Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 544: Achieving Single Digit Body Fat, the Best Anabolic Steroid, Cardio for Competitive Lifters & MORE
Episode Date: July 5, 2017Kimera-Quah! In this episode of Quah, sponsored by Kimera Koffee (kimerakoffee.com, code "mindpump" for 10% off), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about the best strength training for ath...letes, getting to single digit body fat, cardio for competitive lifters and their steroid of choice. 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)
you know what ever since b came by swung by and
greenfield swung by and hung out with us i've been back on uh... being
consistent with listening to his up to he's always dropping fucking knowledge on
his on his podcast and greenfield the bengreen field uh... podcast bengreen
field fitness you can find an itunes is one of our favorite podcast if you
like it's like our brother channel if you want to say sister rate information
and believe or not uh... bins Ben's actually a hilarious guy too.
He's got some good humor in some of his podcasts, but great information. I just listened to why you can't get
away from toxins like glyphosate. This episode was pretty mind blowing from me. glyphosates are
those herbicides that they spray all over GMOs. And we've talked about it a little bit, but he goes
into great detail. This is a great episode
I
Suggest you check it out. Hey, guess what time it is guys? It's t-shirt time. It's the motherfuckin t-shirt
Damn, I was waiting for you to say that. Sorry. All right Doug. Who we giving shirts? How many reviews do we get by?
We got 14 reviews. Hey, we're doing it still. Yeah, four shirts this week. I'll still like us. They do
Yeah, they could reviews Doug all of them are five stars glowing and absolutely amazing because I don't I don't read them this
I said low we get so who gets better reviews me Justin or Adam all we got to tell you the way it's tough
It's tough. It's Justin isn't it? Yeah, Justin tends to win
I'm a winner. Can you guys leave me leave me reviews?
You're more likely to get a shirt.
Not true. He doesn't control that everybody.
All right. So our four winners this week are the Jersey
Gent. I baniza Shookie 73.
Callin Cooper. All of you are winners.
Send the name I just read to iTunes at MindPumpMedia.com,
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, I'm mind, I'm with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
In this episode of Mind Pump,
we get a little confused with some song lyrics.
Yeah.
Thanks to Justin, we figure them out.
Well, you know, you sing these songs all the time
and you're probably singing them wrong.
Yeah, we did.
We did.
We talk about child rearing, should it be an authoritarian
or should you just let your kids do whatever the hell they want?
And we talk about the unpredictability of all of that
in spite of the rearing.
And we scare everybody, actually Adam,
didn't want to have a kid before.
Now for sure, he doesn't want to have a kid.
And then we get into the questions,
so that's about 14 minutes,
and then we get into some good questions.
We talk about the best strength training type for athletes. We also talk about how
you can get into the single digit body fat range. We also talk about cardio and its effect on strength
and muscle mass. And lastly, we talk about which steroid we would pick for our own selves.
We should have said what steroids.
We should have talked about which steroids we pick for each other.
Because I know what I'd pick for Justin.
Which one?
The ones that make your cakes bigger.
Hey there.
Also, this month, by one, get one for free.
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The place to enroll in that is mindpumpmedia.com.
Holy Diver.
I've done too long in the midnight scene.
Oh, it's becoming a me.
I need to listen to that one today.
That's a good one.
What is he saying that holy MacGyver?
Right?
That was the re they did the
The scuiver yeah, yeah, you know that oh I thought that's why you were singing it so he says holy diver
Yeah, what is that? I don't know okay? So he is no I thought that's what he said and every time I listen to him
I can't be saying that so the fuck is it holy diver
Oh, I know I gotta find that now It's what the fuck is it? Holy diver. Oh, I know.
I gotta find that.
It's a pre-set.
Now I gotta find that.
That's good with knives.
The Magyver.
Right, the taiga.
Yeah, that makes sense.
Yeah.
Right, the taiga doesn't want to write a tag.
Yeah, but what's a holy diver?
I don't know.
There's a lot of songs like that where you hear the words and you're like, that's not what
they're like.
I think they're fucking amazing.
You just really high when you wrote that.
You know, like a lot of times that's the case.
Maybe.
What's that one song by Prince?
I used to think he used to say,
Raspberry Sorbet.
Oh, Raspberry Sorbet.
Very Sorbet.
Yeah, I was like, yeah.
That's so delicious.
I like Raspberry Sorbet.
Enough to write a song about it.
Like, yeah, yeah.
Bring me your iron lung.
That's what I thought.
That's what I thought that one said.
What was I saying? Bring me an iron lung. That's what I thought. That's what I thought that one said. What was I saying?
Bring me an iron lung.
That was a higher lung.
It's a higher lung.
It sounded like iron lung.
I was like, what's the iron lung?
That sounds real thing.
It sounds metal though.
It sounds more tough.
It does.
Don't bring me a higher lung.
It would have been more badass.
Yeah, bring me the iron lung.
I'm about to fuck shit up.
I'm going to be cool.
Yeah.
In and out.
Yeah. Hey, so we had Stephanie, my cousin come through here
this past weekend, right?
She flew in, which by the way,
she hasn't stopped talking about how excited
she was to meet you now.
That's awesome.
She was very cool.
She did tell me I was her favorite one.
So I did?
Yeah.
Well, she said everybody in Seattle loved me.
Yeah, actually, how funny is that?
She's my cousin. It's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's said everybody's yellow of me. Yeah, actually, I thought he's that she's my cousin. Yeah, it's sour.
Her favorite and everybody in Seattle. That's why she's
used to use. She did it. Not used to. She didn't tell me.
I she didn't tell me I was her favorite, but I didn't
she wanted to. I could tell. I could tell she was eyeballing.
So that is the cousin of mine. I've shared stories before on
this podcast early episodes that I have an aunt and uncle
Who are like super super extreme conservatives
To the point so they have four daughters. She's one of them like super religious and all that stuff
Yeah, like I mean really really like hardcore like they they were like I remember coming over as a teenager in high school
Like 15 16 years old and like her parents wouldn't let them watch PG-13 movies.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, so we watched a lot of...
But they let you a lot of Disney.
Yeah, no, and I imagined, dude, I was like the bad kid.
Like I just did, I did all the bad things, right?
Which was like, watchin' good fuckers.
Yeah, watchin' it.
Right, no, totally, totally.
So I was the potty mouth and the watch...
Hey guys, the brood drugs!
Yeah, yeah. So after she the potty mouth and the wife's from our- Hey guys, the bro, drugs!
Yeah.
So after she spent the day here at Mind Palm
and her and I spent the day together,
later that night, my uncle and aunt came to pick her up
and we had dinner together.
I hadn't had a chance.
I haven't had dinner with them in a while like that.
Not since Thanksgiving.
And we sit down and Katrina comes.
So it's Katrina, me and my cousin Stephanie
that her parents, my uncle and aunt.
Now, we're sitting there and it's so funny to listen
like my uncle and he's the one, all of them,
he's the most like hardcore conservative.
And he's telling this story, right?
We're talking about like jury duties and stuff like that.
And he's talking about, oh, I was on like my longest one.
And he's going to tell in the story
about an 18 month long jury duty, like forever, right?
And it's funny, listen to him tell the story of the case,
like, because he's like, well, I can't repeat what they said,
but then they said something like that.
He's following all the rules.
Yeah, like, yeah, yeah, right.
Well, not only that, but like not using the swear words
that like the gangsters were using inside a court, you know?
So he's like, so he can't even repeat the story.
Well, he's like 10 minutes into the story and outcomes.
It was this guy named Tupac.
And I'm like, wait a second.
You sat on the case for Tupac.
He's like, yeah.
And I'm like, no way.
Yes, dude, what?
Yes, it was 18 months long, dude.
He was 18 months.
This was the, what do you call it?
What the fuck?
You can write a book and make money.
Bro, he is the, I go, have you watched any of the, the he's like no, no, I wouldn't watch any of that stuff like I could barely sit in the courtroom
There was so much profanity you know
Like you do know who that is right. Oh my god. Yeah, yeah, and I so it was great. We got picked as a jury
So here's a trippy part though listening to him tell a story. Now I wish I remember how this all went down back then now
What do you call that?
What's the what's like the pre court before court like before they decided to go full-blown trial the court primer?
I don't know what's it called?
Lost for a selection. No, no, no, it's something else. I'm don't worry our super smart forum somebody will let me know
I'm not worry our super smart forum somebody will let me know
Court systems. No, that's not it. But good try to something along those lines, but anyway It's a digital system. So that's what it took 18 months to even decide if this is gonna go to like a full blown jury
So he sat on that that jury which I don't understand how that'll work
So I tend to dodge all my jury inception. Yeah
by Jerry. Inception.
Yeah.
So.
That was a very scary movie too.
Jerry Levis.
But when he was telling the story, I was thinking like they had so much more information
and he knew way more about the case than I ever did for many of the documentaries that
I watched.
So I was, it was really fascinating to listen to him tell what he had seen.
But it was, I was the Ned Flanders version.
I was so blown away that I'm like, you haven't watched any of the documentaries
or haven't cared about any of that stuff.
No, it's like, of course to him,
it's just, he doesn't care, you know, no, that stuff.
He's so anti all of that, like he's like,
it thinks rap is all bad and everything too.
It was just like the-
Did he sing with large stature?
The devil's music and stuff in.
Yeah.
Have you, is he a night, does he seem like a very happy man?
That's a very hard question for me to answer there.
You know, I always wonder people like that.
No, I think if I'm being completely honest,
well, and think I didn't listen to my poor cousin now,
she, well, she would tell you too though,
I think that we actually talked about this at lunch.
So you're making me share a little more than I thought I was going to share,
but here we go.
He, um, no, man, I think he's actually, I think he battles a lot, like internally, you know,
I think he had such a, and the unfortunate part is that he ended up having, uh,
a daughter who married into a very, very abusive, a natural relationship who happened to be
a relationship that they tried, they basically put like an arranged marriage.
Oh, they fostered it. Yeah, they were so, they basically put like an arranged marriage. Oh, they fostered it.
Yeah, they were so, like they're so concerned of that, they would encourage the daughters
to marry other kids and other like courting them.
Yes, they would court them and they would be other families from church.
So my uncle knew their family really well and the, and the, and the son and like they
wanted that well, he ends up being a total fucking lunatic like crazy lunatic to a point
where I was going to pay him a visit years back when stuff was going on. So
long story short you know a lot of things I feel bad for my uncle and now he
has one of his daughters who has four kids teenage boys that are living in his
house right now and he was planning I'm sure he was planning to be retired by
now and now he's helping support one of his daughters and their their kids at
their their home. So yeah no I think he's helping support one of his daughters and their kids at their home.
So yeah, no, I think he's got actually a lot of stuff inside that is bottled up and he's
unhappy and it's tough to see that.
You feel bad.
You know, it's again too.
A lot of my lessons in life, I feel like I've been my experience.
You know, I've experienced different extremes
in my own personal family and relationships that I've had
and that's one of them.
I've seen many examples of that with like extreme
conservative homes that, you know, in the kids,
just like crazy, crazy kids, like what they've done,
like especially like they have a term for that, right?
The preacher's kid, you know, they tend to be a little more
rebellious.
And I saw that I had a couple of friends that were like that too
that was just like, just everything was like, you know,
so micromanage.
Well nothing, nothing replaces like a good loving,
warm family.
So I've known people who are super conservative,
who have that, and I've known people who are not,
who have that, and people tend to turn out,
turn out okay, I think you can have all the rules you want,
but if they don't have that environment of, you know,
love and support, then they know.
Well, you gotta have communication part of that too.
So if you can still have that,
as long as the communication is there,
what happens a lot of times is you don't feel like you can communicate when somebody's
like such an authoritative, you know, hammer that's going to strike you.
It could definitely, yeah, I could see it definitely.
Well, I have other sides in my family that the complete opposite to, they were very liberal
and they were allowed their kids to, you know, they communicated well and they had a great
loving home, they had everything they needed. They went to private schools, got into, you know,
beautiful four-year colleges and like had all the toys and all the things they
needed growing up and stuff.
We're, I mean, some might argue spoiled, not spoiled, whatever, but, you know,
I thought that my uncle, that uncle and aunt did an incredible job of raising
those kids and communicating with them and giving them a fair amount of freedom
and a freedom of choice.
And, you know, they both went off to college and ended up partying real hard.
One of them ended up getting hooked on pills and still is to this day.
And, you know, and then I watched the stress that she carried, like, she carries that burden
so much that she's so embarrassed to talk about it or discuss it.
And so, you know, it's crazy to see like, that's terrifying.
Yeah, it is.
It is.
When you have kids, man, it's so terrifying.
It's like, I mean, you do everything right.
You always feel, yeah, like incapable.
When you, when you listen to like those
that really, really know me, right?
And they like know my childhood story,
my own personal story, and then my relationships
with friends and my, and my immediate family,
it explains a lot of, maybe everyone always thinks I have like this fear of like commitment. my relationships with friends and my immediate family,
it explains a lot of, maybe everyone always thinks
I have this fear of commitment.
Oh, you're just scared to get committed.
No, motherfucker, I've seen a lot of shit.
And the fear is that I don't want that for my life.
And so a lot of me is trying to do as much as I can
to personally grow so that if I do end up in that situation
that I'm best equipped to handle that. And that to me, that's all you can do, right?
All you can do is to, all you can do is model really, right?
Right.
Right. But part of modeling though, because people, I mean, there's a lot of shitty models,
you know, there's a lot of shitty parent models that are out there. And I think that's
the lack of personal growth that they went through before they stepped
in this world of birthing a fucking child.
And that's where I feel like I have a lot to grow, a lot to learn.
And I feel like I want to be in a position where if I'm going to raise a child, I should
be pretty damn well done raising my fucking self first.
And I feel like a lot of people are not.
Yeah, I don't think anybody's ever done though.
That's the thing.
It's scary man.
I mean, imagine you ever meet a parent.
You never have it down.
You ever meet a parent whose kid is like a legit like situation.
You know what I mean?
Where like their kid is like addicted to some drugs
or like they're in jail or something like that.
And you meet these parents and they're just,
and they're, you know, if they're kind of good people,
they're like destroyed.
They look like they've been through war.
I couldn't imagine that.
Yeah.
That's what my aunt looks like.
My aunt, I feel so bad for her that it's because she was, she's my favorite aunt.
Like literally, I love her to death.
Like she's fucking so rad, so fun to be around.
Such a good person, huge heart.
Like, I like, I looked away that she raised her kids.
I'm like, I don't know if I would do anything different.
Yeah.
I don't know if I would say then.
It's like, she should have maybe beat them more
or something like that opposite.
Yeah, I'm saying, like, what are you supposed to do
to the opposite?
Yeah.
I was too good.
I need to be more of a, I don't know, man.
Dude, this weekend, this is hilarious,
a little funny story, that my daughter,
a little funny quote for my daughter.
So my girlfriend, she drinks a little bit of whiskey,
probably two or three nights a week.
She just loves the taste of it.
She likes to drink like an old man.
But anyway, so she buys, apparently,
apparently it's a good whiskey, Hudson, Baby Bourbon,
I think it's called.
Anyway, she buys a bottle of it and I go to my mom's house
and she tells me, hey, make sure you take the bottle of the car when you go in the house.
I fucking forgot, wasn't paying attention or whatever.
So in the hot ass heat, this bottle of whiskey was sitting in my car and it was on its side.
And the cap or whatever, the wax must have melted.
Top the frickin' top off.
Oh, no.
Half of it spills in my car.
Oh.
So my car smells like whiskey, hardcore, right?
So we get in there and my kids are like,
Oh, they're a tragic easy lost, so whiskey.
And half of you, oh more than half a bottle.
It smells super bad, so we're in the car driving with the kids
and like, please don't get pulled over
because it smells like alcohol.
I have an open bottle and you're driving two kids.
So I'm talking about this and my daughter's in the back
and she goes, if the police man just pulls you over just tell him
You're the Pope on the way to church. I'm like what?
Why would I say like because they drink wine? I'm like oh
I
The Pope just treats a bunch of wine
He's a real wine. Oh dad just tell me you're the Pope
I'm like that actually make me officer on the Pope.
That might actually make the officer
for me.
I'll first think I'm drunk.
Now, when your kid says that you just burst out laughing,
as you say, how do you not just like die laughing?
I just cracked up.
You imagine that.
Peace be with you, officer.
Do you remember the Cosby show,
the kid say the Darnest Things?
Yeah, that was a great one.
Oh, it was great.
Do they still do that? Obviously he's not doing it
Yeah, he's not gonna host it. Yeah
Yeah, he's just not the the figure that we want
Yeah, kids will save kids will say some shit man make you crack up
Bird time. Yeah, is it the bird? Bring the word. That is it. Is the word? We call it a planet.
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Question is from me SBN. What's the best kind of strength training for athletes?
Best strength training for athletes. Um, for athletes. Straight training.
Yeah, the one that gets you stronger.
Next question, the...
No, it's, so, some of this depends on the sport,
and a lot of it depends on the athlete,
but overall, generally, I would say you want to build
lots of base strength,
but you also want to have a way to convert that into strength
that is usable in the specific.
Yeah, to your sport.
Let's give some examples of that.
Let's talk about someone who has a football player.
There are certain types of strength that you want to be a football player versus someone
who is a sprinter. There's different types of strengths that each want to be a football player versus someone who is a sprinter, right?
Like there's different types of strengths that each one of those. Well, so a football player,
you're looking for anaerobic. I love that he chimes in first. Yeah, it's fine. I was like,
looking over at Justin, the chime. Let me take this one from all of my experience. I know. I want
to hear South City. I know enough about sports to know kind of physical. You do know I want to hear South City. No, I know enough about sports to know kind of physical.
You do know I'm just busting your balls.
Yeah, I'm just busting your balls because I actually picked this question for Justin.
Whatever I'm done. Go ahead, 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, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no need for most positions and every position is a little different, but you need a lot of anaerobic
strength and you need to be able to recover after the down is over.
So it's not lots of endurance, not tons of strength endurance, but lots of power that
you can repeat down after down.
Fast switch movement.
Fast switch movement.
So there's definitely going to be heavy barbell movements
with lots of hip strength, hip power. So squats and deadlifts, power cleans, and then incorporate
power movements like power cleans and snatches and the Olympic lifts, I think I have a good
place. But you also want to incorporate lots of rotational and lateral movement because
a lot of the injuries that happen from football happen from people getting hit or hitting
in these kind of lateral, awkward kind of positions.
And you'll see people's knees will,
you know, they're not getting a lot of knee
and ankle injuries as a result.
So rotational movements, power, strength,
and then while you're building the strength
that's important, you do lots of drills on the field.
Because with football, with a lot of the positions in football, size can be an attribute.
However, if you just get bigger without converting that strength into something usable on the
field, then it becomes a detriment instead of an attribute.
So one of the worst things you could do is gain all the strength and size and then go play
football without having practiced in between
because now you're not coordinated to your new body.
Well, and I think, okay, so I think there's different approaches to this
like based off of like if you're a young athlete
or if you're sort of a mid-level athlete
where I'm not like quite in a professional kind of setting
or I'm not in college or you know, I'm not like quite in a professional setting or I'm not in college
or I'm not trying to get into the pros.
I need to really focus on strength training and I need to build my body up.
There's a whole process that has to happen.
Why barbells are so good for that and why we do want to focus on loading it specifically, so it's in a balanced situation.
So you're going to get the most bang for your buck, the most maximal strength that way that
you can apply.
But yeah, you do want to maintain mobility and function and multi-planar movement, but
that should be the basis of what you're doing.
But then as it progresses
and evolves, the further you get into the sport, it becomes more focused needs to be on
the explosive specific movements and then also the health of your joints and joint specific
strengths. So it's kind of a process that young athletes need to kind of plan out.
So part of why I picked this question because I know it's a vague, right?
So I knew that we could have an open discussion on it and I knew that we'd all have different points.
And I was going to contribute like when I think about just general,
like Justin brings up a great point, I mean everyone's going to be different, right?
Every case, when I get, whether it be a young adult, a young kid,
or an older man who's training for a sport,
how I train them for that sport
is obviously going to be unique based off of them
and what they're capable of currently.
But some general things to take into consideration
and what I think we've talked about on the show
before that we see Ronald.
I know Justin tends to scoff at athletes
that he sees doing CrossFit for football, right?
Like, why doesn't that make sense?
And so the way I would give an example of that
and like how your training should kind of
mere more of the sport you're doing is
comparing like a football player and an MMA player, okay?
So a football player, what do you think of play last?
How many seconds, Justin?
How many seconds is the average play?
Um, yeah, nine seconds, right? How many seconds is the average play?
Yeah, nine.
Yeah, seconds.
Right?
It's nine seconds maybe or something?
Oh, yeah, maybe 10.
Yeah, 10.4.
That's exactly.
Yeah, so under, under 10 seconds, right?
So, and what you need in that 10 seconds,
you need to be explosive and be able to express that strength
in that short amount of time. And then guess what? Then you get to go back to the huddle, and you get to express that strength in that short amount of time.
And then guess what, then you get to go back to the huddle and you get to rest for a few
seconds and then you have to do it again.
So think about that.
Your training should be closer to that than like a CrossFit type of deal where you're doing
non-stop.
That's more endurance space, which that mirrors a little bit more in my opinion like a MMA
fighter. It makes sense to me why MMA fighters appeal to
like the or are drawn to the you know, a CrossFit type of modality circuit type training because they
have to fight for three minutes right inside the ring or five minutes right three to five minutes
depending on what a lot of them time it around that specific amount. So that's good that you mentioned that. Yeah, like the specifics of like these time frames because you know like the most and also like the time of day like you play
games and all these types of things you kind of like take into account in your workout regimen.
But yeah, like explosive movement is at the the utmost. And you know, you do want to have stamina
and so that's why you why within something like mass performance,
like we have these phases specifically
outlining the focus.
And endurance, it does play a factor.
You want to outlast and you want to outlast
the other team, because if you're
dogging it out there, you're not going to be very affected.
I also don't want to get carried away, though,
because people, the whole concept of training
like the sport in the gym, where you're mimicking the sport,
I've seen so many people get carried away with it
that they lose the main benefit of resistance training.
Resistance training does one thing better than anything else
and that's get you stronger.
Yeah.
So you can build endurance with it,
you can build stamina, you can do all those things.
But resistance training is by far
Excellent in the best at making you stronger so like when I said training to jitsu
Some of those guys would go to the gym and all they would do is circuits and stuff because they're like well
That's that's how I train your jiu jitsu and I said tell him look
If you're only going to the gym twice a week and lifting just focus on getting stronger there when you do your jiu jitsu
Just do more jiu jitsu for that. Yeah, you know, I stronger there. When you do your jiu-jitsu, just do more jiu-jitsu for that. You know what I'm saying? And I was gonna say, and if you have the accessibility
of this, here's something you could do that's really awesome, is if you're in a sport like
where you're exerting lots of endurance and stamina and you're near a gym or you're near a
barbell or something like that, here's something cool I used to do for jiu-jitsu. I would grapple
and do like three minute match,
then I'd get up and I'd go do a couple singles
of the deadlift, then I'd go back and do my grappling.
So it was like kind of combining the two.
But again, you don't wanna get carried away with that.
Like Bill, we got drinks.
Yeah, we got into a little discussion with that.
We were talking about bilateral versus,
you know, unilateral type mentality.
And, you know, it does make a lot of sense with
unilateral training, uh, being sports specific, uh, you know, being that it's modeling a lot of
what you're doing on the field and you're making cuts and you're doing all these types of things
from a split stance. So, but like this is why I outlined the fact that there's phases like I want
to focus specifically on just getting stronger.
And so the bilateral, it provides the best situation
for my body to just focus on that specific adaptation
in its pure form.
So building that foundation is essential.
And a lot of times, for instance, Mike Boyle,
he brings that up, but he's training professional athletes
who have already built and established this ridiculous foundational strength.
And so now when you're getting these athletes that are coming in, that are at that level,
it really is all just about the function, the joint health, and preservation, so it's
totally different.
Well, I think that's why we said too that it really matters.
Every case is different.
And even what Sal is saying and cautioning everybody,
it's like, I think that even matters
to what part of your training you're at.
Am I getting you ready for the problem?
Like you're getting ready for a comp,
I actually want you in the best condition as possible.
I'm all my building, the muscle is already done.
So if I already did all my great work in the off season, like so so I have either is an offseason. Right. Like, exactly. So if I,
I'm, if I'm assessing an athlete and I decide, like, let's say it's a young athlete and I decide
that or coach does or whoever does, decides that he needs to put some more mass and he needs to be
stronger. Our offseason is heavily focused on that and very little conditioning, just enough to keep him in condition
and it's separate from that training.
I wanna get him stronger, I wanna get him bigger,
I want to do just enough conditioning that,
I don't know who's just set it's out just in,
but as far as not losing their mobility
in these multiplanes while they're building a size,
I want him or her comfortable
with their newfound strength and size,
so I still want them to be able to apply that and express that in their sport.
So they're going to get little bits of that in the off season.
Now then when it comes game time or close to season time, and I'm getting ready for you,
now conditioning becomes more of a priority because now I need you to be able to use
L. Now let's take all that strength and muscle you've built.
Now let's learn to be able to express that and express that as fast and as hard and as
long as you can.
Yeah, well to be honest, too, this is where the thought process came into the mobility
sessions and a spin-off of our trigger session concept, because now I can focus more on joint
ability and health and support with joint know, multi-planar movement.
And, you know, like, if I was to evolve this program even further
and make it even more like, well, you know,
football specific, you know, swimming specific,
you know, baseball specific, like, I would add in
those drills and those specific practices and movements
that, you know, you want to really hone in on
and sharpen because frequency is everything.
So, yeah.
Well, this is what I've given as a, you know, I've had these athletes reach out and say,
hey, what do you think, you know, I should do on my mobility days and they're a basketball
player or they're a swimmer.
Like you said, this is a perfect place to, you know, during the off season that you would
inject these swim practices
or inject these basketball working on your crossover.
That would be part of your mobility day.
Absolutely.
Because you are working on the mobility that you need to perform your sport.
That's how we structured maps performance was you've got your foundational strength and
power and hypertrophy type building in those phases.
Then you have your mobility days,
which you would incorporate whatever your specific sport is,
like you're saying.
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Hills zero.
How do you get to single digit body fat?
Very carefully.
Yeah.
You know, I've done this for me personally.
I'll just speak, because I haven't done a ton of this
with clients, only because clients tend to not want to
necessarily get to that point.
I have a few.
I have a few.
Yeah, but most people, you know, most of the guys
have trained, got real happy around 10, 11% body fat and women,
the females that I've trained in the past,
usually when they get around the high teens
or even low 20s, they're very, very happy.
But single-digib body fat, for men is very difficult.
For women is, I wouldn't even recommend it at all.
But I know for myself, I tend to walk around,
right around single-digib body fat at high single digit,
so I'm usually around eight or nine percent body fat,
but I've gotten as low as five
or maybe even four percent body fat.
And something very interesting happens,
once I get below, I'd say seven and a half, seven percent.
Getting down to seven and a half, seven percent,
I'm consistent with my nutrition, my training,
everything's good, my calories are a little bit lower,
I use intermittent fasting a little bit more,
you know, in my normal day to day eating.
Once I hit about seven and a half to seven percent,
some interesting things happen.
Appetite takes a whole, that's a whole nother thing.
Cravings, that's when I start to get cravings,
and they're very interesting cravings.
Like, I'll be thinking about an apple all day long.
Like the apple I'm gonna have for lunch.
Like I know I'm gonna eat it, but I'm thinking about it.
And it's 10 a.m. and I have to wait, you know,
two hours for it because I'm working or whatever.
I notice my body temperature changes and I get colder,
which is a sign that my metabolism is trying to adapt
and slow
down.
My sea of less insulation too.
I mean, I think it's that, but I think more than that, it's just my body slowing down,
right?
And it's really, and it's an interesting cold, like I'll be in a room and I'll need,
even now, I'll be colder than the average person, but when I get like that, it's like
I need to cover up.
My sleep gets a little bit affected,
especially when I start to get real low.
But the way you get to single the body fat percentage
for a lot of people is you gotta be really consistent.
Like I noticed when I got down to like,
when I get down like 7% body fat, 6% body fat,
one meal.
Yeah, there's a way, I'm glad you went there.
There's way less room for air when you start getting into that.
Well, and think about it,
because we're talking about a percentage, right?
So when you're only like five or 6% body fat,
you have very, very low amount of body fat.
So it doesn't take very much for that percent to go way up.
Like for you to go. For you to jump from 5% to 8% can happen overnight.
For you to go from 20% body fat to 21% body fat is actually really hard to do.
It would take more than a day normally.
Does that make sense?
Because you're talking about a very, very small number when you're talking about a 5% to
a 6% versus... Dude, you gain one or two pounds when you're about a 5% to a 6% versus it's...
Dude, you gain one or two pounds and you go up a percent.
And your body wants to gain that weight very quickly once you get to real lean.
And I noticed that, like, I'll eat, I'll have a weekend where I'm, you know, enjoying
myself and I'm up a percent body fat, whereas before it would take me a lot more to do
something like that.
So, but to get down to the single digit, you have to be consistent all the time.
All the time.
I think that's some of the best advice for sure with that, because in my, I have actually
coached a lot of people that have wanted this.
And many times, and many of them have, and many of them have not, got there.
And the ones that have not got there, it was because as bad as they said,
they wanted to see themselves
at single-digit body fat.
They didn't want it bad enough
to give up a lot of the other things in their life.
And that's what it comes down to
because once you start getting that low,
there's so much room,
or there's so little room for air,
like Sal was saying,
one meal could throw
you off a percent of body fat. I mean, it's, you're, you're level of sacrifice and discipline
and commitment to that is greatly increased when you start to get down to single digit.
I think that, I think a lot of the average person, the average person, I think a majority
of people can, as far, if we're talking about men, we'll say men first, I think a majority of people, if we're talking about man, we'll say men first,
I think a majority of the population can fairly easily
get down to 10 to 15% body fat very easily.
I think that's with a little bit of discipline
and focus on diet.
Healthy lifestyle.
You should be able to make good choices,
exercising really, I think 10 to 15% body fat
is a very realistic, very very easy not easy, but easier
Manageable more reals. Yeah, and maintaining it feeling good like not having the signs that it's sourcing for a female
That's numbers probably 15 to 19% you know for her 15 to 20% is what I would say for a female
Same thing anything below that for the male and the female.
Now you're at a new level of commitment
and I would tell my clients that wanted this,
but struggle with it, I'd say, well,
have you strung literally like three or four weeks together
of literally consistently eating to your plan
and training without any hiccups?
And that's just like, well, I only did this and I only did that and I said, well, yeah, that's why you look great and you're 10 hiccups. And that's just like, well, you know, I only did this, and I only did that, and I said, well, yeah,
that's why you look great, and you're 10% body fat.
But if you want to be seven or six,
like, there's gonna be a lot more times
of you feeling hungry and those moments of craving an apple,
and you're not, you know, doing something
that you really wanted to do,
because your friends are all going out
and having drinks or eating this way,
because you care so much about hitting that body fat percentage.
I've seen more people screw up getting down to the single digit body fat percentages
because once they got down and got closer to it, then they just pushed it even more
with more cardio, less calories, and then they're shocked to find that their body fat actually went up a little bit.
So that's it. Okay.
Another good point that you bring it by saying that too is a lot of people heading towards
the single digit body fat, they start off at a much higher number, say 15% to 20% or
maybe even greater and that this is their ultimate goal.
Like my goal is to get down to single digit body fat, which I can totally connect to because when I started my transformation journey, I checked my body fat at 19.8%
and my exact goal was I wanna be the lowest single
digit body fat I've ever been in my life.
So I can totally relate to this being a goal,
but I also did that over a six to nine month process
of slowly chipping away at that and building your metabolism
up beforehand. I think it's so crucial to having success at this because if you go about
it, which the way I feel like a lot of people do, which is all of a sudden just boom, all
at once. You went from being fat and out of shape and not really working out, not paying
attention to what you're eating to all the sudden intense training sessions, you're doing cardio, hamster wheel.
Yeah, all of a sudden, and you throttle down right out the gates and you go from 19% body
fat down to 14 or 15 really quick.
But then every percent after that is extremely difficult for you because you've slowed your metabolism
down so much.
In a leaner, you get the harder it is.
Your body fights it more and more, and it becomes more of consuming.
It consumes you a little more because you have to focus a little more.
You can't, like I said earlier, you can't go off nutrition as often as you did before,
but I do want to say this, there's really no knee unless you're I mean
I know how some people have a goal of doing this, but you don't really need to you know men look pretty good usually
Around 10 11 percent 10 11 percent you take your shirt off. Yeah, but who and you're gonna look pretty good
Who are we to say that for some while I'm just saying that's not our place?
Well, I just want people I just want people to kind, because a lot of people have never been to even 10%.
And so they're thinking single digit body fat.
Like 10%, you can get to 10% if you're a man
and it's not super hard, it's not crazy to maintain.
You'll still be able to be strong in the gym,
you don't have to worry about so much stuff
with your nutrition.
You still gotta be relatively disciplined,
but, and you'll look good.
You'll look good.
And for women, God, I mean, most women in the high teens,
17, 18% body fat, you look like you're fit
and you're kind of like an athlete.
I agree, but I also think that,
and I think we all have this conversation with our clients.
You know, I learned so much about myself push.
I mean, how much did you learn about yourself
when you saw yourself at five?
Just the simple fact that you know
what you're giving this advice for that reason
because you know how weird the body starts to act
and how certain foods affect you differently
and you get to notice all that.
And when you get really, really lean,
it's amazing how sensitive everything becomes.
Like my senses to my every type of food that I eat is like super heightened when I'm that low and I and it's
Crazy when you deplete the body for that hard that long and then and and it's all it seems to always be starving for nutrients
Like how quick you can tell that oh wow my body totally agreed with that or or oh wow, it totally rejected that, or oh, you know, it responds really fast
when it's starving for nutrients all the time
and you're finally giving it nutrients
and what you give it tells you a lot about your body.
And it taught me a lot about the mental discipline
that was involved with that.
So I don't know if I wanted to tour someone
for setting that as a goal.
I think just if you're gonna do something like that,
the approach is so important
and making sure that mentally and physically,
you're set to do that, you know?
Picks by Leo, he's got the distinct impression
you guys don't like to do cardio as a way to burn fat
if you wanna maintain muscle mass.
What?
Does your advice change if your goal is to maintain strength but you don't really care about muscle mass. What? Does your advice change if your goal is to maintain strength, but you don't really care
about muscle mass?
For example, preparing for a power lifting or Olympic lifting competition.
Okay, so let's first be clear, there should be a certain amount of cardio, and I hate to
use the word cardio because when I say that, people think they're on a treadmill, on a bike,
on a liptical, like actually doing cardio.
But there is a certain amount of options.
There's tons of everything.
I mean, walking fast, hiking, you know, that kind of stuff.
There's a certain amount of cardio or activity you should do for health.
And if you do it and you optimize your health, it will maximize your ability to build muscle
and strength.
Okay. health, it will maximize your ability to build muscle and strength. Okay, so that being said, adding extra cardio and pushing cardio will do nothing but take
away muscle and take away strength.
In fact, it'll take away strength faster and it'll take away muscle.
That's one of the first things you'll notice is you'll lose strength before you start to
lose muscle mass.
So when I train strength athletes, and I work with strength athletes
who wanna maximize their strength,
I don't tell them to not do cardio.
I'm not one of those people,
it's like avoid cardio at all costs.
I think there's a certain level
of cardiovascular conditioning and shape
that benefits strength,
even if it's powerlifting.
I just don't tell them to do intense cardio,
and I don't tell them to do lots of endurance stuff,
but I will say things like, you know, on your off day,
go do a hike or go walk for an hour or something like that
because it's good for you.
I mean, the heart is a muscle
and it's the muscle responsible for pumping all this blood
to all the rest of your muscles.
So think about, like, I think I want that strong, right?
And I think exercising it to the point
to where it's got some strength
and it has some endurance
and it has some capabilities of doing that
is gonna be beneficial to all pursuits.
But using it as the main source or main tool
to lose body fat, which I feel like the majority.
And that's a lot of the reason why you hear
on Mind Pump, we talk out,
because you will most certainly catch me hiking.
You will most certainly catch me hiking, you will
most certainly catch me on a treadmill.
It's just cardio is overdone.
Yeah, it's grossly overdone.
And so we take the opposite side, not because we're like anti cardio, I'm not anti cardio
whatsoever, I just, I implement it.
It's just commonly thrown out there, that's the answer that everybody has ahead.
It's like I got to run all this weight off.
And there's a lot more efficient ways to do that that we try and bring up,
especially just being more active and concentrating on neat and,
you know, like using cardio more restoratively to benefit you in your strength lifts,
you know, things like that.
It's a different mindset towards it.
Here's something I noticed, because obviously I grew up lifting and I just wanted to build
muscle and I knew cardio burn calories.
So it was the last thing I did ever was do cardio.
Later on as I, you know, became more self-aware and started educating myself a little more
and I started doing a little bit of cardio here and there.
Even, and this was during periods of time I wasn't trying to get lean or anything like
that, I just would throw it in.
I noticed a benefit.
I noticed that I started building muscle a little bit better
and I started getting a little stronger.
And at first, I didn't really make the connection,
but I noticed it because I would stop the activity,
the cardio, the hiking or whatever.
And then I would re-implement it again.
And I noticed that I would be better with my squats,
with my dead lifts, and I just build more muscle,
and I just felt healthier.
We have to understand that a healthy body,
a total healthy body, is the perfect environment
for adaptation, it's the best environment for adaptation.
So if you're avoiding cardio like it's the plague
because I need to build muscle,
and so what you do is you just sit on the couch all
day long except for when you lift weights because you need to conserve calories. That's the wrong
approach most of the time because that's sending a signal to your body as well. That's also telling
your body that you don't need muscle. And so if you have two people who, you know, you got two twins,
one of them lifts weights and then is zero activity all the time and the other one lifts weights
into some moderate activity and just as overall active and going outside.
The person that's doing some of that activity,
it's gonna build muscle a little easier
and have just, because of the better health.
So I don't like telling people,
don't ever do cardio.
I just don't use that word cardio.
I say move and be active.
Yeah, I think that's what, I mean,
I probably speak out the most against it, right?
I think I'm the most vocal about it
because of how it's abused in my competitive world.
But if you, if those that are paying attention
and watching my Insta story, you'll see,
I mean, I'm getting 15 to 20,000 steps a day.
That's a lot of fucking moving, you know?
My heart is working.
My heart has got to work.
It's got to pump a ton of blood to in order to do that.
So even though I'm not getting on a treadmill,
and I'm not pumping away as hard as I can
for 30 minutes to an hour,
I'm still exercising my heart.
It's still having to work.
And I'm conscious of the days that I don't do that,
that that would be a day that,
hey, this would be a great day for me
to do some steady state type cardio
because I flew on a plane to Tampa and I sat all the first six hours and hey, this would be a great day for me to do some steady state type cardio because I flew on a plane to Tampa and I sat all the first six hours and hey, this would be a great time
for me to do this.
And then I'm smart about it like, oh wow, this was a day that I took 20,000 steps and
burned 5,000 calories.
There's no real need for me to go now hop on a treadmill for another 45 minutes to an
hour and bust away doing cardio. That's what, now, and that's the part where I speak out on this
because this is where people think that by doing that,
they're gonna get to their goal faster.
And a lot of people get motivated by a day like that.
Like, oh, I've already stepped this much.
Now I'm gonna go do cardio for an hour and like,
burn up all kinds of fat.
Where no, it's like, you've already moved enough.
Your body has already probably expended some fat throughout the day because you move so much
that this would not be the most ideal time for you to do cardio.
But flip that on the opposite, hey, it's a day where you moved like the average American,
which is 4,000 steps a day, well, fuck yeah, you should do some cardio.
And then also consider there's different, there's cardiovascular goals that people have too.
Sometimes I can wanna build endurance and stamina
and they wanna challenge their cardio.
If that's the case, then yeah, you need to do the cardio
and you need to program it just like you would program
your workout.
Cause you know, look, I lift weights
and I don't necessarily lift weights specifically
for longevity.
Longivities always a priority in mind,
but also the weights that just push myself
to get stronger and build more muscle.
Now, I don't treat cardio that way, right?
I treat cardio as just being active in for longevity.
Well, if you flip that and you're somebody
who really prioritizes cardiovascular endurance and stamina,
then you treat resistance training the way I treat cardio.
You would go in the gym and you'd lift weights a little bit here and there to maintain
strength and mobility.
So also look at what your goals are.
My approach, the way I do it for myself, is based on what I enjoy doing.
It's based on my priorities.
I also like having a little bit of a faster metabolism, which muscle kind of provides me.
I enjoy lifting weights way more than I enjoy doing
stamina endurance type work,
but there's nothing wrong with doing the opposite.
You just need to realize that.
I'm so glad you said that.
That's a great point.
No, so many people think that we're so anti-cardiode.
No, it's just the way we like to train.
Yeah, it is.
It fits our training.
Yeah, if someone came to me and you're training
for a Spartan race, or you love doing cardio and
you don't care about building a bunch of muscle, then you're programming that I would
set for you would be on its head.
Yeah.
It would completely be different than how I train myself right now.
So I think when we talk about things like that, we're talking to the majority of people.
Like if you ask me that your goal is to build muscle and you burn fat,
cardio is not the best way to do that.
It's just not to do either one of those.
It cardio is not the best way to burn fat
and it's definitely not the best way to build muscle.
So I honestly do some cardio
like in high intensity versions like sporadically,
you know, intermittently because mainly
because I want to be able to have the abilities
of these movements.
So I'm pursuing these explosive, you know, intense type movements that I want to have ability
and endurance towards.
So if I'm jump rope or I'm sprinting with the sled or I'm, you know, I'm running up a
hill, you know, whatever the case is, I just like to be able to maintain abilities,
but I weave in and out of that.
That's just something that's a phase that I'll go through
that I actually enjoy doing that sporadically.
So that's how I incorporate it,
but I'm not against cardio,
but I would much rather focus on strength personally,
so that's where I tend to end up.
Yeah, so for me, what I like to do is,
if I feel like I need more stamina and I want
to challenge my cardiovascular training, then I typically will do a circuit or I do supersets
or I'd rest last or I do higher reps with my weights, because just because I enjoy that
more, otherwise I'll just hike.
Like I love hiking.
I want to maintain good hiking cardio.
That's my extent of how much cardio I want.
I don't care about having cardio vascular endurance
to run five or 10 miles.
I don't care about being able to swim a mile
or anything like that.
It's just not interesting to me.
From a longevity standpoint,
I do the activity that I enjoy doing
and to keep that particular cardio vascular shape
and that's it. But you have to understand when you ask your body
to get to for different types of adaptations or specific types of
adaptation, they tend to compete with each other. So if you train for maximum
strength and muscle and maximum endurance, you'll get a little bit of each,
but you'll get a lot of neither. So it's just one of those things,
look at what you enjoy and train that more
if that's what you enjoy doing.
If you had to speculate though,
and which one has more carryover to the other.
That's a very tough, well, I guess,
like if you strength, here's the thing,
weights are way more versatile than cardio.
Yeah, that's where I'm going.
Way more versatile.
Like, I guess with cardio, if you throw in body weight stuff,
now you can get real versatile, but that's not really cardio, right?
Cardio, I would consider, you know, running, cycling,
that kind of stuff.
Way more versatile with weights,
because I can actually train a pretty decent amount
of cardiovascular endurance with resistance training,
maybe not the long type of endurance
like you would get with, with like, running long distance. And that's what I meant. So I would compare,
this is what I would compare. I would compare the guy or girl who swims in a pool,
right? And they're going to get some resistance. They're going to build some
lats. They're going to build some muscle because they're getting some resistance
in there, but they're still high. They're still more cardio based than anything else.
So they're still not going to build a lot of muscle. So if you were to put them now into a gym
setting, how strong would they be?
And then flip that same body type of a person,
they hear she doesn't do any swimming in the pool,
but they lift weights and they program
maybe super setting sometimes
and high intensity type workouts.
You know, who has more carryover into the others?
As long as they have both have good swimming technique, I mean, I could definitely see how
the weights are super versatile.
Like, that's it.
That's the big factor because I mean, you see a lot of cardiovascular programs.
It's very linear.
It's just like one or two different specific movements that they're honing in on constantly.
And it's like, you know, just this, this constant hitting those same type of movements, you know, over a period
of time, it's going to have detriment.
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Amanda K lifts if you could each pick a steroid to use with no side effects
Which one would you choose and why?
So I went through a phase where I really learned a lot about anabolic steroids. This was when
probably my late teens, early 20s,
where I was really into body building. I was really into supplements and how they affected the body.
I started using, at the time they had over the counter,
pro-hormones, which were more accurately
called the designer steroids, because that's what they were.
And I really wanted to learn about why anabolic steroids built muscle and why some were used
for certain things and other ones were used for other things because I knew on a very basic level
that all anabolic steroids were derivatives of testosterone. So they're all based on the
testosterone molecule. Yet you have bodybuilders saying,
well, I use these particular steroids,
and these are the effects I get.
For example, I remember I would read in,
I had books, remember the underground Bibles.
Yeah, the Anabolic Bible.
Yeah, by Dan Ducane, I read that,
and I read, you know, muscle media 2000
was lots of steroid information.
Of course, I worked in gym,
so I was friends with lots of bodybuilders
and I'd ask them stuff. And they would say things like, oh, you know, if you take of steroid information. Of course, I worked in gym, so I was friends with lots of bodybuilders and I'd ask them stuff.
And they would say things like,
oh, if you take this steroid,
Equipoice, which is a veterinary steroid,
you get crazy pumps and it makes you really hungry.
Or if you use, you know, masteron,
your muscles get really hard looking
and you get this real dry look to your muscles.
Or if you use,
sounds like masteron.
Yeah.
Or if you use, you know, wind straw, that's great for pre-contest,
and anavar is very mild, and women will use that,
and whatever, and so on.
Like, if they're all derivatives of testosterone,
how are they all having these different effects?
And when you dig deep, what you actually find
is that steroids have anabolic effects,
and they also have androgenic effects.
And the anabolic effects are all of the, and you can rank them, by the way, you can
actually rank them by, this one is very anabolic and very low androgenic activity, and this
one is very androgenic with very low andabolic activity.
And the anabolic effects are the build muscle effects, the pro tissue effects, the androgenic effects
are the masculineizing effects
that anabolic steroids will give you.
Now you wanna, of course, immediately people are like,
well why would anybody take an androgenic steroid?
If I just wanna build muscle, who gives a shit?
Well, bodybuilders notice that the high androgenic steroids, the ones that are classified as high on that particular scale,
produced the hard, grainy, dry looking muscle, would also give them aggressiveness in the gym.
And when they combined androgenic steroids with anabolic steroids, they'd build way more muscle than if it just combined two anabolic steroids.
So there was this synergistic effects happening here
with the anabolic.
So now that I've bored everybody with all that,
I thought this was a fun question.
He's really.
Well, no, no, no, no, that's, I think it was.
No, I was a good guy.
Yeah, no, I think that's in, I think that's important
that they understand that because if we throw out a name
like I would take D ball.
I know.
Well, what's the reason why that is?
Yeah, it's going to be one of the most anabolic steroids
that are out there.
And you know, with the most anabolic typically come with the highest side effects.
Well, so D ball is actually interesting.
I want to milestone in his life.
Yeah.
They make it.
They actually have what's interesting about anabolic and I remember reading a lot about
this particular thing is it's hard.
You can't just look at their rankings on anabolic activity, andogenic activity, and say, oh, this one's gonna be the most
effective, because D-Ball, believe it or not, is less anabolic than Winstrawl.
Winstrawl is very anabolic, but very low androgenic ability, whereas D-Ball's got, like, I can't
remember the number, but I think it was more like a one-to-one ratio of androgenic andabolic
activity.
Now, you take D-Ball, you're gonna gain weight real fast. You take windstroll,
you're not gonna gain that much weight with windstrolls and take a long time.
So, part of it may be the water retention, I don't know. So, that all being said, I mean,
the one that I would take, if I were to use steroids, is the one that would give me the best results
over time, and that's just good old plain testosterone.
Yeah.
Because it's got, I mean, it builds muscle over time.
It's the one that seems to be the most consistent with it.
And of course, they said with no side effects.
So, I mean, you could throw in the hardcore ones like anodrol,
which was, they call it gorilla, it's not your nose bleed.
Yeah.
That's the one that I guess puts weight on.
I had a buddy that took anodrol and no joke, not exaggerating.
I think you took 50 to 100 milligrams of anadrol a day,
which you're never,
you're not supposed to take more than 50 milligrams a day
because it's so harsh on your liver,
but the guy gained a pound a day.
Oh my gosh.
Yeah, and a lot of it was water.
Yeah, of course.
Within 30 days his face looked like a.
Anadrol is one that I have not,
I've taken quite a few,
I've taken most of them at one point.
Which one's your favorite?
D-ball.
That's why I said that.
Why?
You know, you just feel good on it?
I, every day, I was gaining weight,
gaining size and gaining strength every day.
Every single time I touched the weights,
I literally felt bigger the next day.
Nothing, I never...
Sounds like a commercial for.
It actually, it was...
I have an affiliate link for it.
Yeah, I know.
It was, but it also had major side effects too.
So, you know, it would make, it would make,
kind of a mastio for it.
Kind of come out, oh yeah.
You would get the estrogen side effects.
Yeah, so it definitely had.
Good point.
It definitely had high side effects to it.
So when she says, you know, or he,
I don't know if he or she asked the question,
side effects, like I wouldn't, yeah,
if it didn't have those side effects,
it was unbelievable.
It was so powerful that I actually started
to feel insecure about how big I was getting.
Cause I was like, holy shit, everybody's nose.
Everybody has to know that I'm taking this stuff
because I literally grew basketballs on my shoulders
over two weeks' time.
You know what I'm saying?
You see me as a trainer lifting for a long time,
and then all of a sudden I had these.
And I have, like I always, it's been, you know,
we all have like the way we stand, right?
I have a habit of standing, and when I'm like resting
or breathing in the gym,
like I put my hands on my hips,
it's just how I breathe and it's just,
I don't know.
I put my hand up on my hips.
So I would do that and that kind of rotates your delts forward.
And then it would just create this crazy.
Like you literally look like I had basketballs on my shoulders
and I was like, I'll never forget I was training a client.
I'm standing like that and I caught myself in the mirror
and I went, oh my God.
Like I put my hands off my hips right away. And so I was really self-conscious about how I'm standing like that and I caught myself in the mirror and I went, oh my God, like I put my hands off my hips right away.
And so I was really self-conscious about how it was standing because it had put so much
mass on me and so much strength.
So from that side or from that point, that's what I would take.
But, you know, so I take testosterone, just regular testosterone and anthase.
So that's what I take on a regular basis to just kind of mediate my testosterone levels.
And you know, if done in low doses like that, I don't have any side effects.
Because that's what you're, I mean, that's your testosterone.
So what you have naturally in your body.
Yeah, yeah.
And I take such a minimal dose of it that I'm not getting like, are you at replacement
levels or above replacement levels?
I would still consider myself a little bit
above replacement levels because I think
what Docs originally said was like,
I wanna say 50 or 70, yeah, 50 or 75 a week.
So I'm close to that.
I'm 250 every 14 days.
So what is that?
125 a week.
So 125 a week is still considered higher.
God, that's, you know, it's funny. Bodybuilders listening right now are like, that doesn't even count.
Yeah. And most guys say that most of the bodybuilding world, one CC a week or 200,
250 milligrams is, yeah, considered off.
That's hilarious. Yeah. It's gotten to that point where guys consider. So, yeah, guys would
guy, I would be considered natural
Well, so so deball Diana ball is can I believe if I'm not mistaken is the first
American steroid it was the first one that the American
weightlifting team
Used and it was the first steroid that bodybuilders used and it used to come they used to sell it America
they used to sell it in five milligram doses
and that's what they would take every day, five milligrams.
Do you know what, nobody ever takes less than like
25 milligrams a day now, which is pretty crazy
to think how different it's been?
And I know back in Arnold's day, that was a staple,
it was dianna ball and deca, deca durable
and was the combination that
people would take.
Now, I took a designer, like an over-the-counter one, because there was a period of time with
this gray market where chemists were going through old literature of tossed away, you
know, steroids that-
There's like Adam Molecule or Cetractone.
Yeah.
Well, no, these were actual like, antibiotics, that companies were researching
and then they just never developed them.
So chemists would go through these old ones
and they'd skip right over all the side effects.
Well, we'll worry about that.
That's why a lot of them were never made,
but they actually, they would make them
because there were no laws that said they were illegal
and they could sell them over the counter.
And I took one of them, it was called one testosterone.
I don't know if you guys ever remember that.
It was over the counter, one test.
And it was legit.
Like this shit was like, I gained like 20 pounds
taking this thing.
I remember working out and just,
I would get pumps that were painful to the point
where I had to stop my workout.
And of course, when you go off, it's like,
which goes away just as fast as you had it. And I definitely had
suppression of my own. So that has to us from that's, you know, talk about
again, she says no side effects, but I know deep all gains are gone.
Oh, God. Yeah. For 100% I mean, I was gaining strength. I was getting muscle.
I was getting size, but 50% of that for sure was definitely water too.
So, even though I still was bigger and stronger, it was such a drastic difference that it's depressing.
I mean, that to me was one of the main reasons too that kept me from doing high doses of
anything ever, other than, I mean, when I competed, you know, I would get up so my highest
at a show when I was at Contra Costa,
which I was told I was too big.
So that was the highest dosage I did was 500 milligrams.
And that was, I was told I was too big.
And so after that point I came down and then I never really ever went above 300 in a
week during competition.
And then just to be normal and healthy, I run the dosage I just said, well, when, uh, when I took
the, um, deep all, like it was crazy, the amount of, the amount of water, the amount of
size, the amount of strength, but then the feeling of coming off of that was so bad that it
was like, I can a week. Yeah. And that's really where we're guys get addicted on it. It's
that. It's what you can tell that's what it is.
It's not like, there's not these addictive properties
that are in steroids that are addictive.
It's the feeling of how you feel while you're on them
and how shitty the feeling is when you get off of it.
And that's why when people ask me,
you know, like, I'll get this all the time.
Like, I just want to do one cycle.
That's all I want to do is just to one cycle.
Why?
You're going to, with just one cycle,
here's what's going to happen.
You're going to, at some, when you go off,
it'll take some time if you do everything right,
but you'll still lose everything you gain.
You're not going to keep any of it.
It's not permanent.
The signal that you're sending your body's a hormonal one,
so that extra muscle that you have is due
to that hormonal signal.
Remove that hormonal signal,
and it's no different than you stopping lifting weights.
Signal's gone, muscle is gone.
Now, it's fine on the way up.
There's no problem in gaining that muscle, it's fun.
But could you imagine dealing with,
because I've done this, like I said,
with the pro hormonal or whatever,
dealing with the on the way down, fucking sucks.
And a lot of guys don't even lift weights anymore,
because it sucks to go to the gym
and become weaker.
That's what would happen to me
Lozami they're on or off and you're either on or off everything right you're either on your on test
Oslo and you're lifting like crazy or you're eating like crazy or you're off completely where you're not really lifting at all
You're eating one of the fuck you want and you're not taking test Oslo because workouts become so depressing because there's nothing worse
Then being consistent hitting the weights hard and watching your strength decrease every single week.
And your size and your recovery.
That's like in your sex drive.
Yeah, that's a shity deal for me.
I would want to be on whatever Barry Bonds and Mark McGuire was on.
Put me up.
Balco.
Give me the Balco Dricks.
The clear. Now that all being said,
here's something interesting that I was speculating back when we were talking to Ben Pack, or
hanging out with him, I should say, there is lots of evidence that muscle fiber hyperplasia
happens in humans, and this is where muscle fibers split and become, so one fiber becomes
two fibers. And although muscle's atrophy, when you stop lifting weights
or whatever, there is, you don't lose the fiber.
There is evidence that you don't lose extra muscle fibers.
So here's something that's interesting,
but I'm gonna follow it up with the caveat.
If you did steroids for years,
and then you went off, you may have definitely
created some permanent muscle on your body that
you'll have for the rest of your life.
However, with that comes the massive, very high risk that you've also completely shut
off your own hormone levels, and then we'll have to rely on taking testosterone for the
rest of your life, which fucking sucks.
I really feel for people who have to, you mean, Adam, you have to do that.
I'd say,
I would hate to have to do that, right?
I mean, if you could stop that.
Well, no, that's why, and people ask me too,
like, what's with every 14 days?
Isn't the ester, and it's supposed to be, you know,
five to six days?
Yes, yes, I understand all that.
I don't like fucking pitting myself.
Like, I don't want to do that.
Like, it's not like something.
I, what I do know is that when I don't,
like my sex drive goes through the shitter
and like I happen to like to have sex.
And I feel like, so that type,
and then you too, like you, I can tell my testosterone levels
affect my energy, my sleep, my motivation to train.
Like, so I like just to be fucking normal.
I'm happy with just being good and normal
to where I feel motivated to live. I actually want to have sex multiple times a week, like those things
matter to me. So yeah, I know it absolutely sucks to have to do that. And I've had to learn to
manage that where it's like, okay, what's the again going back to what we always discuss? The
most, you know, the lowest amount that I
least effective. Yeah, right. The least I can take to get what I'm trying to get out of this
without overdoing it because real quick that can lead to I want more. I want more. I want more.
So you know, this kind of reminds me of you know other topics like we talked about like,
you know, getting ready for someone to even compete. I believe that before take because once again
too, mind pump is very,
very big on to each their own like if you want to take steroids, fucking who are we to say not
take steroids like I'm we're here to caution and tell you like the science and what could possibly
potentially happen to you, but who the fuck am I to say you can't take steroids. I fucking take
them like you know I'm saying like so I think that it's more about educating the population and
getting them to fully understand because there's a lot of myths and a lot of bullshit out there.
And I think the most important thing is that anyone who does any of this stuff,
that you, that you, and no one knows, but you are, if you're mentally ready for something like that,
like, do you have the right relationship with yourself to do something like that?
I mean, and, and I wasn't, I wasn't when I did, you know, I wish I was in a place like now,
you know, which is I was in a place like now, you know,
which is why most people tell.
If you just started now using them,
you'd be so much smarter, right?
Well, I would, yeah,
cause then I wouldn't be dependent on them, right?
Cause then I would have been way smarter
about how I cycled off of them.
I would have never taken the,
the mount that I took when I was 22,
the irony is this, right?
22 years old or 23 of somewhere in that range.
When I took my first cycle,
it was easily five times the amount
that I'm taking currently right now
and at least three times more than I ever took
competing on stage.
And I was nowhere near the shape
that I was at the competitive level.
So, and that was really like the big thing for me
to kind of express to people. It's
not the answer to getting you in the shape on stage for sure. I unfortunately made that
mistake when I was younger, how to learn the hard way went through everything that I
went through for 10 plus years, learned how to diet, learned how to train, learned how
to program design correctly, then adding something like that. And yeah, then it takes me to
the elite level. Yeah, then I can go compete with the best in the world or best in the United States
in men's physique because I now have all the other tools
and then I've added the testosterone in there to hang with all these 25 year old fucking kids.
Check this out.
The 13th, we are going to be doing a free open to everybody webinar.
We're actually going to break down and go through our new maps program that we're releasing maps prime pro.
It's a correctional version of maps. So if you're looking for mobility, if you're looking for better overall function, but or if you just have pain, you're going to want to tune into this. It's going to be me, Justin and Adam, and Dr. Brink, and we're actually going to go through our program. We're going to open it
up to everybody for free, go through the assessments, go through some of the movements. We're going
to teach you guys movements. I guarantee you've never seen these things done, most of these
movements I've never seen before. So it's really, really good stuff. The way you register
for this is you go to mapsprimepro.com.
Also, if you wanna ask us a question
that we answer on one of these episodes,
place to do it is on Instagram.
The page is Mind Pump Media.
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My personal page is Mind Pump Sal.
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