Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 621: Cannabis and Muscle Growth, How to Increase Speed & Explosiveness, Choosing Books to Read & MORE
Episode Date: October 20, 2017Organifi Quah! In this episode of Quah, sponsored by Organifi (organifi.com, code "mindpump" for 20% off), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about how to figure out what to do with your li...fe, how to become faster and more explosive, how they choose books to to read and the affect of cannabis on muscle growth. How Jackie sabotaged Mind Pump, not on purpose (3:18) Everett, the official Mind Pump Chef (9:40) The guys talk current programming and trigger sessions (13:20) Quah question #1 – How did you guys figure out what you wanted to do? He is not happy with any of the jobs he has done. (26:58) Quah question #2 – He plays collegiate rugby and wants to find out how to get faster and more explosive? (39:16) Quah question #3 - How do you choose the books your read? (48:14) Quah question #4 – What are the effects of muscle growth when cannabis is used right after the workout? (1:03:37) Related Links/Products Mentioned: Organifi (Official Mind Pump sponsor) Code "mindpump" for 20% off Chicken in a Biskit, 7.5 Ounce Bane Workout: The Insane Bane Training Program (article) The Fred Factor: How Passion in Your Work and Life Can Turn the Ordinary into the Extraordinary - Mark Sanborn (book) Manifest destiny MAPS Performance Subliminal: How Your Unconscious Mind Rules Your Behavior - Leonard Mlodinow (book) DotCom Secrets: The Underground Playbook for Growing Your Company Online - Russell Brunson (book) Blue Ocean Strategy, Expanded Edition: How to Create Uncontested Market Space and Make the Competition Irrelevant - W. Chan Kim and Renée Mauborgne (book) The Alchemist - Paulo Coelho (book) A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life's Purpose - Eckhart Tolle (book) Many Lives, Many Masters: The True Story of a Prominent Psychiatrist, His Young Patient, and the Past-Life Therapy That Changed Both Their Lives - Brian L. Weiss (book) Reinventing Yourself, 20th Anniversary Edition: How to Become the Person You've Always Wanted to Be - Steve Chandler and Christine Hassler (book) The Da Vinci Code – Dan Brown (book) 1984 - George Orwell (book) Ready Player One: A Novel - Ernest Cline (book) Endocrine effects of marijuana in the male: preclinical studies. (study) The impact of marijuana use on glucose, insulin, and insulin resistance among US adults. (study) Cannabinoids as novel anti-inflammatory drugs (study) Top 10 Brain and Hormone Effects of Marijuana (article) Episode 467: True Benefit of Supplements, Transitioning to Keto & MORE (Original Air Date 03/03/17) (YouTube) Mind Pump TV – (YouTube) 30 Days of Coaching (Sign up for FREE!) People Mentioned: Jackie Martinez (@jackiemartinez2197) Instagram Tom Hardy Ben Pakulski (@ifbbbenpak) Instagram Ben Greenfield (@bengreenfield) Twitter Paul Chek (@PaulChek) Twitter Also check out Thrive Market! Thrive Market makes purchasing organic, non-GMO affordable. With prices up to 50% off retail, Thrive Market blows away most conventional, non-organic foods. PLUS, they offer a NO RISK way to get started which includes: 1. One FREE month’s membership 2. $20 Off your first three purchases of $49 or more (That’s $60 off total!) 3. Free shipping on orders of $49 or more How can you go wrong with this offer? To take advantage of this offer go to www.thrivemarket.com/mindpump Would you like to be coached by Sal, Adam & Justin? You can get 30 days of virtual coaching from them for FREE at www.mindpumpmedia.com. Get our newest program, MAPS Prime Pro, which shows you how to self assess and correct muscle recruitment patterns that cause pain and impede performance and gains. Get it at www.mindpumpmedia.com! Get MAPS Prime, MAPS Anywhere, MAPS Anabolic, MAPS Performance, MAPS Aesthetic, the Butt Builder Blueprint, the Sexy Athlete Mod AND KB4A (The MAPS Super Bundle) packaged together at a substantial DISCOUNT at www.mindpumpmedia.com. Make EVERY workout better with MAPS Prime, the only pre-workout you need… it is now available at mindpumpmedia.com Have Sal, Adam & Justin personally train you via video instruction on our YouTube channel, Mind Pump TV. Be sure to Subscribe for updates. Get your Kimera Koffee at www.kimerakoffee.com, code "mindpump" for 10% off! Get Organifi, certified organic greens, protein, probiotics, etc at www.organifi.com Use the code “mindpump” for 20% off. Go to foursigmatic.com/mindpump and use the discount code “mindpump” for 15% off of your first order of health & energy boosting mushroom products. Add to the incredible brain enhancing effect of Kimera Koffee with www.brain.fm/mindpump 10 Free sessions! Music for the brain for incredible focus, sleep and naps! Also includes 20% if you purchase! 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 (@mindpumpmedia) look for the QUAH post and input your question there. (Sal, Adam & Justin will answer as many questions as they can)
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go. MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND have some fun conversation. We talk about one of our favorite fans. She sent us a care box and in that care box was gold.
Oh, man.
Shicken in a biscuit.
Ruining stuff.
While we're actually, in fact, while you're listening
to this episode, if you hear rustling and crunching
and chewing a rat in here and rude mouth noises,
that's Adam eating all of the crackers.
That Jackie's fault for sending those in.
Those are dicking things.
We talk about the mind pump chef,
otherwise known as, I'm gonna call him Evan from L.A.
Evan.
We talked about our current workouts.
I actually talked about trigger sessions
and the value of trigger sessions
and why a lot of people who have maps in a ballack
might not be doing them and why they should.
Definitely want to listen to that part.
And then we mentioned the Organifi Green Juice effect.
We mentioned it as a recipe to combine with chicken
and the biscuit.
Not sure that's a good idea.
Yeah, sure it's a good idea.
But anyway, we do love Organifi products.
They are one of our sponsors.
You do get a massive discount if you use our code
Here's what you do go to Organifishop.com
Enter the code mind pump no space and you'll get a discount on all their products
Then we get into the questions the first question was this particular individual is not happy with any of the jobs that she's had
And she constantly changes jobs. She's 24 years old, needs some advice, we give it to her.
It's awesome, you're gonna wanna hear it.
Adam goes off a little bit as usual.
The next question was.
Some wizard wizard in there, bro.
We haven't. We haven't athlete asking us
how they can get more explosive and more speed for rugby.
So we kinda break it down and lay it out in terms of how you want to
maybe face your workouts. In fact, we talk a lot about maps performance and how we designed
maps performance in particular for goals like this. Maps performance has four phases. It's
broken down into maximal strength, reactive strength, explosive strength, and durability, all the things that you're gonna want
if you want that kind of ancient athlete type of performance,
what we'd like to call broad spectrum performance.
It's our program that probably has more exercises in it
that you've never seen than all the others.
You can find that program at Mind Pump Media.
Pretty different than what you're doing now, I guarantee it.
Mindpumpmedia.com.
Then we get into the question.
Someone wants to know how we pick the books that we like to read.
If you've been listening to Mind Pump for a little while, you know, the Adam has been reading
quite a bit this year.
Find out where he gets his recommendations for these books.
And finally, what are the effects on muscle growth when you use marijuana post workout?
Is that a good idea?
When weed gains.
What help you build muscle?
Or is it just fun?
Find out in this episode.
You know it goes amazing with my green,
organified juice.
Don't do it.
Check it into this.
Don't do it.
Dude.
No, it doesn't.
So Jackie is in trouble.
Jackie, the saboteur.
So Jackie, who works with Mind Plump, is also one of our, probably our OG.
She's probably the OG or one of the OG fans, right?
Because there's a few of those.
Yeah, well you have to give, I think, a show.
You've seen any of our seminars, you know, you're on our team.
So Jackie listens to our show and then she also does our show notes and stuff for us.
So when you look at the show notes and if you like the way they're set up, you can thank Jackie.
She heard our episode where we talked about, I don't remember what it was.
We talked about like foods that we childhood foods.
Yeah.
And I talked about chicken in the biscuit crackers, which I haven't had since I was probably
since I was 12 seventh grade for me. Yeah. what's that 13? Yeah, I'm remembering right now
I like I haven't had us else 12 or 13 so she sends us a that she sends us organic gummy bears a bunch of things that we talked about in the
episode so I open this box up so I'm like I don't remember what they taste like I kind of do but I know you guys have to do with me
I opened it and everybody ate one cracker now remember
that's the dues with me. I opened it and everybody ate one cracker.
Now remember, just so we know, understand the context here,
we're a fitness podcast, we're all a health conscious
individuals, we don't need this stuff normally.
All of us tasted one cracker and almost the whole box
has gone right now because.
Amazing.
It's, it's so, they have engineered this thing
to taste so amazing.
It's the only reason why I think- Soup in your mouth.
The only reason why I think chicken and abisket
isn't the most popular food on earth
is because how do you market chicken and abisket?
Like, you know what I mean?
The name is, if you never tried it, you wouldn't think so.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
Do they ever do commercials?
For chicken and abisket?
I've never seen one in my life.
I'm sure one lives on YouTube.
I just wanna say, I feel like I've seen a chicken and abisket
commercial as a kid. Wow. I'm trying to lives on you. I'm gonna say I feel like I feel like I've seen a chicken in a biscuit commercial as a kid.
Wow.
I'm trying to remember what happens like a chicken flies
by and like shit's magic dust on our side.
I don't know.
How does that work?
There's two grams of protein for every seven.
Well, can I see the box real quick?
Yes, I'm on my I'm trying to get you guys out right now.
So first off they spell biscuit wrong, but anyway.
Uh, so maybe it's like, it's like, it's like Adam wrote it.
B-I-S-K-I-T.
Ah, biscuit.
So I'm reading the back and I was looking at the ingredients
because I haven't seen a box of these forever.
And kind of halfway down or almost to the end
of the ingredients list, dehydrated cooked chicken. Wow, they actually use chicken.
These crackers have chicken in them.
That's two grams of protein.
That's two grams of protein right there.
Lots of vitamins, just liquid.
Oh, that's commercial.
I knew they had to.
Yes.
It's like a real biscuit.
Brack.
This is a real commercial that can't be
Yeah, that is pretty great dude no joke. I used to sit I
It's sit down and watch TV and I'd have a box of chicken in the biscuit. Yeah, and I'd
Eat the entire thing to my face by myself. You know, it's great. There's seven servings in this whole container,
160 calories per serving,
about roughly 20 grams of carbohydrates.
What's the serving size?
12 crackers.
You know nobody's gonna need 12.
I know, that's what I mean.
It's not a party over that now.
Yeah, yeah.
So I like on the back.
The scaler's add up.
I like how on the back,
there's a picture of the chicken and the biscuit crackers
and easy cheese
because if you, if you're gonna eat some, listen, yeah.
That was like for me, nostalgia, easy cheese, like immediately I'm like, oh my god, easy
cheese and trisket, like I've, I've lived off those in college, it was like four or a whole.
Did you four or a whole?
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
What is easy cheese?
I have no idea.
Cheese and the candy.
It's just like, shit.
But it's really processed like.
What does it taste like? Does it taste like cheese? Yeah, man. I mean, it's, it's like, the can. It's just like shit. But it's really processed like. What is it taste like?
Is it taste like cheese?
Yeah, man.
I mean, it's like, you get addicted to it just like crackers.
And you would just spray it on your crackers.
It's so gross.
Yeah.
And you'd be like, this is protein.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It just makes like this noise comes out.
Did you, did you eat it directly out of a can?
Um, sometimes.
You do.
Sometimes when I felt like, you know, I had no shame shame like I would do that. I wish I didn't
It was dark and I took my shirt. I had two of those crackers and that's it and I'm and you're really?
That's it only had to get you out of ketosis. I am I'm your fuck. I'm feigning
The whole thing. Yeah, don't worry. I'm gonna eat the shakes all of us. No, I'm waiting for you to finish them because I'm gonna eat them, dude
There's no plastic. It's crazy how stuff like this is engineered to be just because I'm gonna eat them, dude. There's none elastic.
It's crazy how stuff like this is engineered to be just so,
I mean, even down to like the texture.
Yeah, the texture of it, how they have this like salty,
dusty chicken remains, I think.
The chicken matter.
I don't even know what it is.
Like a fine chicken matter.
Yeah, I or any of this is we're gonna be selling
some chicken.
I know, that's the problem.
People are gonna go to the store and buy boxes of this.
Don't go eat these.
Listen, here's the challenge.
Here's the challenge is what we're gonna do.
We're gonna pick a winner.
Let's do our organica-mursh right now.
Let's drive people to go get organica-
instead of chicken and biscuit.
We need to mention organica-
Oh, we do.
So let's talk about a recipe.
You can use with organica- or organ. I'll just help myself. Let's talk about a recipe. You can use the Organifi product.
And biscuit.
You can try to counter or give facts.
You're going to fuck your diet up for the day
and you're going to eat chicken and the biscuit
for one of your meals.
You absolutely need.
Here's the strategy.
Need to have Organifi.
So here's what you do because you need that in your life.
One of my favorite things, and by the way,
just the preface, I'm going to completely make this up.
One of the things that was great with chicken and biscuit
is you could, you'd have them with soup, right?
Cause it's got that savory flavor.
So some kind of a vegetable dish soup.
Okay.
So what you could do is you could mix up some green juice
from Organifi, warm it up the microwave.
Now you have warm green juice that you could have
with your chicken and a biscuit.
Oh my gosh, that's gross.
What are you talking about?
That's gross.
It's not going on the recipe list.
Damn it.
Yeah, I don't think Drew Canola is going to like that one.
I don't like that one.
He's like, uh, guys, I don't think
he was a very good commercial for this.
We have people microwaving our fucking green juice
all over the country now.
But you can blend it and make some awesome shakes,
which I've done that.
What did you blend it with?
With ice.
Ice, yeah.
Oh, just ice. like, what was it?
I super deep recipe there. I thought you're gonna say like cheddar. Yeah, no, it's in berries
Yeah, you blend it in there
I had chef I would do that getting down for us last night. What did you do the rib eye? Did you see the
Mushrooms onion garlic
Sauteed and ghee butter and then put that over the top of why does he cook like this for you guys? What do you do for him?
Man, he's that shit.
I know, right?
It's the mind pump chef, bro.
Yeah, but you're the only one that gets the benefit of it.
That is where I lack all creativity.
I don't get to eat.
I'm responsible for training him.
Does Evan have, does he listen to the show?
Does Evan listen to the show?
Ever it, sorry.
Yeah, so he's just showing it.
I just made up a name, shorten it up.
I like him so much, I mean I give him a nickname
Is it ever not gonna call you by your name ever it? We're gonna call you Evan. You're more Evan
That's what I'm like an Evan. I want to give people nicknames that are not really nicknames. It's just another name
Yeah, I mean hey John. Yeah, it's really close to my name. That's my name. That's what my son thought nicknames were when I was when he was a kid like just another name
Oh, that's my nickname dad. No, that's not a
It's Robert now. So does Everett listen to the show he does sporadically though. So ever it which I think most people I think you should make
food for
Chicken and biscuit me and Justin
Because Adam
Need to bring you in the studio taking you for granted. I already told him I was the only reason I told him I was the boss.
The reason why we have an aired your videos of cooking and stuff yet is because Adam.
Yeah, Adam is holding up.
He's like, no, no, no.
Bring me some food.
I'll get that shit on tomorrow.
Taylor and him shot a second that they shot a couple weeks ago.
And cooking video.
Mm-hmm.
And ever it was like, oh yeah, bro, I got this.
And I talked to him afterwards and they got home
because they must have spent like four hours
shooting stuff.
He said, hey dude, how did it go?
Oh man, I need to practice.
And I'm like, what do you mean?
He's like, he's just weird talking to the camera
for that long.
And I'm like, yeah, I know, I'm still not used to it, man.
I'm like, you know what, why don't we have,
either myself or Southam.
I was just gonna say, have us do with them.
Well, and I talked to you, you remind me.
Actually, you know who would be,
we should have Justin on there with him.
Cakes, me.
Yes, you, because first of all,
you're brilliant on camera, you're hilarious as hell.
And I think you'd be able to say funny shit
with Everett, you know what I can see that
That'd be kind of it depends in direction that depends yeah, wherever it if you're trying to actually make like
I don't think we're trying to do comedy on that. Oh really? Yeah, I don't think it's supposed to be
Is that what I think you that what good recipe are like hey look at my balls
Come on man
Look my balls
What do you come on man? He's gonna look my balls.
What on the one-and-a-one channel?
What are you thinking? One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a-one. One-and-a That's right when you'd be lost for zingers. You're like, oh, that was a perfect dick joke right there. I can't say anything.
Adam, give me shit about the dick jokes.
Ever it's gonna be ever it's a system ever.
But like, can you grab the cucumber and just be like,
oh, damn it, I want to say something.
It's right here.
It's right there in front of me.
I can't wait though till we do some of that stuff with him, huh?
Yeah, we're already working towards that direction.
So it's coming.
It's coming around the mountain.
When she sing it, I don't know how it goes.
Yeah. When she comes.
It's lighten.
Coming around the mountain when she comes. It's coming around the mountain when she sing it. I don't know how it goes. When she comes. He's like, coming around the mountain when she comes.
He's coming around the mountain when she comes.
He's coming around the mountain when she comes.
No, it's like that.
That's pretty good.
Sing it to me.
Tell me how it goes.
Tell me how it goes.
You fucker against me.
What do you mean I say?
This is rough.
Dude, I liked that.
She'll be coming around the mountain when she comes.
How's it go? Wow. It's almost like he's rocking as he's doing that. That's great. It's good. Yeah, yeah a lot of effort there
Oh, it's really good. You guys have no idea. Oh
So anyway, well, you guys do any working out yet today
You're the only person that works. I know I only asked that so you guys ask me
How do you work out?
Dude I work out in the afternoon?
We covered this.
How was your workout yesterday?
It was good.
What'd you do?
It was all kettlebell workout.
Oh really?
Yeah, because it was like,
I was doing just mobility and then it turned into
like a light kettlebell skills kind of exercise day.
It was fun.
What do you do for the skills?
Lean meals?
Juggling?
Yeah, juggling.
No, for real. like Turkish get-ups
Oh, yeah, so I get through a lot of the movement practice and you know like arm bars and stuff like that
So I just go through a lot of the movements and get my joints
Involved and intention and all that kind of stuff. Yeah, no, I did some turkey get-ups yesterday turkey get-ups
Turkey sure turkey turkey
It's like a half a Turkish get-up. Is it really? You just look like a turkey try to get up sister now Turkey get up Turkey sure Turkey Turkey Turkey It's like a half a Turkish get up. Is it really?
Just look like a turkey try to get up
I'll tell you what man. I've been doing trigger sessions consistently
It always blows me away, dude
I probably have said this several times on the podcast. You're always trying to sell me your program, dude
It's not even it's not even that
You're always trying to push your program.
But it's, it's, seriously.
I've been doing, I've been doing,
focus sessions like crazy.
Have you been doing them?
Lots of focus.
We were hyper focused.
What do you think of them?
Amazing.
Yeah.
Are they awesome?
Change your mind for this.
So when I do, when I do trigger sessions,
highly focused.
Consistently, I see change very quickly with them,
very, very quickly.
You know why I bring this up all the time?
Is because I fall out of favor.
No, they'll fall out of favor with me
where I'll start doing like one a day
or two a day instead of the three a day.
Makes a big difference.
That's all I do.
I did that this morning, I just did them now.
It's really tough for me to discipline myself
to revisit it two or three times a day.
I'm gonna have a lot of time.
That's the hard part.
It is.
It's the doing I'm so frequently.
Yeah.
Even though it's only five minutes.
I know that it's funny that something that easy,
that short that quick, I just, I feel like I mentally
prepare myself for it.
Okay, this is gonna be my workout time.
I'm gonna do it.
And then I do it.
And then when it's done, it's done, you know?
And so I don't have this desire to go back.
So I do have in our spare room,
which is right next to our master, a pull-up bar
with our bands hanging from it.
And so I try and get in a habit of, you know,
once before I go to bed, I'm just...
Trigger, trigger, trigger.
Yeah, yeah, do some stuff like get pumped up
before I go in bed with Katrina, you know? Before I come in, she's like, damn, he looks so good. Pumping up the wrong muscle bed, I'm just... Trigger, trigger, trigger. Yeah, yeah, do some stuff like get pumped up before I go in bed with Katrina.
Yeah, before I come in, she's like,
damn, he looks so good.
Pumped up the wrong muscle, but...
So it's a trigger session.
Sal's got me on.
No, but a clueded body.
So here's the understated part about trigger sessions
that I always notice is the fat loss effect.
I notice my body gets leaned very quickly doing them.
And let's say you do seven minutes each time,
that's about 21 minutes of activity.
21 minutes of cardio doesn't even equate to what this does.
And I think it just has to do with the,
like making your body want to build muscle instead.
You know what I'm saying?
It's pretty cool.
We used to use some broscience like that,
where, you know, when you're getting ready to go hit stage time,
you're trying to shuttle carbohydrates into.
So you get a pump while you eat them?
Mm-hmm.
And it's like you're, you eat, you eat,
and then right after you eat, you're, you're getting pumped.
But there's some, there's some logic there.
No, I agree, a lot of time, you know,
we give bros such a hard time,
but if it wasn't for the bros out there
doing stupid shit, we wouldn't be able to,
we probably wouldn't have studied things
to support it or to say nay, right?
So somebody has to go out there and be the test session.
Because I feel like if you're working your muscles to a particular, with a particular intensity,
it's going to want to replenish glycogen. You've got glycogen or excuse me, carbs coming in your
system, you're probably, you're right, you're probably are going to shuttle more to muscles.
Or at least it sounds logical.
And your problem is how would you study that?
That's the bro science part, right?
They talk about it.
Is it common to do a lot of people do it?
Yeah, it's like, I mean, that's what you do.
Well, as far as I know, most guys that I was around them,
especially when you're loading for a day,
like a show day where it really matters.
That's what you're doing that after every, right?
After I think the one of the last shows I did,
I think I ate like nine meals the day leading up to the show.
And it's just a bunch of like car protein meals.
Now let me ask you this,
because you normally take like four days off
of training before your competition,
but you're still doing these types of things.
So it's more like trigger sessions.
Right.
And the idea behind that.
And the benefits coming motherfuckers?
The idea behind that too is, you know, some guys,
there's a lot of guys actually that still train.
There's two camps in this, right?
There's the one camp is, you know,
oh, I want to keep my body on its normal routine,
keep me training all the way up to like literally
the day of showtime.
So they their idea is that's
what they're they want their body to be used to that they want to maximize
the pump that they get from the day before and the day of working out.
The other camp is and the camp that I'm in is you know, when you deplete like that and
then you're starting to refuel
and refeed the body and fill it back out,
constantly doing workouts and exercising like an hour routine,
and so that kind of is being counterproductive
of what you're trying to do.
So, and, you know, all workouts are different
and, you know, hard to make them exactly the same every time.
So, my theory is like, the reason why I cut training out
the last four days is because I've already done all the work.
Like I'm not gonna build extra muscle
in the last couple of days.
I'm more like trying to be very precise
about how much I intake to fill me all the way up
and not to overdo it.
And I think if you're exercising during those days,
you make that much harder to try and
figure that out.
So instead of doing hard workouts, what if like just trigger session?
Right, after you eat, it's like a little, just a tiny little pump.
Yeah, yeah, and really for me, it was always a pumping into areas that I wanted to look.
So if I felt like...
Yeah, let me ask you this.
So here's a great question.
Do you notice as this progresses, you're getting better and better pumps?
Oh, that's a good question.
Because that's what happens with trigger sessions.
Well, yeah, but then the hard thing to,
you're also carbolosis.
Right.
So that'd be hard to tease it out, like, of, yeah.
Well, so that's what I notice when I do trigger sessions
consistently is as I, if I do them consistently,
what I mean by consistently is three times a day
on my non-foundational days, okay?
Morning, afternoon, evening.
I noticed by the evening session,
my pump is getting, it's much better than it was
in the middle of the day one and in the morning one.
I mean, it makes total sense to me.
Yeah. I mean, I feel like,
it's, you're waking that up, right?
First thing in the morning, you do the first one,
and let's say it's like,
so let's say you're doing a shoulder and a bicep pump.
Like, you're recruiting more neurons into that area, right?
You're sending more blood flow into that area.
So, I mean, that alone already,
and then if you progressively do that throughout the day,
more and more is happening.
So it seems logical that, you know,
that you get a better pump.
You know, when I first put together the first maps,
I first, I thought the trigger session part was the most
important in the sense that, not important for the programming,
but important in the sense that it was different
and I thought it was gonna be a game changer
and I still think that and I still think it's
what's the word underrated.
And I think the main reason why it's underrated
is what we're talking about now is I think a lot of people just don't do them consistently. Yeah, they buy the
program because they get good results from doing the phasing, from the good program,
I agree, from all that. And but they're missing on that one piece that I think, because
trigger sessions, technically, if you program them, you can program with any workout. You
don't have to follow maps. Yeah. I've coach bodybuilders and competitors
who do body parts splits on how to use trigger sessions
with their split.
And they get blown away by them too.
Even before your trigger session concept,
this is how I applied focus sessions,
which were a little more intense, right?
But it's my way of thinking is a similar process, right?
It's the same idea.
You're just, you gotta think too.
You're getting more volume,
because even if it's lighter,
it's still more volume, I'm saying.
You're getting more activity there.
So you gotta think that you're sending the signal.
So your body is, at the bare minimum,
going to at least keep muscle,
maybe it may not be a loud enough signal
to promote huge growth.
I think we all saw that benefit to it.
And immediately, like I was like,
oh, that relates a lot to skills training and practice
and mobility and like, you know, it's all, yeah.
It's all related.
It definitely builds the volume
and it does it in a way where it's beneficial for adaptations.
I think we're the biggest game changer
and why it's, I think what was so special about maps was,
it's so polar opposite of most of the message
that's given out there right now,
that that's why so many people are seeing such
a huge difference from it because,
everything you see right now on Instagram
is these splits and these seven days a week
and no days off and that,
it's the complete opposite approach
and it's a much smarter approach towards your results.
And I think that most people are attempting that other way.
So when they go back and like do this in a much more methodical way, they see huge results.
So then if you actually apply the trigger sessions.
So remember the, which Batman was it with the dude who had the crazy look of mask and he was hella jacked?
Bane.
Who's the actor that plays him?
You guys don't know I'm talking about.
So he built.
There you go.
He built he built hella muscle for that role.
Yeah.
So I just saw this the other day.
Someone sent it to me and they're like, oh shit, he did trigger sessions.
Now I don't think he I don't know I don't think he followed maps or whatever.
I think he just did himself.
But he talked about his his workout routine. don't think he followed maps or whatever. I think he just did himself, but he talked about his workout routine.
Who's his trainer?
Did that highlight that?
I don't remember.
I don't, or at least it didn't list it maybe.
He said that the way he worked out was instead of doing these crazy, you know, two hour workouts
as he would do these mini workouts all day long, and that he got way better results doing
and he built lots of muscle and someone sent that to me.
I thought that was pretty fascinating.
Yeah. You know, that he did that.
So pretty cool.
That's cool.
I think he had a jack for that movie.
I mean, I did one, one show, I don't know why I had the time
to do this, but I did have one of my shows where,
I don't know what we were doing currently at that time,
but I might have been one of the early ones
where I just, I made that like the number one priority.
Like I'm training, I'm dieting, I'm gonna go in the show.
Like it's everything else in my life was priority two, three, four.
Like I really was that focused on training.
And so I was utilizing things like this where I'd be in the gym like three,
four times in a day, but it wasn't like crazy intense workout at all.
It's like the idea was I was going in.
Yeah, yeah, I would go and dress.
I'd go in, go hit shoulders and maybe buys.
And then I'd come back later on and go get triceps
and maybe back and then I'd come back again.
And then in between I was walking,
then I'd go eat and then come back like,
oh man, I mean, I never felt so.
That sounds like fun.
It actually does, I'm not being, I'm not being.
Well, no, it was, it actually freaking really awesome.
And I never felt taxed, right?
I never felt like. How did your body respond? Oh, it was, it actually freaking really awesome. And I never felt taxed, right? I never felt like...
How did your body respond?
Oh, it was incredible.
I mean, it was definitely part of the journey for me
during all the shows and on the way to going pro and stuff.
I don't remember what show it was.
Now, I don't think it was like this.
Holy shit, it changed to I was.
Well, you already knew how to work out.
Right, yeah, it's not like it was gonna be this like,
it was like game-changing for me or what like that.
But it was, it was really nice.
It was a refreshing way to train if I had that kind of time, right?
Like if I was full time competitor and made enough income that all I had to do
was worry about.
It lived in Kuwait.
Right.
It was paying for everything.
But well, so that excellent point right there.
Oh, that's the trick point.
That's actually, that's an actually, so when, when I talked to Ben Pukolsky,
and this was a question actually that, uh, that will I talked to Ben Pukolsky,
and this was a question actually that will address that was on our Q&A that we didn't put up here,
was if we knew what was going on over there,
and I did have a chance to talk to Ben about this,
and he's been there and gone through the whole thing,
and he's like, no, it's not,
because we thought, they must be like,
my own statin' in a crazy drug,
we didn't know the newest purist steroid, and he's like, no, and of course they have.
They have good steroids.
Yeah, they have that, but that's not my premium stuff.
But plenty of guys order that stuff and get it over where we're at.
So that's not the big difference.
He says it's just the environment.
It's like the most ultimate recovery, rehab, fuel, gym, sleep is all centralized in like this one location.
So, you know, you go there and that's all you have.
Yeah, train eat sleep, train eat sleep, train eat sleep.
And that's probably happening multiple times, probably three times a day for a lot of those guys.
Be really interesting to actually ask one of them.
Like if that's true, like I'd be, I would speculate now knowing from Ben's perspective,
what we speculated on. And now seeing speculated on and now seeing such a huge change
in these guys, it's like, dude, I bet,
I bet they did a crazy hard training session in the day
and then they had one or two other ones
where they were constantly just touching muscles
and stuff like that all day long
and then fueling up and then sleeping and shit.
So, I bet that's right aligned with you.
Awesome.
Bring it.
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First question is from Chris Santy
I'm never happy with any jobs. I have and change jobs within a year. I'm 24 years old
How did you guys figure out what you wanted to do?
Oh wow.
I'm gonna address the very first part of that.
Yeah, I go, why don't you go.
Wow, yeah.
I can hear in your voice, right?
I'm, yeah, I know.
I hope we don't lose a fan here.
I know.
So I am never happy with the jobs I have.
Well, there's your problem right there.
It's not, it's never the jobs, it's you.
You know, you're the common denominator in all this.
They're all different jobs,
but you tend to continue to be unhappy.
And you can't, I think when people are searching
for external things to create happiness within,
they forever fall short because that's not how it works.
It starts within, it's very simple or similar to
the style of giving his weight loss analogy for people that
they want to lose this weight because they don't love themselves.
Or it'll make them happy if they lose.
They think if once they lose their 50 or 100 pounds, they're going to be happy.
Then guess what happens?
They lose their 50 or 500 pounds and they're still just as unhappy as what they were when
they first started and realized that it wasn't the 50 pounds.
It's something that starts within.
So you make that choice.
And I also think this was some of the benefits for me
for being somebody who kind of had kind of a tough upbringing
and childhood.
I learned to have to look at things in a more positive light
because there was so much negativity and bad stuff
that was around me.
So you actually learn because you have to survive a more positive light because there was so much negativity and bad stuff that was around me.
You actually learn because you have to survive in that setting that everything isn't happy,
isn't grand, isn't easy.
In fact, most of everything that was around me was extremely challenging and hard.
I found to love everything I did.
The way I did that was, and a good book for this is Fred Factor.
It's a short easy read.
And it's really about you wanting to be the best version
of yourself no matter what it is that you're doing.
So that's just the first half of this sentence,
like you're never happy with the job.
So that's not the job, it's you.
So you have to look into that first.
And if that stings me saying that, that should just let you know how much that's not the job, it's you. So you have to look into that first. And if that stings me saying that,
that should just let you know how much that's probably an issue.
So I'll say this.
Two things, so kind of comment on what you said Adam.
You're never gonna be happy seeking happiness.
Right.
Cause seeking is literally the antithesis of happiness.
So the seeking itself is part of the problem.
So that's number one, but number two,
your 24 years old, make your own job,
like make your own career.
This is the best time in history for you
to be able to do that.
And what I mean by that is the opportunities
are so incredible right now for you to create your own
employment.
You know, I'm one of those people that I don't,
I don't think I will ever be as content
working for someone else as I ever will be,
like I am working for myself.
And I invented my own career, my own job.
Now when I first started as a trainer,
I absolutely loved it, I loved the gym.
And I was one of those lucky people
that kind of knew early on,
you know, what did I wanted to do?
But I'm also one of those people
that when things change and shift,
I make the change,
and the shift that I make is one to suit me a little better.
Like I said, I worked for corporate gyms
and I worked for myself.
So 24 years old, create your own job.
Whatever you are, whatever you do like,
you can create a business out of it,
especially with social media.
You don't need millions of followers to do this.
You just need thousands.
You need to provide good content, good value.
Taylor, the guy that runs our social media and our YouTube, he had
a six-figure business when he was, I think he was 1920, and he was brokering 10 issue
sales and selling apparel to people who were in that world.
I mean, he completely created his own job and he loved it.
And then when he stopped liking it, he stopped doing it.
Manifest destiny.
I mean, if you're unhappy,
and this is something that,
you know, I'm always hyper critical of my state of mind
while I'm doing things.
Like, and I'm not much for like woo-woo or like,
you know, energy or whatever you're putting out
or like the secret or anything like that.
But at the same time, like there's something to your attitude going into work or certain
activities or different things that you feel are like super hard and challenging for you.
If you go in and you start really working just on your attitude, that's when things start
to kind of open up and make sense.
So somebody may pick up on this positivity, this energy that may present another opportunity
that actually might be the job he always wanted.
But like if you're not projecting yourself in a way that's attractive to whatever that job
may be that you really want, that's going to be a really hard thing to overcome.
It's just going to keep repeating itself because the attitude is everything.
It's what you have to start with.
I looked at her profile just now and literally at this age, I had a girlfriend that was 24
and I was 28 at the time.
I remember during that, we were together for a little over a year.
And I remember that year and a half,
almost two years time, that she had like three or four jobs.
And I remember her writing a per resume for this new job
that they were offering her more money
than the current one she was at.
And I remember asking her,
why are you leaving this job?
And she's like, what do you mean?
They're offering me at least a dollar,
$50 to $2 more an hour for this job.
And I'm like, well, yeah, but what about, see,
I said, what about the people that are,
look at this resume, like the way I would look at this resume,
because if you drop this resume in front of me,
I wouldn't hire you.
And she's like, what do you mean?
I'm like, well, you've got like a time span.
You've got like six to eight jobs that you,
different jobs, you think you're building a resume,
but having this, none of them you've stayed for longer than a year. So what that says to me is as an
employer, like I go, how do what makes me think she's going to be loyal to me and stay
working for me for longer than a year? There's no way I'm going to hire this person. I don't
care if she's got this experience, this experience, that experience, it shows to me that she can't
stay loyal to anybody. And when things get tough, she probably bounces. And so, you know, if you're finding this where you're bouncing from job to job, you know,
this is a great time to have self-reflection and go like, okay, what is it in my day to
day that I'm hating, why I'm hating or I don't like this job so much that I need to leave?
And then addressing that and working on it. You know, there was, there was no job I ever
did that was perfect and easy and just what I love
to do. But, you know, I found what I liked about all of them.
They're stepping stones, right?
Right. And then when you come across the challenges, because that's inevitable, that's going
to happen. It happens to all of us. And you get angry or you get frustrated or you want
to be there instead of doing what most people do within those situations, blaming the boss, blaming the employee you're working with, blaming the
customers, how about stopping right there, reflecting on why does this make me feel that way?
Why do I not like this job?
Why do I hate this person?
Why do I hate working for them and look deep inside yourself and ask yourself what makes
you feel that way and then try and reflect and ask yourself what makes you feel that way,
and then try and reflect and crawl on that.
And just consider there's so many opportunities
that present themselves in situations
that you would never expect.
You know, I made years ago, I had a member
that approached me who had this idea, this business idea,
and it was multi-level marketing, and
I knew it was.
But I said to myself, he's a member, I want to show up, I already told my word, but I knew
it was going to be bullshit.
We sat down and we talked about that, and it was multi-level marketing.
It wasn't something that I was interested in, but I showed up and I had great conversation
with this person. I made a good contact.
Years later, this person had becoming very valuable to me in my business as somebody who
would refer me clients and customers.
You don't know what kind of opportunities you're going to be presented, working for these
different jobs and these different bosses with these different employees.
So in these jobs, even if you are thinking yourself, I wanna leave, I need to find another job,
always be awesome.
Like, never represent yourself in a way
that is less than your best,
because showing your best and being your best
on working hard opens up so many doors and opportunities
more than we can calculate right now,
more than we can figure right now.
Because like I said, opportunities present themselves
in very strange ways.
I've made many business deals,
and I've had many awesome things happen
out of situations that I would have never expected,
out of meetings that I didn't want to go to,
because I thought it was the waste of time.
Every job I've had that.
Every job, every business,
everything I've tried to be involved in has led to something
else or the potential to something else because of that.
You couldn't be more right with that statement that if, and this is Fred Factor gets into
that.
So that's why this is such a great book to read.
When you put your heart and soul into everything that you do and you take pride in it like
that, you know, you never know.
I have no idea what this person does, but let's just say 24 years old, you've got maybe
a Starbucks job.
I'm sure a lot of 24-year-olds work at Starbucks, so we'll just use as an example.
You do your job just like everybody else does.
You say the thing they tell you to say when people come up, you take the order in, you
do what you're supposed to do just to get by and stuff like that.
And you don't really make a mark.
But then let's pretend you're that kid
or that person that works there
that does go above and beyond all the time.
And you're the person that these customers they come in,
they just, they love to see your face
because you always say something different
or make them smile or make them laugh.
And you become this memorable person.
And then guess what, One day, you know, this multi-millionaire walks in who owns six different
companies and just happens to be looking for a position for somebody like maybe his right-hand
girl assistant or whatever. And you just, he, there's something about you, your presence,
that he's drawn to and says, hey, you, hey, did you always want to work here?
Would you be open to something else?
And he drops you as card and he walks away
and now you're set up with some.
You never know.
You never know, there's so many.
I've been, I don't know how many times
that's happened to me.
Me too.
Where somebody has seen, I mean, I could go back
and those that have been.
I've been in proposition for other jobs and careers
so many times because just the way I interact
with people when they would come to my gym.
Members, I can't tell you, I mean,
it would be pretty radially where a member would come up to me
and be like, hey, would you like to work here,
would you like to, and that's how I found half my staff
by the way.
Within careers.
Same way, that have nothing to do with what you do.
That's it, right?
Like, I mean, most all those propositions I've had
have been a feel that I'd know nothing about,
but it's the character they see.
Really good leaders can find and see character like this.
Dude, half my staff, I would, I got that way.
I look for this all the time. I mean mean look at the people that are working with us now
Right as we start to bring people on board with mind pump. These are people that I've probably known for a really long time or
Connected through me through somebody else and the reason why we've brought them into our circle
It has nothing to do with oh, maybe they're the best at doing this one skill set that we need. It's their character
Right, it's it's their attitude. It's their character, right?
It's their attitude, it's their vision, it's who they are as a person.
I believe once they understand what we're trying to accomplish, they'll figure out a way
to apply that and help.
And I think most really good leaders see this in people.
And so you most certainly got to find a way to change your attitude towards the jobs.
Eventually, the career or the thing you do for the rest of your life will come.
And let's be honest, most of us feel like we're probably just now finding that and we're
approaching our fort.
So don't trip out.
You're only 24.
Yeah, you'll get there.
Next up is sack.e who plays collegiate rugby and wants tips on how to become faster and
more explosive.
Sounds like a great candidate for maps,
proof formats.
You know why I like this question or why I picked it?
Because I want to address getting faster
and being more explosive for a sport in the sense that
the times, yeah, and the times you train to become faster
and more explosive are not when you're in the peak
of your season.
So I want to be clear with that.
When you're training to improve upon your power, your strength and your speed, the time
to do that is before the season.
That's why you have enough season.
That's why you have enough season.
It's not because you're taking a break and relaxing necessarily.
It's because you're trying to improve upon the foundations of your
performance, which are strength, speed, agility, power, endurance, or stamina.
You want to build those as much as you can in the preseason, then in the season, your
job with your training really is just to kind of maintain and prevent injury.
It's not a good idea to train hard to improve while you're in the peak of your season because
it's kind of a recipe for injury.
I mean, it's just too much.
It's kind of productive.
It is.
So, like, for example, the way we programmed a map's performance, which is definitely ideal
for athletes, the way we set up the phases is so that you have four phases leading up to a season.
And then right when the season starts,
you're at peak performance.
You've already done the strength,
you've already done the training for...
It was very thought out as far as the progression
of which adaptation would fit best in conjunction
and go in specific order.
And that is definitely why we put endurance at the very end of it because, you know, the body can really respond and adapt fairly quickly
to that adaptation. And so we wanted to make sure that that fit in nicely, like right going into, like say you're going into your double days,
you're going into, you know, practice with the team and you want to be at your ultimate conditioning. But yeah, like
Sal said, working on that raw strength, that ability to, you know, on command, you know,
drive weight off the ground or drive your legs hard into the ground. These are things that you definitely need to build upon,
but it's going to work in this ladder fashion
where we're going to go into that
and then we're going to go into the next phase.
We're working a little bit more on our proprioception.
We're working on our movement patterns
and making sure that the body and the joints
can respond appropriately
when you make those hard cuts.
The other thing, too, I see a lot when athletes talk about getting faster and more explosive,
is that they focus on complex movements and techniques and forget that the foundation
for all these pursuits, all of these physical pursuits is strength.
So what I mean by that is if you build just good solid strength while maintaining your skills training,
because you don't want to lose your skills or your connection to your body or the field or that stuff,
if you build just regular strength,
you're gonna get a lot faster,
and you're gonna get a lot more explosive.
So the first thing I ever recommend to an athlete
who's asking me this question is I say,
just get stronger in your core foundational movement.
Let's literally break down and share the each phase
and how many weeks and how we program green.
So people understand that.
I mean, we start off with raw strength in maps performance and it's, we're there for
three weeks.
That's your maximal kind of graining strength.
Right.
So you train that first.
So for three weeks, you're heavily focused on strength, which is your low rep range,
heavy weight.
In the tempo with that, we're a little more in the eccentric part with the explosive
come up off the ground.
So it is that like a maximal try like force output.
Well, then we move over to reactive strength, which is phase two.
Phase two are there for three weeks also.
And then from reactive strength, we move over to explosive strength.
Yeah, speed power.
And that's three, three weeks also.
And then we finish up with strength durability or what we would call so endurance.
So that's what we were saying before you head into it.
So that's what the entire layout looks like.
So it's a total of what, 369 to 11 weeks, is that what it is?
Right. 11 total weeks leading up to your season.
And literally if you followed that kind of formula of every three, three weeks, is that what it is? 11 total weeks leading up to your season. And literally if you followed that kind of formula
of every three weeks you're facing into a new adaptation
towards performing better and then leading up to your...
That's the order, that's exactly the order.
You want to become faster and more explosive.
That's the order you should train.
You're slow grinding, you know, base strength,
then your reactive strength, which is more about
proprioceptive ability, because now we wanna make it
so that you have it be more, little more functional,
and then to your power type training.
The durability training is more towards
just giving you stamina, but really the first three phases,
like what Adam was talking about,
that's the order that you wanna train,
and you should spend at least two to four weeks
in each phase leading
up to the explosive training phase, which is also, if you're, if you're, if you're
extra training for explosive power and you're doing things like plios, it's very specific.
Yeah.
The goal is not fatigue, the goal is not to burn yourself out.
The goal is literally to be able to explode as hard as possible.
And so that's the way you want to treat your plio training.
Get as close to instantaneous response as possible. And so that's the way you want to treat your plyo training. Get as close to instantaneous response as possible.
And what's really cool about it is,
you know, as you go through like raw strength,
you really can see how now just having more strength
and stability by, you know, doing these types of lifts
that that pace will go into now.
Okay, I'm taking my time,
but now I'm moving in more multi-planar fashion, which
is very important because in a game setting, you're not going to be in this nice, comfortable
sagittal plane. You're going to be all over the place. And your joints have to have that
strength and respond appropriately further out, which mobility was the other part to that
that really enforces the fact that you are capable of going a little bit further
with your joints. You just have to make sure you are secure in that. You have the ability
to some instinct to overcome the force.
Well, on that note, which is important, I should say, as I was laying out the layout in the
format of maps performance is also on your off days of training for these adaptations,
you're focused on what are called mobility days, right?
So there's specific movements in there
to improve upon your mobility
while you're still training for your sport
or whatever it is that we're leading up to.
So that's what it looks like on your other days.
So instead of trigger sessions or focus sessions,
if we do in the other programs,
performance is heavily focused on the mobility
for the reasons that Justin's talking about.
And that begs this question, does working on mobility make me faster and more explosive?
Yes.
Yes.
Absolutely, because many times, it's very foundational.
Yeah, many times, the limiting factor with an athlete in terms of their speed and explosiveness
is a lack of mobility or a lack of stability because the body comes
with its own rev limiter, if you will.
When you're lifting a weight, a maximal weight, or when you're exploding or taking off as
quickly as you can, your body has these natural checks and balances that prevent you from
exerting maximal force because it's protecting you from injury.
Now the more training you go through, the more experience you have, the more you're able
to reach a limit of, or reach your limit of maximal exertion, which is part of the reason
why you get so much stronger and better just by practicing the skill.
But mobility helps with that, because mobility has, it's everything, right?
It's stability.
It's being able to move a joint
through a large range of motion,
but have control in that entire range of motion.
It's moving in all these different planes
and having control.
So if now you're super stable and mobile
in all these different ranges of motion,
when you go to make a movement or explode
or cut to the left or to the right or jump,
that limiter that you have on your body,
it opens up a bit.
It opens up because you're stable
and your body senses this, so now it's boom.
You feel like you can move with more speed.
And that, yeah, your body doesn't want to injure itself, right?
So you have to teach it that it's going to be okay.
And like the more you teach it,
that it's going to be okay
with these types of explosive movements,
you know, the better your performance gets,
the more output you get with that movement.
So it definitely is a repetition thing
that you have to apply.
That's right, so mobility, big, big important factor.
Next question is from MGRDO31.
How do you guys pick the books you read?
Yeah, Adam.
I have a couple different ways that I do that.
That's a good question I would like to know from you. Yeah. There's a couple different ways that I do that. That's a good question. I would like to know for me.
There's a couple, well, it depends when.
So, yeah, I know, there's a, like I said, there's several different ways.
One of the ways I used to read was I'd go, I'd read two books that I,
it's about something that I wanted to learn, and then I'd read one that was like, purely for entertainment for me.
So I used to read a lot of biographies and stuff.
So I typically would read two books
that was on topics or subjects
that I wanted to learn more about,
and then I would read one that was purely
for, you know, entertainment reasons,
or about somebody that I wanted to learn about.
So that was kind of the formula I followed
for quite some time. This past year,
I said a goal at the beginning of the year just to make sure that I knocked out one book a month,
which I don't think is too much a stretch, and I know some people that read, wait, a fucking
bin, what has been read five a week or something? It makes me feel like a chump when he does that.
But, you know, so some people read a lot faster than I do, so you could knock out more. But I know
that what I tend to do is I used to,
in the past, I'd go in these spurts,
where it's like if I'm traveling and vacation,
I'm flying a lot, I'm reading a lot,
then I'm busy, then I'll also nice stop reading.
And then I would go in these peaks and valleys.
And one of the things that I wanted to establish
this year was just consistency with reading,
because I noticed that it creates better content for me
on posts and stuff I put out,
better content for what we talk about on the show. And so this year was more about consistency
with me with reading. And so that's why I set out the goal that I want to knock out a book
a month. And right now, the way I typically choose books, it is. It's along the lines of things
that I'm interested in. I don't read a lot of fitness stuff, which I think a lot of people think that we would.
Like right now, I'm reading a couple books right now.
I'm reading Subliminal right now.
I'm reading.com secrets right now, and I'm reading blue waters.
Particularly, I'm typically reading two or three books.
One book, I'm reading by myself.
One book, I'm normally reading with
Katrina or listen to an audible and then I normally have a book that I'm listening to
to and from work. So, you know, dotcom secrets is internet marketing. Subliminal is about
unconscious and conscious neuroscience and then blue ocean strategy is business, right? So, you know, those are kind of the topics
that I like to learn about.
I've actually read a lot of books this year
that were referred to me.
What other my favorite things about sharing
when I'm reading is I get an audience of people
that will inbox me and be like,
oh, if you like that, you should read this at them.
And so I've read quite a few books this year
that were purely recommendations
from other people based off of what they've seen
that I'm reading.
And I know people too that know that I love to challenge
one way, so I'll read a books with opposing.
So I already have the book lined up
for after Blue Ocean Strategy,
and it's called Red, something I forgot what it's called,
but it's basically the opposite theory.
It's like the opposite theory, right?
It's the opposite theory of so that way I can get two perspectives, right?
This whole book is because anyone silly to think that there's not going to be a
biased in every book that you read. It's written by a human, right?
And we all have bias. You know, we all have political sides to us.
We all have personal views, religious views, whatever. And so anything
is going to have some sort of bias. And because of that, I love, and I really, this is a page
that I've Paul check. I mean, I aspire to be like this one day where my library looks like his,
where if somebody came in, you just trip out on how different his reading's on the counter.
The counter, both the counter.
Yes, on the counter.
Yeah, I mean, you just have like the vegan miracle
and then like paleo solution and you know,
all like right next to you.
And all different religions and practices and ideologies
that are conflicting of each, I just love that.
And I think that I think everybody should kind of take
a page on it.
Well, rounded.
Especially when we've talked about this on the show
before, I think real quick, you can get a lot of confirmation
bias because if you tend to, oh, read this book
and then what do they do?
If you read this book, you should read this book too.
Oh, if you read that book, you should read this book too.
And guess what, they're all saying the same goddamn message
and saying in different words.
It's like, you know, instead of that,
actually, once you read the book,
that is completely counter-refute to.
Yeah, right, that refutes that and then actually
and then gather your knowledge like that.
So, I like to read like that.
I like to challenge my own way of thinking and philosophies,
and those are kind of the subjects I like.
I like psychology too, so I know I picked up a book the other day
that was not, I don't remember the title of it,
but I just wanted the book story the other day,
and I'll just grab a bunch of topics I like.
I really, really, really love books.
However, I don't read a lot of them, believe it or not, I don't read a lot of actual books.
The way I read is I read articles, I read studies, I read magazines, I read, you know, I belong to forum groups
that, you know, some of them are economic, some of them are science, some of them are nutrition,
some of them are political, you know, whatever, you know, some of them entrepreneur,
and then people on there will post interesting articles or studies or, or discussions, and that's where I'd consume 99% of the information
that I consume.
I will say this though, I go through spurts
where I'll pick up a book and read a book,
and when I do that, I tend to read a whole bunch
in a real short period of time.
I'll have a one month period where I really want to read books, and I haven't had one in a real short period of time. Like, I'll have like a one month period where I really wanna read books
and I haven't had one in a couple of years,
but when this happens, I'll read,
you know, in a month I can read as many as 10 books
all at once.
So it hasn't happened, like I said for a few years,
we'll see what happens.
The other thing that happens to me is I'll read a book
and once I feel like I got the idea,
I stop reading the book.
I, do you know how many books I've read halfway through? I've heard halfway through? I've done that a lot. Yeah, I do that a lot. Once I feel like
the book. I have a 50-page rule. Really? I got to read the first 50-page rule. Yeah, I have a 50-page
rule. I give every book at least 50-page. Well, I mean, if it's, no, not always. It's if I
I'll give every book no matter how slow of a start is at least 50 pages. And if I feel like I already know where it's going, like, okay, I'll give you an example.
Although I did finish it because Kishirin and I were going together.
The alchemist.
I read that book so late, like everyone who's been telling me to read that book for like
10 years or whatever, and I was just like, I never got to it.
Yeah, Courtney just read that.
I finally read it, and people just love that book.
And I think so many people, I was like, oh, well, I've heard this message
told a million different ways
in a million other books that I've read already.
So even though I listened to the whole thing
because Katrina was enjoying it,
I was like, I was telling her like,
oh, okay, this is what's gonna happen.
He's gonna do this and this is this
and this is the moral of the story
and this is why I was like,
so I get books like that too,
where I'll read a book.
And because I feel like I can,
I already get the message it's trying to give,
and it's like, why should I, why don't I read the rest of it?
I'd rather read something that's gonna be like,
oh shit.
Well, once I feel like I get the message,
and then I feel like they start repeating themselves,
or trying to make different cases for it,
then I'm the last book that I read that was really,
a full book that was really compelling,
that was different in the earth for you. I'm sorry? New earth. No, no, well, a new earth was really compelling that was different in the new earth for you. I'm sorry new earth
No, no, oh well a new earth was really good. That was definitely fantastic. I heard you talk about that more than yeah
I know. No, that was a fantastic book
Then before that the one I was just thinking right now was many lives many masters
Which is a very
interesting book my sister loved that one did she very interesting book. I just really love that one. Did she?
Very interesting book.
It got me to think of things a little differently.
Around this time, this is when I was,
my family's Catholic, I was raised Catholic,
then I became atheist, pretty hardcore.
This book got me to kind of where I'm at now,
where I'm more of an agnostic, you know, kind of.
I don't believe there's nothing,
but I also don't believe in one particular thing.
And very, very interesting book, Good Read, Fascinating.
But other than that, man, it's just fucking, I just read articles.
It's funny too, because people think I read books all the time.
Well, you know why?
Because, and this just happened to us this morning.
You were talking about a study, and I'm reading it in a book that I'm reading right now
And you've already read the study and probably just by itself
PubMed or is it in an article because that's how you read and
You were familiar with what I was trying to explain that the book gave a whole chapter
Around me understanding it and then explain it and then talking about the study where you're somebody who goes directly to the source a lot
Like much much of the books that are that, at least all of us, are into are based off a lot of these
science, especially when we're talking about neuroscience consciousness, like that,
which you're very much so into.
You've already read all the studies for it.
You get the premise, like so I'm going to spend the next couple weeks reading this book
that you grasp already because you've already read the study.
So everybody gets, I think everybody gets information
and give you different ways.
Yeah, I mean, I tended cereal boxes for you, right?
Serial and usually, yeah, like Dr. Susan
and Marvel comics.
Hey, bro, do not knock on fucking Dr. Susan
because I still stand.
I still read it to my kids all the time.
He's in my opinion, he's the greatest philosopher.
I love it.
I'm not knocking that. I will fight that In my opinion, he's the greatest philosopher. I love it. I'm not knocking that.
I will fight that all day long.
He's the greatest philosopher all time.
Yeah, like a lot of my clients tend to recommend books.
And so that's usually where I tend to get my ideas for them
for the most part,
because they're all just like killing it in business
and life and I'm always very receptive to any kind of advice.
Like this is gonna be a great read for you right now
because where you are in life, like for instance,
reinventing yourself is one that I've been reading quite a bit
and it's just like, and it's not that I've been going through
like a hard year or anything, but it's been challenging
at times for like new ventures and different things
and how things are, are, you know, they there unavailable, how things aren't there
and available and what other really massively successful
entrepreneurs have done in those situations.
And they highlight a lot of different stories in there
from it's encouraging.
It's like, you could try some idea over here
and fucking flat on your face,
but they've done it a million times.
You know, like a lot of the most successful people
have done this repeatedly.
And it's just stuff like that, like it comes up.
You know, for me, it's situational.
Like if it's something like,
I'm trying to learn something very specific
or I'm like getting really into tech,
like I read a lot of tech journals.
I'll read like a tech book that's very just like
manual driven.
Here's how this works.
I try to learn, okay, well, what's the science behind making an app?
What are they trying to configure?
What's in this wireframe?
Why do they structure it this way?
That's the kind of stuff I'm like, okay, if I'm into this, I'm really into this.
If we're going in this direction,
I wanna know the behind the scenes kind of stuff
that they're engineering, you know, hiding things.
Do you guys read a lot of fiction ever?
Do you ever read fiction?
I used to, I haven't in a long time.
I used to be science fiction a lot.
So there's no fiction book that you can remember
that you read.
Not since fucking high school.
Really?
I won't either, you won't get me to. Really? Because for many years, I didn't even like to read, not since fucking high school. Really? Not since I won't either, you won't get me too.
Really?
Because for many years, I didn't even like to read,
being completely transparent.
Just, I was that person who once school ended,
and I was working, I was making money.
You know, me, I was like, the small brain, me, right?
20 years old or whatever, it's just like,
I'm done, I don't need to read anymore,
I've got my job, I love what I'm doing.
Sure, I'm reading certifications
and getting more knowledge in my field,
but outside of that, not at all.
And then I made that transition to 25.
It's interesting,
because I, same thing here, same here,
I don't, I'm not pulled to fiction, however,
I have definitely read fiction
and fiction provides different quality.
It's, it's reading for leisure, but it's really, it's expansive.
It is. It really helps you to stretch a bit with your thought process.
I've recalled reading fiction and improving my creativity and my thought process indirectly
almost because you get lost in the book, you know, while you're kind of in there and reading
and reading these stories. So I haven't done it,. I don't do it very often. I think the last fiction
trying to think what I read, uh, Da Vinci code. That's fiction. Oh, that's cool. That was
a book that was like that series. Yeah, dude, I, you can't get me to do it, dude. I just,
a couple of times I've like dabbled in it, tried it. I'm like, no, it's not for me. So it's
not. I feel like I'm gonna read. I just ordered 1984.
You know, yes. Now that's that's fiction. Yeah. But that's got. I know. And lots of parallels. I know a lot about it. Yeah. Well, isn't Taylor's reading
player one, isn't he? That looks that that didn't treat me a little bit because
that's kind of. So yeah, sci-fi I could see myself like certain sci-fi because
that would try to pause with that follow that category would go under there because I feel like it's fiction but then it could
be a reality you know if we keep heading this direction so that side and I get where you're
going with the creativity thing. It's harder to make time for that right because if you're
reading like oh this is about business or oh this is about you know this thing I'm gonna learn
versus I'm gonna spend more in, and now we're just relaxing.
I mean, for the most part, for any available time I have now
is like my commute's very long,
so I tend to stick more with podcasts or like,
if I get into audio books,
which I've been meaning to really dive deeper into that,
but I've been so compelled by people's conversations,
like I really get into it.
Well, that's a new, I mean, if you talk to me,
formful, it is, if you talk to me, it's a new form for me.
It is, if you talk to a lot of millennials,
this is how they learn.
This is exactly how they learn.
And that's podcasting.
Podcasting is become a huge platform for education,
which is, again, part of our secret sauce
is that we try and entertain and inform at the same time,
right? It's not just purely information
so you get bored to fucking death, listening to somebody.
But then also you get little nuggets of good information.
I want to leave this question with some advice
for people who are listening, you know,
young trainers or whatever,
or people who are not ever, that's right.
Yeah, it doesn't even matter.
Follow your, when it comes to reading, follow your passion.
Feed your passion, because that's going to lead you
to learn
lots of amazing information.
So whatever's feeding your brain,
seek it out and it doesn't matter if it's articles,
it doesn't matter if it's creative advice.
You know, magazines or if it's books or podcasts,
like feed that passion.
Feed the beast.
And it'll grow and expand and you'll...
No, that's such a great advice because
that goes back to what I was just saying.
I don't like to read the fiction because it's just, I'm not feeding you.
Yeah, I got don't force something that you're not into.
Just because someone's telling you you should learn more about this.
If you're not into it, don't you know, it goes back to that great advice.
I got when I was younger.
Just stop looking at the things you're not good at.
Focus on what you're already good at.
Be great at it.
Become a master at the things you're not good at, focus on what you're already good at, be great at it, become a master at the things that you love.
And so the books that I read are in the similar world
that I love to learn about,
but then I try and challenge the philosophies
behind each one of them, right?
I think that's a cool way to go.
Next question is from Rosie Rell.
What are the effects of muscle growth
when cannabis is used right after a workout?
Is it because are they thinking
because the anti-inflammatory is used right after a workout. Is it because, are they thinking because
the anti-inflammatory is that right?
I think maybe or I think a lot of people like to smoke weed
after a hard workout, you know what I mean?
It's kind of, you know, you're amped up,
you're in the gym, maybe you had a pre workout,
maybe you had coffee.
You ham yourself, then you blaze, then you smoke
a little cannabis, then you eat the munchies
and you have your post-workout meal.
I mean, it sounds like, it sounds like a very familiar recipe
that I know a lot of people in the muscle building world follow.
Here's the thing about cannabis and muscle growth, okay?
The jury is still out in terms of how cannabis affects
muscle protein synthesis and the like.
But we do have some clues.
And some of these stuff I'm going to say you might not like to hear.
THC in particular, at least initially, has a negative effect on testosterone production.
In animals, it's pretty predictable that you're going to reduce testosterone by a little
like a 5 or 10%.
In humans, this studies are murky.
Regular users show no difference in testosterone.
Short-term users show a drop.
So perhaps what's happening is initially you get a little drop and then afterwards the
body balances itself out.
So there's that.
It affects hormones like insulin. So here's some good news.
Canabinoids in cannabis have been shown to improve insulin sensitivity and it's mediated through
the liver. So this may be a good thing when you're trying to eat your carbs post workout and
you want to improve insulin sensitivity
to get more of those carbohydrates
to where you want them to go.
And also to reduce potential fat gain
from being insulin insensitive
or having insulin issues with your body responding to insulin.
Then there's the anti-inflammatory effects.
Cannabis or cannabinoids have a mild, very, very mild, acute anti-inflammatory effect.
This is also negated when you smoke it, right?
Because you're going to get pro-inflammatory if you smoke it.
Smoke is the worst way to administer cannabis.
But it's what the way most people are, right?
So I think you have to address that, right?
If you're using cannabis for anti-inflammatory properties,
you're probably just, it's a wash because you're smoking.
As far as the inflammation is concerned,
you're still better off, even if you smoke it,
but for the anti-cancer effects, for sure.
Now you're at baseline.
Yeah, for sure.
But in terms of inflammation,
there's an acute anti-inflammatory response from cannabis
or from cannabinoids, but it's super mild.
In other words, if you never have cannabis and then you have it, you'll get a little
bit of an anti-inflammatory effect.
Now the real anti-inflammatory effects are long term.
The low exposure, low but frequent exposure to cannabinoids has this kind of systemic anti-inflammatory effect in the body, which in some cases may be a good thing.
Do I think it's going to be pro muscle building? No. I think we're lucky if it gives you no effects to muscle growth.
You're probably not helping yourself by having cannabis postwork
out.
I don't think it's...
There's definitely something going on hormonally from cannabis because, and I think I've
shared this before in the podcast, I know I definitely have talked to you about this
always.
If I increase my intake, and I'm already not somebody who, I don't consider myself like a
heavy cannabis user, I literally like, you know, maybe consistently take two puffs off of a joint at nighttime.
And increased cannabis intake for me would be anything more than that.
And so I've had times where I've increased that to double or triple the amount in a day.
And I actually get a my guy on a stya.
We'll flare up. Oh, you'll get a my guy no matcha will flare up.
Oh, you'll get a little bit.
So, for sure, something's going on with my testosterone or estrogen levels for that to
get flared up.
And I remember that it took me a while before I kind of pieced that together because I
would get these weird kind of flare ups.
And I'm like, this is weird.
I'm not doing anything different hormonally.
I'm not changing my testosterone.
I'm not taking anything else, what's going on.
And then I kind of go like, you know,
I am smoking more weed than I usually do.
And I remember the first time I started doing research
on it, I was like, oh shit.
There's a lot of studies that they've showed
that there's shows that some correlation with that.
And so it caused me to start to inspect it more with myself.
And again, I know we're talking anecdotal here.
It's myself, but I have definitely noticed it.
So if you're a kid, teenage kid, or kid in your 20s,
and you have a gynecomastia, which is breast tissue development
or swelling at the nipple region,
and you go to a endocrinologist, or endocrinologist.
I always say it wrong, Doug, it always corrects me.
If you go see a hormone doctor,
and they'll ask you all kinds of questions,
and one of the questions they're gonna ask you is,
are you a heavy user of cannabis?
Because it has been linked to that in some studies,
and there's lots of anecdote.
It also affects ovulation in women. It can have adverse
effects on sperm production. So for sure something is happening hormonally.
Something is something is. Dude, it attaches to one of the most, if not the most abundant
G-protein coupled receptor in the body. Canabinary receptors are everywhere, but they're really
concentrated in a few areas.
Your brain, your liver, and your gut, and your testicles and your ovaries.
So all your reproductive areas have tons of cannabino and receptors.
So it's going to have some kind of effect on you.
Is it going to, you know, I think the abuse of it probably will have a negative effect on a lot of different things,
but I don't think cannabis is one of those things that you should use and think it's going to help you, you know, build muscle.
No, it's definitely not. I don't think there's any, I don't think you can make any case that it's going to help the cause.
No. I think I could see a fat loss, potential fat loss benefit, but mainly from the strategic use of particular cannabinoids,
because again, the insulin sensitizing effects.
In fact, there's, I think in phase one or phase two trials, uh, we called that a long time
ago.
We called that when we did our marijuana episode, almost 500 episodes ago or whatever when
we talked about the future of supplements and that we know making it, they're soon making
it. I'm sure they'll make CBD will be
Yeah, they'll make it they'll make a fat loss supplement because you can you can make that to me if you're just a normal person that uses cannabis
It's not in your best interest to go out of your way to use it more to try and get benefits for fat loss or building muscle
In in my recommendation being another person who also uses cannabis I try and use it as judiciously as possible.
I try and come off of it for a week or two
every now and then, like,
it's not something I'm trying to promote extra in my life.
You know.
Remember this, your body produces its own cannabinoids,
which are molecules that are very similar
to the ones that are found in marijuana.
This is why your body even reacts to cannabinoids from marijuana plant,
is because you already have these receptors that are,
that you evolve to have, that respond to your body's own production of cannabinoids,
otherwise known as endocannabinoids.
If you supplement with phytocannabinoids, that is cannabinoids from plants externally,
so now I'm eating or I'm smoking or I'm vaping tons of cannabinoids from plants externally. So now I'm eating or I'm smoking or I'm vaping
tons of cannabinoids.
It's perfectly within reason to think
that there's going to be a feedback system in the body
that's going to sense a higher amount of cannabinoids
and is going to lower its own natural production
of cannabinoids and or reduce the density of its own cannabinoid
receptors.
In other words, having lots of cannabis causes your body to adapt in ways that may not
be favorable because now you become more dependent because now if you go off of the cannabinoids,
now you've got this lower amount of cannabinoids, but you've also got lower amounts of that
your body is producing and a lower concentration of cannabinoids, but you've also got lower amounts of that your body's producing and a lower concentration of receptors.
Now you may be in a bad situation where you can cause like an endocannabinoid deficiency
syndrome or something like that in extreme cases which has been observed in some people.
So it's definitely one of those things you can abuse.
I know it's cool right now because it's becoming legalized and we talk about it all the
time and we joke around, but it's not something I think you should go out
of way to use unless you have a medical reason for it,
in which case it can be a miracle drug for some people.
Right.
I've seen, you know.
I just think you gotta be careful.
Like, I mean, it was like, it's like the keto craze
right now too.
We talked about all the great benefits behind it
and then what happens without everybody
actually take everything to extreme.
You're seeing that with cannabis. Yes, we're learning more and more about all of its
benefits and how it can be a game changer and life changer. It doesn't, would not give
you a reason to go and start to introduce it into your life for any of those reasons.
Like unless you have, like you said, you have a medical condition that, okay, let's see
if this helps. The rewards totally outweigh the risk.
Like if you have cancer,
and you know that there's cannabinoids,
that cannabinoids kill cancer in many studies,
and you're trying to do everything you can to cure yourself.
One of the things you might wanna do,
or look into is high doses of edible cannabis
throughout the day.
Basically, you're gonna be stoned really bad all day long,
which if you didn't have cancer,
wouldn't be really cool, right?
Not a good idea.
But in that context, it may be a total benefit.
In fact, I have, and I'm not promoting cannabis
for cancer killing,
except before people come after me.
But there's lots of anecdotes, lots of study.
My dad has a friend who's 75 lung cancer and did not basically like,
you know, we're going to try, we can try chemo, but it's not going to, it doesn't look good for you.
So he opted to not do it was given three months to live, went and watched the documentary,
given three months to live, went and watched the documentary, the Rick Simpson story, I think it was, who is this Canadian man who was synthesizing this cannabis extracts and giving it to cancer
patients and finding that a lot of them were being cured.
So he went and watched this documentary because my dad recommended it to him because I told
him about it.
And the 75-year-old man went, God is in cannabis card, bought, highly concentrated cannabis oil,
had never had marijuana in his life, and gradually got himself to the point where he was taking
a tremendous amount of this oil every single day, because you can build a tolerance.
And that was two years ago, no cancer.
And his oncologist was like, tripping out, and they were actually saying,
you know, this is very interesting.
So fascinating stuff, but yeah, other than that.
Probably not the best for muscle growth.
Yeah, probably not.
Check it out, go to YouTube,
MindPumpTV, Justin just posted.
Holy shit, make sure you check that out.
It crazy, crazy video.
We post a new one every single day.
Also, if you go to MindPumpmedia.com, you can register for 30 days of coaching. It will
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