bad. It's still it's less bad. I don't know we need to work on the positive mother
reinforcement here. I'm trying to figure out I'm trying to figure out what I can say to you that
will prevent you from ever seeing again. I can't figure out that. I'm starting to get requests now
just so you know people are in box. We say to add a
Don't let don't let South put you down you keep singing man. You're getting better every time we hear you those
Fuckers it's the fun
Oh
Listen, it's the last four days to get
Forum access for free. That's our private form. It's what everybody talks about.
It's where all the cool kids are.
You can get access for free.
All you got to do is enroll in the maps Super Bundle
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Those two bundles contain our maps programs
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to where you want to be.
Superfit, ripped, lean, strong, healthy, sexy,
awesome, whatever.
It's got all the programs you need. The RGB Bundle has maps and a ball, Strong, healthy, sexy, awesome, whatever.
It's got all the programs you need.
The RGB bundle has Maps and Obolic, Maps Performance, Maps
Esthetic, the Maps Super Bundle has all those plus,
nine months plus of program.
Plus Maps anywhere and Maps Prime, so it's all of them.
Enrolling either one of those and you get the forum for free,
or you can enroll in the forum by itself, pay for it,
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So good stuff going on, you go to mindpumpmedia.com check it all out.
T-shirt time. T-shirt. How many reviews, Douglas?
We had 10 reviews.
Well, yeah, we're not asking for any more. We don't ask for any more.
We don't ask for any more. I don't think we would kill you very much, you man.
No. I think just shut it down, right?
I did. Yeah. We're giving it, well no, because now,
at the end we talk about this stuff.
That's the thing, we still get shirts on.
I'm gonna shirt away, get two now,
because it's only 10.
Shut that shit down, no. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, open it up, search for Mind Pump. Even if you're subscribed, you gotta do this. Search for Mind Pump, click on the icon, it'll come up,
and then there's a little button you click on for review.
Leave a review, listen, out of 10, three, get a tert t-shirt.
That's a freaking, that's a 33%.
For a terture.
Yeah, you get a terture.
Can I speak it today?
Hey.
You got a really good chance of getting a free t-shirt.
Give it away, Doug.
All right, the three are Matt Allen 17.
I'm Jacob Hicks and Sam 981963.
All of you are winners.
Good dudes, we're so nervous.
We're so nervous in there.
Great, great people here.
Send your name to when I just read to iTunes at Mind Pump.
I'm sorry, I just said the wrong one.
I know that's right.
That's it.
You got this, Doug.
The new guy here, go ahead.
iTunes at MindPumpmedia.com.
Send your shirt size, your shipping address,
and we'll get that right out to you.
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind,
there's only one place to go.
Mind, pop, mind, pop with your hosts.
Salta Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
What do you think, oh, hurry up, let's do this. Let's do this.
Let's talk about Justin's hat.
Yeah, old school orals hat, dude.
That's throwback.
Bro, I'm bringing back the ugly hat.
Fat.
The Baltimore orals?
Dude, that's pretty good right there.
Don't fuck with me, dude.
I'm not fucking with you.
Let me just tell you something right now.
I know.
Just Google that before we got here.
No.
Okay.
How do I Google your hat?
You just fuck stupid looking burn hat.
He's just the Baltimore Orioles.
No, here's what it is.
I'll tell you why I knew what that was.
All right, baseball.
You're actually going down.
It's actually a college hockey team.
It's the Oregon Ducks.
It's not the Ducks.
I know what the Ducks look like.
No, that's the football Oregon Ducks. This is the division two Oregon Ducks. It's not the Ducks, I know what the Ducks look like. Now that's the football Oregon Ducks. This is the division two Oregon Ducks, hockey team.
Here's the thing, when I was younger, I was semi into baseball and football cards.
So I know what is semi mean?
You used to buy the things so you could get the gum.
Like, you have a half boners.
Exactly.
I was like, fully erect.
It was mom, can I get the baseball cards?
Just so I could chew the bubble gum that I'm inside.
Kind of made me do this right now.
A couple more tugs.
Just, touch you hate that.
No, I was into baseball cards and football cards,
so I know what I know about professional sports
is right around the night.
It's like in the 90s.
I can't talk to you.
I can't talk too much shit to you
because my sports knowledge is like every year's decreasing when I was a kid
Like I was fanatical I
Collected all cards I could ramble stats
I'm in fact my mom used to think it was like a fun party joke is to call me in the room and be like
Tell them tell them the all the Dodgers players
You know like and I would rattle off all their stats and everything like that and my my two best friends
They are still fanatics.
We have a thread, the three of us that are on,
and we go all the way back to elementary school.
And so a big part of our friendship
is based around sports.
I mean, we go much deeper than that,
but a big part of it is sports.
And so it's like all this sports talk,
and they just love to punk the fuck out of me now
because I'm not up and up.
Like I'm not staying up
But if you talk about like like early 2000s and 90s. Oh, yeah, yeah, no, if we're if we're back in even all the back in the 80s 80s and
90s man, I got you we could talk sports on you guys still have your old football and baseball cards
I do you know I found I found them when I was at my parents and
I made sure to go get them because I didn't want my brother to
grab them. I mean, I've got the good ones that I had in like plastic cases, you know, they're worthless.
So I mean, like that was such a thing. You're like, you thought I was an investment, you know,
like I'm keeping all these. I got all the upper deck. I don't know.
Can't agree for juniors. I remember I was like, it ends up worth nothing.
That was the fucking brand, then there was score.
What was the other brand score?
Upper tax, tops, and tops.
Yeah, there was another one.
I can't remember.
Well, those are the big ones.
Yeah, so hold on, you don't have any of the worth money
then, Justin?
I mean, maybe, but not like, you thought that was gonna be
like a thousand of dollars, you know?
I have someone like me,
25 bucks.
You do?
Yeah.
What's your most value?
I wonder who has more of it,
because I have some that are worth some.
Like they're in mint condition.
You know what I have in look to,
oh yeah, and mine are in plastic heart.
I have some.
Me too.
I didn't take that much effort.
Me too.
I have them literally like in little hard plastic cases.
Yeah, let's see here.
The ones, you know what,
I haven't checked a back in a really long time.
So I have an Emmett Smith rookie card.
I've got a King Griffey Jr.
Oh, Emmett Smith is a good one.
Do the King Griffey's not worth shit.
No, the upper deck rookie card of him,
that's what I thought would be worth.
It's worth pretty good money.
I've also got, who else do I have though?
I remember it was worth some good stuff.
So I have any bow jacksons.
I do have some bow jacksons.
I have a Troy, Troy Aiken.
Aiken, Aiken, excuse me, Rookie card score
and then Barry Sanders, Rookie card.
What do you do?
That's Aiken, no way.
Both of them now, the last time I checked
to see what their value was.
The last time I checked, they were worth,
and this was a long time ago, they were worth like 80 or 100 bucks each.
So now I'm sure they're worth a few hundred bucks each to have to be right.
Yeah, well, I would definitely, the Bo Jackson card, I would have.
No, very good.
Oh, you said, you said very Sanders, very Sanders and Trayekman.
Okay.
Both rookie cards.
We're football cards that I don't know if they're not as much space.
Yeah, they are still though.
If you have, if you have rookie cards and they're kept in good condition and they're they're one of the better brands
Well, I traded my fucking Mark Mark wire rookie card didn't I yeah, I got those actually I got a bunch of
Ace like in Kinseko like what so what were you doing with these that you didn't even I didn't think you were into sports at all
You actually had some as a kid makes sense was it an accident? This was the nerdy part of the girl friend you dated in high school
And I heard cards and she left them at your house house I bought them just for the gum that I liked them
That's what I like the card. Oh, they got statistics on it. Oh, they got exciting
I love the gum that came with them. I mean the like you lick the powder
I was like so I was fucking it was like made out of like razor blades and cardboard
You never had the hell kind of gum once ever how hard was
Seriously no joke throw it it would shatter you you could literally this is not a joke now
If you had that gum on an airplane they take you off because you could kill mother fuckers with it was sharp
It was hard and sharp so take me back to want how did you get cards? Why do you even have cards? Yeah?
I was in I was telling you at trade it for like a science book
I think I was into I was into sports for a little while. Hmm. Definitely. Wow. Yeah,, definitely the 49ers when they were in the fucking 80s,
when they were awesome.
So, it's a bandwagon that's good.
No.
No, was it?
You like a winning team?
I like to play football, street football,
so like football on the street.
Oh shit.
Oh shit, street football!
You're a fucking art guard.
Yeah.
Damn. Yeah, it's weird. It's weird. We should play
Basketball again. So now that we should just kidding. Yeah, exactly. No, you just opened up a door there
Let's you know, where's there ever one motherfucker? I'm gonna beat you again. Let's bring it motherfucker
Again, let's do we play again. I'm the raining. Did you have it? Did you have a did you have a sport?
That's what you do that you played as a kid or that you really wish you played or wish you were good at like there
Was there like something that you're like get like I go back now and I think like fuck man
I wish I would have swam even though I didn't think swimming was cool because you think you would have been good at it
Yeah, of course. I mean let's be honest as a kid you you tend to gravitate towards a shit
You're good at anyways. I mean that's the stuff that you've fallen with. I was really nobody likes a sport that you start and you get your
Asking for three years. I was really good at how to go seek
No, I think I really was though for real. There was no there was never a sport
You're like man, I wish I was good at that or yeah, I wish I was a fucking best at on any of them
I don't know the skill. I wouldn't be sitting here. Well, I don't really I can't maybe I still I never cared about baseball
Did you ever try track, Sal?
Mm-hmm, yeah.
I did, I was really,
that's not much of a, not into running.
Mm-hmm, yeah.
Like, shot putting all that shit.
Nah, fuck that.
Okay, stupid.
I did, I just did judo as a kid.
judo, I wrestled a little bit with the team,
but I didn't wrestle for the school.
Mm-hmm.
And then I just played shit on my own,
but then I started lifting weights, dude.
I was 12, I started lifting weights.
That was my thing.
Well, yeah, that's early.
You know what I mean?
Because I didn't start lifting weights
till after 15, 16, yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
Had I met you guys, I could have totally been your trainer.
All right.
Well, you know what I'm saying?
I could have showed you guys some stuff.
You probably could have actually
this shit that I was doing when I first started the chance.
I'm not sure how I grew it all. What's the worst champion?
It's a worst happens or something. Yeah, what's like the worst like workout fucking shit you did when you were kid
I mean there was probably there was probably months maybe even years that I went like
You know biceps and triceps was like all we did for him. Oh my gosh. Literally, like months of arms. Like months of arms. Yeah, months of arms.
Dude, like months of arms.
Oh, I don't think there was times where, you know,
and like I never wanna do chess
because I was terrible at it.
It was so bad at bench pressing
and my buddies love to do it
and I hated to do it because I was terrible.
It was weak and my form was terrible.
It didn't feel right.
So I avoided it like the plague and legs.
I mean, I didn't do legs till I was like in my 20s, you know, so I literally did like arms
I did like all bench like all day. Yeah, I would do like every angle every possible thing like all just bench
You know like I just like that's all I wanted to do is just bench
You know that's so so I was so different from you guys. I always trained everything, always.
I always trained everything and I wrote everything down.
Actually, I think I took my...
Oh, I didn't start tracking.
I brought you my workout to let me.
Then I bring you guys at one time
and show you guys my printed out workouts
and shows you those 14 years old.
Yeah, yeah.
But the worst thing that I would do
is I would just do everything all the time.
So I would literally be, but I did a split, right?
But so if I did chest,
it was every single chest exercise that could possibly think about everything.
I didn't do, see, I didn't do workouts like that. I went through phases of bad training,
right? Like my first phase of bad training would be like just doing bison tries. Then,
then like when I actually realized like, hey, I need to do these other muscle groups.
Then it was like, you know, like you said, I just, I would be chest day and I would go
on and do every machine
and every chest exercise.
I could think of Tyler, like, right now.
I did everything, come out of here now, right?
It's still squat, because I mean,
we had to do that for sports.
You were tested on squat and you were tested on bench.
And that's all in your shirt.
That's so cute.
Yeah, so I got really good at those too.
I don't think I did my first squat towel in the 20s. 20s. Yeah, I didn't do my first squat. I was in my 20s and even as a trainer like
I feel so bad that I I avoided teaching that that much like because very few clients
I felt like had the proper mechanics. Nobody did dude. You know, it's hard to teach a squat.
It is no it is it's it's so if you don't know how to do it really well yourself forget it as a trainer
Well, and I think that's a lot of why we talk about it
so much as we know that, right?
Like I'm not stupid.
Like I was a fucking trainer and I was a boss of trainers
for a very long time.
So I see what you guys are fucking doing.
You know, you guys aren't, you're not very good at squatting,
so you're not teaching it.
Same thing with deadlifting.
So you're avoiding two of the best fucking movements
you can possibly do.
I mean, if there was anything I could go back and tell
the younger trainer or self of me or self went on fuck that was all messed up.
The younger me right, whatever I would do I would tell myself listen bro figure
this shit out and help you. Would you have listened?
You get a hard head. I do but you know what like if first of all if the future
me like I look at him and be like guy like, God, this guy looks smart. He's good looking. I might listen to him. You know, I'm saying like
Maybe if like you or Justin came and told me I'd probably be too stubborn to listen. Look at his future
God, he's handsome. Oh, okay, whatever you say, bro, you look at your future. Show me the way, dude. Oh my god. Did I fall in my face at some
What happened to my hair?
I'm not a weird, I'm not a weird. I don't look as...
What happened to my hair?
Like this buff hippie, what happened?
Yeah, no, I had two breakthroughs as a kid.
One was my first time taking creatine,
because I've been taking creatine on an office
since I was probably 16.
I bought...
Guzzles cell type.
I bought phosphogaine.
Oh, not phosphogen.
Phosphogen was AES's just pure creatine powder,
but then they made a protein powder that I created and it was called FOSFAK GAME.
And since all I ever wanted to do was GAME,
I had to believe I'm FOSFAK GAME.
I had sighted Gainer like crazy.
Oh, that's correct.
God damn it.
I took it, I'll never forget, I took it
and like, I used to weigh myself, right?
So like seven days later, I weighed myself
and I gained like four pounds.
And I was like, holy shit, this actually works.
So that was a huge breakthrough for me.
Then the second breakthrough was when I started squatting
and deadlifting, and I'm not joking.
I put on over a summer, and of course,
keep in mind I force fed the shit out of myself,
but I gained like something like 13 pounds over a summer,
which is a massive amount for like a 16-second.
No, I can't imagine if I actually was squatting,
deadlifting, overhead pressing as a kid,
like how much my body would have responded.
Dude, my ass, because I had no ass and no legs,
I was doing leg press and shit like that,
and they kind of grew, but I started squatting, deadlifting,
and I had to buy new pants.
Yeah.
It was so crazy, I like put them on,
and I was like, what happened?
I really feel like for at least 10.
It was opposite for me, I had legs in chest,
but like no arms, and then all of a sudden,
I started focusing on arms,
it was like, pwww.
And then I started playing basketball,
and I actually affected like some of the other guys were like,
oh shit, what did you do over the summer?
Like your arms are crazy, and so everybody started doing arms.
So you was like this arm, you always had a, like a big ass.
Big old ass.
You ever go back and look at the photos,
so though of kids and stuff that you thought were like massive
and buff and big when you were a kid, and then look at what the actual picture is now as an adult.
Like I had a buddy who I was like swear when I was a kid, he was just jacked.
Like crazy jack dude and then I go back and look at the pictures and I'm like oh he looked
like a little boy still. And because he was you know what I'm saying he was only 17 years old but
he was so jacked compared and that's because when you're that age you don't look at you
Don't look at 28 30 year olds and look at like compare your physique to you that's so far ahead or oh my god
They must be on steroids. You don't even think about that. You only look at what's right in front of you
And so and your friends and it's that you look to the friend that looks the craziest right and to you
He's like cock diesel and then I go back and I look at pictures like he barely looks like he works out
like cock diesel and then I go back and I look at pictures and I'm like, he barely looks like he works out.
I haven't heard cock diesel in a long time.
That was my nickname.
I, do you guys have pictures of yourselves flexing
when you guys were kids?
Like, like, young.
Only in action shots, where I'm like, you know,
driving to do per shot.
I told you to photo my parents put on my 16th birthday.
That should be our homework.
My 16th birthday, that's my golden birthday.
So, what's your golden birthday, you know what yours is? Oh, I don't know that mean
So a golden shower a golden birthday is when your birthday lands on the day so like I'm November 16th
So my golden birthday was when I turned 16 years old
So what are your dates?
I was four. Oh, that's my golden birthday was all four. Yeah, you know, I was a fucking riot
Let me tell you what your what your choices Woo! Who cares how that works again?
So what month?
Okay, your January.
January.
January.
No, no, January what?
26.
Okay, so 26 was your golden berthay.
Okay.
Diaggo was yours.
23rd.
So there you go.
That's your golden berthay.
Mine was 16.
We made this shit up.
Yeah.
Whatever.
It's probably some, well I was going to say Pinterest thing,
but this was way before Pinterest.
So it's some bullfits.
I think they lied to you.
No, no, whatever.
Adam, it's your golden bird.
They aren't too excited.
You're like, what?
Well, as a kid, I was a good way to get my parents
to make a big deal about it, right?
So maybe you made that shit up for sure.
I'm probably, I might have been that good.
I'm proud of who knows.
Hey, Bob, it's my next birthday.
It's my golden one.
Remember that means double the presents.
Well, they did.
They did all these, they did all my
rapping favorite gold parts. We did a limo to dinner and then I came back.
limo and you were 16?
Well, I did it a girl who owned a limo.
So that wasn't hard.
Oh man.
That's, wait, this whole story is fucking crazy.
Well, you dated a girl.
So my girlfriend starts with your presence being wrapped in gold.
Then you dated a girl at 16.
That's why you're so bougie.
You drove a lit, she didn't own the limo.
Yeah, her parents owned a limo.
Yeah, her parents owned a limo.
So how old was she?
She was 16 also.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, yeah.
So did she drive the limo with you in the back?
No, no, we had a driver.
Wow.
So that's the way it worked.
So her parents are fancy.
I wonder what all twins would be.
Yeah, her parents, yeah, that's why it's
why I like the guy who takes the limo
all over the place right?
So it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's,
she was, her mom and dad, mom was actually just a teacher,
but her dad was a lawyer, like the lawyer in town
for a small town.
And they owned a limo, and then all you had to do
was pay for the driver, and for my birthday, of course,
my girlfriend's parents took care of the driver for us.
So we had a limo, and, you know,
because people were probably going like,
wait a second, this motherfucker said he had a poor,
he was poor, I was, okay, so I did have moments like this that I got to he knows people which probably explains why I was a suburban
I'm the lawyer in this call one of those wagons call
Just has a back this has two back seats. Wow
I mean it is a limo. It was a station wagon with four lawn chairs in the back.
So, you know, limo, same thing.
It's a pickup truck with same difference.
The stride was chairs in the back.
Hey, baby, for your birthday, your golden birthday,
we got you a limo.
It's like, that's a pickup truck.
No, no, no, no, look at the chairs in the back.
Oh my god.
It's a limo.
So you know what I mean, right?
Same thing.
So it pulls up.
We go out.
And then when we come back, you know, all the gold presents were out, right? Same thing. So it pulls up. We go out. And then when we
come back, you know, all the gold presents were out, my cake and stuff. And then as soon
as you walk through the door on the wall across the way, my parents had blown up literally
by, you know, it was, you know, four feet by two and a half feet wide, this picture of
me. And it was when I was, I was in Modesto, so I had to been like five or six years
old at the oldest, right?
Somewhere between five and seven and somewhere in that range.
And I'm in on a coffee table, just like this one.
And I'm posing in my red underwear and I'm, you know,
doing these muscle poses and shit like that.
And they blew it up and that was like the picture
that I was looking at when I walked into the house.
It was pretty embarrassing.
Yeah, that might be.
My mom still has it.
Can you breathe?
You like trying to be a whole whole whole whole?
She's still, I'll bring it down here so you can.
Can we do this?
It'll be funny, right?
Can this be our homework?
Can we all go get like an old flexing photo of ourselves
so we can post it?
Actually, if we could find the,
if everyone could find the oldest flexing picture, that would be cool.
Well, I'm not, it doesn't count if you have it
when you're like 16.
Yeah, I got high school like, I have 13 or 14 or 13.
I was passing y'all about earlier.
I was just, you can come up with the youngest.
Well, I already know I got to be with you guys.
You got, you got me, you got me.
Well, I don't know if I, I don't know if I have any
from when I was real young, but the one when I was like 14,
it's pretty legit.
I got my skinny kid, but I have some decent definition.
Well, I have some of those when I'm like 17, 18,
like when I was really starting to actually lift weights,
and posing where I think I'm the old model.
Oh dude, no, no, no, no, at 14 years old,
I could pose better than most bodybuilders.
I had practiced the side arm pose,
my arm, old the fucking twisting three quarter window.
Oh yeah, dude, I thought for sure, I was gonna be Mr be mr. Olympia the irony I realized that I didn't build muscle
How funny is it that I never did any of that? I mean obviously there's a picture of me posing
But I would mean it looks terrible right and it is the Arnold pose. It's this one, you know so but I did you think you guys
Did you guys ever think like I'm gonna be a bodybuilder never even one even up until the day before I
Decided I was gonna be a bodybuilder and compete I
Are men's physico the fuck you want to call it min bikini. I?
Never once like thought oh be so cool to do the most cool. I thought I was gonna be Ronnie lot the most
The most ever that I was except for your white. Yeah, it like, I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like,
I was like, I was like, I was like,
I was like, I was like, I was like,
I was like, I was like, I was like,
I was like, I was like, I was like,
I was like, I was like, I was like,
I was like, I was like, I was like,
I was like, I was like, I was like,
I was like, I was like, I was like,
I was like, I was like, I was like,
I was like, I was like, I was like,
I was like, I was like, I was like,
I was like, I was like, I was like,
I was like, I was like, I was like,
I was like, I was like, I was like,
I was like, I was like, I was like,
I was like, I was like, I was like,
I was like, I was like, I was like,
I was like, I was like, I was like,
I was like, I was like, I was like,
I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like, There was a Jack Dast trainer that was training out of our facility.
It was the place I took you guys for Maps Block, right?
It was there.
And he was just like Jack'd.
And we used to always like ask him questions.
Like, hey man.
And it's, you know, it's so funny.
It's the shit that drives me crazy as a trainer now.
Like, hey man.
Yo dude, what's the best by surprise?
Oh, you idolized people like that, though.
You do.
And you walked up to, you know, hey bro, what's the best best
best by surprise? Bro, you are, hey bro, what's the best, best, best, best, best practice guys?
You are huge.
Yeah.
So tell me how.
He made me want to be a trainer,
but then I never thought I could make any money doing that,
because I never saw any like rich trainers or anybody
that was like, which, I was very money motivating coming
from not having a lot of money.
So I thought it would be a cool job to have
wow into college and got like a real job.
So that was the only time I thought,
wow, this would be cool or I wanna do this.
No, I thought, I thought,
I've one set for a small second,
I thought, ooh, I don't think I wanna compete
as a bodybuilder, but I'm like,
I'm definitely gonna get as big as Arnold did
because that's just what happens
with more of a heart at something.
Yeah.
Then for a second, like I said,
I played Street Football.
That doesn't mean like a brand of football
will play crazy.
It just means I played in my street in front of my house
with kids.
And we know.
No one thought it was an organized league.
You didn't have to explain that.
So check this out though.
I was actually pretty good at being a wide receiver
because we'd have all these kids together.
And I mean, I was five years older than everybody,
but that's not why I was the best.
It's because I actually had some skills.
But your little kids like,
boom bitch, touchdown motherfucker, it's right.
No, no, no, they were all my age,
and we were playing, and I was actually really good
at receiving. I was like,
people had a tough time covering me.
And so I thought, now looking back,
I'm sure everybody was horrible,
but back then, I had these delusions of grandeur,
like I often do, and I thought for sure I was gonna be,
because I thought I would be like Tim Brown.
Tim Brown was the dude that I really looked up to
and during that period of time.
So for a small period of time, I thought,
I'm gonna be a wide receiver.
Dude, you're not Jerry, right?
I was just gonna say he was a nighter fan.
He was a band like a vampire watching Tim Brown.
I don't dare you.
I don't know why.
Jerry writes crazy ball time.
I don't know why. I don't know why. I don't know why I picked Tim Brown. I don't dare you. I don't know why. Jay Rice grace of all time. I don't know why.
Want to be somebody else?
I don't know why I picked Jim Brown.
And I thought that for a little while until I was in,
I think I was in seventh grade.
And I begged my mom and they never want to let me play
tackle football because they're like, it's gonna,
you're gonna hurt your brain or whatever.
But I begged them and they finally let me play tackle football.
And I went to a grand total of two practices
and I said no.
No, I'm not doing this shit.
You were an into it?
No, man.
Oh, my friend, I'm in a tackle practice.
I fucking loved it.
Of course you did, because you're fucking maniac.
Oh, the best.
Here's why I didn't like it.
I'll tell you why right now.
This is the one reason why I didn't do it.
It wasn't because of the training.
It wasn't the fucking pads or the tackling. In fact, we didn't even tackle each other yet because we just started.
It was because I could not fucking stand someone yelling at me telling me what to do.
I'm such an, I hate that to this day.
If you fucking tell me what to do, I want to punch your face.
And here's this coach that's like,
And you just co-exist and navigate these coaches.
And I mastered this process to where coaches never even talked to me.
Like I did my own thing, they just trusted that I would do
my job, my responsibility.
Even a young man's hurt.
Even a young man, dude.
But that was like, I established that very early.
I was like, look, I got this and I would kept telling the coach,
I got this, I got this.
No, I fucking hated it, man.
Do you know that's the only thing I've ever quit
in my entire life?
What?
Football. Really? Only thing I've ever quit in my entire life? What? Football.
Really?
Only thing I've ever quit in my entire life.
I played Pop Warner Football and I was, they put me at defensive end.
You got lit up.
I got fucked up, bro.
I mean, I was like, literally like 98 pounds wet, dude.
Yeah, and I'm just, the tight end across from me was like double my way.
I know it's not done to the blind, because in Pop Warner you have weight classes, right?
So I'm exaggerating.
No, I think it's just age when you're
reading. No, no, no, you have pop order football has age and weight class. So you were
probably a linky 98. Yeah, exactly. And he was just, I mean, he had, he still had good
weight on me. He probably still had 15, 20 pounds on me. And I just, it was not a position
for me. I just literally play after play was getting fucked up. And the same experience
coaches just yelling screaming
And I'm like dude what to do, you know like this is my first year playing football and I'm just getting beat up every play whistle
Go bam on my ass whistle goes bam on my ass and then getting yelled at like I'm like, why am I doing this?
Like this is this is all the fun my friends were talking about like this is not fun for me and I finished
You know, I feel like when you're when you're and that was like such a bad age for me to get him,
like I will wish I had the frame, the size that I have now,
and I love the sport of football.
Like everybody thinks that I played football
and they see me and I'm like, no,
if you only saw what I looked like when I was a kid,
you wouldn't think I played football at all.
It's funny that like how coach is how they can be so effective
or so ineffective.
Yeah, yeah.
Like my, my son's on a volleyball team for school.
And yesterday they played their third game.
Their three and oh, and their three and oh.
They're, they're three and fucking oh,
and here's why it's crazy.
Because the other teams so far have all been bigger
and stronger and they hit the ball harder.
And on my son's team is, you know, my son
and some of his legal robotics teammates.
So you can picture these kids, right?
They're all, like those kind of kids.
Super athletes.
Yeah, no, but because they all have trained
and practiced together with legal robotics,
like so hard, they've got like this group flow thing going on.
And so when you watch them play, so yesterday,
they're playing this other team,
and this other team's fucking twice their size.
And this other team is just, blah blasting the ball over the net. And little
by little, my son's team is playing so organized like a team, like one, like they know what
to do, like they're all in unison. And they started breaking down the other team and the
other time, the other team literally fell apart. Like as soon as they started losing,
you could tell they were all like scattered, didn't know what to do.
And my son's team was like this,
like this fucking little well oiled machine.
And I'm watching them just like,
oh my God, this is so nice.
When you lost the grace,
I feel that that totally reminds me
of when we played basketball
because we were a bunch of like smaller,
you know, white kids that we would go play like all over
the place and we would win based off of fundamentals
and teamwork.
That was it. When you're a coach that was on uncle, the one who we're going to meet this Friday,
he is like way too, we've phonatic like when he comes to football, right?
Played all through high school college. He's coached for a really long time and he is so
into like the chess matchup and he loves to take young kids and like drill in fundamentals
and he just destroys leagues.
Like they go like every season they go.
I think there's in all the season, he's got to be lost.
He's lost like a handful of times.
And he and coaches fucking hate him because my uncle do like the same play over and over
and over and over until like they figured out and then they figure that out and then
see and all these other coaches try and get fancy and teach all this other stuff.
He's like no, at this age you teach them like three or five things
and you teach them how to do it really well.
And they just,
well, that's a long call.
That's what they do.
That's what they do.
Yeah, that's why they've had like the most champions
that anybody for high school footballs
because they've mastered like a few plays,
but they bring in kids that are like super talented, so they have that, you know,
aspect. I've read their book. Their book and the movie is fucking awesome. I'm telling you,
like the coach on my son's team, she's great, she's good, but really what's doing it is I know that
these kids have all worked together for the last two years competing in this legal robotics tournament
and being such close friends, all of them,
that when they get on there, they're all just,
they know each other.
And so when you watch them play,
you can see them just systematically,
without really, they don't even know what they're doing.
They don't realize it because they're so young,
but they're like, you know,
because here's what kids do.
It's intuitive, yeah.
This is what the other team would do.
When the ball would come over,
two kids would go for the same ball and they'd fuck up.
Or it would come over and then they'd both wouldn't go
because they'd wait for the other kid. Meanwhile, my son's team, you'd see these kids, you know, like, I same ball and they'd fuck up. Or it would come over and then they'd both wouldn't go because they'd wait for the other kid.
Meanwhile, my son's team, you'd see these kids,
you know, like, I got it and they'd hit it and then,
boom, they'd set it up and then they'd hit it over and it was like,
so organized, I'm like, holy fuck, they're totally breaking
this other team down.
And they were behind in the first game and they started coming back.
And you could see the other team start to break down,
but it was too late, they lost, they were behind by too much.
But by that point, I could see psychologically what was happening.
And I was telling Jessica, I'm like, watch this, I said,
the other team start to break down, I can tell.
And sure enough, second game was close, but we won,
third game, we fucking destroyed them.
They just all fell apart.
That's great.
And it's great watching these parents,
like, get frustrated with their fucking athletic kids,
and I'm sitting over there like, when you see a good coach, a young young, just really cool like that. parents like come on like get all frustrated with their with their fucking athletic kids and you know
I'm sitting over there like when you see a good good coach it's really cool I tell dog bring on the
fucking bird
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10% off! It's the motherfucking f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f***ing f*** First up is a more fatty.
More?
A more fatty.
A more.
I love it a fatty.
So this person is asking,
why no barbell snatches in the programming, the map programming.
There are cleans in maps green.
Well, first I want to be clear, we are huge fans of the snatch.
So we just want people to know that. as long as it's clean exactly uh... no you
know what here's a
alright yeah let me i had to make a joke on here's a thing uh...
against the gather a snatch
we talked about this though we just a little bit discussed we must be on
this there aren't
cleans prescribed in maps clean no map screen there
clean uh... there there are a high prescribed in maps, clean, map screen, they're clean.
There are high pulls, and this was like a very purposeful
why we did that, because it's a very complex set
of, set of operations and skills that you need to accomplish
before, really being able to master this type of a movement properly
and having all these things in place ahead of time.
We're just trying to get to that expression of power.
So, you know,
cleans being the next progression from the hypo,
is something that I definitely,
like as an athlete,
like that's something that I definitely promote
as far as like having that kind of a response is very beneficial.
We debated this, we actually debated this one.
We made maps performance and I'll tell you what,
if you're very proficient at cleans or snatches
and you wanna switch out high pulls for those, you can.
But the reason why we didn't put in the programming
is cleans are highly, highly technical
and snatches are fucking five times as technical more.
Like, that's probably the most technical
barbell movement you can do.
And we're not about to put an extremely technical exercise
in a program that we're going to promote to most people.
And we knew that most people have either
A, never done a snatch or B, they do them wrong.
And they don't have the shoulder mobility
to even do that. And they're not gonna get the power out of it. They're not gonna get wrong. They don't have the shoulder mobility to even do that.
And they're not gonna get the power out of it.
They're not gonna get the benefit from it
because they don't know how to do that.
So this is where all the programs,
and this is why, there is definitely a major reason
why we did, we talked a lot about this.
But I remember at first, I remember Justin was like,
man, that's such a major movement. We got a program in there, and remember Justin was like, man, that's such a major movement.
We got a program in there and we were all like,
dude, but we all know how technical it is.
Where we see it going is, we're giving you this,
performance program, which is really the foundation
for all sports and any athletic performance pursuit.
And then on top of that, you can build modifications.
So I foresee when
we're when this business is all squared away and we've got the app done and we've got all
programs released out and everything. We have a staff and everything's going, which is
we're heading that direction. We'll be there very soon. I think we'll go back and we'll
start getting really specific first like specific sports. I foresee us, you know, okay, these movements for football,
these movements for soccer, these movements for whatever,
and then here's some movements that we didn't put
in performance that this is how we would modify
and add it in there.
If you're somebody already who like, you know,
Sal was saying, if you're already somebody
who's proficient at snatches or cleans,
like by all means, this is where you can incorporate it,
but we just don't think that's something
that we would recommend to the person
who's going through map screen the first time.
I have a bit of an issue too,
because I feel like the overhead snatch
in any kind of Olympic lifting exercise
is that's a sport by itself,
and that's something that you,
you have to have like dedicated years towards
Achieving these movements to get them to what they should look like and so for just to throw it into a workout
You know as like you know some other programs i.e. Crossfit
I you know any other kind of like highensity type of a workout program that somebody's created
Just to throw it in there because it's exhaustive. It's an exhaustive move that you know stupid. Yeah, it's it's really stupid
And it's it's something that I feel like I guess I'm I'm
Impassionate about it because I feel like a lot of coaches are just
It's the rationale about it because I feel like a lot of coaches are just
naive. Yeah, naive to throw it in there like that. It's a fucking technical movement with more risk. Well, they're irresponsible. It's more risk than reward. There's plenty of movements that we can do
that can replace that movement. Now, not individually, like it, not one movement is going to trump that
snatch or clean, but there's a lot of other movements like the overhead press and the high pulls and things that we can do that are much safer,
easier to get the mechanics down, going to get tons of the, tons of similar benefits.
But yeah, if you want to progress to that, that's like a, like, justness at a whole program
itself, which we've also talked about that is like, and we wouldn't write that until we aligned
with someone who we think is like one of the best Olympic athletes.
Yeah, we're all renowned, yeah, coach for that.
Olympic lifting coach that we go through
a whole Olympic lifting routine, you know?
Yeah, I mean, the bottom line is when you're doing a program,
you have particular goals.
And there is a phase within mass performance
where we're focusing on power,
the ability to generate force within a very short period
of time and maximal force, right?
So we're trying to build as much power as possible.
You have to look at the risk versus reward of each exercise. The reward being how much, well this contribute to power, the risk being,
how long will it take to learn this and or the risk of injury?
Because of the technicality of the movement and a snatch is very, very high
risk.
And if you compare the risk to reward, it's not very good.
In fact, there's very few people that I would ever program a snatch into the routine, very
few people.
The ones that I would use a snatch to with are Olympic lifters because they have to learn
how to snatch.
People who compete in events that involve snatches.
So if you do crossfit events and there is a snatch event,
you should definitely probably just do it then.
Or number three, somebody who's got all the time
in the world who really just likes to learn new techniques
and wants to learn new functional movements
and doesn't mind doing snatches with a broomstick
for a long-ass time before progressing to 20 pounds
and then 40 pounds and then so on.
Then I would program them in, but 99% of the people who are working out and doing
NAPS performance to improve their athletic performance, I would say no, I wouldn't
do, I wouldn't put a snatch in there.
You're going to get just as much power generation from a far less technical movement.
Like I'll tell you what, a kettlebell swing is also very, very
technical, but it's not nearly as technical or hard to teach as a clean. Still hard to
teach, but just not as hard. Can you get the same hip, drive, and power from a kettlebell
swing that you can from a clean? You can. But it's still safer. It's still safer. Yeah,
any kind of a kettlebell movement is is gonna be safer than a barbell movement
That you're gonna throw over your head and that's just the bottom line you can debate that all day long
It's it's it's not debatable. It's it's irresponsible for coaches to program this into an athletes program
If they're not an Olympic lifter bottom line line. And that being said, that doesn't mean that,
you know, that's a movement that all of us actually practice
and do quite frequently inside the gym.
It's just not something that we recommend to the athlete.
Yeah, but how do you practice it?
Let's be honest, you're not doing it to workout.
No, no, it's a workout.
Yeah, no, exactly.
It'll be a lightweight and I'm just working on mechanics.
So, and it's, I've done hand cleans as a workout.
And when I work out with hand cleans,
and at one point I was practicing them pretty frequently,
like two or three days a week,
and I took me like seven months to really,
and I didn't go above 135 with a hand clean,
and this was after like eight months of practice,
and like dedicated practice.
And even at 135, I found that I could tell
that I wasn't as good as I could be.
I noticed certain nagging areas that went on.
Yeah, and that's the thing.
I know exactly.
I know going through power cleans myself,
like how if you haven't been doing this movement
frequently, how quickly you lose it
and you lose the ability to perform
it properly.
So it just, it takes a lot of volume for you to get to a level where you're proficient
in it.
I don't think we can communicate this clearly.
It's hard to.
It's hard to clear it off.
Like, let me put it this way.
We talk about how complicated and complex and technical a squat is.
Just a barbell squat. Barbell squat of all the traditional, slow type barbell movements,
I would say a barbell squat is probably the most technical.
Barbell squat, deadlift, both very technical,
the squat maybe being a little bit more technical.
If the technical, if it was a 10 in terms of how hard it was to teach and learn and how much time it took to learn how to do a barbell squat and it was a 10,
you can pretty much say a clean is a hundred and a snatch is 200. That's literally the difference. It is so much more complex.
So when I see people working out with cleans and snatches, especially in timed routines. I want to take, I want to rip my eyeballs out.
Well, yeah, just cringe.
Well, you have, inside.
You just have, it just, you don't really have any business
doing it until you perfect the foundational ones.
Until you've got a squat, a deadlift, an overhead press
with like beautiful mechanics.
Like you mastered them?
Yeah, like it's the sense.
It doesn't, unless you like you said,
there's a sports specific reason that like you requires you to learn this movement
Do you put that just because the risk versus reward? It's not and and the risk versus benefit
You gotta think about it this way. These movements were invented
Because the goal of Olympic lifting was to the original goal of Olympic lifting was
Get this barbell to my shoulders.
So you can lift the most weight to my shoulders.
And over time, the smartest lifters developed this highly efficient technique to do so.
So it was a technique designed around a goal.
It was not a technique designed to make you more powerful or stronger.
Whereas a squat is I want wanna get my legs stronger,
put the bar on my back and do it.
It's no different than when you look at like a high jump,
when someone jumps over a bar,
and you look at the weird way that they jump head first
and do this weird technique.
It's not because they're trying to learn how to jump
as high as they can and get that explosive jump.
It's because at some point, over time,
there was an athlete that figured out
this really highly efficient, efficient technique, and then you just became good at the technique. So that's what
cleans and snatches are. It's not necessarily, that's what they were invented.
It's how can I get this weight to my shoulders as efficiently as possible and
then perfect at particular technique.
Dusklim Kingman. How do we prevent our lat from being over engaged while doing
a military press? I feel instant relief in my back when I re-rack the bar
and my friend has similar problem,
but he feels a lot more in his traps.
Before we answer this, I want to remind people
we still have 30 days of coaching available
at mindpumpmedia.com for free.
So with this particular question here,
he's feeling like his lats are over engaged and he's getting relief in his back when he rewrapped the bar.
I would debate whether he's feeling actual tightness in his lats because the lats are actually countering the overhead movement.
If his lats were engaging while he was pressing up too hard, his bar wouldn't move. Yeah. Well, I think what he feels is that he's probably got
a little bit excessive forward shoulder.
And so he's so tight that when he puts the bar
in the military press position,
he's just having to squeeze his back so hard
to pull the scapula back.
Because this is me.
Like I remember feeling this way.
This is why.
Did you feel in your last story or your mid back?
Cause the last don't really feel that scapula regressive. Well, I think that's what he's just, I mean, Because this is me like I remember feeling this way. This is why did you feel in your last or your mid back because the
Lats don't really well, that's I think that's what he's just I mean because you're I don't think that's I'm saying
I don't think it's a lot. That's probably more rhomboids that he he feels either rhomboids are like his actual
Erector spina muscles, but you'll stabilize when you're when you're actually fighting to pull back like that
Maybe the rhomboids at first are what are overworking, but then as you start to decelerate down, you'll feel a lot and you'll feel a lot of the weight.
This form is just off.
Yeah, stabilizing. So this is decelerate the load. That's not going to be active in the
concentric portion.
Well, yeah, but what's happening is this. This is so close to home for me. This is exactly
how I used to feel. So I felt like this a lot, and it was just because I didn't have the shoulder mobility.
I didn't have the proper shoulder mobility.
So for me to have the proper mechanics,
I felt all those other stabilizer muscles
having to work so much to keep my mechanics correct.
Like so, this is where prime is money for someone like this.
Like taking yourself through all like the shoulder mobility
moves before you go into like your military
press should help this out a lot. I mean, bottom line is that the back and the traps, these
are muscles that are, you know, your antagonist muscles to this movement. So it's common
that you feel it. But if you feel it more than you feel it in your shoulders, it's probably
a lack of mobility and then you're overcompensating with each other.
I mean, let's be clear,
the backs very involved with the good overhead press.
Traps are directly involved.
Traps have to, especially the upper traps,
they have to stabilize the scapula
because they're fighting those downward forces.
The lats aren't necessarily,
unless you're engaging them because you've got such poor,
like Adam said, poor mobility in your shoulders.
Here's an easy fix.
If that's really where you feel it,
hang on a bar for 20 seconds.
Literally just relax and hang on the bar,
feel your lat stretch, get your shoulders
in that overhead position.
Then do some band pull apart so you can activate your mid back,
then do a military press and see if you still feel the same way.
It's very, very, I mean, if this is really what's happening,
that should... How about a lot? That should help out quite a bit. And just by doing. It's very, very, I mean, if this is really what's happening, that should help out a lot.
That should help out quite a bit.
And just by doing what Sal saying right now,
it's you doing that shoulder retract.
Because you may not go from feeling it this way
to also imperfect that you do that one time from Sal,
but you should feel a instant relief
or you should feel it more in your shoulders
right after the first time you do what Sal just said
based off of what you're describing. If you, and if that's the case, then diving deeper into like all the prime movements
and things that we talk about going into these exercises is only going to benefit even more. So
if you actually spend some good time on all your shoulder mobility exercises before you go into
actually lifting with your shoulders, you should notice a major difference. And don't feel, don't be afraid to go very light.
Yes.
Like lighter than you.
The bar was all I was pressing when this was my issue.
This was my issue and I was literally...
You were just perfecting your form.
Yes, the 45 pound bar.
I was, that's all I was doing and I'm paying, I was paying attention to my spine the entire
time because, in God, I was just walked last night, I was at the gym and it was packed.
Which by the way, he might not even know,
that wasn't that long ago, you did that.
No, no, no, there's like, here we go.
Yeah, there's video, if you go far enough,
back on my Instagram, you'll see me posting videos of it.
You know, see me posting videos and talking about,
I remember when I like started adding,
and I was just adding 10 pounds, like each time,
until I finally felt really comfortable
with, you know, 135 pounds controlling it,
keeping myself
in a good neutral spine as I press.
So, this is something that it should take time.
But you should see good progression
if you actually regress all the way back
to super lightweight, pay attention to your mechanics,
and then keep going.
And if you're not, this is also a lot of why
we started Mind Pump TV.
So if you're not subscribed to the YouTube channel,
you know, we address a lot of things like this on there.
And then, you know, Doug is split it up in different playlists.
So if you want specific things related to the shoulder
or related to the back, you know,
go through those, subscribe to those videos.
We drop them every day, go through and start,
you know, using those tools.
If you don't own prime, if you own prime,
that should handle all this shit.
I mean, that's why we created it.
But if you don't, we've provided a lot of free tools
for people like the Mind Pump TV,
so take advantage of that.
Ferryland is asking, has a parent with children,
how do you explain fasting and food tracking?
With a world being so image conscious,
even explaining that it is for health purposes,
can it still be dangerous
on young, impressionable minds?
Well, number one, I don't explain fasting to little kids.
I explain that it's okay to not eat if they're full or if they're full and they don't
want to eat anymore.
I don't say fasting.
I think if I sat down with a kid and I said, you know, my kids and I said, hey, we're
not going to eat until dinner tonight because fast.
It's 12 o'clock.
We have to feel like fuck you dad.
I'm not even hungry.
Not only that, but a kid is going to, they're probably going to interpret that as what's
the word.
Like I'm like I'm like I'm going to get you're going to get child services not going
on your device.
So like I'm taking something away from them and then they get to eat when they finally do get to eat
and that could promote kind of a bad food relationship.
As far as food tracking is, I don't do that either.
I don't tell my kids like, okay, how many calories
or how many grams of protein.
What I do say though is I do tell them what's in their food.
So I will say, this know, this is salmon.
Salmon is high in protein, protein does this.
It's also high in fats.
Fats do this for you.
And there's a special kind of fat in salmon
called omega-3s.
And this is why they're really good for you.
And that's why when you taste salmon
and I explain why it tastes a certain way,
why it's a certain color.
I just did this the other day with my daughter.
We were over my mom's house and she uses Himalayan pink salt, so do we.
And so I actually brought out some iodized pure white table salt and I showed her the difference.
And we've been using Himalayan salts for so long that it was a shoulder and she was like,
oh yeah, salt can be really white too.
I said, do you know why this one's pink?
And she said, no, I said, well, there's different mineral composition in this.
And so it just opens, opens up a conversation and what they, you know, I'll tell them what
they do for them.
And then you end up finding that your kids kind of make some, some decisions and choices
based on the information that they were given.
And I also, of course, I limit their options.
I don't let them know that I've limited their options.
You know, it's not like I tell them,
like, you can only eat these foods.
It's like, hey, Dad, I'm hungry.
What do we have to snack on?
You can have an apple, a piece of cheese or sardines,
you know, take your pick.
It's not like, you know, if I don't give them any options
and they're the ones making the choice,
and it's just the options that I've forgotten.
Well, it's interesting because my oldest,
he's found food labels.
And so, that's his favorite thing to do now
is to just take a food and then he reads the back of it
and he wants to tell me everything that's in it.
Awesome, that's cool.
And he just totally did that on his own.
And so that's another thing.
It sparks a conversation.
Like what are the macronutrients?
What are all these types of different foods and what kind of nutrients
you get from these foods.
And so really, I just try and create the dialogue for it of like, you know, why, you know,
my mommy and daddy choose these types of food and why we're eating this, you know, in combination
together and all this.
I'm not saying like, you know, I'm not condemning, you know, like, I just, I don't want to get
them fixated on these numbers.
And that's something that I was like kind of like trying to weave in and out of with
him.
Like it's great to have an understanding of these things and to see it on the label, but
I mean, for the most part, mommy and daddy don't eat a lot of foods with labels on it.
So, well, I think that I picked this question because I knew it would be a little bit challenging
for a couple of reasons.
One, I knew it would be challenging for us because I knew that you two didn't track or
tell your kids about fasting.
I knew that.
So, and then you've got someone like me who does both fasting and tracking his food, even
though I'm not right now.
And I then I don't have kids.
So I haven't had to have this conversation,
but if I had to have this conversation
because what would I do if,
because dad competes, what if I was competing
and I was measuring and weighing my food
and my kids saw me doing that?
I think I would explain what I was doing
that dad's in a sport, I'm getting ready for something,
it's very easy to miscalculate or to overeat food.
And for my goals and what I'm trying to do right now, I'm trying to be as precise as
possible.
So I think just sharing with my kid, if I had one while I was doing that, I would just
explain to them what I'm doing, but I would not try and impose that on them.
I would allow them to ask me like, well, you know, can I do that or
should I do that? And even if they ask, I would tell them that they would don't need to do that,
but if that's something they want to do, I could teach them and help see that's the perfect approach
because there's like this, this line that we walk as parents and, you know, you want to make sure,
first of all, don't make it such a big fucking deal. And what I mean by that is, I'll give you an example.
European kids binge drink at a far lower rate than American kids do.
This is a fact.
If you look at statistics, you'll find that especially in the countries in Europe where
wine is served at the dinner table and kids are allowed to taste wine and try wine and
they start having a little bit of wine at the age of 13 and 14.
And they binge drink at much lower rates
because it's not that big of a fucking deal.
And they're not taught that it's like this,
this taboo like secret thing.
And if you treat food like that with your kids,
you make actually cause the opposite to happen.
So talk to them about like Adam was saying,
like, well, this is why I eat this way,
and these are my goals, and it's part of what I do,
and here's the consequences of it,
and here's the positives of it.
You know, they're not, they're not,
just because their kids doesn't mean they're stupid.
You know what I mean?
Like, you kind of let them make some of those decisions
themselves, and treat them a little bit like adults
sometimes.
You'd be surprised.
I think the question and the reason why people,
and I think it's a very good question,
because I think, you know, as parents people and I think it's a very good question because I think
you know as parents you got to be concerned like with all the shit that's at school and you know I don't
know your kids go or to their friends house and they're you know their their family may have all kinds of
box shit that they're getting fed and things like that and then they come home and then you know you're a
parent that's you know health conscious or you're at least trying to be health conscious, and you're trying to think, okay,
I need to teach my kid these things that I'm learning,
what's the proper way to do that?
And I think that's why when we talk about fasting,
fasting is an advanced tool.
And I think since we've been talking about it
for a couple of years now,
I feel like I've seen, you know,
two sides here.
I see a really good side of people that are applying it intermittently into their routine
and it's-
What's the thing to their body?
Yeah, and they're doing it for health purposes.
And then I see the other side of people that, you know, use it as like a weight management
strategy.
And not to say that that's bad or wrong, I just don't think that's ideal,
and the reason why I don't think it's ideal
is for a situation just like this,
because then all of a sudden that becomes convoluted
when you're trying to teach a kid.
Well, dude, back in the day,
not eating to lose weight was called a food,
it was a eating disorder,
and if you'd went too long, it was called anorexia.
Now that we have studies showing the benefits of fasting,
you've got people who've got that similar mentality
who are now saying like, it's fasting.
No, it's you not eating because you want to lose weight.
So you just decided not to eat,
but now that fastings got some purported help benefits
and some study supporting it,
you feel justified with your bad relationship with food.
And I think that's what Adam's talking about.
Like don't fast to lose weight fast because of the health benefits.
Is weight loss a side effect many times?
Sure.
It definitely is.
And I think there's a difference too, like, you know, with food tracking, like how,
okay, so if I'm in the grocery store and we're looking at food labels and we're reading
about, you know, the ingredients, the nutrients involved with each food.
I love that.
I want my kids to learn all those things
and understand on a deeper level
what each food is providing.
But I'm not fixated on,
I'm fitting this into this meal
and I'm adding all these numbers in together
to complete my day for the meal for all that.
That's just, I mean, that's unnecessary for them
to learn at that certain stages.
I think later on in life, that's something that,
they'll grow into that sort of understanding.
And kids naturally fast.
I mean, you talk to any parent and there's one meal
that they have to force their kid to eat usually,
maybe not every day, but don't force them.
I mean, if I give my kids breakfast,
then I'm giving them good choices,
and I notice that my kid eats a tiny amount,
and they don't want me more,
and I'll ask them, why aren't you eating
the rest of your breakfast?
I don't want it, you don't feel like eating it, no.
That's fine.
They'll kind of naturally do that sometimes,
and I'm not gonna-
And she saw some chickens, they'll eat the leftovers.
Well, do you know that whole era of, finish your plate
is so crazy because it's such an old thing
that you had to do when there was like a scarcity of food, right?
And now it's like, and so many parents,
because they were taught by their parents.
That is the root of food problem.
It is.
It is.
And so you start off, you have too much food.
You're telling kids to do, they have to have to have to,
and then you create that mentality.
Then now they have all these crazy, terrible options at their disposal all the time.
So now you create this, you know, overeating where it's like, don't be afraid to, if they're not
hungry to not feed them, like it's crazy. Just what? In a couple hours, they're going to take a hungry.
And also think about this. There's your two jobs as a parent when it comes to food. There's two jobs.
Number one, provide them with food that's going to nourish
their body that's going to make them feel good and be healthy.
But number two, your other job, which is equally as important.
It's just as important.
There isn't one, isn't more important than the other.
The second part is your job is to provide an environment
where your child will become an adult
with a good relationship to food.
Because at some point, that kid ain't going to live with you is to provide an environment where your child will become an adult with a good relationship to food.
Because at some point, that kid ain't going to live with you and they are going to make
those decisions for themselves.
And I'm telling you what, there's a reason why kids go off to college and gain 15 pounds
the first year.
It's because mom and dad are not controlling their food.
They didn't develop a good relationship to food.
They go off on their own and they eat horrible.
And that contributes to this obesity epidemic
with adults and I've known many people who,
oh my God, my parents are so strict with my food
and maybe and now they're overweight
and they eat horribly because they never developed that
for themselves.
So those are two things you need to keep in mind.
Yes, you need to feed your kids to give them,
you know, to nourish them, to give them the nutrients
they need to give them good food choices.
And that's gonna contribute to how they eat later on as well.
But number two, don't do it in a way where you're gonna,
you're gonna create bad food relationship with your kids
because at some point they're gone.
And then what are you gonna do?
You can't control them at that point.
So, with that, listen, go to YouTube.
We post a new video every single day. Mind Pump TV.
It's the best fitness channel on earth.
You can also go to mindpumpmedia.com,
check out our 30 days of coaching.
It's still free.
Lastly, go to Instagram.
If you want to ask us questions
that we can answer in these Q and A episodes,
you go to Instagram and find us at Mind Pump Radio.
You can find my personal page at Mind Pump Sal. Adam is at Mind Pump Adam and Justin us at Mind Pump Radio. You can find my personal page at Mind Pump Sal, Adam's at Mind Pump Adam, and Justin's
at Mind Pump Justin.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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