Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 622: Top Five Most Functional Lifts, the Proper Way to Bulk Up, Cardio & Longevity & MORE
Episode Date: October 21, 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 proper way to bulk up, how to ...read studies, cardio and longevity and the top five most functional lifts. Silent mental health epidemic vs. physical health (2:31) ·Ketones vs. Glucose (10:15) ADHD prescriptions, the norm? (14:45) Western medicine, what a bitch! (18:00) Quah questions #1 – Proper way to bulk up? Do you recommend it to build muscle? (26:56) Do a bulk right after you do a cut Buckwheat pancake mix (Birch Benders and Arrowhead brands) from Thrive Market (36:00) Mind Pump shopping run! Quah question #2 – Can you give any insight how to read studies? (40:34) Sample size Is it double blind? Placebo control Peer reviewed Look at control/consensus Quah question #3 – You guys talk about cardio not being a great component of longevity and Ben Greenfield has shared how triathlon has significantly decreased his telomere length. With that being said, how are these 60 year olds crushing it? (50:54) Quah question #4 – Top 5 most functional lifts (56:45) Related Links/Products Mentioned: Thrive Market (Mind Pump sponsor) One FREE month’s membership $20 off your first three purchases of $49 or more (That’s $60 off total!) Free shipping on orders of $49 or more One in 6 Americans Take Antidepressants, Other Psychiatric Drugs: Study (article) Exercise is an all-natural treatment to fight depression (article) Can a Ketogenic Diet Help Fight Cancer? (article) WHAT ARE EXOGENOUS KETONES: WHEN AND HOW TO SUPPLEMENT WITH KETONES Misuse Of ADHD Drugs By Young Adults Drives Rise In ER Visits (article) Psoriasis and vitamin D deficiency (article) Hardgainer How to Undulate Your Calories for Faster Weight Loss & an Improved Metabolism (Mind Pump TV – YouTube) Organic Buckwheat Pancake & Waffle Mix (Arrowhead) Subliminal: How Your Unconscious Mind Rules Your Behavior - Leonard Mlodinow (book) Telomere What Kind Of Damage Happens To Your Body After You Do A Hard Workout, Triathlon or Marathon? (article) Eating To Break 100: Longevity Diet Tips From The Blue Zones (article) Add Windmills to Your Workout to Increase Your Deadlift Strength (Mind Pump TV – YouTube) People Mentioned: Robb Wolf (@robbwolf) Twitter Chris Kresser (@chriskresser) Twitter Ben Greenfield (@bengreenfield) Twitter 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. 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 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 We always have fun, so. And physical health. And are they separate or are they the same thing?
It's all one.
We talk about ketones versus glucose,
the benefits of each.
Which one does your body run better on?
Exactly.
And then we talk about the increases of anti-depressant use.
I also mentioned thrive more.
All the matter all over is out there.
Exactly.
I also mentioned thrive market in this episode.
Don't forget you can go to thrivemarket.com
forward slash mine pump and get some a bunch
of free stuff, free membership, $20 off your first three orders of $49 or more, and free shipping.
That's right. They love you. They do.
Then we get into the questions. The first question was, what is the proper way to bulk up?
Is there a more effective way? Is there a less effective way? How do we recommend you do it?
Pizza bulking. The second question is, how do you read studies effective way? How do we recommend you do it? Pizza bulking.
The second question is, how do you read studies?
In other words, what do you look for?
How do you determine if the studies are credible
and if you should take them?
I defer this one to South.
Yeah, like red wine burns body fat.
No, it doesn't.
Next question was about cardio.
We talk about it in terms of if you overdo it,
it may sacrifice longevity.
This particular person is saying, well, if that's true, then why do we see these 60-year-old
triathletes who are just kicking ass?
Do you want to look like a skinny raisin?
Ask yourself that.
Exactly.
My telomeres are telling me other things.
I think you just wanted to use telomeres.
Yeah, you did.
I think that's what that was.
And finally, we're the top five most functional lifts.
We have a little debate about that, but I think at the
end we have a consensus. Also, maps and a ballic, it's our foundational program. It includes
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That's right. I did want to talk to you guys about something kind of interesting
When we went we met with Rob Wolfe then we had Chris Cresser here
Which we don't know when his episodes gonna air if it was before this one or after but anyway Chris Cresser brilliant guy in the
World of functional medicine of wellness. Oh, yeah, and we're talking about
this silent epidemic,
the mental health epidemic that's exploding, that's crazy. And it completely mirrors the physical health epidemic.
Like we know now how poor health contributes to anxiety,
depression, you know, all ADHD, you know,
all these, these mental disorders,
even, and then we're meditating on top of that,
and we're getting all the symptoms,
as resulting from that as well.
Well, besides that, we have this explosion in poor health.
Of course, we're gonna have this explosion
in poor mental health.
So I looked up some statistics,
this is gonna blow you guys away.
Well, is this front the study he sent over to you?
Or is this something to do? No, no, no.
So that's peridot because you did send me a study.
So the study that he showed me was that people with
immune autoimmune inflammatory disorders,
like irritable bowel syndrome or multiple sclerosis, are much, much, much higher risk for
mental disorders,
like depression or anxiety.
And that's an obvious connection,
especially now that we have studies
that show how inflammation contributes to those
and how poor gut health contributes to those
and all that stuff.
But it's just incredible how we try to separate the two
when they're actually both,
the one in the same health is health.
And so I looked up some statistics,
I said, okay, we know physical health is gone to shit.
And it's just getting, it seems to be getting worse in many ways.
Let's look at statistics for antidepressant prescription prescriptions for in regards to
what?
How many prescriptions are being put out?
How many people are diagnosed now with depression?
Oh, yeah.
Anxiety.
Well, when my wife went in to get like,
for a thyroid, you know, an thyroid was low.
So they're prescribing right away.
They wanted to give her an antidepressant.
That was the first thing just because they could treat
something right there.
Off of a thyroid?
Yeah.
That was the next, that was the go to,
because of symptoms.
Because there are symptoms presenting themselves
in a common way that many times you don't have a necessarily something measurable, although she did have low thyroid, so that was the remedy.
Right. But yeah, you're right. That's like the first landed defense. But my point is,
mental illnesses are exploding in this country and suicide is at all time highs in most age groups.
Suicide. All the stuff is, and we're like,
we're living in a time where things are not combined
at all.
Nobody's thought processes.
Everybody thinks the mental part is separate
than that's all genetic.
What's hard is you have to tease out everything, right?
You have to tease out that our population
is increasing at a rapid rate.
Then you bring in the stuff that,
and I know people are probably tired.
It's a percentage of population,
so that would have mattered.
Oh, it was a percentage.
Yeah, it's not a person.
You're not saying that.
No, no, that's not total numbers.
Okay, so percentage.
Yeah, so that does tease that out.
But then you have to take into account
other factors that I think actually play into this,
also, which is like social media.
10 years now, we have, that's all we have
of this data of all these people,
you know, posting pictures of themselves
and getting likes, or not getting likes, and the, oh my God, nobody likes me type of bullshit.
Like that didn't exist.
It exaggerates.
It didn't exist 15 years ago.
When we were kids, it wasn't like that.
Like if you, if you were sad and depressed because you didn't have friends because nobody
knocked on your door and no one wanted to play with you or you were picked last.
Like that was it.
Like there wasn't like, I wasn't just getting this constantly bombarded with, oh, I don't,
I don't feel good about myself.
You're still a status.
Right. I wasn't in check like myself. You're so status. Right.
I wasn't in check, like constantly.
So that's what I thought too.
And I would definitely bet that social media plays a role.
We don't have enough data yet, because I haven't been around
long enough yet.
But I would definitely bet.
If I were to bet money, I would bet it does.
Although science has an interesting way
of proving us wrong, right?
However, if you look at the growth of diagnosis
of these mental disorders,
it's been growing since the obesity epidemic began.
So before, way before social media exploded,
you see this rise, 80s, 90s, early 2000s,
that's continued rise.
So it's not like we saw this kind of constant amount,
and then this joint.
Well, the debate with that would then be this the
awareness of it and then people sharing it and we're now
familiar with it because go back another 20 years or 30 years
before that. And it was something that we didn't even diagnose.
Well, suicides, suicides are up to in all age groups. I mean,
I, I, I, for me, if I look at the whole thing, I think there's
a lot of factors that you can speculate. But the one that I think is pretty guaranteed, at least for me, if I look at the whole thing, I think there's a lot of factors that you can speculate,
but the one that I think is pretty guaranteed,
at least for me, in these science show this,
although a lot of people don't talk about this,
is if your physical health is poor,
you're probably not gonna have great mental health,
or at least your odds of having poor mental health
are much higher.
I don't, it's interesting to me that this is even a debate
with a lot of people.
We have studies that show that exercise and nutrition
are as effective or more effective
than antidepressants for treating mild to moderate depression.
That's already established.
Well, and this goes back to what we've talked about
before too that a lot of people think they feel good
because they don't know what great feels like
or they've never felt their body at optimal
and what it feels like.
So even those that are running around
that maybe carrying themselves 20, 30, 40 pounds overweight
and eating whatever the fuck they want,
and they feel like, oh, I'm totally fine.
I feel, I don't feel like I'm not healthy,
but that's because they've never actually cleaned up everything.
They don't know what their brain feels like,
or their body feels like when it's running optimally.
And even speaking from experience, I remember when we went through the whole ketogenic process and for the first time in my life,
I was eating under 100 grams of carbs on a daily basis and it was a significant difference in my cognitive function.
I mean, I could tell when we would podcast like this, like it's, you know, we'd talk on this goddamn thing
all the time and, you know, we're talking about all kinds
of topics and subjects and we're calling studies
and remembering information that I've fucking learned
years ago and stuff.
And when I'm low, lower carb, higher fat diet,
I'm way sharper than when I am.
And I've played with this multiple times where I'd be like,
oh, let me introduce another 200, 300 grams of hot.
That's all I found from fasting. Same thing, let me introduce another 200 grams of blood. That's a lot of fun from fasting.
Same thing.
So much sharper as a result of that.
And once you got through the actual hurdles of learning
how to navigate in that situation,
and what real hunger actually feels like,
and then when actually need food,
and when it's going to benefit me the most.
So did you know there's some recent studies now
that are showing that a ketogenic type diet can help treat or can be used as a treatment for
anxiety and mild depression?
They're actually showing now that exactly what you said. Now that I'm not I don't want to be clear
It's not the answer to everything
I think it may be good for a lot of people and I think when people are in a study like that
I'm going to be able to try though. Well, what I I think when people are in a study like that, people would try to do it. Well, when you're in a study like that,
they probably went in with a shitty diet.
And so yes, it was keto,
but it was also probably an improvement.
Right.
You have to unpack that, right?
Like, it's not the fact that it's the ketogenic diet
that it's now making these people feel better
or less depressed.
It's probably the over-consumption of processed foods
and sugar and carbohydrates.
And then the switching over to probably more whole foods,
higher good healthy fats,
and that it's really not the diet.
I think that's what we were always trying to get
that message across that.
It's not this, such thing as a magical diet
that's gonna make a person feel this way,
but there are characteristics that come from
a ketogenic diet, which is eating a higher
higher ketones, like fuel with that fuel. A lot of people don't understand, your brain really is eating a higher high ketones, like feel what that feels like.
A lot of people don't understand, you know,
your brain like really, like it thrives with ketones.
Like it's interesting.
It's on that topic of running on ketones
versus like glucose, you know, it's funny to me,
I prefer glucose if I'm like an athlete.
Like if I was always playing sports,
like I was there as a meaty.
Right.
But as an older adult who doesn't play sports
every day of his life anymore,
I prefer riding on ketones.
For mental clarity purposes,
satiety, no cravings, things like that.
It just seems like the body operates on that system better.
And then if you're an athlete,
then it seems more efficient.
Yeah.
But if you're trying to be explosive
or do things
like sprinting or you know that then obviously like for me
like glucose makes a lot more sense.
Well exogenous ketones are, I've used them as a
neutropic. So I'll supplement with them sometimes if I
want to be more sharp and I'll take the exogenous ketones
and I'll take it with like another natural
neutropic or I'll combine it with like the you know
like chameleon coffee that's got the
tropics. Yeah, the only one that's been really experimenting with the ex, you know, like, chameleon coffee that's got the nitropic.
Yeah, you're the only one that's been really experimenting with the exogenous ketones, right?
Have you done any of that?
Adam, I've taken on like twice.
Mm-hmm.
I'm not a big fan.
Uh, you know, who was it we just recently discussed this?
Rob Wolf.
Was it Rob Wolf?
Yeah.
You know, he made some good, exact good points.
Yeah.
He talked about like, here you've got the exogenous ketone supplements.
You take them. So they do raiseogenous ketone supplements you take them so they do raise
Your ketone levels in your body. So now you do have ketones
But people are taking this who also have adequate glycogen and you know carbohydrates and they're still in their system
So now sitting two different signals not only are you sending two different signals?
But the only time a human body will have high levels of both ketones and, you know,
carbohydrates or glycogen present is in ketoacidosis when they're diabetic and they're not, you know,
it's unhealthy.
It's not unhealthy.
Yeah.
Otherwise, it doesn't happen in nature.
You don't get ketones unless you run out of glycogen or ketones.
And not to mention too, we're splitting hairs here too.
Like to me, and it's expensive as fucking supplement
It is man. Those things are like 50 60 bucks a pop like a
Remember I'm on CBD. Oh, we're looking into that dude. It should yeah, no
It's it's just exactly not so great example CBD is another part one that we promote talk about because of the benefits that we have found
I mean we just had an episode where we discussed about that the health benefits behind marijuana
But you know, of course what we're gonna do is we'll take a little bit of that
science and good information.
We're going to package it into a supplement, wrap everything around it, make it sound like
it's a fucking miracle supplement.
And charge you $60 to take this fucking CBD with them.
It's just like, that's ridiculous.
Like, for the amount of advantage that you're getting for that, unless like you,
we talked about earlier, if this was somebody who's got cancer or it's like,
then at all costs, I'm trying everything I possibly can.
But for the everyday person who's trying to use ketones
for better performance or fat loss,
or it's like, come on, you're splitting hairs.
I would much rather invest that money
in something else that is gonna benefit you long-term.
So I got some statistics here for you,
based on what we were talking about earlier
with mental health disorders.
So from 1999 till 2014, there's been a 65% increase.
Wow, 65.
And the amount of people using antidepressants.
So huge.
65% increase, right?
Huge.
Now, now there could be, there's two sides of that too, right?
Cause that could be the over pushing
from the fucking medical side too.
Because it's easy, it's more accepted.
Because it's already going.
So then they're pushing it on top of it.
It's quick easy.
It's a condition they can treat.
Right, real quick.
So I agree, I agree, but the,
and we probably know they're addictive.
So it's just like a drug dealer.
Well, I mean, they're not necessarily addictive,
but they will have dangerous withdrawal,
symptoms when you go off of them.
That's addictive by the fucker.
That's fucking addictive.
So, so here's the thing, when you look at countries
who have this kind of poor health epidemic,
you see the similar type of pattern,
although the US kills everybody in per capita prescription drugs.
I mean, it's incredible.
We are the most important.
We're the biggest drug dealer in the world, bro.
By far.
100% were the biggest drug dealers.
Here's some more statistics.
Adults between 20 and 44, the prescriptions
of anti-ADHD medication and anti-exhideum medications
has increased 30%.
So that's gone through the roof as well. HD medication and anti-exhiting medications has increased 30%.
So that's gone through the roof as well.
Basically across the board, these psychiatric medications have exploded and the diagnosis
have exploded.
And I think we're in the middle of a health epidemic that encompasses everything, not
just physical health.
And I don't know about you guys,
but I've been training for 20 years.
I don't remember as many clients telling me
that they're on these medications
or suffering from anxiety like now.
Like now it's normal.
Yeah, anxiety is everywhere.
It's normal.
When I talk to a client like nine at 10 times,
that is something that they want to work on.
It wasn't ever really, I don't remember.
There's just so many factors that contribute to that.
You know, besides like the poor nutrition,
the poor stress and all this stuff,
like just being connected all the time on your phone
and just not being able to unplug.
And we talked about this and had people on the show
that have highlighted the addictive properties and just like how real that is
and how like we're just bombarded, we're overstimulated.
Do you think part of it though is just that
it's become more accepted and so that's probably,
that's part of why it's just like, oh it's the norm.
It's like oh, you know, Suzy and Tommy and so on.
So they take, well I have communicating.
So they take Adderall and they take this.
I definitely think that's part of it because
As it becomes more less taboo than more people are willing to ask for it and then so on because when I was a kid
That didn't even exist like that. That wasn't even in school like you didn't talk about it
It's nobody I knew I don't know any kids when I was in high school
They wouldn't have talked about it. Well, oh you think so if it was your prescription that you're getting it was more
You're embarrassed about it or whatever?
Kids have been getting prescribed.
Yeah, back in the day.
No, it has been but not like it were.
I mean, you should have got to go back.
And we are, remember that's 15 plus years ago for me, right?
So that's over 15 years ago that was not normal whatsoever.
It wasn't until like maybe watching my younger siblings
go through school and some of that.
Did you hear kids, you know, taking fucking Adderall and all your other,
and what's the other ridlin' in?
Yeah, all these other drugs too,
so they could study all night long as they have,
I wasn't introduced to any of this shit.
I wish I would have, I probably would have done
and even better at school.
I was for performance.
Would have been at least a three, five or a fucking four
or a five or a five or a five or a five or a five.
I would have been stuck on this goddamn podcast
with you, motherfucker, that's for sure.
You're gonna be like a PhD something.
You're gonna be like a supplement company.
But I mean, again, to me, the scary part about that stuff
is anybody that has dabbled with AdWRL or Ridlin,
and you know what it's, I mean, fuck, bro,
it's like the best cup of coffee you've ever had in your life.
And if you're a kid who's trying to study and work.
Bro, the base molecule is, I mean, like methamphetamine.
It's a methamphetamine drug.
Yeah.
It's legal.
That's only different.
It's legal crack is what it is.
And, you know, you get your hands on that at a very young age.
Talk about what that's setting up, setting you up for long term.
Well, I mean, besides the psychological dependence,
you have a developing brain, which your brain is plastic.
In other words, it reacts to its environment and your nutrition and stuff, and that'll direct
how it develops, and where it's going to develop more connections, or it's going to have
less connections.
So, you can't tell me that taking a psychiatric drug doesn't, isn't going to affect that in
some way.
And, of course, there's definitely people out there that need these substances, these drugs.
But I don't think it's... Number one, I don't think it's as many as we think, but number two,
I do think that because our health is worse, because our gut biomes are so off,
and that gets passed on generation. Because they do fine from generation to generation,
the gut microbiome becomes less diverse each time,
because you get a lot of your fingerprint from your mom.
And so if hers is worse, then yours is gonna be worse.
And then, if your girl has kids,
and you know how I was thinking about that,
as far as like, you know how they're coming in
for like stem cell and all that stuff,
and they're gathering all this for like further science,
like down the road.
Like, I was wondering about that as far as like the microbiome,
like if somebody were to kind of have like really quality
microbiome that they swab, you know, with a newborn
at to set them up, you know.
Fucked it even better.
The hard part is like, we don't even know
what a quality of microbiome is.
But we don't know it yet.
I'm saying down the right, like for sure.
For 100, I mean, 100% when they figure this out,
we are gonna see medications where it's specific bacteria
for specific things.
Oh, you have, and I'm not even exactly.
Well, they're already somewhat playing with that
when they swipe the mom's vaginal canal
when after a C-section, right?
I mean, you're basically putting bacteria
into their system or their mouth.
But what I'm talking about is,
and you mark my words
This is gonna happen guy. We don't remember that. Yeah, I mean this is gonna happen in medicine. They are going to make or do you
Yeah, this or do those kids like in printed your answer
Or do those kids have a weird fucking relationship with their mothers, you know
That could be I know as anyone that a study on that. Yeah, I don't know that's something that I haven't how long
They've been doing that for me that has studied on that yet, I don't know, that's something that I haven't, how long have they been doing that for?
Is anybody that studied on that?
Well, it wasn't that long ago.
I mean, with C-sections, we're like a dime a dozen,
not that long ago, then we found out that it was,
what was the percentage of kids that were born
with autism that went through C-sections.
It was, it's just higher rates, higher rates.
Much higher rates.
And all kinds of things.
Everything, right?
But how long ago was that?
It wasn't 10 years ago, was it?
No.
So we don't know,
there's always a cause and effect to everything.
So, we might have fixed the allergies,
but now you have this weird sexual addiction to mother.
No, dude, first of all, if you're born naturally,
you come through her vagina.
That's why all that's on you porn.
Well, I get, now.
Coming through mom's vagina and getting it swabs
in your mouth are like two different things.
Not really, dude.
Not really.
I got an idea. Hey, would you rather be swabbed my toe and put in your mouth? like two different things. Not really dude. Not really. I got an idea.
How would you rather be swabbed my toe and put in your mouth
or you want me to put my whole foot up?
Cross, that's it.
Come on man, let's clean it up in here.
Yeah, I want to talk about that.
Anyway, when I was in Villa Company,
what I was gonna say is they're going to design specific,
you know, medications of specific strains,
four particular ailments,
including mental ailments, mark my words.
You will see here take this probiotic for depression,
for anxiety, for whatever, and people are gonna be taking them.
That's gonna be a huge part of medicine.
The future.
The question that I have with that then,
is it better for us to use probiotics like that
to kind of create this healthy bacteria,
or is it better to again address lifestyle, eating habits, things like that to kind of create this healthy bacteria or is it better to,
again, address lifestyle eating habits, things like that to promote a healthier gut.
I don't think many cases we're not going to have a choice.
That's the problem. You know what I mean? I think that's going to be the problem.
It's going to be like a... What do you mean? I think we'll always have the choice. I think the way
our lifestyles are going, we are 100% heading in that direction because that's still better than
the route we're going right now, right? So I agree with you on that,
but then you have to ask yourself,
like, you know, I could just,
I could see it being not as good for us,
it then it would be to change behaviors,
habits, not go through certain.
Indially both, right?
Right, right.
Or just the lifestyle.
Yeah, right.
I think it'll always go back.
I think it'll always go back.
Even, you know, remember when I told you guys,
I started supplementing with vitamin D after you read the,
you shared the Harvard study with me, right?
I liked the D.
Yeah, that's right.
After he's the one.
Yeah, it is, right?
After that, like then it kind of dawned on me like, you know,
well, when I, when I really noticed this happen,
it was when I started working in gyms,
I mean, I was literally born, like, taking in the sun all day.
From sun up, sun down, I was in the sun to the point where I had a really, really dark
complexion.
And it wasn't until, and until I was in my 20s when I started working in gyms, did I
not have that lifestyle anymore?
And it took about four or five years and all of a sudden, I don't know where here comes
psoriasis.
And you know, we, then you share the study with me years me, years down the road, and I'm meditating with steroids,
doing all these things like that to suppress the psoriasis.
Meanwhile, I've got this vitamin D deficiency
that should have been fucking obvious, right?
Knowing that vitamin D is correlated
with all almost skin issues.
And then it makes so much sense to me
that I was went from being somebody my entire life
that was exposed to tons of sun-like,
iting tons of vitamin D more than my body probably needs
to all of a sudden getting like zero.
Literally, like, because I would work.
I would get more freckling.
I would get to the gym before the sun came up
and I would work till the sun came down.
And for years, that's where it was
and then all of a sudden this comes down.
And you know vitamin D acts like a hormone in the body, right?
Right, so another, yeah, right?
So affecting that also.
Oh, all kinds of shit.
Right.
And so for me, so then I started suppling with Vitamin D
and noticed to help suppress my psoriasis,
but then I go like, okay, well, I'm one step better
than what I was before.
I'm still not like the ideal.
The ideal would be in the sun.
Sit, yeah.
So now I've tried to, and I know that people,
our fans love to hear when we like implement things
like this in our life.
So, you know, the other day I had to take a call, right? And I was on the phone,
just a business call and it was like a 45 minute call. And I was sitting in my living room,
because I was sitting there on the computer working, and I was still sunny outside. And I'm like,
what am I doing? Like, I just stepped right outside, sat in a chair. It was a beautiful day.
It was like 75 degrees. Like, why? Right. and it felt amazing, and I felt so good afterwards,
but just having to retrain myself to think about that, like, wow,
how easily I could just kind of cut that out of my life.
It was such a part of my life as a child,
and you don't think, of course, twice about it,
then I get older and be now because my body finally expressed itself
and said, fuck you, here's psoriasis for being an asshole,
and never being in the sun anymore.
And then I go see, then I gonna have to get dressed itself and say, fuck you. Here's Saraias' for being an asshole, never being in the sun anymore.
And then I go see, then I go talk to Western medicine
and they say, here's a steroid for it, take some shots,
here's some pill.
Put some cream on it.
And then I'm like, the whole rest of my life,
rubbing cream on myself and not realizing that,
you know, every time I get stressed out,
just a little bit about putting the cream on myself,
that's flaring it up more anyways.
And so, playing this game forever, and then it's years later, you hand me a study
about vitamin D being correlated to it.
And it's like, okay, let me try supplementing
then oh my god, oh, I should have just been outside more.
And not to mention the side effects of the steroids,
creams you had to use, which sucks.
It just blows my mind that you go somewhere like that,
and they don't even mention that.
You know, but part of it's our fault.
How many people do you think
if they went to the doctor and the doctor, guys?
Okay, I'm looking at your lab results right now.
Here's what you need to do.
I want you to exercise three days a week.
So I'm like, you need to get better exercises.
Go outside at least 20 minutes a day.
And here's your new diet.
And here's your new diet.
And then they hand it to them.
You know, people would do it.
You know, it's crazy.
You're right, even I wouldn't do it.
But if you explain to me why I'm supposed to go out
and what I'm more than likely to be here.
You see the flare ups, you're actually gonna like
take that into consideration.
Right, I think you can change it.
I think that's the missing piece, right?
And this is why no one does that
because you get 12 minutes with your doctor.
So he's fucking, then tells you what to do, then you're off.
But instead, if I really understood
that I have this deficiency more than likely,
that's the main reason.
Whether it be I was genetically predisposed or not,
like here I have this deficiency from vitamin D
because I'm no longer the sun.
So hey, I'm gonna give you this cream or what about that,
but really what you should do is get out
and get in the sun as much as you can
because you're deficient of vitamin D
and that's one of your greatest sources
of getting vitamin D is that way. And maybe hear some food choices and you should make because you're deficient of vitamin D and that's one of your greatest sources of getting vitamin D is that way.
And maybe hear some food choices
and you should make sure you're in your diet
and like, oh, okay, thank you, you know.
It's, you know, what they'll, they do that for certain things.
Like when people go to the doctor
and they're giving a statin or blood pressure medication,
I know because I have family members that go to the doctor
and the doctor will say to them, okay,
we're gonna have to raise your blood pressure medication.
But, you know, if you just lost weight and you exercise
and you wouldn't have to take as much,
and you know what they do, they go take the fucking...
Double dose.
Yeah, they go take more medication.
They're lazy as fuck.
And they're my family members.
And I'll tell them, like, this is what you listen,
you need to work out and you need to write,
nope, nope, nope, don't wait a minute.
You're healthy, you're taking a bunch of pills.
Yeah, so yeah, I think so.
Let me do this way.
They get pissed off when they have to take a pill
more than once a day.
That's too much.
Yeah.
Do you know how many people go to the doctor?
Like, what do you mean I gotta take a twice a day?
Don't you have one I can take once a day?
I don't want to have to remember to take a twice.
Oh, it's too much pill.
It's too much work.
I have to remember it again.
It's true, dude.
God, it sucks.
No, it is.
It's, it's an uphill battle.
Doug, you better bring on that fucking bird
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It's the motherfucking car!
The eagle is landed!
Quiquevoir!
Alright, first up is X Griffo.
Proper way to bulk up.
Do you recommend it to build muscle?
So, bulking up is the old school way of bulking up
is eating a tremendous amount of calories,
calories, excuse me, for a prolonged period of time,
gaining lots of weight,
because that's what's gonna happen,
and you get stronger, and you build more muscle.
There definitely is an anabolic effect
from eating more calories.
Even people who are sedentary,
if they boost their calories,
will get initially, there's evidence to show
that they'll build a tiny bit of muscle initially,
and then they kind of lose that effect.
Now that even happens with people who work out.
If you dramatically bump your calories, initially,
you'll get a lot of strength and a lot of muscle gain,
but that starts to come down really quick,
and then it becomes just fat gain.
So that's one thing to consider.
The second thing to consider is,
the best time to do a bulk is right after you do a cut.
That is an incredible feeling.
I have never felt-
It's a contrast.
And I've taken over the counter,
pro hormones, I've taken all these different things,
supplements, whatever.
There is, I can't think of a more
anabolic muscle building feeling
than going from a cut to a bulk.
I mean, it's like, it's pronounced.
Well, there's so many things
that are benefiting you there, like that,
why you get that, right?
You get this anabolic rebound
because you've been in a deficit for several weeks.
I wish I would have known this,
because my first, you know first fat loss, weight cut,
ever in my entire life was at fucking 29 years old.
Like, I didn't, my whole life, I was on the bulk
because I was the skinny kid who was always trying
to maintain your muscle mass.
Trying to build muscle.
So never in my mind would I ever think,
oh, for the next three to four weeks,
I'm gonna try and lose weight that just seems absurd
But how do I know what I know now and how did I gone through what I went through in my late 20s?
This is what I highly recommend to any of the young hardgainers and I say that in quotation mark, right?
So for anybody who wants to build is to actually first go on a short mini cut
somebody who wants to build is to actually first go on a short mini cut for two or three weeks where you're actually restricting calories and dieting like you're trying to lose and
then going back the other direction.
You'll get such a crazy animal.
You'll get a crazy animal.
You'll have lower your, you'll have lower your colore can take that's necessary to bulk
and build because normally guys that are hard gainers like myself or had a hard time
getting enough calories.
You know, if I'm constantly feeling, shoveling, shoveling food,
my body's getting used to processing that much food.
On top of that, would you also suggest maybe a day of protein fasting
so that way when you come back into the bulk part of it,
like you get even more response?
Well, yeah, even or intermittently fasting.
Like so what I would do is I would run, I would run a, like, this is the protocol I would run now.
Like, if I was the skinny kid trying to bulk up
and build muscle knowing what I know now
and understanding physiology the way I do now,
compared to what I did when I'm in my early 20s,
I would cut first for two or three weeks
where I'm pushing as low calorie as my body can handle,
wherever, where it's relative from where you're at right now,
trying to lean out.
Because part of what I'm doing by doing that too,
is your metabolism is just slowed down,
like your leptin's gonna get suppressed.
It's the opposite of what we tell people to do
when they, when they have a slow metabolism.
Right, right, it's the opposite, right?
So I'm kind of trying to do that.
I'm trying to, in a sense, kind of slow my metabolism down
by cutting, reducing, reducing calories.
And then I'm gonna come back the other way.
And when I come back the other way,
you reintroduce 500 calories more than wherever
your new maintenance is at.
And you're gonna feel like a fucking champ, right?
You do, and in fact, you'll put weight on.
In fact, when I coach people through bulking now,
even through their period of bulking,
I have them inject low calorie days.
So, the same, okay, so it's really no different
than how I would recommend someone cut.
When I'm telling, when someone's trying to get leaner,
I will-
I will-
I'll undelate their calories and I'll give them
a day or two that are higher calories
because I know it helps them with talism.
With someone who's trying to bulk,
it's just the reverse, it's the flip.
I'll have them most days being a big surplus
and then there's gonna be a day or two
where they're actually gonna be in a deficit
That's another way I like to use it and when people do that they get more lean body mass and more strength gains from it and less fat gains from it
And I know you're listening right now some of you listening who are thinking I don't care if I gain some body fat
I'm really skinny. No, no, no, no, you would rather gain muscle. That's the point the point is the point isn't necessarily
You don't want to gain fat,
although a lot of you don't.
The point of it is, you'll build more muscle
as a result of you to have your muscles.
If you are not anabolically enhanced
and you are trying to do this,
like everybody else you see on fucking Instagram doing it,
you're gonna have a hard-ass time
because what's gonna happen is you're going to put on,
if you do what they call the dirty bulk,
or just get big, right?
Because you need a bunch of shit.
It's winter and this is coming up right now.
We're about to see all the insides.
30 bulk season.
All the insides.
All the Instagram turds are going to start posting there.
It's bulk season.
Everybody.
30 pebble pizzas.
Everybody is popping pop tarts and we're going to go up 20, 30 pounds because it's winter
and it's bulk season and out of that 20 pounds, 16 of it's fat.
Four of it is actually muscles.
So you did put some lean mass on.
That's why you fill your strength, go up
and you feel stronger in the gym
and you look bigger, you're filling your shirts out.
Then you decide you're gonna come back the other way
and you go to an extreme cut to lose that 16.
And you're back where you started.
And you're back where you started.
And if you're very lucky, you're up one pound of muscle.
You've been way better off gradually building it up.
I am speaking from personal experience every year.
I would get my, so I'm six feet tall, right?
I weigh now, I walk around about 190 pounds.
I used to get my body weight up to between 220 to 230,
every winner, every winner I would gain 30 to 40 pounds.
And then every summer I drop it down
and try and get to about 10% body fat,
which would be probably anywhere between 190 something in the mid 190s.
Every year I would do this and I'd always come back the same.
It wasn't like I was gaining muscle every year.
It was the same kind of back and forth and it just wasn't as effective as when I started
to learn how to do these mini cuts and mini bulks where I'd go on a two, like a two week deficit
and then go on a four week surplus, two week deficit,
four week surplus.
Of course, overall, surplus is,
I mean, a surplus more often because my ultimate goal is to gain,
but I would always have these deficits
because I would notice just tremendous effects
when I come out of them, bump up those calories.
It would like, it would all go to my muscle.
In fact, if I got myself really lean
because there's a couple times where I got myself down
into like a four, you know, the 5%, 6% body fat range,
I would bulk and for two or three weeks,
I would be shredded.
I would be shredded still.
I would just get bigger.
And it was like the most awesome,
I was like, well, the most awesome feeling.
So that's the proper way to bulk.
The improper way to bulk is to eat a shit ton of food
all the time consistently, weekend, week out,
you're gonna lose the antibiotic effect within a few weeks
and it's just gonna become like fat storage.
And not to mention, once we get beyond what is it?
15, 17% body fat, our testosterone starts to suppress.
It can start to affect it.
I think it's around 20%.
Yeah, I think it's more like 15%.
Is it really?
Yeah, I think it's like 15 for a male, maybe it's 20 25 for a female right once you start getting around that 15% plus
Of body fat for a male your hormone levels start to dip which that's the last thing we want to happen if we're trying to build muscle is to suppress
testosterone it well fat is a is a estrogen sensitive hormone and high high amounts of body fat
In men act like estrogen
and you'll see estrogenic, like, uh, quality and get boobies.
And they do.
They do.
So yep, that's the proper way to bulk.
Uh, mini cuts, mini bulks.
Um, we talk about, you know what, there's, we did a YouTube video, you and I did a YouTube
video.
We did that.
We talked exactly about this.
Yeah.
So you should, on my pump TV, you can go find word Sal and I discuss I think underlating calories or so now
So what are your some of your guys is like now right now that we know better
Whatters because I'm gonna actually actually I'm gonna I'm gonna do a bulk pretty soon
I'm gonna do a bulk a mini bulk which I haven't done in a while like a concentrated one. I'm gonna do it
Towards the end of November going into December.
I have it all planned out.
And but the way I do now is very different.
Like the way I used to do it was all calories.
Like anything I could eat, I would eat.
And the more I could eat the better.
Now I'm gonna be eating, you know,
I'll use things like white rice, buckwheat,
which are my two favorite sources of starchy,
you know, gluten-free carbohydrates.
I'll eat lots of bison or ground beef, grass-fed ground beef, chicken, tuna,
that kind of stuff, avocados, macadamia nuts for my fat sources.
Just high quality, high calorie foods is what I'll end up eating a lot more of.
But I'll have, I will do more of the starches, buckwheat in particular.
I don't know if you guys every buckwheat.
I don't really get buckwheat.
I mean, the, every buckwheat cereal pancakes.
Yeah, buckwheat pancakes.
No, no, no, no, stacks does buckwheat pancakes.
I thought so.
And I've had them before.
I've had them not that long ago, but it's not something that's not a regular thing in
my diet.
I don't thrive market is, is, is where, is that where you get yours?
Yes.
So they, they have these buckwheat, I'm gonna look up the name,
maybe Doug can find it for me, the brand,
that I get these buckwheat pancakes that are amazing.
And so, and I don't put tons of syrup on it.
What is it called for?
So the buckwheat is obviously replacing the flour.
So you're getting the buckwheat,
and then what else do you get to add eggs to it,
or do you know what that is?
It literally like,
It's a mix.
You add water.
No, no, you just add water. What? Yeah, yeah, you add water to it. you know that or is it literally like? Oh, it's it's a mix. It's a mix. It's part of it. You add water.
No, no, you just add water.
What?
Yeah, yeah.
You add water to it.
I think you're making your shit wrong.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Really?
Yes.
I showed you guys the other day.
I know you did, but I don't, you didn't show me make you making it though.
You didn't have to put eggs, no milk, nothing in it.
You literally just water it, water, and the mix.
Really?
Yep, yep.
And they have ones made with buckwheat.
They have some that are paleo
that are made with like almond flour and
Is it is that the one arrowhead? Yeah
Yeah, so that's one of them and then there's another brand that I also eat how much is that 395? That's it. Yeah damn retail five 35
Yeah, you know, there's so many companies that are doing this, like at the fitness conventions, like this is like a big thing, right,
is all the pancakes.
The mixes?
Yeah, all the mixes.
They sell them, they retell them for like 15, 20 bucks, dude,
for these bags.
For those because of their protein.
Well, yeah, some of them are, you know,
everything's got protein.
That's what I'm saying, like everything's true.
So here's the other brand alike, it's Birch Benders,
and they have a protein pancake and waffle mix,
they have a paleo pancake and waffle mix, and they have a regular one and I my kids love them
But anyhow, those are so both brands are on thrive market both brands are so birch benders is the other one that I like
Yeah, see look that one is really really good. Oh, I did other they have a protein one
Yeah, yeah look at the protein one and look at the even the protein ones for 79 for 39 dude
Whole foods that's it's almost $7 by the way.
What I like to do is I'll make these in the morning
and I'll just put butter on them and eat them just like that
because I mean, you syrup.
And they taste good.
They're fucking great.
But I also like just straight up buckwheat
that you can make into like a crema wheat type of cereal.
And it's just, buckwheat is such an easy thing to digest.
And if anybody, if you're listening
and you have gut issues
and you want to get in more starches
because you're just trying to build muscle
or get more calories,
buckweed is an excellent source
of easily digestible gluten-free carbohydrates.
Now I'm not using our thrive market enough.
I didn't realize.
Bro, you need to buy everything's in there.
Okay, so the protein one has way protein in it.
Already there.
All you do is add water. So there you go, 16 grams of protein per serving. Oh, wow, dude. Yeah, for the
protein pancakes. I don't have that one because it's got dairy in it. So you need to do,
you need to do all your shopping there. No, I know. I have. I'm proud. Katrina, Katrina has
bought a few things on there for us, but I haven't gone on and like really done like
a, what I want to do is, and we're do this week to go hit like our whole foods run instead of going to whole foods. I'm going
to order everything see if we can order everything. I want to do that. See I've just been
doing condiments and like a shampoo's and all those types of things, but yeah, I didn't
realize that they have that wide of a selection. Yeah, they even and they have competitors
for similar type stuff. Everything. Everything you'll find a whole foods you'll find there
except for the perishables like you're not going to get tomatoes and stuff like that.
You know what? I don't, I know when we interviewed him, he told, I can't remember how many different
products they had. Do you remember the number when I said, no, it was a lot. It was a lot.
It's, and I'm wondering what that is in comparison to like Whole Foods and some of your normal
stores like that. I think they rival that right there. I'm just sure that you're adding
them all the time. Oh, no. They're up there. Yeah, that's crazy. Well, for, for the listeners,
thrivemarket.com, forward slash mind pump, and then you get like all kinds of stuff that I can never remember
and that we get in trouble for not remembering. I think it's, what is it? Free membership.
We have to a free membership. You get your first three orders or $20 off each order.
That's $49 or more. Yeah, $39 and more plus free shipping. Plus free shipping. Right. And the
way it works, it's a $60 a year membership,
similar to how Costco does it, but the cool part is,
you do the mind pump code, you get that, it's basically,
yeah, if you use the mind pump code, you get the free month,
and then you get $20 off your next three purchases
as long as it's over 49, you basically get the money
back that you'd have on the membership.
And what I would so awesome that,
a lot of people don't realize how it works
and how they can get away
with being so cheap is that,
and getting the product for wholesale is that,
they're not making, there's hardly any margins
on the selling of the food,
they cut out all the middlemen,
and then what they do is where they make their money
is the memberships, their membership is where they make
their money, they're not making it on the parieta
and they're telling the way that.
Like you said, it's the Costco model online.
Yeah, no, it's brilliant. With whole foods, right?
So I mean, getting all organic whole foods
instead of your Costco.
Excellent, excellent stuff.
Next question is from Tello24.
Can you give any insight on how to read studies?
What to look for and how to determine
if they are credible?
Well, ask the study, man.
This is a good, ask Google Magic over that.
Go to the South, Professor South.
Google magic, that's like my,
that's like my name at Bernie.
You know what was funny was to go magic.
It's Google magic, it's shiny.
You never cease to amaze me with some of the things
that you're able to recall.
I mean, for listeners, literally I walked in this morning
one of the books, audio books I'm listening to right now
is called Subliminal. And I came in to morning, one of the books, audio books I'm listening to right now is called Subliminal.
And I came in to like, I told Sally,
I said, man, you would love this book.
It's about the unconscious mind and the conscious mind
and they totally cite all these studies
and I started to tell a study
and he finishes the rest of the study.
And I was just like, this motherfucker,
I can't even one up you on this.
Like, I don't know how you remember these studies
and do you have a source that you go to,
that's your go-to spot? or are you all over the hall?
It's a whole pub, man.
Like, where are we talking about here?
So, I think, I've been thinking about this,
and I think most of us have this ability.
It's just four things that we find super-composed.
I waste my own baseball cards.
Well, fuck.
Well, think about this way.
Think about this way.
I wasted our first.
Think of your hobbies and the things you really love to do the most
You probably know like the different names of whatever whether it's cars or shoes or clothes or TV shows or quotes from a particular actor or whatever
For me it's just for whatever reason studies and it has there was no value in it whatsoever until I got a podcast
So thank God they have a podcast now I can use this totally worthless you found your purpose
Yeah, it was cool Like like parties and stuff and that was it
Smokers jacket just hey guys
Well, it's only about this microbiome city
I read three years a PubMed
Anybody where did I go great way to pick up on girls? Did you know blue eyes didn't show up until 30,000 years ago?
What oh my god, please share that. That's the truth. Is it? I've heard this before.
Okay, so blue eyes weren't always around. No, no, it's a relatively new, I don't know how long it
was, maybe it was 30,000 years ago, but it's a relatively new in the whole scheme of things.
Variation. What were the common colors?
Do you remember all this stuff?
No, I don't remember that.
I know Brown.
Oh yeah.
He has the most common one.
I don't know.
And again, it's random.
I'll remember random shit.
It's not directed.
You know what I'm saying?
I can't direct it.
So here's the thing with studies.
It's in pieces.
This is a good question because you see a lot of sensationalized articles
on your social media that will say things like red wine,
you know, boost fat loss.
Super biased stuff.
Yeah, eat chocolate if you wanna gain muscle
or a compound in chocolate was found to prevent Alzheimer's
or whatever.
And so you'll read these headlines and you're gonna be like,
oh shit, and then you share it
and you're like, do check out the study, it's freaking awesome.
What you need to do is you need to look into the study
and look at a few things.
Control.
Number one, look at the sample size.
So that means how many people are in the study?
Yeah, there's four people.
That's right.
You can have ACCC studies like that.
You could.
And you could pick four random people
and just by chance pick four similar people
who are then going to skew the fuck out of a study
or even 10 people. Like if I took 10 people from a gym and I sampled them and asked them fitness
questions, the answers I'm going to get aren't going to really be representative of the
population because the all can be about a six to six and a half the population is working
out. So you're not even addressing half of that.
That's it. And most studies, I hate to say this, most studies are done on males between,
I believe the ages of like 20 to 30,
like college age or little older males, white males.
So that alone, where the ones will end to experiment.
Well, yeah, willing to experiment.
Test on me.
In college as projects, that's the only part
that people don't understand about studies is most studies
that we see that are actually get promoted and put out there that are biased. It's because
they're expensive to do. And so it's not like we're running around doing all these great studies
on stuff. So when you do C1, nine times out of 10, it's funded by a company that it already had
a desired outcome before they went into the fucking study. So it's as biased as it comes.
Yeah, and you can tweak data, like, how it all over like however you want.
I still clients all the time. Like give me any topic you fucking have heard about with
health fitness wise, nutrition wise. I'll sell you on both sides of it. Yeah. I'll
sell you how it's the worst thing for you ever. And I'll say, oh, it's the best thing in
the world. So you want to be able to spend the data. So sample size is important. How many
people are in the study? Is it double blind, in other words, double blind meaning the study participants
don't know that they're the ones that are being either the control group or the tested group.
So in other words, they don't know if they're getting the active ingredient when they're
taking the supplement or pill or whatever, it could be whatever.
The people giving the test don't know either.
That's important because we know that even the, even if it can influence.
You can have an influence.
So double blind meaning, nobody knows who's getting what.
So it's a big guess.
The only people knowing are at the end of the study
we're getting the data.
Then there's placebo control.
Placebo control means if we're gonna give someone,
if I'm gonna test something like an herb like turmeric
and I'm looking at inflammation and I've got 500 people
I'm gonna give 250 of them turmeric and the other 250 nothing at all
Something that looks like turmeric, but isn't you know like here's this pill and it's got like sugar in it or something like that and
Because is a very bad example because if you're testing for inflammation and you gave sugar pills
for inflammation and you gave sugar pills. You would have a life.
Skyrocketing.
That's a good point.
I don't know.
I just got to call you on it because if you fucking me on that one for sure.
Wow.
Looks like turmeric lowers blood.
Heroin.
That's everybody asleep.
Yeah.
So that's important double blind placebo control.
Do you want to see if it's peer reviewed?
In other words, has it been reviewed by other people in this field?
And then look at the consensus of studies.
There's made a analysis where they'll take many studies
on this subject and you're gonna see this general trend
because one study will point you in a direction
but rarely is one study conclusive.
It's typically gonna tell you,
oh wow, it looks like people who take multi vitamins
tend to live longer, let's do looks like, you know, people who take multivitamins tend to live longer.
Let's do more studies.
Let's do more studies.
And rarely ever can they duplicate a study exactly the same.
So many times, even like the best studies is like, okay,
take this in general, right?
Well, general speaking, this is what it's like.
It's a new variable.
It's interesting.
You say that.
So when even when they make the study as close to as the previous studies possible,
and they try to mirror it, even then there's a large minority, but it's not a majority, but still a large percentage, I forgot what it was, something like 20% or something that are never that are not able to be duplicated. So they'll take what I mean by that is they'll do the same study and the results are different. So they can't find the same results that were found with the first study.
That percentage goes up with psychological-based studies or behavioral studies.
Behavioral studies, I think something like 40% of them are, they can be duplicated.
They can't mimic them.
So they'll find like, oh, people who listen to this music tend to act this particular way or whatever.
Well, then they copy the study, comes out to listen.
Well, now you're getting me excited
because this is exactly what I was reading this morning
with Subliminal and they talk about,
that's because like 95% of the information
that our brain is downloading is unconscious.
Like, there's only a small percentage
is actually conscious that you're doing.
Your eyes are downloading information,
absorbing and taking it in.
So it's so easy for that to manipulate and become
make you biased on your decision.
So when you talk about behavioral science and stuff,
this is where this gets crazy.
Because they say that, are you really in control
of your movement, or is your movement happen
and then you perceive it right afterwards?
Well, and you could be walking into the study
and somebody says something to you,
that has nothing to do with the study right before
and it could influence and change how you react to certain questions.
I'll give you an example.
So, and you're right, and the brain can be primed to think certain things.
Right.
Well, I'll give you guys a good example.
I want you right now to imagine the color gray.
Just imagine the color gray.
Now really quick think of an animal.
And it's likely that you thought of an elephant.
Very likely. So I primed, you would say donkey. Now really quick think of an animal and it's like that. You thought of an elephant. Yeah, very likely
So I primed you said donkey. Yeah, yeah, it's very very likely that you thought of an elephant
And it's just there's lots of these tricks that happen
Well, you use it we use this in sales we use it in sales with leading leading questions right when you're you're leading people into a
Sale and a clothes and tie them down by getting them that you're priming them to say yes, right? Like, that's what magicians do.
Okay.
Yeah, they put an idea in your head and they're like,
oh, so fun.
But yeah, as far as studies are concerned,
they can direct you, look at the consensus,
look at the controls, that's another one.
How did they control the study?
I love to give this example because it's a classic one.
It wasn't that long ago, probably 30 years ago or so,
that coffee was thought to cause to be a carcinogen.
So it was thought that coffee was bad for you because the studies done on coffee drinker
showed that they had a higher rate of cancer.
The problem was in these studies, they never controlled for cigarette smoking.
And 30 years ago, people who drank lots of coffee also smoked a lot of cigarettes.
So it's just a basic example.
You want to look at controls.
How are they controlling the studies?
Look at all these things and then start to kind of form an opinion.
But I also don't want to throw out anecdote.
Although anecdote is not evidence, a lot of anecdote points to different directions.
And thankfully, because we have technology, we have the internet,
we can go on forums, we can read what people are saying,
and you can kind of figure things out
before studies come out.
For example, people have been talking
about how artificial sweeteners affect their gut poorly
way before the recent studies showing that it affects,
negatively affects the gut microbiome.
People have been talking about how certain things
will affect inflammation in a positive way,
way before studies come out saying,
oh yeah, they're absolutely right, eating these particular
foods or whatever, has good effects on inflammation.
So those are all the things you want to consider.
Or just fucking read Sal's Instagram page.
There you go.
I never quote Sal.
I never put down the study that people can still imagine.
Oh, I guess.
What's the source?
I get mad with people ass that.
Expect that.
Go to your work.
He's been 40 years of his life fucking doing it.
You should do it too.
He's like, oh, research.
Yeah, tell me.
That's crazy.
All right, next is Mick the Plant Man.
You guys talk about cardio not being a great component
of longevity and Ben Greenfield has shared
how triathlon training has significantly
decreased his telemere length. With that being said, how are the 60 plus year olds crushing
it? Tell Ben Greenfield I don't give a shit about his fucking telemere's. Fuck you Ben.
It's a hot topic. Yeah, right? So tell me what my telemere's are doing. So here, this
is a great topic. I have no idea.
Now telomeres are at the end of your DNA
and they are a good signal for aging.
So if you have your biological age
and then your telomere will tell you how old your body is
in terms of it's health or whatever.
You know, I feel like before you go further in the science here, I feel like there's going
to be a very fine line here that you're talking about.
Like you could easily over do that and have adverse effects from it too, from other parts
from the running all the time.
So you may have some benefits that show like, oh, for longevity, this part of running
is.
And to me, what, what are you saying?
So Ben Greenfield talked about a decrease,
meaning when he trained for a triathlon,
his body aged more rapidly.
Oh, I thought he was saying he can eat that. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, absolutely. That doesn't conflict with what we said. No, no, and I don't think he's saying that.
I think he's just saying, knowing that, knowing what we say
about cardio, knowing what Ben Greenfield said.
Oh.
Why is it that we see these 60 plus year olds
who are crushing it in these competitions?
Well, that, what's your goal?
You can, it doesn't make sense to her.
It's an ad movement.
Why'd you pick this question?
Well, this is not a very good question.
I'll tell you what's wrong with it. One agree with that with Ben like absolutely and you can be 60 years old and
Crushing your sport. I mean we talk about this all the time
I didn't mean well this is important because I mean optimal health. Thank you. It's important. What do they look like?
This is important because it's like I fucking eating you raisin well
It's what they look like. Eating and training.
You run that much.
Show me somebody who's been running for fucking 60 years.
It is kind of raisin, actually.
Tell me somebody who's been running for 60 plus years,
okay, and closer to that.
That doesn't look like a fucking skinny raisin.
So what do they look like?
Well, it's oxidative.
And it's not just that all skinny raisin people run very long.
That's not the correlation here.
It's fucking that. When you do that, it makes you look like that. Yeah, it's what just all skinny raising people run very long. That's not the correlation here. It's fucking that.
When you do that, this makes you look like that.
Yes, you look like a skinny raising disease.
So here's a thing.
It's a thing.
Hashtag.
That's a new hashtag.
We're starting.
Training and eating for maximum longevity
is not the same as training and eating
for maximum performance and vice versa.
If you train and eat to maximize your performance,
especially for stamina based and endurance based sports,
you are gonna be taking away from longevity.
That's a fact.
So I hate to say that, but if you're,
you know, you're kind of, you got a balance to do.
Now, if you're a competitive athlete,
this is your livelihood, do your thing.
If you're an everyday person that's
constantly fit and healthy,
this is something you should look at
because I could push my body and squeeze out
into the five pounds of muscle on it,
is it worth reducing my longevity and overall wellness?
No, it's not, because five pounds
isn't that fucking big of a difference anyway.
Same thing with taking 30 seconds off
of your marathon time or whatever.
So consider those two things, Longevity is very different.
In fact, when they do studies on the world's blue zones, this is where people live, you
have a disproportionate amount of people who live to 100 or older, more so than the rest
of the world, all of their activity, everything they do revolves around moderation.
It's all consistent daily, moderate, low to moderate, intense movement.
Yeah, it's been. daily, moderate, low to moderate, intensive, movement, active, moderate, everything.
They don't, none of them are hardcore exercises.
None of them are competing in powerlifting.
None of them are running marathons and doing CrossFit.
They're all just, they're very chill.
That's it.
They're chill.
They're active appropriately.
They challenge themselves kind of a little bit
on a daily basis, but nothing extreme a hardcore.
So yeah, training hardcore, like, theseyear-olds that are crushing it, they're
literally are crushing their back.
And they've got the benefit of, you know, they probably eat healthy and they move, so
they've got the benefit of that, but then they've got the judgment of overdoing it.
So, when they're not going to necessarily live through their 90 or something, they're probably
going to live to their normal age, life expectancy,
that the average person gets to who doesn't exercise and doesn't eat right.
See what I'm saying?
Right, yeah, I know.
I think that...
And I think somebody who's been running,
and I know we tease the runners all the time on here, right?
Like we're anti-running.
I pull up all the runners.
I just think that there's so many people in the running camp
that think it's the best thing for your body, just like we're anti-running. I just think that there's so many people in the running camp
that think it's the best thing for your body
because maybe they've been in the best shape of their lives
while they're running.
And I think that's mainly what we're always trying
to address to people.
It's like, no, and I definitely think that somebody
who decides to run and make healthy choices
of eating is far better off than the couch potato,
couch potato, who never exercises
and eats potato chips all day long.
Like, yeah, if we're comparing those two,
absolutely, I'd rather see somebody run themselves to death
than somebody on eat themselves to death on the couch.
The person running themselves to death
will probably outlast the person sitting on the couch
and eating themselves to death.
But both of them are not heading in the best way
for longevity for yourself,
and that's just the bottom line.
But performance is different than longevity.
Yeah, and there's quality of life.
Like, these 60-year-olds who are killing it and triathlon competitions.
They probably love what they're doing. They're probably having a lot of fun doing it. They're having a blast.
You know, okay, that's cool. Do you think, man? Like, you know, I love ice cream. Yeah.
Whatever, terrible.
Next. Our next question is from T Fluet.
Top five most functional lifts.
Here we go.
Let's start with number one.
Squat, for sure.
What is the number one most functional lift?
I think we're all going to say squat.
Right.
I wonder if we're going to disagree on all these.
I don't think we'll disagree on it, but I think everybody will have more.
You weigh out.
Oh, the order.
You want to go in order?
Yeah, let's go in order.
So most functional lift squad
It's got to be the squad for sure
What do you think the second most functional list deadlift? I'm gonna go over it press. I'm gonna go with zircher
Think about functionality everyday behaviors
How often do you walk around in a front loaded carry situation where you at to pick something up off the ground or grab to me.
Well, they're so similar.
I know, I know.
But if you're going in order,
one, then two like that, I feel like.
They're outranked, that's the thing.
Then you take that box and put it up on the shelf.
Deadlift is overhead pressing.
Deadlift is my third overhead press is my fourth.
Okay, because I would go barbell squat, deadlift,
then I would go overhead press,
then I would go bench press, then I would go bench press,
and then here's the problem with number five. I want to throw something in there that's
a bunch.
Rotational though, because everything's so like, you know, you could do a rotational lunge
or a multi-plainier lunge and now you're killing it.
Yeah, I would say that. What about some kind of a row or a pull up?
Well, no, you already, you got to, when you get your deadlift in there.
I guess. You got your deadlift in there. I guess. Yeah, you get your deadlift in there.
I don't know.
To me, I go squat, I think we all agree on squat.
I go searcher squat, even though they're similar,
I still think that you gotta get a front loaded,
holding something type of exercise.
Whether you, I mean, it's a good point.
You could combine the searcher with a multi-planeier lunge,
you get real functional here.
Yeah.
Well, you know, like, after want, you know, like, after,
after you hit the big three or so, I feel like it's kind of like,
you could, why would say goblet squat is very similar to just
zurcher squat, right?
Because it's like you're holding something in, but you're trying
to keep like, you're not really going to be lifting anything
that's like much bigger than your body.
Well, how about this?
Let's go this way.
What are the, what are the most functional or foundational
movements?
Because we can name like a zircher and a deadlift
are both kind of hip-hinging, right?
Like just the patterns.
Yeah, like what do they say they are?
There's like, they're squatting,
there's pushing horizontally, pushing overhead,
there's pulling, horizontally pulling from overhead,
you've got rotation, split stance, position, movements.
You know, lateral.
Yeah, you know, lateral type movements,
kind of, you know, lateral type movements.
You'd have to have something rotational in there.
So that's probably the only thing that we missed by all of us
because you got to have something that's,
so we're not stuck in the sagittal find on entire time.
So something's, yeah.
Well, I like caustic, but it's not like,
I mean, it's very functional,
but it's not like a staple.
You know, I give everybody, here's something controversial
that I think we'll agree on,
but maybe some people will freak out a little over.
What's more functional?
Overhead press or a bench press?
Overhead press.
Overhead press.
Yeah, all day.
And I know a lot of people are gonna argue with that
because it's part of the B3.
Who are you?
Just a simple fact that...
I mean, have the Arleafers?
Just a simple fact that one of them you're lying down
on a bench and you can take half of your body out
of the equation. It already makes it, that's not even a debate to me.
Someone tries to debate that.
Stabilizing your spine, like the same way, it's just like anything standing that you're
having to do with your feet planted on the ground is going to become more functional than
anything else.
And I see it being way more functional in all sports.
Which is also why I thought the whole stability ball craze of standing on the stability ball
and just about that is funny that we call that functional because how often will you ever stand on a fucking round ball
That's about to roll somewhere like in the circus. Right exactly. You were in the circus. That's a functional movement. Otherwise
Not very function. Yeah, back in the day that was a test of strength was overhead press. It wasn't
Benchpress came in later much later at press. Yeah, that's a great way to do it. You want a rotation?
Yeah, let's add the Benchpress for, yeah, the rotation.
So there you go, there's your rotational overhead strength
and hip hinge all in one.
I mean, that's, yeah, I like that one.
Did we make a Benchpress video for YouTube?
Yeah, just did.
Did I do long time ago?
Long time ago.
Long time ago.
At the other gym.
Oh good, so you can go to our YouTube channel
and look up the Benchpress.
It is an old school, extremely functional movement. Oh, Timmy. For you body go to our YouTube channel and look up the bend press. It is an old school
Extremely functional movement. Oh, Timmy for you bodybuilder types for people who like to develop your mind pump TV It'll give you
Incredible back and dealt the watch your back. Yeah, that's a delicate movement if you haven't rotated like that before
Thank you for listening to mind pump if your goal is to build and shape your body
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