Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 700: Lost Episode from the Mind Pump Vault- Mobility & Range of Motion
Episode Date: February 5, 2018This episode was recorded one year ago and was never aired. The conversation is classic Mind Pump, a variety of topics, some off color humor and then some actionable discussion on mobility and range o...f motion. “Goddammit Doug!” Find out who created the phrase? (2:52) Justin “Sports Center” Andrews at his finest…The guys talk old school cartoons. (4:00) Can you break your dick? Yes, the guys go there! They also share stories about getting into fights and what they would do. (8:50) Can you break your dick? Yes, the guys go there! They also share stories about getting into fights and what they would do. (8:50) Coming in with a low standard. The guy talk about the Lululemon seminar they held for a runner’s group! (14:56) Mobility and range of motion masterclass to master the squat and get the competitive edge (20:46) Be willing to compromise and becoming aware (32:00) Changing the focus of your goals (37:35) Range of motion vs. Controlled range of motion (39:10) Frequency is king! The guys give actionable tips to start. (48:05) How do the guys stay motivated? (57:33) Links/Products Mentioned: Day 30: Which MAPS Program is for YOU?? - 30 Days of Training (MIND PUMP) The Fall Guy (TV Series 1981–1986) – IMDb Airwolf (TV Series 1984–1986) – IMDb The A-Team (TV Series 1983–1987) – IMDb What REALLY Happens When You Fracture Your Penis - Men's Health Lululemon MAPS Prime Pro Bundle - Mind Pump Media The 'Third World' Squat: Can Holding This Position Daily Unlock Elite Athletic Performance? Squatty Potty The Original Bathroom Toilet Stool 7"- White Younger is not always better when it comes to learning a second language Structural brain changes related to bilingualism: does immersion make a difference? Aerial silk routine - training – (YouTube) Here's Everything You Need To Know Before Trying Aerial Circus Classes Dunphy Squat- Improve Your Squat with this Secret Exercise – (YouTube) Tension Squat- Increase Squat Depth with this Simple Exercise – (YouTube) Mind Pump TV – (YouTube) People Mentioned: Dr. Justin Brink (@premiere_spine_sport) Instagram Dr. Terry Wahls (@terrywahls) Instagram Jessica Rothenberg (@thetraininghour) Instagram Jon Call (@jujimufu) Instagram Adam Schafer (@mindpumpadam) Instagram Sal Di Stefano (@mindpumpsal) Instagram Justin Andrews (@mindpumpjustin) Instagram Doug Egge (@mindpumpdoug) Instagram Enjoy! 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 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 You insure your car but do you insure YOU? If you don’t, and you are the primary breadwinner, you will likely leave your loved ones facing hardship and struggle if you die (harsh reality). Perhaps you think life insurance is expensive, but if you are fit and healthy, you can qualify for approved rates that are truly inexpensive and affordable. To find out if you qualify for the best rates in the industry, go get a quote at www.HealthIQ.com/mindpump 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)
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mite, op, mite, op with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
We got a little something special today.
We went in the vault.
We went back in the vault and got an episode that we forgot about.
It's a one-year anniversary.
It's a year old.
We totally forgot about this episode. Never aired it.
Which by the way, motherfuckers, keep in mind.
That's almost 400 episodes ago.
So I like to think they were a little more refined.
So fucking be nice here a little bit.
Dude, we're not as sharp.
Bro, I was, so when Doug sent us the file,
he's like, hey, here's an old episode.
What do you guys want to do with this?
I was listening to it and I was pissing my pants
the entire time.
Well, I said we got to play this.
I'm like, I think, I mean, hopefully, I mean, I know it's nice to stay current, but this
is nice.
It's football Sunday.
Super balls going on right now.
So a lot of people will be watching that.
We thought this would be a cool time to drop an old episode that we did that we've never released
before.
Hopefully everybody enjoys it.
But yeah, it was pretty good.
Dude, it's a funny throwback.
It's hilarious.
We do talk about mobility in there.
That's one of the main topics, but it's just
classic mind pump banter.
So it's, we're having a great time with it.
So we hope you enjoy this episode.
Also, I do want to say a couple things.
Last month, we had a huge promotion.
People were enrolling in all of our programs like Crazy.
This month, we still have the bundles. Just like we did last month, you could do the Super Bundle,
which is a year long of exercise programming.
We have the Prime Bundle, which this episode talks about mobility.
The Prime Bundle is designed specifically for mobility and correctional exercise.
We still have that on our site.
And we have a couple other bundles that combine our other programs together, and we have individual programs.
Here's the thing, a lot of people have questions, which programs are best for me?
Which one needs this kind of equipment? Can I do this in a home gym? Can I do this at home? Can I do this?
How many days a week? All those questions can be answered for you on our website, mindpumpmedia.com.
Just click on the program, watch the video where I break it down. We also did a great video on YouTube.
So if you guys aren't following our YouTube, Mind Pump TV, we just recently closed out
the 30 days of fitness with Mind Pump, where we actually created a calendar for you guys
and a free workout with mobility days every day.
And then at the end of it, we had so many questions about where to go from there and more
detail about the programs and basically what what avatar fits which one of our programs.
So if you've been thinking about getting one of the programs for a long time and you wanted
to explain it a little bit more depth, you can go to the YouTube channel, look at one of
the last videos, I'll have Jackie, because Jackie does the show notes, I'll have her put
a link in the show notes for you guys where you guys can go directly to that video and
watch that detail.
Excellent.
So without any further ado, enjoy classic mind pump.
Here you go.
We're gonna do it out here to get it upgrade here.
What's going on?
Wow.
It's interesting.
Yours is different than mine and Justin.
It is.
Cause we know that you two are the favorite.
Spotted.
You are for sure at least.
I don't think we're so much the favorites
as you're the least favorite.
You know what I'm saying?
It's not like that outcast. It's like, hey, I like them the most. It's more like I like to release. It's a very
different. It's all that harassment like you put Doug through all day. Yeah. Who's the one
that invented the phrase? God damn it, Doug. Yeah. That's become a meme everywhere. It's a
it's a yeah, it's a catcher's ad and stuff. God damn it. Anything that happens. Oh, fuck,
it's raining outside. God damn it, Doug.
Damn it, Doug.
Yeah.
People are starving and half, God damn it, Doug.
It's Doug.
Damn it.
Damn it.
Everybody needs a fall guy, yeah.
Hey, do you guys ever watch that show?
What's that?
Wow, that was an old school show, the fall guy.
The fall guy?
You remember that shit?
I was like, he had, he had, so it was like,
I don't, I watched as a kid, so I probably interpreted it wrong,
so I have no fucking idea what,
oh, I remember what it was about.
He was a stunt guy.
That was his job, but then he kinda like fought crime,
and should I think?
Was this during the like the Magnum PI kind of era?
Yeah, but he had this like sick like pickup truck,
and he would always, at every episode,
he'd jump something with it.
It was like, what?
Yes, it was like the, when we kids, when was it? it. It was like, what? Yes.
Yeah, it was like the,
when we kids, when was it?
That was like the golden era of TV.
Then he had like, air wolf,
in the air, like,
all of the AT,
the air wolf,
the AT was a bit bad.
Air wolf was the fucking big dick of military.
I actually was,
I was actually thinking about getting a say,
but in the,
best song ever.
Best song ever.
How's he gonna remember that?
He remembers every little fucking studio.
But what they did is they
Sal has a photographic marry for science studies.
You can just to remember commercials.
I remember all commercial, all TV.
That's a song.
That was a song.
He couldn't be more,
any more like my best friend Justin.
That's what we call him sports center
because he remembered like the guy just remembers
the most random fucking numbers and facts. Well, so here's the thing about you apply that to something that
makes us millions of dollars maybe I am right now so let's put him on a game show what if I know he
shit that's so let me ask it was air wolf again I was young what was the premise like they had this
badass helicopter and they fought crime with it seems It seems excessive. Yeah, it was the crazy one, right?
The crazy copter that was...
Yeah, hella fast and it had frickin' the mini guns on it.
Yeah, they have missiles or mini guns.
Everything.
I had everything on it.
Oh, shit.
That was the era of like super...
Because night right now.
It was all about helicopters, dude.
Because even Magnum PI, he had that...
Buddy that had a helicopter.
It just seems excessive.
It seems excessive to me or whatever. Like if you're fighting regular crime, like, oh shit. Yeah, but you Magnum P.I. he had that buddy that had a helicopter. It just seems excessive. It seems accepted to me or whatever
Like if you're fighting regular crime like oh shit. Yeah, he needs a helicopter that guy's mugging that person over there in a fast car
Get the air wolf which is a military bait. You know, it's a fucking got missiles
You know what I'm saying? Well don't you shit? You just blew up the whole shit. Don't shoot some shit
Don't you think that was kind of the beginning of the era of like where we like a lot of TV
Oh, you need a van when you think about a lot of like our TV the era of like where we, like a lot of TV, you need a van.
When you think about a lot of like our TV shows,
like even like the Westworld, a lot of them are based
on like real stuff that's going on
that we just, not a lot of people know about, you know?
Yeah.
They take a little bit of it in the next band.
It would be like that.
Yeah, of course like,
Aero Wolf, there's probably not a guy
who did like what he did in the show, right?
It wasn't as cheesy as that.
But they take from some, you know.
A brand like stealth helicopters. Yeah, yeah, of course they
I think the technology was around by the
So look who we're at now, dude, so those are everybody thinks is aliens. It's just fucking advancing
So those are 80 shows and the 80s was the era of like the end of the cold was towards the end of the Cold War
It was about like big-time militarization like Cold War. It was about like big time militarization,
like big guns.
It was fucking Schwarzenegger and Stallone
and blowin' shit up.
Huge.
And so it just spilled over into TV, I think.
And so that you had the A team
who had that fucking mini band.
I'm getting us that band.
Dude, no you're not.
Tell me, how would you say,
we just went to a, last night we went to a seminar.
I was gonna roll out.
It's gonna roll out.
It's gonna roll out. It's gonna roll out. It's gonna roll out. It's gonna roll out. It's gonna roll out. It's gonna roll out. Like we just went to last night we went to a seminar. I don't know if we would have rolled up to Lou lemon and came out of our black
18 fucking vans roll out tell me people would not be like holy shit
But I want it also would have chained gold chains all over him. Oh, we he be not like strap like fake grenades
Oh, he'll be Mr. Dean you can't do that anymore. I'm being a fool. You can't do that
I'm down. Well, I wouldn't't have to paint my skin or that.
I would just have hair or that was crazy.
I wouldn't be crazy like that.
There's traces.
I wouldn't do that.
You could come out blackface.
No, you can't get away with that.
I'm just trying to be Mr. T.
I'm the man behind the man.
No, I don't know how the hell he got away with that.
What do you mean?
That was epic.
Trisha's comedy. Trisha's comedy. Yeah, that's great. No, I was glad he did the hell he got away with that. What do you mean? That was epic. Trizos comedy.
Trizos comedy.
Yeah, that's great.
No, I was glad he did.
We're technically in the comedy.
Aren't we, aren't we, right?
Doug, we're in the comedy in fitness.
Fitness and comedy.
That's right, we do that to cover our ass.
No, we can, yeah, no, we can get away with what we want.
We can say some bullshit.
Peter Foo, I do want to vent like you guys.
We were comedy.
But first, fitness second.
But besides, missiles and shit,
I would also like in the back a rotating bed inside the van. Oh, oh, no, that's yeah, that's special
I haven't you ever wanted years like on ceiling. Maybe haven't you ever wanted to do it in a moving car?
You know what I'm saying that that would get crazy exactly. Oh, I see yeah
Yeah, it's all bumping around and then you're in the back. No, it's driving. It's lots of course stability
I mean a lot of stuff going on. Yeah, trust you got trust the driver. New driving. It's lots of core stability. A lot of stuff going on.
Yeah, trust the driver.
Can people see inside?
I don't know.
It's exciting.
You know what I mean?
All those factors, I feel like, would make it a van
that you had sex and while it was driving.
Is there a porn that you didn't know?
The porn.
Sounds a freak.
Sousa grig and safe.
Sounds very, yeah.
No, no, someone else is driving.
You'd be stabbing not.
You know, things.
It's an example of not safe sex. What
That's an example. Hey, yeah, hey Adam. How did you break your dick? Well?
I was having sex in the in the team van
Over a speed bump. We're in San Francisco. We had a bump. Oh
Snap the right in half
That's not even funny. Why is that? You can't make a pogos.
Why can't we make dick jokes like that without everybody going,
ooh, because we know we were, we weren't Katrina and I were just at a movie.
We just saw, uh, can you really break your dick?
Yeah.
Is that possible?
Yes.
You can, that was weird the way I said that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh my god.
Yeah.
So certain.
It's like, he's like three times for me actually.
It's like, it's like, it's so glad you out. It's like three times for me actually
It's so glad you out! It's like you went backwards and puberty like I'm gonna go back
No, yeah, you definitely can break your dick
For sure
Wow
Yeah, there's places
I'll see pictures
You hear a snap
You hear a snap
Oh
Massive internal bleeding
Can we stop
Can we change the subject please?
And then And then
And then you get a bone
uh... but you can break the the the tissue it's the what is the
tissue called cavernica
cavernica fuck i remember
it's not the cuckoo cut that the corpus callosum that's in the brain
but anyway
it uh... it getting your heads mixed up
it snaps and then and then i think many times your penis then is misshapen
well now you have a wonderful,
you know, we're in like some scar tissue build up.
You could probably add an inch to it or so.
So, circumference wise,
it could be a strategy for some people.
Just repeatedly break your name.
So, I was saying,
I was starting to tell you guys we were in the theater.
Katrina and I just watched,
it was before we watched Founder, right?
So, I told you guys we went and saw Founder Ray Crock,
but it was another movie we watched.
And it wasn't a good movie,
but there was a scene where the guy gets just from behind,
comes up and just kicks, gets kicked in the dick,
like full everything, right?
And it was so funny,
because the whole theater, all the men,
oh, I did like this perfect timing,
like harmony.
Katrina Surtz lavish,
she goes, oh my God, did you hear all the mitt?
Like every, like, you know, it's like it's seen.
Everyone's in the scene, right?
This is action scene.
Oh, whoo, whoo, and then,
and then the scene comes with a guy gets kicked.
Oh, the whole audience at what,
like it was like all at one time.
It's because, and they say men are empathetic.
We're empathizing.
Only for that.
Ooh, we can feel, you know,
it, girls hurt too when they get kicked in the front,
but it hurts them too.
The front butt?
Yeah, but never is pulvicitis foot.
I call it kudur.
I call it dekudur.
You never heard of that term, the front butt.
Kudur punch.
Yeah, if they get kicked there hard, it hurts too.
There's a lot of nerves there.
It can get them a fat lip.
It's not good.
Oh, man.
Wow.
Yeah, so you don't wanna kick anybody in the groinish area.
Although they have those Kung Fu masters,
have you seen the videos?
Where they can somehow summon their Chi
and just repeatedly receive blows to the neck
and handle it somehow.
Is that all about?
I've seen those videos where there's like a dude
and he's like, oh, yeah.
And then they'll go by and they'll hit him in the back
with a two by four, boom, two by four,
they'll hit him in the head and it will, four boom two by four They'll hit him in the head and it will make it to and then he did kicks and that's the last move
Someone comes up and just blast him in the dick several times
You've never seen these videos and the guys just chill. I have yeah
Have you ever have you ever been in a fight where someone's hit you and kicked you in the dick or even they're punched you in the
Dick before no, I had some guy Trent twist twist my off that's I did that wow you
twisted it guys yeah yeah that was in the bottom of a rugby scrum this guy's
fucking just just squeezing the shit out of my nuts did he really yeah I just
like put you away out I was punching and scratching my way out did it was
horrible and you but you actually did do that I remember you said some guy got on
top you yeah yeah he was a wrestler I mean wrestler guy get on top of me I'm not
a wrestler and fuck first thing I did was grab his dick real some guy got on top of you. Yeah, yeah, he was a wrestler. I mean, wrestler guy got on top of me. I'm not a wrestler.
And the first thing I did was grab his dick.
Real quick, I was on top.
Real quick.
That is the move.
It is.
Yeah, I remember there's like a group of people
that were, of course, you know, there's always a bunch of,
you know, people standing by, cheering fights on when fights happen.
Uh, and I remember everyone going,
oh, you just, oh, you can't do that.
You can't do that.
Oh, look, this is a fight, bro.
I'm trying to live right now.
To do what?
Rules? This is going to rule. You to live right now to do what a rules.
Who's gonna rules?
You know what's funny?
To your mother rules.
If you think rules are to street fight,
who makes the best thing?
If you think about it, if you're in a street fight
and your primary, like your number one go to moves are,
I'm gonna pick three moves, you ready?
Okay.
Kick them in the dick.
Yes.
Number one.
Bite.
Yep, bite.
And poke in the eyes.
You're probably gonna win. Yeah. You're guaranteed a win. I'll give you a strategy. Bite. Yep, yep, bite. And poke in the eyes. You're probably gonna win.
Yeah.
You're guaranteed a win.
All great strategy.
And the funny thing is,
those are the last things that I would think to use.
And a fight because immediately I'm thinking,
punch, jujitsu, but the reality is I should just bite
the motherfucker and kick him in the nuts.
Absolutely.
And like eat a piece of his face off,
punch, kick him in the nuts,
and then you'll win every time.
And just act really crazy.
We talk about paradigm shifting.
We saw those guys that just take their pants off,
and then everybody's like,
oh, I don't want to run away.
I don't watch that video.
Oh, that would be pretty funny too.
Get ready to get a fight and get naked,
but it totally works.
Yeah, cause you're like,
oh, it's crazy.
Could you imagine being in like a bar or a situation like that
with all this testosterone ego going,
fuck you, no fuck you man,
push each other back for them
You're like oh, yeah, and you just get naked. Yeah, I'm ready
You ready motherfucker? Oh, yeah, yeah either he's too ready if you get naked
They'll probably won't want to fight or if you just take a shit those two things right there are probably guaranteed to avoid a fight
I don't know anybody. It's another great stretch. I don't need anybody in the world that will want to fucking Tussle with you when you shit yourself
I'm cool. I'm cool. I don't need that
Is that a real word or I just make that? It's a good word actually
Sounds like a yeah, it sounds like a yeah, you guys are kind of like Southwestern you can tussle with your lady too though
You guys are kind of like Southwestern you can tussle with your lady too though Tussle you need to do a tussle this week
You can tussle with your lady to a treasure trove of flowers
You know it you know what Adam did earlier gave a treasure trip Adam. We got in a big old tussle
Adam took some neutropics and his verbal fluency is just approved
He's he's he's several words that's never
He's a trove I've been dying to patrol somewhere I
Figured I combined it with that one. Yeah, it's kind of like beetroot
Does it work? I mean like his word yeah, anyway, I just thought of a good Instagram handle now
If you're like if you're like one of those chicks like wrestles dudes and it's kind of like those fetish things
You could call yourself like tussle with muscle or something like that
That's what muscle tussle I bet or something like that. That's what muscle, yeah, muscle, tussle. I bet you that's already taken.
Someone's done that already.
Let's hash that.
Let's try.
How'd you guys get new muscle?
How'd you guys like the seminar last night at lemon?
Lululemon.
Lululemon.
Lululemon.
Lululemon.
Yeah, you know what?
I have to say that was probably Katrina was asking me like my assessment of it when we left
and she goes, what do you think we think she's all nervous because she was like, I felt like, you know, there
wasn't, I was really disappointed. I wish there was more people there. And I thought,
well, you know, I actually thought it was a decent showing considering where we're at.
I mean, that was a small setting to try and fit 100 plus people in there. So I said,
you know, I don't think it could get more challenging of a group of people for us to
talk to. It was a running runner's group.
Yeah, it was a runner's group.
And they're immediately looking at us
and they're thinking like, right away.
Yeah, right away.
Who are these assholes?
Me, yeah.
Nobody, literally like, I mean, there's like a handful
of people that actually lift weights.
Everybody else are avid runners.
Some of them were ultra marathon runners.
They were running group.
The only group I could think of that could be more challenging talking to would be possibly a
CrossFit group. I think it would be easier. I think it would be easier to stay lift. Exactly. That's
why I said, I don't, that's why I told Katrina, I said, I think that went the best it possibly could
because nobody left. We didn't have to. Anyway, quite a few people looked very interested. I had
a lot of people stay afterwards.
I saw you guys, but we were all busy talking
to a line of people afterwards.
So we definitely struck a chord.
I think that I was surprised.
I think they were surprised.
I got more wisdom.
I think they were surprised that we knew
what we were talking about.
Because I think they looked at us.
Well, that was the most common thing that Michelle
and everybody came up and told me afterwards,
like, hey, those guys were really smart
automatic right we get judgeable or really smart or we just exceeded their
expectations
it's more of a step above the initial pressure
it's not hard when you've been and maybe that's the you know that works toward
vanish
looking like a budget dummy come in like with a very low standard
it's a great strategy.
I barely even shaved.
I mean, you know, it's true.
I mean, yeah, we appear super smart just because
we looked the way we do and we're in the fit and industry.
If we were all, that's what's going for us.
If we were all neurobiologists, we'd be idiots.
Yeah.
Hi, my name's Salmon, neurobiologist.
I'm from God.
He's way dumber than I thought he was.
For a neurobiologist, he's a retard.ural, I'm off the way. I'm from Denver. God, he's way dumber than I thought he was. For a Neurobalologist, he's a retard.
I got a lab coat.
But for a new head trainer, I'm a fucking genius.
That's right.
I had a good time with you.
We know what we're doing.
I had a great time there talking to people.
Here's the thing about Lululemon.
It's definitely not my typical scene,
and here's a lesson that I learned last night
with Lululemon.
I learned a very, very good lesson because even as much as I try not to get a, you know,
preconceived notion about a place or people or whatever, you're still lingers.
There's still this little bit that'll happen.
And what I mean is I went in there, we did our thing, it was great.
And then she's like, hey, I'm going gonna give you guys 40% off Lululemon clothes
I never buy Lululemon clothes because to me Lululemon just seems
For girls, you know, I'm saying it just kind of seems for girls. It seems like it's it's a little bit
It's yoga-ish, which is cool. There's nothing wrong with that
But it just doesn't seem like something that I'd want to wear
Because I had that preconceived notion. Well, I tried on some of their clothes,
and I'm wearing some of their sweats right now.
Let me tell you something right now.
Fucking sexy.
They're comfortable.
No, we gave you compliments coming in rock and roll.
They got good clothes, like really, really good,
high quality stuff, and it looks really good.
So I'm mad that I never really took them seriously.
Yeah, they're thoroughly impressed.
It's a little tough though.
I mean, their sizes are,
they're not quite designed for me.
Like, you're quite made into the meat market yet.
Yeah, like, most of the stuff I have to wear from there
is like double XL, because their XL is kind of like a,
I mean, you're wearing, what's that double XL?
They do, but the double XL just gets wider.
I hate that.
I think you're just fat. Yeah, it's exactly
it's a double upsell. You're one of us or you're fat. If you've ever put like if you've ever shopped and you put like
An exhale shirt and a double exhale shirt like lay him over the top of each other. It's not longer. It's just wider
Yeah, it's just wider. So that's the frustrating part for a guy like me is I don't need it
In fact, it could be a large as far as how narrow it
is. I'd need it to be longer. So it doesn't turn into a belly. So you're more of a
more of a not so much of a width person. You're more of a length person.
It's a good close. Yeah, we're identified. We're talking about my shirts, right? Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's time. That's. Yeah.'s turned out, it's turned out. Yeah, that's true.
You know, it's interesting.
We talked a lot, so we're obviously talking
to a group of runners and we figured,
God, the best thing we could possibly talk about
with these people that they'd probably be interested in
would be one rep max powerlifting.
Just kidding.
We talked about, we talked about priming their body
before.
Priming and mobility.
I told you, we should have just started off
like flexing and doing a whole routine.
What I wanted to say is I was going to introduce everybody and I was going to introduce myself, Adam, and then I was going to say, and I'd also like to welcome Justin Andrews, the world's heaviest ultra marathon runner.
Just to say a thing.
Oh my God, I wish you would have done that.
You know what?
Next time I'll wear a medal and we'll totally go with it.
Yeah, I won this medal.
I wonder how many people I've been in.
I'm in the world's fastest cancer battle world.
Record you, the happiest fucking older marathoner.
This isn't add up.
To give you guys context, the normal you can hear him miles away.
The average marathon runner would need to carry two other marathon runners
in order to equal the girth and weight.
It's like a seven day challenge
you have to eat somebody to finish.
Yeah, so, but anyway, so, no,
but we talked a lot about mobility and stuff
and we talked about, at one point Adam,
you were talking about squatting, sitting in a squat,
getting into a squat.
You know, it's been a while since we kind of went down this,
I think it was last year, mid last year.
We went on this little kick where every other episode or so,
we were doing just on like a body part or,
and I remember that we all had great feedback and we said,
you know what, we need to make sure that we still visit
some of the basics because, you know what, we need to make sure that we still visit some of the basics
because we get so caught up in all
like the new cutting edge science or what's new here
and what's new there and like the competitive edge
of everything and it's like, you know what,
so many people neglect the basics and or totally just
don't understand the importance of it
and understand that focusing on that
and mastering that will benefit us so much more
than all these other little things that we talk about
or people are much more asked questions
about getting the competitive edge.
So much more, when you think about the squat,
we're not talking about working out with squats,
although those are obviously also squats,
we're just talking about just being able to get into a full
sit-down
Feater flat. Yeah, feet are flat. You've got good posture. You're comfortable
squat position
You know, some people call it and I don't necessarily like this name because it's a little
I find it a little offensive, but they call it a third third world squat where you see people who sit in a squat and they'll pick rice.
It's like a resting position.
Right.
For most of the rest of the world.
What people don't realize is it is a very, very basic, normal, natural part of human function.
And in modern societies, we've eliminated it out of our day because when we sit, we sit in chairs.
When we poop, we poop on a toilet,
that's a chair, we never squat,
we never do anything in that bottom position,
and we completely lose our ability to do something
that our bodies are completely designed,
that are designed or have evolved to do.
And if you don't believe me, the average toddler,
the average toddler who learns how to walk can sit in a squat,
and in fact, when they play, many times they do sit in a squat.
Something we're designed to do, just like walking or standing, but because we never do it anymore,
we've lost that ability.
And along with losing that ability, we lose a lot of the benefits of being able to sit in
that position, that comfortable position.
And I'll use myself as an example.
I mean, here I am, a guy that works out,
consistently has done so for a very, very long period of time.
And I lost my ability to sit in a squat.
Now I could do a barbell squat
and I can get down to parallel
and maybe even a little below parallel.
And for me, that was my assessment of a squat.
Can I squat slightly below parallel with heavy weight?
I'm cool, I'm happy.
I can do this.
But as we started getting deeper and deeper
into human movement and mobility,
and especially watching your progress, Adam,
with being able to sit into a squat
and then working with Dr. Brink.
And here I am, I can't fucking do it.
Like I can't sit in a squat.
Why can't I sit in a squat?
This is like something I should be able to do.
Part of me was like, almost in disbelief.
Like there's, I think there's something wrong with my hips.
I just can't get down there.
I feel like something's locking up.
I feel like it just doesn't work.
And then going through testing and finding that,
actually do have that range of motion
when I'm laying on the floor,
just when I'm standing, I can't get into a squat. And now I've been practicing over the last, I'd say three or four months,
and now I can finally sit in a squat. It's not comfortable, but I can do it. And I made such huge
improvement. Huge improvement over the last three months. And I'm noticing the benefit
in other exercises and stuff that I'm doing, and it just really solidifies just how important
that fucking position is.
Like it's so important to be able to get into a squat
and just sit into a squat made for it.
We're totally made for it.
In fact, there's that squatty potty product,
which is actually quite popular,
which is basically a step stool
that you put your feet on when you're sitting on the toilet.
I give kudos to Onet for having them in their bathroom stalls. That's right when we went on
that they had a little squatty potty. And what it does is it puts you in this squat position
because that posterior pelvic tilt is actually quite beneficial to being able to poop and that humans
probably sat in that position to poop. Women giving birth probably sat in that position to poop.
Women giving birth probably sat in that position, giving birth.
And now in hospitals, they include these little harnesses or whatever
these, like, lower health.
I remember that because when my wife, like initially, because
everything that she's done has been so, like, clinical and
medical-based because she works in a hospital and everything.
So she really wanted to kind to go outside of that and research more about natural ways.
I think God, we didn't do a natural birth at home or something crazy like that, but
pretty much utilized a lot of those different positions and techniques and squats and all
these kinds of things.
We had a doula to help with the process of that, which I thought was really cool.
And but yeah, there was a lot of natural positions like that that helped to kind of move things
along if you use your body.
Oh, so she was standing and squatting.
How did she, now how did she, when it was time to deliver your kids, did you do the epidural?
No.
So she didn't do anything.
No.
How did she deliver the baby on her back?
Were she standing? Well, she kind of started in a lot of different positions and then ended up
on her back. Okay. So she was moving to get it going and then she actually went on her back. Yeah,
exactly. Wow. That's making Adam really uncomfortable. Wow. Wow. That's really cool. Yeah, it was
awesome. I mean, one of the things to keep in mind is when we're talking about this, is we need
to differentiate between range of motion and control range of motion.
Right.
Because those are two very big things, you know what I'm saying?
So, I don't know if you want to get into a little bit of that.
Well, you know, I think something too that I noticed because this was something that,
I think the way you feel right now, I remember going through this in this last year.
It's been life changing for me, really has.
I've been somebody who's battled with low back pain for years and years and years and
it was the reason why I didn't squat.
And anytime I would squat, man, my low back would just light on fire.
And then I would avoid it for a while, then I'd revisit it, and I'd be like, God, I just
no joke, I would do a couple sets.
And anything over five plus reps, I'd be laying on the floor, and my low back would just
be on fire.
And so I just justified not doing them.
And it was, and I heard Brain Class night talk about that and
that's this people go like, you know, stop squatting because the squat hurts them. And
it's like, no, the squat didn't hurt me. And the squat's not what's hurting me. It's
my mechanics or what's hurting me. You hurt you. Yeah, I hurt me. And you know, once I
started looking at it like that, and then we started addressing all the issues I had
that was keeping me from able to go down all the way into a baby position.
I started to notice relief in my low back and I was sleeping better.
All my other movements became better.
And it isn't so much that the squat relieved all that.
It's all the work I had to put in to get to where I could squat full range of motion. So the opening up the hips and working on my ankle mobility,
that's what relieved all this pressure that I had
in the whole hip complex that was bothering my low back so much.
And it really, it wasn't a lot of hard work.
It was just a lot of consistent things
that I needed to apply to my day.
I think once that kind of light bulb went off for me
that, hey, I don't need to do these
like long stretching sessions or go
in row in some yoga class.
I need to find a couple of these moves
that are making an impact and opening my hips up
and I just need to just do them as much as I
possible. You know, God damn, you know what? It's so true with all types of learning and I want to be
very clear before I forget this, this kind of just popped up in my mind. One of those epiphanies on how
you can communicate certain things and we got to keep in mind it's very important to communicate
things in different
ways, because people, one of those ways might resonate with someone and they'll finally fucking get it.
And here's just something that just really strongly resonated with me, is that you're not training
your body, you're not, you know, trying to improve flexibility through doing all these different,
you know, movements, what you're doing is you're trying to learn, okay, whether your body learns or
your brain learns,
it's all the same fucking thing.
You're just learning something new.
And if I wanted to learn a new language,
okay, you talk to anybody who's ever learned another language.
The most effective way to learn a new language
is to immerse yourself in an environment
where people speak that language.
It's far more effective than taking hardcore learning classes,
you know, one hour, two hour classes a day.
It's much more, you learn much better
if you're just kind of exposed to it throughout the day
because it's where you're at.
You're in that country.
And even though you're speaking English,
you hear a lot of French still and you're exposed to it.
Your brain learns better that way.
The body learns better that way as well.
So rather than interesting that we have such a disconnect
to that, so we think that just by doing this occasionally
or just in the very beginning,
you're just gonna absorb all of that.
Like your body's gonna respond exactly to that
that same protocol every time.
And though you haven't really gone through the part
where you really have to teach it to do that.
That's what I'm saying.
I think people think of like,
oh my God, I gotta get better mobility.
So what I'm gonna do is I'm gonna dedicate
one hour three days a week to working on mobility,
which sounds like a lot, right?
If you're talking, if you hear that, you think,
wow, that person's really committed,
they're dedicating one hour, three days a week,
just stretching a mobility, and it's way better than nothing. You're dedicating one hour, you know, three days a week, just stretching a mobility,
and it's way better than nothing.
You're definitely gonna get benefits,
way better than nothing, but it will not compare
to the individual who just throughout the day
fucks around with mobility.
You don't need to dedicate an hour of intense mobility,
it's just literally 10 times during the day
while I'm doing something, I get in sitting a squat, or I sit in this position
that I'm stretching my hip,
or I put myself in a position where I have to support myself,
just works on that mobility.
Are you hover poo?
Yeah, that, exactly.
That makes so much bigger of a difference,
and I'm watching you do that, Adam,
I'm starting to do that now, and it's like,
fuck, it's like night and day,
I don't have to even dedicate an hour to it at all.
No, it's not that.
I just do it throughout the day.
It's not even that it's not daunting at all.
It's not, it doesn't need to be this,
it doesn't need to be this huge session
or this workload.
It's super structured.
Yeah, you know, last night, and it's such a common question,
right?
So last night when we were talking to this group,
you know, the girl raised her hand and she's like,
okay, well, you know, what are some, you know,
simple things that I can do and, you know, how fast can I do?
Like it's like, everybody wants to know like,
how little can I do with this and, you know, see?
How fast am I gonna get fixed?
Yeah, exactly.
And how fast am I gonna get fixed? And,, exactly. And how fast am I going to get fixed?
And, uh,
Brink made a really good point of saying that, listen,
if you're, if you're dealing with aches and pains
and, and you know, something isn't right with your body, um,
and yet you have this passion for running or you have this
passion for lifting weights or, you know, this passion for a sport
that you love to play and you're like, okay like, okay, Adam, what do I need to do
to fix this while I'm playing?
What is it?
And the real answer is that if you really care
about getting rid of the pain and learning to move better,
then that needs to become the priority,
and then everything else you kind of fit into that.
And I think that's where we go wrong.
First, is that becomes the mentality is where
we don't want to interrupt, you know,
what we're currently doing that we love to do so much.
You want to maintain whatever performance you have
and you don't want to see any numbers drop.
Yeah, ever.
And when in fact, if you were willing
to go through the process of allowing some of these metrics to kind of
fall a bit to really build and fortify your joints and range of motion and strength in
these ranges of motion.
You come back, you exceed, you know, those numbers.
But you get your name.
That's the, I'm not going to be able to exceed it.
If you don't, you know, if you're not willing to compromise that.
That's the irony and the whole thing.
The irony is, if you stop, if you stop doing all your intense training
so that you could dedicate your time to working on correcting
imbalances or eliminating pain or improving mobility,
the irony is at the end of it all, at the end of the long cycle,
when you go back to your intense training
and you get back into getting performance also, you're going to end up better off from a performance standpoint
anyway.
That's the irony, and it's really, if you really think about it gentlemen, it's actually
a poor relationship to exercise.
Absolutely.
When you, someone tells you, hey listen, you need to dedicate the next four weeks to all
you're going to do is correctional exercise and mobility work to fix the fact,
to work on the fact that your back bothers you,
your hip bothers you,
or to work on your mobility.
And the person freaks out like,
I can't not like lift heavy for a month, right?
You can't hit it right on the head without that.
It's a bad relationship to exercise.
It's awareness.
It's no different than the debate we got into
when it's talking about nutrition and the awareness,
with the levels of awareness, the
same concept is true with training and taking care of your body.
People just, they wanted to, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, go about your day and do these other things, but it's there and it's just a matter of you being aware of it or ignoring it and continue doing all the things you're doing until it gets to a point where you can't ignore it anymore.
And then now, which is what I feel like people do with food. It's like you have this food addiction or you have this food issue and you keep doing shit until all of a sudden the doctor says, hey, guess what, you have diabetes? Or, hey, guess what, this is shutting down on you
or this is blocked now, and now you gotta fix this.
Then all of a sudden, we have our first bit of awareness.
Like, oh fuck, I do have a problem.
I do have a problem.
But I still like that, so can I get a pill?
So the trick is, for all of us,
to become more aware, way before we get ourselves
into these major issues.
If you already have these little things that you're, these little nuances that you're noticing
about your movement and your body, now start addressing them now.
So they don't become this thing that limits you from doing basic movements later.
And I'll tell you right now, if you're not squatting and you're not squatting because
it hurts, it's not the squat that's hurting you.
It's you that's hurting you and you need to address that. There's your first step of awareness.
Stop neglecting that movement. You don't, and in fact, if you can't squat right now,
then that should be the main focus of your workout.
It would be no different. Look, it's imagine right now if you just all of a sudden couldn't walk.
Would that become a priority of yours?
Over everything else, you better fucking believe it.
Like all of a sudden, if you lost your ability to walk,
you're like, I am dedicating some serious time.
Look at Dr. Terry Walsh.
Right, to learning how to walk, right?
Well squatting is right up there.
It's right up there in terms of being a fundamental movement
of the body, and if you can't sit in a squat,
you should definitely dedicate and prioritize some time
to be able to sit in that squat because,
what I'm learning on a personal level now,
I'm learning this, I knew this objectively,
but I didn't experience it on a personal level
just because probably because I kept myself
in a little bit of the dark, right?
There was a little bit of me that still remained in the dark
because I still like to squat heavy weight,
I still like to be able to pull my 500 pounds off the floor. I still like to do all those things.
But now I'm realizing that my inability to be able to sit in a squat was actually impacting
all everything. It was impacting how I worked out. It was impacting how I felt when I moved,
when I sat. And like what Adam's talking about in terms of paying being around a one or
a three. And then, oh, now it's at a six. I gotta fix it, oh, it's back down to a three now,
I'm cool, like, why are we okay with that?
Why are we okay with setting us a low, such a low standard
where, okay, now it doesn't hurt us bad,
I can get about my day,
like how awesome would it be to just not have it at all?
You know what I mean, how great would it be
to just never feel that pain?
How great would it be to get into a movement
and just get into it?
Or you're just...
Yeah, and I think there's less business around that.
You know what I mean?
The business around pain is definitely around like,
what can...
Treating it, right away.
Yeah, treating it and then putting you right back
in the mix and that's the mentality
that we've always had, especially with athletes.
And you know, I'll tell you what,
dedicating, you're changing the focus of your goals.
This is key now.
If you're one of those people that's got kind of a poor relationship to exercise, like
I did and probably still do a little bit to where it's very difficult for me to stop the
heavy lifting so I can focus on other things because I feel like, oh no, I'm going to lose
the strength or, you know, that's my favorite thing to do or whatever.
What you got to do, what helps me is to change my goal, change to focus on my goals.
Now, I'm thinking about strength, all I'm thinking about is improving control range
emotion, improving mobility, and now that I'm focusing on that particular goal and I see
progress there, it becomes really fucking fun.
It becomes a blast.
And here's a side effect that I'm noticing now is the fact that because I can get into
deeper ranges of motion, it sucks saying this, by the way, because it's like duh, I've talked about this a million times,
but I just ignored it for myself.
I actually build more muscle.
Like I noticed now my legs are starting to look,
I'm not lifting with nearly as much weight in the squak,
I'm really focusing on just trying to sit in that squat
with weight, but I'm looking in the mirror
when I'm flexing my legs and stuff,
and holy shit, they actually look a little bit better.
Like I haven't lost, not only that not a lost muscle,
but I'm actually starting to see what seems to be
better muscle development.
Certain ranges have an experience,
any kind of resistance.
That's it, that's it.
I'm making my muscle stronger.
I'm earning certain parts of what your muscles function
is capable of.
And we need to talk about, you know,
what range of motion, the difference between range
of motion and control range of motion.
This is something that Dr. Brink blew my mind in
when we first met him in his office.
He put me in a 90, 90 position,
which is, it's a hip, external, external rotation
of the hip.
So one side is externally rotated,
one side is internally rotated,
I'm sitting on the floor.
And he's telling me to lift my back foot off the floor
while keeping my knee down on the floor.
So I'm internally rotating my hips even more,
and to do it with my own power and strength.
And I could get off the floor maybe an inch at the most,
with lots of like, ah, that's a strain and tension, right?
And he says, well, you know, he tells me,
he says, why can't you get any higher? I'm like, well, I just, I don't have that range of motion? And he says, well, you know, he tells me, he says, why can't you get any higher?
I'm like, well, I just, I don't have that range of motion.
And he goes, no, you have that range of motion.
He takes my foot with his hand and he pulls it up.
Like a foot.
Like pulls away the fuck up.
And it felt really weird.
I'm looking at it and I felt disconnected to my leg.
Are you breaking me?
Yeah, I didn't feel connected to my leg.
It was like, oh, whoa, this is a range of motion.
I didn't even know I had.
And he says, now try and hold it up here as I let go
because he's holding my foot up there. He lets go of my foot and I can't. I don't even know I had and he says now try and hold it up here as I let go because he's holding my foot up
There he let's go over my foot and I can't I can't hold it and he says okay, so he goes the range of motion exists
It's there the problem is you don't have control in that range of motion
You have no strength within that range of motion and it was like a light bulb went off in my head like holy shit
I have way more range of motion than I think I do. What I'm lacking is strength within that range of motion and control.
And that's the important thing.
Range of motion is nothing without control.
It means nothing unless your job is to fit yourself inside of a small box and just relax
and sit in there and you're some kind of a, you know, a performer like that.
But if your job is to move daily or perform in a sport or workout,
range of motion means nothing unless you have control.
Otherwise, if you can't get into it,
or if you do get into it and then you have no strength,
that's instability, that's an injury waiting to happen.
Or if you can't get into it yourself,
well then it doesn't even matter.
You know what I'm saying?
And I think this frequent getting myself
into these positions with tension,
like what I'm doing throughout the day now
is I'm getting myself into a squat, a bodyweight squat.
I'm trying to sit in that squat,
and rather than relax in that squat,
I'm trying to, yeah, I'm trying to kind of stay there
with control right now, because it's new for me.
I'm taking my feet, and rather than letting them pronate,
I'm actively trying to stay more on the outsides of my feet.
I'm trying to press my knees out.
I'm trying to press my chest through, even though I'm not getting very far with it because
obviously my...
That's an interesting thing.
Once you start really identifying how much pressure or where you're applying pressure
with your feet, and I see my big toe wanting to lift up and my feet pronating a little
bit. I'm self-correcting as I'm getting dropping into a deeper stance in the squat.
But it's like, if you can really start to slow down and figure out what your body is already
doing and compensating, it's interesting because then you really can understand, wow,
if I just focus on grounding myself better
and working on these little articulations with my feet,
it makes a massive difference.
Like you don't feel those little twingy aches
and pains that shoot up your leg.
So Jessica is very proficient in range of motion,
inflexibility type training.
She traveled and worked for four years
to Cirque du Soleil.
And so she had the amazing ability, excuse me,
the opportunity, I should say,
of training with the best in the world
when it came to flexibility, mobility, tension, control,
because these are all contortionists
and performers that do just ridiculous
feats of you know human movement right. And so she really took to and enjoyed silk
training. So for the listeners who don't know what silks are, it's those big, massive pieces
of fabric that hang from you know high point in the ceiling and then a performable climate
and then wrap their body with it and support themselves in the splits and do back bends and twist
and hang upside down and it's really beautiful,
it's really amazing.
But from a physical standpoint, when you analyze
what they're doing, is you literally have to have
ridiculous ranges of motion with control
because you're supporting yourself on these silks.
You can't relax on the floor in a stretch
or whatever, you have to support yourself.
And so she has incredible flexibility,
but good control within that flexibility.
Like she can get in the split,
but the splits worship support herself,
one foot on one silk on the other silk,
which is different than just sitting on the floor
in a split where you can just relax, right?
Oh, it's what makes Jujji so impressive.
Exactly.
That people don't realize it's like,
it's one thing this guy is doing the splits.
It's another thing that he's doing it
between two chairs and holding a fucking
hundred something past.
Yes, you have strength within that range of motion.
So when I talk to her and here's the thing,
like once when you're doing something sometimes,
you don't realize what you're doing.
And then when you think about it objectively
and you try to verbalize it, then you start to realize,
oh shit, this is why the trainers had me do this.
And this is why the, so what she tells me is,
they have these Russian trainers there
and Russian silks, you know, these Eastern block silks trainers.
And they take her through these just gnarly stretch sessions
where they would themselves put her in a stretch,
so she's passive in it.
So first they would get the range of motion.
But then when she was in that range of motion, they would tell her to do two things.
A, try to hold your leg in that position.
So let's say I'm holding you in a hamstring stretch, real fucking deep, and at first you're
relaxing just so we can get there.
And then they tell her, now you hold it here and flex your quad and pull with your hip flex
her.
And they would also tell her to oppose the stretch. Now push into my hand and go back and forth and do all these other things. She said it was painful
as fuck, it was horrible, but she went from being an extremely inflexible individual who couldn't
touch her toes. And now she's like one of the most flexible people I know. And as she's
explaining this to me and as I'm learning all the stuff with brain and all the stuff that we're
doing with mobility and how we, you know, when we put together prime, I'm realizing that they were training strength within ranges
of motion. Like, that's exactly what they were doing.
That's exactly it. And it's, it's basically how I've always, like, I've wondered how to
explain a guy doing, like, the gymnastic rings. And like, why that was always so impressive
to me is because you'd see this guy with his arms all the way out
like in a crucifix pose, and then he goes and flips upside down,
he pulls himself up seamlessly, everything just looks so smooth.
I'm like, I know just like doing a pull-up
and then trying to transition into a muscle-up or whatever,
like that's in itself is like it's incredible the amount of
strength that you need for that, but like more than that, like they're training themselves on like
crazy ranges of motion and applying insane amount of force on demand and there's a way to train for
that. Yes, so here's a great example. Let's say you have tight hamstrings, we'll just use hamstrings
because everybody feels like they have tight hamstrings.
And throughout the day, you want to apply this kind of frequency principle that we're talking
about where you just throughout the day you practice, you're learning, you're teaching
your body how to become more, how to gain more range of motion with control in the hamstrings.
So the typical, the average person may think that what they would do is they'd just stretch
their hamstrings statically.
Like, I'm just going to put my leg up on the table and just kind of sit there, relax and
let the hamstring stretch.
And you will get more range of motion that way, but you won't get control.
Here's how you would get control doing something like that.
So let's say I do that.
Let's say I put my leg up on the table and I get into the stretch.
First I get into the stretch and I relax for a second, try and sit in there.
Then while I'm in the stretch, now what I'm going gonna do is I'm going to try and pull my leg up
while I'm in that stretch and hold that for 20 seconds.
Then I'm relaxed for a second.
Now I'm gonna push it down into the table.
I'm not moving, my body's not moving,
I'm just creating tension.
Now I'm pushing down into the table while I'm holding the stretch.
Then the next thing I do is I point my toes
while I'm in that stretch, intense my quads.
Then the next thing I do is I pull my toes back while I'm in that stretch, intense my quads. Then the next thing I do is I pull my toes back
while I'm in that stretch, intense my quads.
And then I rotate my leg and then I flex,
all while stretching the hamstring,
what I'm doing is I'm creating tension
in different positions and what that does is it builds,
it creates that neurological pattern,
that strength, it gives me strength within those positions.
Your signal gets louder.
It gets much louder.
And all I'm doing is I'm literally,
I'm looking at a grand total of 30 seconds
to a minute and a half of doing this throughout my day.
And I do this maybe three, four, five times a day.
So you're literally dedicating a grand total of,
you know, 10 minutes during your day doing this.
And so far I've done this, I've been doing,
you know, stuff like this way faster,
progress than spending 30 minutes of stretching at the end of my workouts. It's really blowing me well. I have it. I don't think there's been a day where I've spent 30 minutes to an hour just
stretching or mobility work. It does, you don't need to. You just, and frequency wins.
I'm far better off doing it three, four times for five or ten minutes throughout the day than I am one time really long.
You know, circling back to the squat, so my best friend, I got a chance to hang out with him this weekend and see him in a while.
And he's recently got back into lifting and working out.
And he's like, yeah, I know you really motivated me to get back to squatting and he's like in squatting deep.
And so, you know, he told me, he's like, I can't quite squat with the barbell really deep.
So he tells me he's been using the Smith machine
and squatting all the way down to the floor.
And I go, well, you'll be way better off
doing no weight on your back and getting your mechanics
down and working on that.
So I want to be clear about this.
So, you know, here we are telling you everybody that,
okay, you need to squat, squatting is so important.
It's the king of all exercises.
If you can't squat, get to the point where you can't squat.
Now, the problem with a lot of people is they hear that,
and they go like, okay, well, I trust my pump.
I feel like I need to, so they go, I'm gonna just start.
Somebody who's stopped squatting because it hurts them,
and now they just say, okay, I'm gonna start squatting.
I'm glad you're going here.
Because my pump tells me I need a squat.
And then they just, and then they start pushing
their range of motion because they know that we've been saying
that you need to get deeper in your squat.
Well, it doesn't work that way.
Like, like Sal was talking about his progression
that well, he's been working on this for three plus months.
Shit, I was working on it for over six to eight months
before you could,
and you can just go back and look at my Instagram,
go all the way back in the last year
and pay attention to a squat video I did last year
and look at the squats now,
but that's been a gradual progression over the last year.
I didn't just go from,
hey, barely been able to break 90s
to all of a sudden sit in the baby position.
No, because you didn't have strength in that range of motions.
You would have hurt yourself.
So my process looks more like this.
First thing I would do is I would use TRX straps so I could balance on something and then
my goal was to try to get down to the bottom of a squat position, which was very hard for
me.
It was painful.
And I would just practice that.
Or I'd use, I'd put my hands on a couch or something
so I could reach forward and get balanced.
And I started with my heels elevated to start with.
Then I started lowering my heels to the point
where I could go flat.
Then I started practicing without having to hold on to anything
and I could only get so far.
Then I was able to actually get down to the bottom
without, you know, anyway.
Then I would do it with the bar. and I practiced it, now then I was able to actually get down to the bottom without, you know, anyway.
Then I would do it with the bar.
Meanwhile, normally I can squat with 300 pounds.
I could go up to three plates
and that's what I can work out to.
Meanwhile, what I'm doing is I'm slowly scaling the weight
down in my squat and going deeper and deeper
and deeper in my range of motion.
So I went from three plates to two and a quarter
with a little bit of a deeper squat,
to two plates with a deeper squat, to two and a quarter with a little bit of a deeper squat, to two
plates with a deeper squat, to one and a quarter with a deeper squat, to...
Then I went all the way down to the bar to be able to get all the way to the bottom of
squat.
Two, for the first time since this process began, I have squatted with 135 pounds, but at
the bottom, where I'm totally getting down to the bottom.
I'm not allowing myself to go any heavier
until I can get really fucking good with 135
and I'm doing five reps.
Like 135, I can press with my arms above my head.
Like that's not a heavy weight.
I could throw it if I wanted to,
but to get down into that position
with good tension control within that range of motion,
there's a good 12 inches or so or that 135 is about as much as I can handle.
Once I get out of that 12 inches, I can hammer it up,
no problem, but that's the point.
The point is, I'm using, the weight is matching
my worst part of my rep, which is that bottom position.
I'm not trying to go as heavy as I possibly can
because the point is you can handle 12 inches.
That's the point.
Well, here's an important point to make too, is that there's three major areas that anybody
that I've helped with this that we have to address.
And whether you address all of them together and you make slow progress towards this really
deep squat or you address one at a time and get really good
at it, which is kind of the way I went at this. So I'll start with, you have the your
thoracic region, you have your hips and then you have your ankles. Those three are typically
the three main areas that limit people from getting them into this really deep squat.
And you know, just ever it was at our seminar last night
and he was like, he was felt so inspired to like,
work on his squat depth because he kind of stops
right at 90 degrees and he can't get all the way down.
He's like, man, he's like, I really want to get to the point
after listening to you guys and bring talk about
how important it is to be able to connect
and go all the way down there.
He's like, you know, so I'm gonna start squatting barefoot
and doing this and like, hold on dude, pump your breath. He's like, you've been so I'm going to start squatting barefoot and doing this. I'm like, hold on, dude, pump your brakes. Like, you've been wearing high heel shoes,
squatting and just getting to 90. You don't need to take your shoes off and try and go all
the way down. And I said, you know, learn from my mistake. I got so excited about my progress
and my squat that I did this exact same thing. I'm like, oh, I'm done with my belt. I'm
done with my shoes. I'm squatting barefoot all the way down. And then I hurt myself because
I wasn't right. And it wasn't even a lot of weight.
It was just, I wasn't ready for that.
So once the hips get opened up enough to where you can down a 90, well, then you're also
going to have the thoracic region that's going to round forward still, and then you're
also going to have a limiting factor with your ankles.
It's rarely ever just like just hips, and then you're good.
Normally, if your hips have been really tight, you haven't been getting down that position. You haven't asked your ankles to have to have that much travel, and then you're good like normally if your hips have been really tight you haven't been getting down that position you haven't asked your ankles to have to have that much travel
and then you also haven't asked your spine to stay in that neutral position when you get that deep in
the thoracic region. So each one of these are going to be limiting factors to having that beautiful
perfect deep barefoot squat and so make sure that you're either one addressing all of those or you make progress
in one and then you go to another area, you work really well and consistent towards range
emotion there. And then together you'll finally get it's taken me like I said a whole year
before I could sit in this position. And I'm still not all with there. I just somebody
love, everyone loves to point out like anytime you know, anytime you post anything on Instagram
and you're somebody like us who are sharing information
to people, everybody likes to write away,
hey, that's, aren't your hips coming up too fast?
You're fast, you're nervous.
Yeah, that's how, yeah, no fucking shit, man.
I know, I'm very aware of all my imbalance.
No, it's funny, because you're listening to a few meatheads
here, Justin has been focusing on mobility and movement
way longer and more in depth than I did.
And more than Adam did because Adam was competing for a while. He just didn't do it anymore.
And so, but you're listening to, you know, like I'm not by any means proficient at all when it comes to mobility range of motion, but I am very,
I am knowledgeable on the effects and what's happening with the body and what it's doing with the
central nervous system, and I'm applying it on myself now, which is kind of cool.
It's cool because I get to go through it myself, which puts me in a good position and you need
position to be able to communicate kind of what may be happening as you're trying to do this.
Oh, yeah. You know, you get a lot of cool coaching kind of cues like as you go through it yourself.
And for me too, that's where like I found like tools and different techniques that I really
responded to and I was like stoked on it. And that's what kind of led me down this sort of pathway
towards getting further into mobility, using sticks, using props, things like that, like getting into stuff like the
Dumpy Squaw, where we, you know, I'm using these kind of leverage points to, it automatically your body tends to
to tense up the way that, you know, you want to be able to recruit that process. So it's just a helpful way to
kind of direct your hips down and to be able to sort of gain that recruitment
and that response that you're looking to achieve.
This is probably why the biggest,
the, we get messages from people, right,
who enroll in our programs, you know, maps,
and you know, whether it's a aesthetic prime performance
and a ball, like, you know, whatever.
And the ones that people are always emailing and go,
holy shit, I'm totally surprised,
are usually the aesthetic focused individuals
who do end up doing math performance or a math prime,
because they go into math's performance,
and these are bodybuilders, physique competitors,
people who just wanna look good,
bikini competitors, whatever,
they go into math's performance because they trust us, right?
They listen to us on the show and they're like,
okay, I was the least, I did maps in a ball,
I did maps aesthetic.
I was the least excited about doing maps performance
because I know it's mobility and performance based,
but you guys kept talking about it,
so I gave it a shot and holy shit, I'm blown away.
Like, I can't believe my squad is better.
My deadlift is better, I'm building more muscle and I can't believe it. My squad is better, my deadlift is better,
I'm building more muscle and it's like,
it's this wonderful side effect
of improving range of motion with control.
It makes such a huge fucking difference
in the way you look too.
So it's not just about moving and feeling better,
like I'm telling you right now, working on these things,
even if you could care less about being able
to sit in a full squad or whatever,
you're gonna build more muscle and look better
And more well-rounded and the message we're getting where messages we're getting from people
It's they're blown away when they do performance or prime which is also a I guess you could put in that category of mobility
Priming your workouts boy does that make a huge fucking difference too and being able to just be connected to
You know deeper and deeper ranges of motion
Well somebody asked us recently,
like how we stay motivated,
if you guys have been lifting for so long,
like how do you stay motivated to train day in, day out,
and what does that look like?
And the tip that I gave, or for me,
this is how I do that, is I find areas of improvement
that I need to work on.
Whether it be a simple movement like a squad or overall mobility in an area and I set goals
that.
I want to be able to do this.
I want to be able to do this and I want to do it well.
It gives me something to focus on and it gives me a new goal that's not scale driven,
the mere driven or based off of how much weight
I need to be lifting, which there's nothing wrong with those goals too.
I love going after those two.
That's what drove me to get to be honest though.
We've done that for decades.
Yeah.
You know, so this is something that's outside of that, which is actually, you know, it's
exciting in its own way.
Yeah, no, I think it's important.
I think all of them are important.
I learn so much in my journey to becoming an IFBB Pro,
that whole journey of being so focused on how I look,
taught me so many things, and I totally appreciate it,
and I'm over it.
You know, I'm over it for right now,
as far as like competing at the highest level,
because there's other things that are important to me,
and like, I'm totally enjoying
this moving better.
And I know me too, like I'll keep working at it until I feel like, man, I feel great.
And I already do feel really great.
I feel the best I've felt in my life in a very, very long time.
And I don't feel like I'm way off from that aesthetic version of me.
Like I feel like that's so close that I could be there within four to six weeks, no problem.
So, for me to have an aesthetic physique right now
and moving the way I'm moving right now
and to be pain free, like I am right now,
I mean, I feel fantastic, but then I know me too.
Like, something I'll get, you know,
I'll get a hair, a hair up my butt or whatever,
and then sooner or later I'll be focused on something else.
And to me, that's how I keep going and how I enjoy this whole process.
That's a whole, by the way.
I think we should probably recommend that everybody, I don't care how good, how mobile you think you are, how awesome your range of motion is, or how long you've been working out. I think everybody should probably dedicate an entire phase of training on just
improving ranges of motion with control on mobility, on being able to move better. I
think everybody should take anywhere between three weeks to 12 weeks or longer of a workout
phase where that is your only goal. Whether you're an athlete or you're aesthetic driven
or you're just health driven, just do that.
Just phase it, put it in, make that the primary goal
where you forget about everything else.
You're not worried about how much weight you're lifting.
You're not worrying about aesthetics.
You're not worrying about the pump or anything like that.
All your focus on are those things.
And I promise you, I promise you, you're going to come out of that phase.
Your mind is going to be fucking blown.
You're going to go back to your other phase and your mind's going to be blown
again. Your body's going to respond in different ways and new ways.
It is going to be the shock that your body needs to start progressing.
Again, I hate that when they say shock your body until you know,
that's reality. That'll, that'll do it.
That'll probably do it.
Like if you've plateaued forever
and you're just not seeing any progress
and you're frustrated as hell,
phase in a nice, you know,
three to 12 week period of just mobility,
range of motion training of just
that kind of functional type of work
and then go back to what you were doing before
and see what happens.
Well, real soon here, you guys are getting ready to wrap up our focus series that we are
doing on our YouTube channel.
So if you guys aren't subscribed to the YouTube channel at Mind Pump TV, so Mind Pump TV
on YouTube, if you subscribe to it every day, we're releasing free videos that are short
three to five minute, a little bit of tidbits
of information.
And we're about to transition into mobility videos.
So if this is something that you know you need to work on, you maybe you don't own
any programs or you can't afford a program right now, but you're looking for more help,
more tips.
This is why we created the YouTube channel.
We want to try and help out as many people as we possibly can, even if you're in a position that you can't afford one of
the programs. If you can't get prime, you can't get maps performance right now, which ideally
would be, I mean, this would be the most ideal for everybody because then you can figure
out what's best for your body. The next best thing after that is at least take the free
information that we're-
Just start applying some movement.
Yeah, and start applying to some of them.
And that was the advice I gave last night to somebody
as like, well, listen, you know,
go through these movements and you're gonna know,
you're gonna know when you get into them,
the ones you really struggle,
the ones you're really struggling to perform
are probably the ones you need to work on
and work towards them and get good at them.
And don't think intensely, don't think,
okay, I'm not good at this.
Oh, my goodness, stretch as hard as I can
and intensify as hard as I possibly can
and do it for a long period of time.
No, just learn them.
Yes, exactly.
Learn them, get down in that position,
do it for a few minutes, move on.
Come back.
Come back later in the day, do it again for a couple minutes,
move on, come back again in the doing day, do it again for a few minutes
and just keep doing that.
And I pay attention literally to how different you feel
in like a week's time.
Like this is not one of those things where,
it's pretty, you'll notice them.
Yeah, it's not like building instant.
Like, body loves it.
Yeah, it's not like what we have to do
to burn a bunch of fat or bill muscle.
It's not like that. It's amazing. If you actually do it. Yeah, it's not like what we have to do to burn a bunch of fat or bill muscle. It's not like that.
It's amazing.
Like if you actually do it like three, literally take one or two moves, you're not good at
that we're going to post up there.
If you own prime, one or two that you've already noticed or challenging, do them two to
three times a day every day for one to two weeks, report back to me.
Guarantee you will feel and see a significant difference
in that short amount of time of just applying that.
And when people see that and feel that,
I feel like that light bulb goes off everybody like,
wow, this isn't that difficult.
It just takes consistency of continually to apply that
because you're training on a neurological level.
We're training patterning right now.
It's not a strength thing.
It's not like you're trying to build a bunch of muscle,
burn a bunch of fat.
You're just trying to train that body to get connected.
So stop training and start learning.
Listen, if you like Mind Pump,
leave us a five star rating review on iTunes.
If we like your review, if it's a good one,
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you by mail. Also check us out on Instagram at Mind Pump Radio. That's where you can ask
us questions and we answer these questions on our show. You can also find my personal
Instagram page at Mind Pump Sal. You can find Adam at Mind Pump Adam just in his at Mind
Pump Justin and you can find the eagle Doug Eggie at Mind Pump Justin and you can find the eagle, Doug Eggy, at Mind Pump Dog.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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