Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 724: The Importance of Sex for Health, Teaching Kids Healthy Eating Habits, the Future of Personal Training & MORE
Episode Date: March 10, 2018Organifi Quah! In this episode of Quah, sponsored by Organifi (organifi.com, code "mindpump" for 20% off), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about sex and if it is needed for optimal healt...h, the future of personal training, the best way to teach children about eating healthy, especially when eating away from home and advice for someone facing a huge life decision. Making an example of people for silly reasons. Should we punish people for changing the game in a good way? Listen to the guys thoughts. (4:26) Just trying to fit in or just don’t care. How have the guys evolved and changed over the years? From fashion, to personal…they share their personal stories. (12:00) The mark of a great communicator. How do you mean? How listening and having empathy makes you more effective and a better human being. (19:35) Who is going to pull the trigger first? Russia’s new nuclear capabilities and should we be terrified. Find out the guys thoughts and how Russia is still trying to stay relevant. (32:18) Another way to express yourself. New piercing trends and the guys discuss how far tattoos will go. (38:00) Frequency is king. The importance of frequency in your workouts and your body’s adaptation system. (42:15) Quah question #1 – Sex, is it needed for optimal health or is going without it better? (53:32) Quah question #2 – Where do you guys see the future of personal training? (1:11:10) Quah question #3 – What is the best way to teach children about eating healthy, especially when eating away from home? (1:24:38) Quah question #4 – What advice would you give for someone facing a huge life decision? (1:41:45) Links/Products Mentioned: Meet The Guy Who Beat A Tesla P100D With His $13,000 Trash Car Electronics-recycling innovator faces prison for trying to extend computers' lives Eric Lundgren, ‘e-waste’ recycling innovator, faces prison for trying to extend life span of PCs A Recycling Entrepreneur Has Been Sentenced To 15 Months In Prison NIKEiD Custom Shoes and Accessories. Nike.com Mirror neuron Putin claims Russia is developing nuclear arms capable of avoiding missile defenses People are getting their fingers pierced instead of wearing a wedding ring and it looks excruciating Comparison of Two Equated Resistance Training Weekly Volume Routines Using Different Frequencies on Body Composition and Performance in Trained Males Four Sigmatic **Use the discount code “mindpump” for 15% off of your first order of health & energy boosting mushroom products.** Thrive Market 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 Cortisol, Sexual Arousal, and Affect in Response to Sexual Stimuli How Stress Can Cause a Low Libido Ep 720-Dr. Molly Maloof- High Performance MD to ... - Mind Pump Media HealthKit - Apple Developer Ep 649-Chris "Drama" Pfaff - Mind Pump Nutritional Correlates of Human Oral Microbiome Ep 595-Joe DeSena - Mind Pump People Mentioned: Jordan B Peterson (@jordanbpeterson) Twitter Robert Oberst (@robertoberst) Instagram Emily Morse (@sexwithemily) Instagram Lisa Bilyeu (@lisabilyeu) Instagram Dr. Justin Brink (@premiere_spine_sport) Instagram Dr. Molly Maloof (@drmolly.co) Instagram Joe De Sena (@realJoeDesena) Twitter Bedros Keuilian (@bedroskeuilian) Instagram Arnold (@Schwarzenegger) Twitter Also check out Thrive Market! Thrive Market makes purchasing organic, non-GMO affordable. With prices up to 50% off retail, Thrive Market blows away most conventional, non-organic foods. PLUS, they offer a NO RISK way to get started which includes: 1. One FREE month’s membership 2. $20 Off your first three purchases of $49 or more (That’s $60 off total!) 3. Free shipping on orders of $49 or more How can you go wrong with this offer? To take advantage of this offer go to www.thrivemarket.com/mindpump 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 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 HIIT, an expertly programmed and phased High Intensity Interval Training program designed to maximize fat burn and improve conditioning. Get it at www.mindpumpmedia.com! Get MAPS Prime, MAPS Anywhere, MAPS Anabolic, MAPS Performance, MAPS Aesthetic, the Butt Builder Blueprint, the Sexy Athlete Mod AND KB4A (The MAPS Super Bundle) packaged together at a substantial DISCOUNT at www.mindpumpmedia.com. Make EVERY workout better with MAPS Prime, the only pre-workout you need… it is now available at mindpumpmedia.com Have Sal, Adam & Justin personally train you via video instruction on our YouTube channel, Mind Pump TV. Be sure to Subscribe for updates. Get your Kimera Koffee at www.kimerakoffee.com, code "mindpump" for 10% off! Get Organifi, certified organic greens, protein, probiotics, etc at www.organifi.com Use the code “mindpump” for 20% off. Go to foursigmatic.com/mindpump and use the discount code “mindpump” for 15% off of your first order of health & energy boosting mushroom products. Add to the incredible brain enhancing effect of Kimera Koffee with www.brain.fm/mindpump 10 Free sessions! Music for the brain for incredible focus, sleep and naps! Also includes 20% if you purchase! Please subscribe, rate and review this show! Each week our favorite reviewers are announced on the show and sent Mind Pump T-shirts! Have questions for Mind Pump? Each Monday on Instagram (@mindpumpmedia) look for the QUAH post and input your question there. (Sal, Adam & Justin will answer as many questions as they can)
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.
In this fabulous episode of Mind Pump, where we at?
Super fabulous.
We're in, where's this place called?
Passo, Passo Robo.
Passo Robo, like, beautiful.
Beautiful.
Scen scenery out.
Here's like a whiner, is this like a place
where whineries are?
Where would you rank the house for you?
The house?
Cause it's compared to all of them.
Yeah, all of them.
Oh, no, I don't think this has one of the best views.
Yeah, one of the best views for sure.
Yeah.
I like the one in Hollywood, the hill.
I like the Tahoe one.
But it's a nice place.
But yeah, a nice fireplace.
Yes, it's very nice.
Anyway, for the first 50 minutes of our introductory current events conversation, we covered Eric
Lungrim.
He's actually a gentleman who's hacking into cars, making them last longer, and he might
even go to jail over it.
No, it's the computers.
He's coming up with a chip for computers.
Something like that.
We're pretty close.
The computers of cars to make them last longer.
Yeah, he turned, no, he turned
them into, he actually took all parts from computers and made a car. Yeah. Oh, yeah, that's with a
car park. Well, learn learn learn what we really talked about in this episode. We talked about the
evolution of our style. I'm the most consistent. Obviously, he definitely have that down. We talk
about men and crying, Justin gets real deep on that one. Man, I was bl have that down. We talk about men and crying just think it's real deep on that one.
I was blubbering. We talk about communication skills,
Putin's new nuclear toys or, as Adam says it,
Putin's new nuclear toys. Look out for sales, good transition.
Nuclear. We talk about finger piercing and tattoo trends,
training frequency, muscle soreness, muscle adaptation.
And we also mentioned two of our sponsors.
Adam had the four-sigmatic Ray Shee last night, and it got him tucked into bed.
And he slept really nice.
Now we are a sponsor by four-sigmatic.
He's a good boy.
He drank it.
If you go to four-sigmatic spelled F-O-U-R-S-I-G-M-A-T-I-C dot com, four-slash-mind pump,
and enter the code Mind Pumpump. You'll get a discount.
We also mentioned Thrive Market.
Doug is going to be cooking up a Thai cuisine for us tonight with ingredients bought off
of Thrive Market Organic Non-GMO products.
That can almost smell it.
If you go to ThriveMarket.com-fores-mind-pump, here's what you'll get.
One month free membership and $20 off your first three orders of $49 more and that's not
all you'll also get free shipping.
Also by the way before I get into the questions don't forget if you go to mindputmedia.com
you can see all of our show notes so you can kind of go down and see what point of the
episode we talked about a specific thing.
The first question we answered was is sex needed for optimal health or is it better to not have sex?
So we asked Justin, he seems to be having most sex.
Yeah, man. That was a lie.
Yeah. Next question.
Just slain it. Next question.
Where do we see the future of personal or training? Actually, a great conversation on that question
right there. Next question was, what are our thoughts on necessary nutrition for
children and the best way to teach them about eating healthy?
Also a good conversation there.
Do you spank them when they eat an Oreo?
Wow.
Probably not.
Yeah, that's not the move.
Final question, how do we weigh out huge decisions? Do we have any advice for people who
are facing a huge life decision? Again, this episode we get pretty deep.
It's pretty entertaining.
Also, would you like to get into our forum for free?
What do you say?
That's right.
You can actually get free access to our forum
for rolling in any of our maps bundles.
Bundles are when we put maps programs together.
Let me go through and give you a quick rundown.
Are you interested in building maximum muscle and strength?
Maps and a ballad gets for you.
Are you interested in functional performance,
almost like an athlete?
Ooh, I like that.
Maps performance is for you.
Are you interested in sculpting and shaping your body,
or even competing on a stage like a body builder,
a physique competitor, or a bikini competitor,
then get maps aesthetic.
That sounds like me.
Do you like to work out on the go without fitness equipment?
You like to exercise with just your body weight.
Anywhere.
Try maps anywhere.
I love what you're talking about.
Do you have pain in your body?
Do you want to correct imbalances?
Do you want to move better so you can do your heavy lifts
without pain?
Sometimes I heard.
Well that's the maps prime and prime pro bundle.
If you get any bundle, don't forget you get free access
to a forum for more information, go to mindpumpmedia.com.
So you guys do either or just do either one of you guys know who Eric Lundgren is.
No, you never heard that name.
I'm like, I saw I was reading in the hustle.
Yesterday, his name sounds familiar.
Like you, I would think you both know it.
I, I, I didn't know who it was.
And I feel like I should know who this guy is because he sounds
fucking brilliant.
He is like an e-waste recycling pioneer.
He was one of the people that started to see how fast we're turning through these electronics
and that it was like going to be a problem and then he's supposed to be really brilliant.
He's taken some of these computer parts and he's actually made a car out of it that we can
go further than a Tesla on electricity, right?
So, yeah, yeah, so he's supposed to be really brilliant.
And so, check this out, this is what he does.
So, in 2011, he's been back and forth, I guess, in this big lawsuit.
2011, he creates a, I guess it's like a disc or a chip that increases the longevity of
your current computer.
So, basically, I think it like
Updates it to whatever. So he's hacking. Yes into so he's hacking it He's hacking and he's because you know what your computer is just obsolete in five years
Yeah
Right and you're and then you're into the next thing. Well, he's found a chip to
Expand the life basically of these of these Microsoft computers and so guess what Microsoft is coming after... They're pissed. Oh, for sure.
They want, yeah, they want you to upgrade to the newest thing.
And that's why they, I swear, dude, they have it built in
to go to a certain amount of time
to where everything's gonna start to degrade.
There's not, there is no, like, this is,
like, where and there.
This is funny to me because,
especially for technology, patents.
They're trying to put him in jail and shit over this.
I know.
So this is, he's infringing on patents and patent laws
and protectionist laws, which,
you know, whether you agree with him or not,
I think it doesn't matter.
Good luck.
Like this is a program.
How are you gonna stop this?
People jail break their phones all the time.
That's illegal too.
Like one stuff like this in technology gets free,
which obviously if he created it,
it's not, yes, he's a smart guy,
but at some point it'll be as easy as going on your computer
and downloading it to something and then uploading it.
That's crazy.
Because every time I swear, I update after Apple comes out
with a new product and I update my phone
or my computer or whatever,
I swear the speed goes way down.
It does.
No, no, they came out with a statement
and said that that's what they do.
And they do that.
So the reason why they do it is they say,
it's to save your battery life
because the new updates.
Oh, bullshit.
Yes, that's, of course.
That's what I think.
Do their plan like three, four generations down, dude.
And everything, all the computers, all the computers,
all that.
Here's the thing with that though, Justin,
like that's perfectly fine in my, in my,
yeah, I still not there.
So for me, that's perfectly fine.
They have the right to choose that,
but then somebody else has the right
to potentially put something there.
You know, you can change it.
Or you just buy something different,
but as far as this guy getting in trouble
for doing what he's doing under current law,
yeah, he has broken the law,
but these, this is all posturing,
like they're trying to make an example of people like him,
but good luck stopping anybody else from doing that.
Like patents are gonna be so completely worthless at some point.
Yeah, it's not gonna be funny.
I can't live that in any way this was.
I can't live that in any way this was.
You know, this old ownership of all these different things,
it's funny, like they're scrambling now, trying to figure it out.
Because the old model is just completely,
it's gonna change so much, what are you gonna do?
Yeah.
Do you guys remember anybody who before like Napster,
like what was the first big, big thing like that?
Oh yeah.
Before Napster, we used to steal cable,
you know, you do the block box.
Oh right.
That's right, like pay-per-view.
Yeah, you could jack in your neighbors.
Remember that shit?
What else were people doing?
I mean people would go into camp
and the movie theaters and like, campy or...
Yeah.
But nobody really cared about that,
because the quality was so bad.
Right, right.
We're now, you can just get the same exact quality,
no problem.
Right.
I wish, I wonder, I mean on my audience,
I love, by the way.
Every time I go to Mexico,
I love that some knockoff shit.
Do you?
Yeah.
You're gonna come back and you're like,
these aren't Oakley's.
Yeah.
Oh, these are folklees.
Did you know how much those costs?
Okay.
So when I was a kid, I was in, let's see,
your fourth grade.
And I was trying to think of what made me
into Oakley glasses that much.
But I liked Oakley so much.
That's when they had the razor blade sides.
You know, like the tent, the different,
and you could use the razor one.
Oh, yeah. I mean, this is fourth grade, bro. This is way bad. That shit was cool then. You know,
saying totally, and I saved the whole summer up to buy a pair. They were like $120 or $140
back then, which is like $500 for glasses now, right? So I saved up for these glasses, a kid. And
that was when chums were popular. So you put the chums on my my God. The croquis. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. You put those on.
Oh man. That's crazy. What? I don't know why I was just telling you that. The best was the ones.
Like you remember, um, was it Michael Jackson had the ones where like kind of was like a web that
went down, you know, from here, like they're bright red and then they had like a webbing around the
sides. Oh, that's what I was telling you guys. Those things cost 23 cents to make.
That's crazy.
What?
It's just plastic and then, yeah.
Well, the cost of the product is not based on the cost
of, like the cost of consumer pays
is partially based on how much it might cost to make.
But my point of that is that we're gonna be able
to make things like that for next to nothing.
You'll be able to jack and your, it's just plastic.
Well, how easy would it be to get that raw materials here in the next 10 years?
So think of it this way, because I thought about that for a second, right?
When it comes to fashion, fashion may be protected a little bit, because people don't necessarily
buy the expensive fashion because it looks better.
It used to be that way, but it's really more so because they want people to know it's
authentic.
Like it's real and I paid this much for it.
So I think what they're gonna have to do is a way for you to express yourself.
Right.
So that'll never, I agree with that.
So I, we'll still find a way to make that expensive.
Well, that's gonna say, what do you think about this?
Like I feel like fashion makers will just figure out creative ways to, well, I think maybe
they'll do like a special look at.
I'll show you how we do it.
Here's an example of it right now.
Do you guys know, you've seen my shoes that I have from Kikaso.
So this is, you're watching this stuff become really popular.
Someone like Taylor that's a purist with shoes hates that
and doesn't like that.
But I see the future of that of like even fashion
being so unique.
Like an artist does artwork on your
the west coast.
Because if you think of the 3D printing future like you're saying like we're gonna be able to print off
night the best coolest looking night keys I can just print them up but what I can't not everybody can do
is have somebody put their touch to it on something that's like represents me so like I'm you know
like Justin I'm into Star Wars so I have some sort of like our piece of art on there
that's represent Star Wars.
And so I think things like that,
because we'll all be able to make the models versus,
and look how we're doing, how you see,
and like licensing out your brand.
Look where Nike, Nike went with a Nike ID.
Nike ID was the beginning of that.
Yeah, absolutely.
And now it's getting more and more popular
for you to customize it all yourself.
So yeah, it'll be like that. You know what I'm saying everyone will be able to have a base model and then you'll you'll seek out
Build on it. Yeah, maybe or the other thing could be that people just personalized and make their own shit
You know, I mean they'll be still have such tools for for doing these things that the people it'll be maybe instile to not
Yeah, that's like creative people. Oh, you know, I don't think everybody's that creative right?
They just want to fucking buy something. They don't have like an idea. They'll be that side too
So just like there is now or it'll be like in those dystopian movie movies where everybody's wearing like the same thing
Did you guys like it?
Justin would did you the one you guys ever go through a phaser? I went through a phase where I wore like white t-shirts for like only like two years dark
Jeans and white t-shirts fucking white haains t-shirt V-next dude like.
I used to wear white- I used to wear white-hains.
I had I literally bought like 30 of them and I just just just wrote that.
But that was when I thought I was like all like rockabilly and shit and I would like cuff my pants.
You know, and wear my white shirt and then grease my hair every day.
Same exact thing.
So how long did you do that for?
How many girls is you going to do in that?
At least probably a year and a half.
You know what I'm saying?
How much is your style actually evolved in chains and sizes?
My style?
Yeah, has it changed much?
You know, I mean, I'm trying to think of things
that I actually were important to me with style.
I used to wear wife beaters a lot.
I had leather jackets.
It's still a chance.
Used to.
Yeah.
I still knew.
You were working out in a wife beaters this morning.
Oh yeah.
I've never seen him not with a wife.
I mean,
I mean,
I literally just gave you a tattoo on your body.
I just gave yourself a sore.
I just gave you a tattoo on your body.
I just gave you a tattoo on your body.
I just gave you a tattoo on your body.
I just gave you a tattoo on your body.
I just gave you a tattoo on your body.
I just gave you a tattoo on your body.
I just gave you a tattoo on your body.
I just gave you a tattoo on your body.
I just gave you a tattoo on your body.
I just gave you a tattoo on your body.
I just gave you a tattoo on your body.
I just gave you a tattoo on your body.
I just gave you a tattoo on your body.
I just gave you a tattoo on your body. I just gave you a tattoo on your body. I just gave you a tattoo on your body. not something that I've really super focused on. I've definitely been like,
if I was gonna go out with a girl
or whatever would try and look a certain way,
but I really never really cared.
Well, you look sharp.
I'm not saying that.
I'm just saying how I'm curious.
What I mean, it's, I never put thought into it.
I never really put thought into it.
I think to myself,
like, oh, I'm gonna,
there were times when I was a kid where,
so you never went through that as a kid
where you felt like you wanted it,
like wanted it something as your friend was wearing it.
Janko jeans.
Okay.
You remember?
You know, there was that whole junior high phase where that really hard.
That's a hacky sack.
That's a good thing.
Hardcore.
Yeah.
No, no, I didn't have to hacky sack wearing those fucking balloon jeans.
No, I never did.
You know, it was, it was like a period of time between 12 and I'll say maybe 14 or 15
where you're like, you just trying to fit in,
you know what I mean?
So you kinda see what other people wear.
But then after that, I started,
I really stopped caring, so I was just like, whatever.
You know, I was this past weekend
and we were talking about this.
I was forced to be creative with like my outfit
because we couldn't, I got a box like every year
for my grandmother that my sister and I,
okay, my 50-year-old grandmother's picking my outfits out
She's picking my clothes up which I appreciate and I love my grandma for that
But I had like all the knockoff like Nike stuff would be like a Nike swoosh
But then inside the haze dad's like the sushi's upside down. No, they were
Like a visor was backwards. You know what I'm saying?
But people didn't pick up on it. Yeah, so yeah, saying? That's all there. Oh yeah, so I had shit like that.
So I remember early on, being teased for like my outfits.
And then I, so I think that it thickened my skin
and built this strong character on that to where I was like,
I'm gonna own it, you know what I'm saying?
I heard your feelings at first.
No, I thought I was trying to think back to that.
Like I don't remember it.
Well, how did it thicken your skin?
Well, here's the thing that tripped me out too.
So it was something that we broke through
this last weekend was, so we were telling stories
about my sister and I forget exactly how we got there.
But I started to say something about my sister
and this is where I started to cry.
It was a trip because I hadn't,
first of all, I don't ever cry.
And I started to get choked up about it.
I've only seen you cry like four or five times.
That's pretty low. But what what trip me out? My guy in the headlock was one of them. What what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what what of joy, right? It was actually, I was talking about something that my sister had said to me about me,
and it made me feel really good. And then I start, that made me go even deeper and go, you know,
it's a trip. So I didn't even cry at my dad's funeral. And so from that point on, I can't tell you
a time that I've ever cried in my life over being sad. Every time I've been emotional, whether I've cried,
it's been out of joy and excitement.
So I, and I was like,
oh, that was a trip.
That was a connection that I made
that I never even thought of
until he made me get emotional
over something and then he asked me
thought I was maybe sad or something.
I was like, no, no.
That's actually quite common among men
because we, as we grow up and get older
and whatever, we know that crying grow up and get older and whatever,
we know that crying is like socially unacceptable
or you know, you're made fun of.
And it's always attached to, don't be a wimp,
you know, be strong or whatever.
So it's always attached to pain.
So I think we have learned as men to,
so for not cry for that.
But then when you all of a sudden get super happy
and don't know what to do,
like you don't know how to deal with that. and then the emotion kind of comes out a little bit
That's what I really think it is because I'm the exact same one so think of that
So think that if with men naturally kind of have that in them already and then my father takes his life at seven years
Oh, it makes it worse, right? And then I and then I don't cry well also probably because I can't even imagine
I'm the child because you were seven right right and I'm the oldest like how you're dealing with it
Yeah, right so you probably felt did anybody the oldest. Like how you're dealing with it. Right, so.
You probably felt, did anybody tell you,
or did you automatically feel this?
Did anybody come up to you and say,
okay, well, you're the man in the house now,
or did you automatically feel that
because you were in the house?
Oh, I automatically felt that right away.
So right, and now you're seven,
now imagine this, you're seven year old self,
feeling now that you are the man of the house,
you're seven year old understanding of now that you are the man of the house, your seven year old understanding of what that meant,
is what you like an immediate like switch went off.
Like you like whatever you want to understand
as a seven year old now, you're like,
this is what a man is and I'm sure trying
to imagine how much it cemented into my mind now
over all this time too, you know, I'm 37 years old,
think of all those years.
So I thought that was really cool that we made that connection that I had never even thought
about that before.
And I said, oh shit, that's a trip, you know, that type of stuff.
I can't remember.
I can't remember the last time I cried over something really sad.
Yeah, either that's very difficult.
I didn't cry.
Dude, I didn't cry when I got divorced at all through the whole process.
I didn't.
And it was very tough. I was the hardest thing I've ever gone through.
Oh yeah, well I did cry when someone very close to me
died of cancer, but it was what they said to me
that made me cry and she told me,
don't feel bad, you did help me,
you really tried your best.
And then I was like,
and so I don't know if that's necessarily sadness
or like I failed, you know that I kind of know if that's necessarily sadness or like I failed.
You know that I kind of lost it, but I don't,
but it wasn't like a sob, like I've never sobbed.
Don't you sometimes feel like you,
like I wonder if you're missing something
because you haven't done that.
You thought it stored up inside you.
It's completely let it out.
Dude, I told you about the time I saw,
um, if you guys, when's the last time you've heard
a grown man actually cry cry,
like when's the last time you heard that?
22 years old, so we're on there.
I don't know if you heard it in that ran away.
It's a weird thing to hear.
It's like yeah, because you're not used to it
and I feel like when a man loses it in that direction,
then it's like, because I heard it.
Dude, there was a guy that worked for in my facility
who he was going through some really terrible shit
with his wife and one of the female trainers
one goes up to him and she's his friend and she starts hugging him and you can see him kind of
like he's really sad so his arms right aside he won't even like put his arms around her and she
keeps rubbing his back and she's like listen it's okay you can like you can let it out it's okay.
Oh she robbing Williams, dude and then he went and it's not your fault. And then you see his face
chains like he starts crying quietly
But then he started like starts the lip like kind of quiver. Oh, then he started the
It was really like oh no not bubbles here. What you do
That's the only time I've cries like when somebody
Somebody is like really crying like and I'm just like sitting there and then it like starts to affect me
is like really crying, like, and I'm just like sitting there and then it like starts to affect me.
You know, like it's contagious or something.
I just can't help it, man.
Like I just, I feel energy from other people more than,
like I don't think to do it,
but like somebody can affect me like that.
Like that, that's the, that's the,
the mark of a good of a natural communicator.
So there's, there are neurons in the brain
called mirror neurons.
Have you heard of these?
So if I, if I'm, if I'm doing something, let's say I have an emotion, my own original emotion,
or I do a movement, or I throw a basketball or something like that, there's neurons that
fire, that pattern, that show that I'm doing that.
Now if I watch someone else doing that exact same thing, those neurons still fire.
The only difference is I'm not getting the physical feedback from my body from actually
performing it. So when you're watching someone have an emotion, smiles, cry, whatever, your mirror neurons go off
and that literally tell you that you're experiencing the same thing. That's how social humans. That's
why we're so interconnected. That's why I'm whole body language. That's why when you see people that
are great communicators,
not only can they communicate verbally,
but also they're animated and they smile.
That's such an important piece to communication.
The most important part of communication is not speaking.
It's listening.
And listening is not just hearing the words.
It's actually feeling what the person is trying to convey.
Here's a thing. Here's a thing.
Here's a thing.
If you're trying to communicate to somebody and you fully grasp and understand what they're
trying to communicate and their emotional state behind their communication, now you know
how to reply and communicate back to them.
If you don't understand that, it's impossible.
You're guessing at best.
At best, you're guessing.
And you can be a good salesperson
and sell your idea or whatever, or at least animate it and make it really charismatic or whatever.
But if you don't fully understand the other person, then you're kind of guessing and you're really playing with half power or not even.
So I remember learning that as a salesperson. One of the most impactful lessons I ever learned was early
on in my career at fitness. I was really effective at selling training right out the gates,
but I remember sitting next to, at the time, one of my mentors who had been doing it a little
longer than me, and he was also very, very good, and he was doing the process or whatever,
and me and him were talking to a potential customer together. After the customer left, he looked at me and he said, use your ears in your mouth and
proportion.
I said, what does that mean?
He goes, listen, twice as much as you talk.
Many times when you listen, you're going to get everything you need to be a much more effective
communicator.
And I was like, that's weird.
I don't know if that makes sense or not, but I just started doing it.
And I started realizing, oh, shit, I'm way better.
When I listen more than I talk, and that's what it really, that I just started doing it and I started realizing, oh, shit, I'm way better when I listen more than I talk.
And that's really what it amounts to.
Well, part of the sales process
that I used to teach trainers was to,
like someone to answer a question,
my channel, before even trying to think of money
and sales and converting things like that,
like learn to be an active listener,
learn to engage in the conversation.
And so when you ask a question, don't just stay right there,
like go three more questions within that question. You know what I'm saying? So if I ask you
something very basic, like, Sal, what's your goal? And you say, right, I got a dig deeper into that.
How do you mean, right? How much? Yeah, exactly. All those different things. And when you do that,
it makes that other person feel like you're engaged in the conversation. By the way, how do you
mean is a magical statement
in communication?
If you want someone to go deeper,
all you got to say is how do you mean?
For whatever reason, it is not a...
If I say what do you mean,
sometimes it's a little abrasive.
Like if you're explaining something,
I'm like, what do you mean?
You know, it's like people feel accused,
but if I say how do you mean,
it comes across very much like I'm trying to understand you,
and boy, do people open up.
There was another technique that I've really started to utilize recently that I learned from Jordan Peterson, who's obviously he's a psychologist.
And so when a very, very good psychologist teaches you how to listen or talks about listening to people, that's a good time to pay attention because that's what they do.
That's what their job is, especially if they're good, right?
That's a good time to pay attention because that's what they do. That's what their job is especially if they're good, right?
So one thing that he said that was I was like, oh, that's fucking brilliant is when someone's explaining something to you
Repeat it back to them. So what if you're explaining something to me then I'll say okay Let me let me see if I understand what you're saying what you're saying is and try to
Distill what they're saying and it's something that's understandable now that sounds easy
But it's actually quite difficult
because you'll go back and forth many times,
many times because you either didn't understand them
or because the person communicating is thinking out
as they're talking, they're trying to formulate
what they're trying to express themselves.
But when you can distill it down to what they mean
and you both agree after you've communicated it,
now you can communicate your point extremely effective.
I heard him, I read that when he wrote that,
and I was like, well, that's fucking brilliant.
And I've actually used it a couple times,
and I've gotten a couple,
well, that takes good communication with both parties,
because you can do that,
and then a lot of times people's egos,
if they don't understand what you're saying,
but then they just immediately agree with what you're saying,
because they don't really, they feel like afraid to say,
well, I don't necessarily understand what you just said there.
Like, can we talk about that a little bit more?
Well, that's what makes humans so dynamic and remarkable,
and especially in our growth,
and how fast we evolve our thought process
and the way we live and things tend to get much much better in most metrics
is that our ability to communicate with each other and that extends to writing things down and storing them so now we have stored knowledge that we can add upon
and it also comes to, I mean, the better animals can communicate the more social they become, the larger their societies become, this is true for all animals, whether you look at chimpanzees or
dolphins or humans, where the greatest communicators, you know, in the world, our ability to be
a convey ideas.
We're number one.
Yeah, our ability to convey ideas.
Are we though?
Are we?
I mean, that's what we think.
Yeah.
I mean, how do we know that?
Our octopuses, you know, have in deep conversations.
Well, so they don't even need to be, they don't even need to be
near each other.
They're just tingly.
Well, well, here's, well, here's the part that they lack,
because they do communicate pretty well with you.
I'm just fucking with you.
Well, I think about that a little bit.
Well, colonies communicate in incredibly remarkable way,
so that they all work as one unit.
You get what's on the top line.
The jellyfish lives forever.
I feel like maybe they got something to do now.
Or bees.
Yeah, but that's almost like on a chemical level.
Well, that's what I'm saying.
It's just a form of communication, right?
But here's the difference between that.
The difference between us and other animals
like ants or whatever,
because they do have, in some respects,
incredible communication is that humans have the ability
to store knowledge
and then to add on to it. So ants have evolved in their processes that much in millions
and millions of years, whereas humans have this hockey stick of evolution where we not
a lot changed for a long time. There was some advance, but then when we got the ability to store information, it was like, now we explode in our ability to grow and evolve, where we
can become more and more specialized as a result. So, yeah, so I find communication fascinating
and I think the better you can do it as a person, the more effective you'll be in your whole
life, everything. Relationships, your job. I don't care what work do you do.
That's an important aspect. I mean, I think it's, I your job. I don't care what work do you do. That's an important aspect.
I mean, I think it's, I tell every,
I don't care what fucking job you have.
That has to be one of the most important things
that you can learn to do for sure.
I think that should be taught at very young age
all the way through school.
That should be like a staple class
the way we've treated some other classes
that I think are pretty useless.
Absolutely, yeah.
Absolutely, and I think that rules should be established,
or at least people should understand how a good argument
or a good debate is made so that we don't get so caught up
in the, like here's a simple silly, simple example.
It would solve a lot of people's problems
when they're trying to argue or debate with someone.
If I'm having an argument with Justin over a specific topic,
and Justin does a, he creates a straw man for me to focus on,
we've lost the central focus of the conversation,
so no progress can be made,
because now we're sidetracked with all these different straw men
that really don't have anything to do with the topic at hand.
You've got people on the straw man,
and it's for example, I don't know what straw man is.
So a straw man would be just creating a separate argument
That really has nothing to do with so for example if I say to you
You know, well, you know Trump is made a Trump made a bad decision on foreign policy
And you know, and I'm a liberal right Trump made a bad decision on for some foreign policy
And then you come at me you'd be like well Obama made the same decision
What the fuck does that have to do with what I just said?
Other than, now we're gonna argue who's playing
a diversion tax.
It's really, it's nothing has nothing to do
with what we're discussing at all.
It's just, it's distracting me from what we're talking about.
There's a lot of different ways of debating
a more extreme version with that,
maybe someone attacking you personally.
Either, and that's called something else.
I forgot what that's called, but there's a lot of terminology.
And just knowing how to debate and discuss it,
like let's focus on the topic at hand, let's discuss this.
And you're right, attacking someone personally,
also was another kind of not fair and not really effective.
You know what's interesting?
You guys are talking about like school.
Like I remember in college, we actually had a class
where we would have a panel,
like basically our project was to argue and debate a point that they would just assign you.
And so a lot of times you got the one that like you didn't agree with necessarily,
but you had to kind of build up your case and you had to like write all these points out and make
sure that it was a powerful case that you're presenting against the counter argument.
And I remember getting one for it, I had to like argue for having nuclear power and nuclear
warheads.
So I had to like argue basically, obviously my argument was really just that we got to this certain level.
So that way, now we've prevented wars because with nuclear warheads, it's like a deterrent.
It's like the ultimate.
Basically, we all go down.
But anyways, it was interesting because it gets people to think in a different direction
and it causes them.
No, it's a good practice right away to learn to argue
the opposite side.
Are you kidding?
That's all I do that all day long.
It teaches you empathy when someone else is debating you
about a topic.
The first thing I assume, I think there's a mistake a lot of
people make when they get into debates or conversation is
they're thinking of their next point versus trying to
actually listen to the other person
and understand where they're coming from.
That's right.
And so doing stuff like that helps you understand
where somebody else could be coming from
because you've actually had to think,
okay, if I had to argue and defend this,
what are all the angles or ways I had to think?
That helps you have empathy for that person
who's now debating that on that side.
I think it's such an important skill. Well, I mean, you here's a deal when it comes to, you know, kind of where I was going with this.
You said empathy for someone I totally forgot. No, it is. It's just it's super important that people
learn to do that. Okay, that's a skill set that I mean, I feel like I've been practicing for a very,
very long time. Oh, here is where I was gonna go. If you don't mind me interrupting. You just put Justin.
Yeah, I know. I just did a Justin right there. Yeah, what happened? We hung out, very long time. Oh, here is where I was gonna go. If you don't mind me interrupting. You just put Justin right there. Yeah, I know, I just did a Justin right there.
Yeah, what happened?
Wow.
We hung out too much last night.
How am I affecting you just like your affecting my guy?
No, so here's a deal.
If you're so afraid of being wrong that you avoid
looking at the other side, like you don't almost don't want to know.
You just want to be right so bad that you don't want to know.
But the reality is, do you want to be right in the sense that you have the right answer or do you just want to win?
Is my point. Yeah, so if you want to truly be right
You have to study and examine the opposite side with as much detail and as much dedication
Add to the side you strive to think your way through that and one of two things is gonna happen one is
You're gonna realize that you're wrong, but that's great because that means you're no longer wrong.
So that's awesome, but people are afraid of that
because then all of a sudden it's like,
oh, it's been wrong this whole time
and that's too painful.
It's more painful to continue to being wrong.
So just realize that.
And the second thing is when you,
if you study the other side and you realize
that you're still right, you've only strengthened
your position even further. You know what I'm saying? So you're just creating, you've only strengthened your position even further.
You know what I'm saying? So you're just creating, you're getting more evidence
by being as open as honest and possible. I do that shit. If I'm debating someone on economics,
I tell you something right now, nine at a ten times, I can argue they're side better than they can.
And I can still overcome it, but I can still argue they're side better.
And you see a lot of the same arguments circulating over and over again because people
haven't realized
that because it worked on people who didn't know their side.
Once you start to debate a side and you start to realize, oh, that's not an ecstasy or argument,
then you start to strengthen your own.
So it's very important that you do that.
Very, very important.
Did you guys see Russia's announcements on their nuclear, their new nuclear?
Speaking of nuclear, right?
That would have been a much better transition. Why didn't you do that? He was talking about nuclear. Yeah, that was, he was their new nuclear. Speaking of nuclear, right? That would have been a much better transition.
Why didn't you do that?
He was talking about nuclear.
Yeah, that was, he was talking about nuclear.
Why wouldn't you start right there?
Instead of forgetting your new nuclear.
Nuclear.
One of these times out, one of these times.
Nuclear is no, it is.
It will be smooth.
So, so Russia has got, apparently Putin came out
and talked about their new nuclear capabilities, their new weapons that they have.
Awesome. Yeah, exactly. Not scary at all.
So one of his ICBMs is called the Satan 2. I don't know if you guys know that. That's the nickname for it.
Get the fuck out of here. No joke. Wow.
And this isn't, so it's an ICBM. Those are intercontinental ballistic missiles. That means that
they can launch them from Russia and they'll hit any country or anywhere in the world, right?
And we've had these for a long time.
This has been around since the 19th.
We've got the Patriot Miss.
70s and 80s, right?
Well, here's a deal.
They've designed one that flies at hypersonic speeds
in strange maneuvers that now they're showing examples
and American strategists are saying,
oh yeah, that would be almost
impossible to shoot down with our current capabilities.
So there's that.
So that came out.
He also has a sub that is autonomous.
So it's a total self-driving sub.
It's a nuclear sub that's nuclear powered.
In other words, this thing goes underwater and can be out
in the ocean for like 100 years or more
and park itself,
park itself somewhere in the ocean.
So it could be in the ocean,
it could sit there, turn itself off,
or run at low, whatever, nuclear powered and chill
in case some shit goes down.
So they've got one of those,
which I'm sure those have been around for a while.
I'm sure we probably have those too.
And then there's also a nuclear-powered cruise missile. So this is a missile that goes up
into space probably and can just circle the globe forever with a new gun straight up peacock.
Yeah. So essentially this is just ensuring mutual destruction. Oh, that's all it's just keeping the balance
on the force I guess.
No, he's just, he's trying to like put his chips out there
like boom, dude, I got it's gotta end at one point though, right?
Like how do you, how do you get more powerful
when that sense, right?
I don't understand how, where it is.
There's nothing.
We'll have a death rate.
I can now blow the world up seven times over.
I mean, is that was nothing.
I think the biggest advantage would be if somebody We'll have a death rate. I can now blow the world up seven times over. I mean, is that what? There's nothing.
I think the biggest advantage would be if somebody
invented a way to completely neutralize all incoming missiles,
that would be a huge power shift.
But other than that,
I, you know, here's a thing, like a lot of people
are realize this, if the Soviet Union and the US
didn't have nukes when the Cold War was going on.
We would have gone to war for sure.
100% we would have gone to war.
We almost went to war with nukes.
Yeah.
You know, several times, people don't realize how close we came to, you know, mutually
a short self-destruction on, you know, both sides on all sides, right?
But we didn't because of that.
It was like the biggest deterrent.
It's my Pakistan and India don't go to wars because they got nukes pointed at each other. And it's like, who's going to pull the
sugar first? It doesn't matter. Everybody dies. It would be like pouring poison into
everyone's water, including the water that I'm going to drink to kill you. You know,
it wouldn't make any sense. The only time this, this fee that I, so I have no worries about
this with Russia or other countries. Only time I have, I worry about something like that is if
religious fanaticism gets their hold on New Yorkers because they believe so much in, like
they're willing to kill themselves anyway. So that would be a way, like you know what I mean?
So for suicide bomber mentality, got their hands on a nuke, and that's what they want.
They want mutual destruction. They're gonna launch a nuke just so that they know everybody else is gonna nuke each other so what was
I uh what was that quote I don't think I've said it on the show yet what was that Einstein I think
he said he says I don't know what world war three will be fought with but I know that world war four
but will be fought with sticks and stones yeah it's fucked up yeah that's a fucked up man fucked up
quote but yeah so it's funny how Russia is still trying to stay relevant, you know.
Yeah, you're right.
And I think it really is.
It's just like it's just peacocking, you know, but yeah, the extremists, the people that
like have no disregard, you know, for being rational and logical and, you know, they
think it gets this higher purpose to do something and it's
like higher call and it's this belief system that supersedes like you know all the rest
of humanity.
That's some scary shit.
Dude, you know what it highlights to me is it shows that humans are we are driven by a basic operating system.
And that operating system is not your instinct,
it's not something you're born with,
it's an operating system that you plug in
and it's your belief system.
So when people look at people like that
who are willing to kill themselves
or who do crazy shit or cannibalism,
which exists still in parts of
the world or just insane stuff. You teach yourself like how could people even think that
way? Well, it's because it's their belief system. So that's why it's so important to
push for ideals. That's why there's a, you know, being inclusive and letting everybody
speak their mind is important. But it's super important that you also speak your mind
and there's a battle of ideas going on because if someone sells their bad idea better,
people start using that operating system, people start doing some crazy shit.
You know what I mean? So that's why I'm always like,
yeah, kind of looking at crazy shit.
Yeah, looking out for that crazy shit.
Yeah, that's a good transition. It's a better transition right there. People, you know, the latest trend is so this was
interesting. I know some people that have actually tattooed their finger to, you know, for if they're
getting married and they want to have rings. Yeah, tattoo a ring on your finger. Not the actual ring.
She just wants it. Yeah, something that represents it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's what we need.
That's what we need.
That's what we need.
That's what we need.
That's what we need.
That's what we need.
That's what we need.
That's what we need.
That's what we need.
That's what we need.
That's what we need.
That's what we need.
That's what we need.
That's what we need.
That's what we need.
That's what we need.
That's what we need. That's what we need. That's what we need. That's what we need. That's what we need. I had no idea this even existed, but the new trend is the Pierce, your finger. With, yeah.
What the fuck?
I should show you guys,
I wish we had in the studio,
we'd have the TV and Doug could pull it up for you guys,
but they literally pierced through flesh,
like through the meat of your finger,
and then it interweaves in through like the top part,
and some people put a stone right here,
and it like, yeah, it's like all in,
and think about that getting infected.
You had go into work, like,
you obviously don't do a lot of shit with your hands.
Right.
Well, I think, oh, it's just like those studs.
Look, oh, there is.
Okay, I get it.
Yeah.
Oh, gross.
You know what, dude?
It's just fucking weird.
You know, you know what's gonna happen? There's gonna be at some point, the cool thing is gonna be have no piercings, oh gross. You know what dude? It's just fucking weird. You know, you know, it's gonna happen
There's gonna be at some point the cool thing is gonna be have no piercings no tattoo. Oh, I think so too
Yeah, I think I wonder if our party's already moving I wonder if like when we get old our kids are
You so lame dad. Yeah, yeah, fucking tattoo your door
Yeah, you know people oh, man cool tattoo dad
The only reason why I'm into clean the only reason it may have, it may hang around there is for the, especially if you
have art that means something to you that means it's just like the fashion thing, right?
It's a way to, it's another way to express yourself.
So I think it, well, the trendy, I definitely think the piercing and just putting holes in
your body all over the place.
So I don't think tattooed, well, maybe, here's what I, so here's what I'm observing.
Maybe you guys disagree with me because I'm speculating here. But what it looks
to be, what it seems like with the trends of, we'll talk about tattoos for a second. The
trends of tattoos so far seem to be where you put the tattoo. And there's been a few
trends of types of tattoos. Like there was the Chinese writing for a while, there was
the barbed wire for a while, there was, you know, the wings on the back
or the garter-bought thing around the leg.
Like I can name a bunch of them that,
the tribal, you know, design.
But-
That's gonna graze right over your dolphin tattoo, huh?
Yeah, man.
Yeah, no, that's not a style.
Not for men, at least.
I'm the only guy that has a dolphin tattoo on it.
Yeah, yeah.
But, but, so, but mainly what I see with the training with tattoos
is places on the body.
So first it's cool to put it on your ankle, low back, stomach, neck, we don't wear
ever.
So we're just picking different areas.
The next place is probably the, not the mid back, lower back or upper back.
I'm starting to see mid back.
Ribs are starting coming out of style now.
Neck face tattoos.
Neck face tattoos.
Neck face tattoos.
Neck face tattoos.
Neck face tattoos.
Neck face tattoos. Neck face tattoos. Neck face tattoos. Neck face tattoos. Neck face tattoos. The next one is real popular for some reason. I think it's because the more extreme, right?
Yeah.
And so you go from the neck on the side,
but now it's throat.
So a lot of people are getting it on the throat,
like right underneath the chin, face, head,
which I'm like, wow, that's gnarly.
Yeah, so I feel like the eyes,
so I feel like people tattoo their retina.
Yeah, so what in the fuck?
It feels to me like tattoos won't go out of style
until all the spots have been gone out of style.
Like until everything's gone out,
then you're gonna see people be like,
oh I don't have any.
And by that time I think we'll be able to do this thing
where we'll be able to, you know,
I'll be able to hit a button or hit software
that goes, I get like a cool,
get like a tribal sleeve.
It's almost like on a wall.
It's like, you know, they change the color of their suit,
but you just change like your dragon tattoo into that.
That would be sick, right?
So you're inked up one day and the next day, you're totally not.
Yeah.
Oh my God, that would be crazy.
Come on.
That'd be pretty cool thinking it's like second life
for whatever that game is.
Yeah.
You just like have your own avatar and you just
change yourself all the time.
Change your skin color.
Well, you know, I should have needed to.
I already see those ones that people, they do people yourself all the time. Change your skin color. Well, you work, you work, you work, you know, I should've needed to have more. I already see those ones that people do all the time now
that like Hannah tattoos or whatever they did last
like a couple of weeks.
I mean, just think of that process sped up,
you know, and better technology,
or maybe I can just put my arm in a arm
or whatever place you want to tattoo.
That's a weird idea.
Dude, so another trend I wanna go over,
which is in our space of fitness, there seems to be
now, because more and more studies are supporting what we've been saying for a while now, since
day one, that frequency is a major contributor to muscle growth and adaptation.
So, another study came out where they compared two groups of people, one group training
of body part, once a week, the other group training a body part six days a week,
the six day a week group experienced same results
or better, so it was actually slightly better.
And now I think of course you can go overboard
with too much intensity with frequency, right?
Cause I looked at the study
and I think they were going to failure every day,
which was like, that's crazy.
But they still got great results.
Here's what a lot of these frequency studies are showing,
which, well you guys know which option,
people might not realize this,
but more frequency of training results
on less muscle soreness, 100%, 100%,
which maybe why a lot of people still feel like
brosplets or the super, you know,
once a week high-volume workout.
Oh, I see what you're saying.
Yeah.
Because they get sore.
Because that's their indication of good workout.
That's right.
Yeah, workout.
And that means I'm building.
That's right.
No, muscle damage.
I am 100% think that.
Yeah.
Because I know guys that would meet that met me that would that saw that I was training like
like our maps like when we were competing.
And they would try and do it.
And they would only stick to it for a couple of weeks.
And they're like, they would freak out because they're not sore.
They're not getting a sore as they were getting before they were hammering everything
for one day.
And I was just like, no dude, that's just one.
It's better.
Let me explain something to you.
The less soreness you get,
like you want to manage that,
too much soreness is terrible.
I remember the first, like, I was one of my,
was that a mind blowing thing to feel?
It was a certification I was going through.
I wish I remember which one I was,
but I was talking to the guy who was teaching
the course afterwards and we're talking about that.
And he said that to me It just was like
I did doubt my whole career. I thought if I train if I train a body part once a week
I'm gonna get sore every time if I train a body part three or four days a week
I almost never get sore. Yeah, never and I can really start to I mean
There's a point where I even start to push intensity and I just don't I just don't get sore
God
I still hear that like oh my god. I got so sore, but in a good way.
Yeah, like you can always throw that one in like
right after it.
You're like, oh yeah, yeah.
Especially if they know my own punk
because they know we tell us a good way.
It's a good sore.
Yeah, I got you.
No man, frequency is super important.
And this is why, like so people who follow like,
for example, maps, anabolic with the trigger sessions,
and you know, we have the three foundational workouts
and then the other trigger session days, right?
People who follow it to a T
are always blown the fuck away.
And it's basically because you are literally maintaining
an adaptation signal every single day.
The biggest, one of the biggest reasons
why you're not building muscle like you want to
is because you are simply not having an adaptation signal that's active
or high all the time. In fact, if you're not building anything and you're maintaining or whatever,
it means you're building and losing at the same speed. So because remember, muscles don't really
maintain. They're the builder or the other shrink, right? So gain or lose. So what that literally
means is you are gaining and losing equal parts throughout the entire week. So you have as many days that are adaptation in the positive
as days that are adaptation in the negative
because they're both adaptation, right?
Losing and gaining muscle.
So all you have to do is move it in the favor
of more often adaptation in the positive.
That's all you're trying to do with your resistance training
and frequency is a very easy way to do that
And so when you throw in that free
So even if you do a body part split because you can still do a split and just organize it right you just
Bump up the frequency train your body parts more frequently makes a huge and more and more studies keep coming out and I'm seeing all these
You know bodybuilding publications. I here's a thing. How long do you think it'll take before pro bodybuilder start doing this?
I think some I think some do I just don't know already mess with it become a little more popular
I'm sure well, and here's the thing though, and so and I remember when I got and this is you know
What we have coming down the road is a more reflective?
I think of what I was at at the peak of my competing where
It's a split, but it doesn't look like a split.
You know what I'm saying? It's not really,
you're still hitting three muscle groups a lot of times in a day.
And so you're able to, you know,
and you're still hitting frequent times a week.
Yeah, so I think a lot of guys built off of a split.
I think if they realized that if they were to just go to a full body for a while, they'd benefit from it.
But I even think that some of these, most of the guys
that are at the pro level, their split
doesn't look like the average gym gore
that's trying to make a split work either.
Not to mention all the other things
that come in the factor too.
I honestly think a big, just a huge part of it is
that adaptation signal that you get from resistance training in some people and a
very small percentage of people and probioty blooms definitely make up a tiny, tiny fraction
of the normal population in terms of this is that they just have an adaptation signal that
just fucking stays on.
You know, or if I go lift weights and I do a really good job, maybe that adaptation, and
I'm experienced, right?
So the more experienced you are,
the shorter that adaptation signal stays on, by the way.
So if you're a beginner and you lift weights,
your body's gonna adapt in the positive,
probably over 48 to 72 hour periods.
Some studies show that if you're super experienced,
that period is like 16 to 24 hours.
Like you're not hitting it some way,
maybe a much lower intensity, like the chair is just.
I read a study one time that said that after recovery from a muscle, so if you hit it and it gets
sore and once it recovers within, within 72 hours, atrophy begins. Yeah, good. But see,
here's the thing. Obviously, there, I know that there's tons of variables that go into
that, but I remember reading that study that was the first time that kind of switch for
frequency. You went off from me was like, well here, look at it this way.
When you train less frequently,
you're causing more muscle damage
as evidenced by the soreness that you get, right?
That means that you're recovering more and adapting less.
If you can figure out a way to reduce the damage
but still send a muscle building signal
and send it more frequently,
now you're adapting more than you're recovering,
which is why frequency is so,
is so such a powerful force.
And the more experienced you are,
the more frequent you need
because that adaptation signal doesn't stay on very long,
but I suspect when you have somebody
who's just a fucking genetic freak when it comes to this,
that they'll lift weights and that shit just stays on,
like three, four times longer than the average person
That's what I think that's happening. They just they just they don't have to do nearly as frequent that and they assimilate food better
I mean, I think there's and of course thrown anabolic right yeah
Yeah, I definitely think there's exceptions to that rule that there's a lot of that where you see guys that have become
Been very successful with building their physique because it's what works really well from.
I mean, it was the number one thing that I thought
was the biggest problem was, I'm not,
I can't, it's hard to knock a guy who's a pro
who's done this to his physique over and over and over.
So in, sure, you know, people's minds are watching that.
It's like, oh, this trainer's smart, but this guy's done it.
I've said it in due time over time again.
But what they don't realize is that he's mastered
his own body, it doesn't mean he really understands.
And his body's so far away from yours,
because of those genes.
Because of those genetics, you know?
So it's just one of those, it's just cool to see,
because I remember talking about this three years ago
on Mind Pump and people were blown away by what we were saying,
and actually a lot of people were arguing and debating it and saying it's wrong.
It's really cool now to see that.
It is becoming, it's not the message yet, but it's becoming like part of the discussion.
You know what it reminds me of?
It reminds me of when we first started talking about small meals and now it's pretty well
established.
Now if you talk to it, relatively
informed fitness enthusiast, they'll know that the small meals things is a myth. Whereas
three years ago, they didn't. Today, when you talk about training more frequently, it's
starting to get to that point where people are like, oh yeah, if you hit the body parts
more frequently, you know, and don't go to failure, you know, it's often, it's probably,
you know, it's probably better for you. So it's really cool to see that it's, you know,
that's moving in that direction.
I mean, the first times I was clued into that were,
did you guys ever experience something when you were a kid
where you did something good?
Well, I'll see you maybe not,
because you guys weren't lifting weights
until much later.
I was starting to, so I was lifting weights of 14
trying to build muscle.
And I remember when I was 14 trying to build,
and I was trying to get bigger arms, trying to get bigger arms,
and it was really slow and took a long time. And then there was a period of time where I was 14 trying to build and I was trying to get bigger arms, trying to get bigger arms and it was really slow
and took a long time.
And then there was a period of time
where I was like, I had a BMX bike
and I was practicing bunny hopping,
which requires you to pull up on the handlebars.
And especially if you're not proficient at it,
you pull really fucking hard
because that's what you think there's the bunny hop,
right, so you just rip it.
And I remember for like a week,
I would go outside and practice for hours, bunny hopping,
because that's what you do when you try to learn.
You just practice over and I used to measure my arms every week and it was like, I gained
a half an inch on my arms that week.
And I remember thinking to myself, like, was it the bunny hopping that made my arms?
It sure fucking was.
Then there was when I was 15 and I had to wear a knee brace, so I had to walk with one
leg straight all the time, which meant that so my left leg was straight all the time,
but I could still walk,
but it required me to push off really hard with my left foot.
So I was just walking like that all the time.
Now, at the time, I was training my calves,
my calves weren't growing.
And after doing this for a month,
my left calf grew a quarter inch, or my right calf didn't.
And I was like, was it because I was walking all the time?
But I didn't quite put it together. That was that frequency that was doing it,
you know what I mean? But the clues were all there. But I think the reason why it is hard
for people is we connect so much that soreness like Justin said earlier. And they're seeking
that. And so when you, and then when you realize real quick, when you switch over from being
in this single split to going frequently like three times a week, you can't hammer a muscle like that.
You got it.
You can't, if you hammer like that,
it's two days later, you're supposed to be back
and it's touching it again.
So, you're treading.
Right, so you have to learn to really scale back
if you're gonna increase frequency
and that's really tough for someone to do
who's trained themselves to chase the pump,
to chase the burn, to chase the soreness. If you're so used to chasing that all the time, trying to make that transition,
that's why the people that I see that don't like it or fail from it, it's typically that.
And it's hard to tell them that, you know, say it's like, they got to figure that out for
themselves. You can help guide them in that direction. All you got to do is try it for, I mean,
if you're really in tune with your body, try it for two weeks.
No joke, two weeks will tell you right away.
The first time when I switched,
within two weeks I was stronger and I knew,
but I know my body pretty well.
Otherwise try for 30 days,
if you're not one of those super in-tune people,
you have nothing to lose, you really don't.
Worst case scenario, it's not as effective
if you go back to your old routine.
Probably not gonna be that way, try it out.
All right.
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Oh.
All right, our first question is from Eddie the coach.
Sex.
Yes.
Oh, sorry.
Sorry, that's a whole question.
Wow.
Is it needed for optimal health or is it going without better?
Oh, good question.
Hey, before you answer that, Adam said, okay, did you pick the sonat of I do add I'm going
to jump on it. I need to ask you a question though, that I totally forgot. You you were
been having trouble sleeping past couple nights. And I know I made you drink the fuck. That
you don't like the taste. Yeah. Did you sleep differently? You know what I think I think
you just like for me to point out all the times
That you're right about something on the show. That's of course
Well, I give him the ray she the the four-signantic right I put it in the war
I just time I he heated it up because he doesn't like
Quit being a bit like the taste could be the baby. It tastes better heated up right? Yeah, okay
It's not it's not awful. You know I'm saying it's just I like tea. It's just not fucking
Cytomax or
It's definitely not that purple color
No, it's definitely not red or but I did know it does it does call me down right before I go to bed
And I like that so it worked. Yeah, I did I fucking work. I slept and we're not at it. We're not home
So that's even a bigger thing for me. Well, I know you always have trouble sleeping outside of you know
We travel or whatever so. Yeah, I want to make sure I took care of my boy
Sal the near true
I appreciate that you take care of it. Well Doug's taking care of us tonight, right?
Yeah, I can't wait for that. Oh shit. Doug's with one of dinner tonight. Doug is an excellent fucking cook chef boy or D
Yes, if we ever make a cookbook We put up dinner tonight. Doug is an excellent fucking cook. Chef Boyardee, next date.
If we ever make a cookbook, it's gonna be a lot of your shit.
Well, this last, the last, was it,
we're throwing those Brussels sprout recipe
in there we have to.
Well, was it this last thigh box
or the one before we're Doug ordered his stuff?
This is our first time.
I think it's about a month ago, I ordered a bunch of stuff
with the intention that next time we travel,
I'm gonna whip up some
tasty Thai food.
Now, did you get this off of the paleo menu or did you just search Thai?
I just searched the ingredients I needed.
So like last night, the intention was to cook a nice Thai dinner with some basil beef and
some penang curry.
Boom-taeng curry?
Boom-taeng curry?
But!
I like how that rolls off your tongue.
Hamburger's,
dropped my dinner.
So, that's because we got Robert Overs' one.
Hi.
Dude, we got Robert with us.
He's like, he was hungry.
So, he didn't have time to wait for him.
It was more of a timing thing.
It was, truly.
So, tonight my intention is to make a Thai Penang Curry
with beef, and that includes coconut milk
that I got from Thrive Market, some fish sauce
I got from Thrive Market.
Get some nice spices you're gonna throw in there.
Yeah, absolutely.
And then some basil beef, which is one of my favorites.
In fact, I made it for you back when we created
Mamp's Black over in the...
Oh yeah!
It's a little throwback.
That was good.
Yeah, thanks so much.
Thanks, Ty.
Ingredients, you can get right over it, drive market.
Did you buy enough meat because we have the giant with us?
This is a valid one.
I don't know.
Do you think 15 pounds will do it?
Well, it leaves about two for us.
So we'll split two pounds.
We can all fight for that.
Which by the way, living in a house with an actual giant
is very interesting.
Oh yeah.
It totally distorts my perception of how big I am.
I've never felt the smallest.
Imagine how I feel.
I posted a picture of Doug and him next to each other.
It's so great. It looks like Doug's child.
Last time I felt the smallest when I was in Japan and I sat next to Kanishiki,
which he was like 500 and some pounds, a sumo wrestler.
Oh, shit. I have a picture. I have to dig it up someplace.
Oh, you should have a picture that I do need to find.
I have these big spectacles on too, so there it is.
You have contacts?
You have contacts?
I wear contacts at night.
I didn't know that.
Yeah, I use this thing called orthocharitology.
So those are not your beautiful eyes?
Oh, these are my beautiful eyes.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, gorgeous eyes.
You're good.
Thank you, Adam.
He's got colored contacts
I know actually wear contacts at night and then they change the shape of my eyes and in the morning
I take my contacts out and I can see just fine during the day
Yeah, that's interesting. Did you read the study on their connection to eye cancer? Yeah
I said hey forget it
I'm just kidding sounds good
I said, hey, forget it. I'm just kidding.
Sounds good to you.
So I should take that.
All right, let's get back to sex, all right?
Yeah, I like it.
So is it important for health?
It's sex important for health.
It's in us primal, man.
We're supposed to reproduce.
Dude, it is part of the relationship.
This is something that it is important.
Being fit.
That's how a lot of times you can express love between your partner.
It's something that gets distorted because it's men.
We have this novelty thing that we keep thinking about.
It's definitely something that is constantly bringing me close to my partner at the same time
communicating well, all that stuff. It all plays a factor. It's definitely a big factor. know, it is constantly bringing me close to my partner, you know, at the same time, communicating
well, all that stuff at all plays a factor. So it's definitely a big factor.
It's so it's not as clear. It's first take, it's not as clear as like food and water
and air and shelter in terms of how important it is to you because obviously without food
water, you know, you would, you yourself would die without sex, you'd stay alive, but this human species would die.
Yeah.
So, so it is a fundamental thing that we have as humans that's extremely important now.
It's programmed.
Yeah.
We, we feel that programming to like that we need to do this.
Now, is it important for humans to have sex?
Well, it's, again, it's hard to separate because being healthy physically, emotionally,
mentally, usually means you have a healthy libido.
Actually, no, it does mean you have a healthy libido
because that tends to be a part of it.
So if you have sex issues, is that bad for your health?
I think there's definitely a positive feedback loop
but having bad sex or having bad relationship with sex
could also be the result of poor physical health,
poor emotional health and poor,
maybe even spiritual health.
Now, that being said, is avoiding sex bad for you?
Depends on your belief system when you're out with it.
Right, right. It could be a distraction for you. It could be something that you are addicted to.
I mean, I've definitely had friends that are sex addicts, and if anything fasting from that,
and actually going without for a while while is helping them get better connected with
Themself and wrist at wrist-allish their own values, right? So I think you get better dreams
I do think yeah, you learn to love yourself a lot, right?
I think that you know, I think it depends. It really it depends on the person. I think
Generally speaking if you know, you have a normal sex, you have a normal relationship with your partner,
and you don't have some weird views on it,
I think that absolutely, it's a healthy thing
that you wanna have.
I mean, I know personally for myself
in our relationship, it's extremely important.
It's definitely, I mean, here's some things
that are anecdotally speaking,
I mean, I can tell my attitude,
and I can tell Katrina's attitude,
I don't think ever the next 24 hours of our relationship
hasn't been anything but super positivity,
like right after sex, it blows my,
and it's on both sides, it's not just her, it's not just me,
it's like I also have more willing to do.
It's like mental clarity.
It is, well, I think.
It's well-being.
Also, you share something with your partner that, I don't know if it's
this process of you're giving to them on this deeper level, because what I notice is,
because, and I catch myself in my own behavior, but I notice in hers too, where, you know,
I also, and proactively go do the dishes, you know, I'm saying, right?
Yeah.
You know, I'm saying, helper with something that she didn't even ask her.
Yeah. And that's, you know, a lot of times I can get so focused on you know what I'm saying? Or I'm saying helper with something that she didn't even ask her for.
Yeah, and that's, you know, a lot of times I can get
so focused on myself and what I'm doing
and all the work that I have
and she's very self-sufficient
so I don't have to worry about her.
But after we bond and connect like that,
I catch myself being more into that
and paying attention to that more.
So, I mean, again, this is just what I,
and I see that from her too.
I mean, anytime that we have that connection the next day, the next 24, 48 hours,
I feel like she's very attentive to my knee. You're more like in tune with your, with
each other. Right. Right. It's a tough, it's a tough subject to try to quantify when
you're talking about like how much sex is healthy, what is healthy sex between two people?
Because we have general averages,
but that doesn't necessarily mean,
that doesn't mean much for individual couples.
It just shows what the average, you know,
what average people do.
I think the most important thing,
if you're talking about sex for a relationship,
the most important thing is I think
you should both be compatible.
And what I mean by that is,
you could have a very healthy, high sex drive, but that would be terrible
if your partner has a very healthy,
less high sex drive, right?
Now there's a bit of a discrepancy there.
So if you don't have a lot of sex together,
but that's how both of you like it
and both of you are just wired that way or whatever,
and that's healthy for you, then that's great.
If you guys have tons of sex,
but that can also be dysfunctional, by the way.
To a lot of sex can be a distraction,
it can be just based on a lot of things.
Many times, it's a signal that the relationship
is built only on lust.
Oh yeah, you can have that.
That's true.
Yeah, absolutely.
Absolutely.
And more often than not, when that's the case,
it's feeding something else.
It's feeding some other insecurity that you have
that's driven you to be attracted to that type of person.
And then that's all you see in this, the loss.
But if you're a healthy individual,
your sex drive is typically healthy in the sense
that it's not distracting you.
So some people, and I think especially men,
will attribute a super high sex drive with healthy.
And that's only because we've connected lots of sex and high sex drive with being manly.
And that's what healthy is. And yeah, I like to bang all the time. I got a boners all day long or whatever.
And men joke that way.
So we think sexual, yeah.
So sometimes sexual compulsion can be confused for being healthy.
Like, no, I'm a healthy man.
Like, I do, you know, I have sex all the time
and I have all this meaningfully sex.
That's not necessarily healthy either.
I think a healthy sex drive is probably not distracting.
Like, it's not getting in the way of life.
But it's healthy enough to where you feel good about it.
You feel comfortable with it.
You have good relationship with someone else
who, or other people, or whatever, plural,
that you have sex with.
And that's pretty much it.
You know, a really low sex drive.
That can be an indicator of poor hormone health for sure.
You see this being displayed.
So problems with hormones and sex are common.
Problems with stress and sex are probably more common.
Oh, 100%.
And I think sometimes people confuse that with hormones, right?
Well, I mean, I share this all the time on the show that that was something that was
a major thing that I connected was realizing that I could be on all these antibiotics and
still not have a sex drive.
I mean, that was stressed out.
Yeah, because of work stuff.
And I was so obvious because there would be always something going on, a big decision
or we'd take on a new employee and the revenue wasn't quite there. And so it's like, oh, god, also, a big decision or we'd take it on a new employee
and the revenue wasn't quite there.
And so it's like, oh God,
also, I feel the way to the world on me.
And then sex drive is just completely flat.
I didn't notice that before my 30s.
It wasn't until beyond my 30s that I start to really start
to connect that and go like, fuck, this is important, you know?
What's interesting about the desire to have sex,
of course, it's rooted in procreation, but there's a lot more that goes to it like
For women sex has been for thousands of years has been a form of currency
And I don't think that it's not a conscious thing, although in some cases it is a conscious thing
But in many ways it was you know look female mammals or female human mammals are one of the only mammals on earth that have sex when they're not in heat or at least when they can't get pregnant
or most mammals, the majority, the vast majority of female mammals have sex only when they can get pregnant.
Human females can only get pregnant really in a short period, in a short window during the whole month.
The rest of the month, their odds of getting pregnant
are incredibly small and yet human females
have sex throughout their entire month.
And so you, you know, one of the big questions is why?
And it's because that's probably one way
she kept the man around or at least kept him from
because a man who had children with lots of other women meant his resources were gonna get
spread to other women or maybe he'd find one that he preferred over you which was bad news for you
and your child because that was a major responsibility and potential burden for most human civilization so
women that was a very strong currency and what i mean by that by that is you'll find that sometimes women will get turned on in under
certain circumstances, not realizing that's because that's one of the driving factors.
For example, make-up sex, very, very tends to be very aggressive, tends to be very passionate,
and tends to be driven by the female.
And it's because, you know, instinctually instinctually probably she almost lost her mate, but she wants him. She wants to make sure she keeps him and not realizing that now
she's very passionate and it might be driven from there. So it's kind of fascinating to see the behavior behind sex.
I try, I try to reach out. I think the month or two ago to that sex with Emily girl. I thought she would be a really fun.
She'd be a fun one to talk to, especially since we've got a
question like this, because I love talking to somebody that's all they study, because I think it is
super fastening, very interesting. I think there's many variables. I think so many you need.
It's one of the reasons why the behavior of it's so fastening, why promiscuity is strongly correlated
with poor relationship with the opposite sex, especially in females. Well, you made a point about the behavior of it so fascinating, like why promiscuity is strongly correlated with like
poor relationship with the opposite sex, especially in females.
Well, you made a point about how important it is to that you find someone who you are on
the same level or a different level.
Yes, I think that's really important because there's a lot that happens to us in our
like formative years too that really shapes us in our sexual behaviors, you know, even
the way you view your mom dead.
I mean, I don't know how much you subscribe
to a lot of the Freudian theories and stuff like that,
but it's for sure.
It's something that could go all the way back to childhood.
So when you're dead, you're gonna change that person's.
Bro, just think of taboo.
Like imprints you.
Humans find, humans find a derived excitement out of taboo
and taboo changes.
So you guys will love this.
I saw an old, someone posted this on some Facebook page,
but it was a menu from a brothel,
from like 150 years ago.
Like a shnazwam, bro.
Like an old brothel menu of prices of sexual acts,
like they'd have a menu like, oh, if I want a blowjob, if I want to have inner force. like like brothel menu of prices of sexual acts.
Like they'd have a menu like, oh, if I want a blow job, if I want to,
you know, if I want to have inner core
of the names for all the different activities.
But the most expensive,
but there's those activities.
So let me add, so trip off this, right?
Trip off of this.
Today, and I have no, obviously, this is,
and this was based off of that article,
and I think it's true by the way people make jokes and stuff right today if you were to hire a prostitute
The the probably the one of the least expensive
Sexual things you could do with her besides like a like you know manual stimulation
Which would be like a hand job would be a blow job like a blow job would cost less than sex right much less typically
And this is this is what I read in the article like the going price for blow jobs and prostitution and legal brothels in Nevada. So if you go
to a legal brothel, blow job is cheaper than sex. On this old menu from 150 years ago,
a blow job was by far the most expensive thing because blow jobs were way more taboo
back then. And so it was more valuable. Men wanted them because it was something that
women, their partners probably didn't do like, oh my wife doesn't do that. That's only
for, you know, whatever, right? Very interesting. So taboo is very fascinating. So the things
that we think are taboo kind of excite us and make us want to do it more, which is why
I think it's super important to have a partner where you and your partner are so Safe with each other in the sense that you can express your own
Potential sexual desires that you don't that I think will prevent potential problems or
Proversions or obsessions later on because if you have a partner who's like I'm not doing that or you can't even talk about that
Sexual thing forget not doing it because a lot of people are like oh don't even talk to me about that
You may start to obsess about that thing and it becomes
of taboo and a fetish and it could cause sexual issues for you. You know? Kind of interesting,
right? No, that's really interesting. It reminds you what Lisa Billeu just said when we were
just hanging out with her about how her and Tom once a week, but this is more towards their
selfish pleasure in general speaking, but how important that probably is for a relationship to make sure you express
those selfish desires sexually that you have.
If you don't do that and you don't communicate to that partner,
how long that sits under there.
And I think it makes it bigger.
Oh yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
Have you ever been with a partner where you're like,
oh, this is a little, you know, in your mind, right?
You're like, okay, this is a little,
like I'm gonna express something.
Let's see how they react.
Yeah, you get all nervous. Yeah, what would you explain that, brother? No, no, no, this is a little like I'm gonna express something. Let's see how they react. Yeah, then you say it.
What would you explain 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, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, have a question about all the latex rubber, the mats, and the cameras before we get into that.
Why is there viscreen all over the floor?
I'll get to that. But anyway, you could you have a conversation with this person about it and they're super open and safe about it
And then you find that that thing is not really a big deal because you were able to express it
Versus where you feel like you can't say something and then it becomes even bigger and bigger in your mind because of that whole taboo factor
Right, right. Yeah, so anyway next question, please. I want anal
Next up is David J. Schroer. Where do you guys see the future of personal training?
The future of personal training way way more growth in virtual and online personal training
I hope we're a part of that.
Then the growth in personal training in person.
I won't be as bold as to say, I think the personal training in person market is going to
be flat, but I've definitely seen it slow down its growth.
It's good when it got, but it started exploding in the 90s.
I think it's going to look a lot more like... And I know Bed will disagree with us on that right? Yeah, but I'll argue this all day
I think it's gonna look more like like the way Dr. Brink has started his his clinic
I think trainers will have like the same similar type of a clinic set up for example where I charge you pretty top dollar to come in and get like this full on
charge you pretty top dollar to come in and get like this full on huge assessment for me to just check every joint in the body, kind of see how you move, go through a full
assessment with use and work on your mechanics and then give you all, I mean, then you would
lay out a program that's all specific and you'd be able to give detailed videos.
I mean, once you let it just like little Skype sessions to kind of like check up on you
and see how everything's going.
I mean, you'll literally have all, I think with this, this era we're in now, we can just like little Skype sessions to kind of like check up on you and see how everything's going.
I mean, you'll literally have all, I think with this, this era we're in now where we
can we document everything that we're doing like a business like ours is when you think
about it, when we keep, keep, keep adding to these videos, I mean, look, this is only
what, three years in and we've only been doing YouTube, and I think, imagine when you have
a, a very good detailed answer
for every question that a client could potentially want.
It sounds a lot like, and you mentioned Dr. Brings' facility too,
which I think, definitely, but also Dr. Molly Maloof,
the way that she gets all aggregates all this data
and then interprets it for her clients and shows,
okay, here's all these biomarkers,
here's what's going on, here's what we maybe
can adjust and tweak.
So, the further we get with sensors and the further we get with technology that's relevant,
if we're able to then incorporate that into the platform.
So now the coach can just have, well, your macros were here, your heart rate was super
elevated in this portion, and
they see all this data either real time, or at least they can go back and see what was
going on with your body throughout the workout process.
I think we're going to see less of coaches and personal trainers telling people exactly
what to do, and more a bit of a growth in coaches and personal trainers telling people exactly what to do and more a bit of a growth
in coaches and personal trainers who are going to teach people how to read all these new devices
and things in order to identify, you know, individualize their own programming. I mean, talking about the
the the GSMs, the glucose, the continuous, excuse me, CGMs, continuous glucose monitors.
the continuous, excuse me, CGMs, continual glucose monitors.
I mean, talk about being able to read your own individual
reaction to what you're eating in real time.
Right.
That is, we're gonna be the most effective.
We're gonna be able to deliver every answer
you could potentially need to progress your body
and find your answers out
with instantaneously into your fingers.
And this is why,
because that's the beginning.
The CGMs are the beginning. This is the beginning.
I watched my own evolution as a trainer.
And it wasn't until just this last couple of years
that I get to the point where it's crazy.
I, my job, I was doing less,
I was doing less for my people
and I was getting more results
because what do we all know?
We know that the client that you that asked you,
Sal, write me down, and work out in a diet
and you write it down and I'm gonna follow.
I don't wanna learn, I don't wanna be the...
That person never sees more than never.
Never, ever, ever, ever.
100% of the time that person,
the people that do see it or keep it going
are the ones that actually kind of fall in love
with the learning process that look like,
oh wow, you help connect dots for them
and then they be passionate about it.
So what I'm thinking is that the future is definitely
just helping people connect those dots faster
and more efficiently like tools like that.
And it's gonna be less of a choice.
There's nothing that I require much of your skills.
There's nothing wrong with having a set out plan
for you that's designed by professional,
even nutritionally, the problem is when the coaching
stops there.
You need to know the why's behind what they are, and then start to pay attention and see
how you're reacting to, because here's what a good trainer can do.
A really, really good trainer can take all their knowledge and experience and can give you
the best guess as to what's probably going to work best for you.
It is by far the best guess, and it's going to be in the general correct direction
for the most part.
But if the trainer stops there,
they've done 20% of their job.
The other 80% is now how do we take that
and start to tailor it and identify signals in your body
and move in the right direction to where now
you have the routine.
Think about this way.
You have a continual glucose monitor, right?
Imagine if you had a monitor,
which I'm sure they can somehow create this,
because we already know we can measure this.
It's just the equipment required
isn't something that you can have on
and you can monitor right away.
That technology hasn't been invented.
But at some point, what if you can measure,
your adaptation signal?
Oh, muscle protein synthesis is going up.
Oh look, I peeked shit, starting to come down.
Let me go do this exercise or whatever.
Now you're literally training your body
based off of objective measurements in real time.
For sure, the future is gonna look a lot more.
I mean, the sensor is with shirts,
like it seems a little bit silly right now at this point,
but like we're talking about the future. Like so, I mentioned with the sensors with shirts, it seems a little bit silly right now at this point, but we're talking about the future.
I mentioned with the cardio threshold, how they're measuring that with the chest expansion
and stuff like that.
It's like, this is all happening without you having to really do anything other than
wear a shirt, and then you're getting that data.
Now, somebody can interpret that and be like, listen, you know, at this pace is what you want to keep consistent to be able to make this time and it's
Very accurate that you know, it's probably gonna play out that you know what we're we are five to ten years away from and I think it's closer to five away from
a device that's non-invasive
That measures your insulin
Reaction and maybe some other parameters, but for now we know insulin.
You put it on and you eat normally, like you normally do.
And all it does is aggregate data.
All you have to do is enter in what you're eating
every time you eat it.
So, oh, I'm eating four ounces of cheese.
I'm eating a handful of peanuts.
That's all you have to do.
That particular device will measure the metrics
with what you've entered.
And after wearing it for a period of a week to a month,
it will tell you what your macros need to be.
It will tell you what foods to avoid,
which ones that you should eat.
Face off of what it was measuring.
Face off of its own observation.
Who do you think it figures it out first?
You think Apple?
You think Apple does it for us?
I think they created it.
There's obviously going to be steps on its face.
I don't think they're serious enough about health yet.
I mean, I'm yet to see it.
Like I know they've built parts like the health kit
and things like that that they can kind of get all of your devices
to kind of aggregate.
But there's going to be one side that creates the chip
and stuff like that that has the ability to read all the stuff.
The next, the other part is gonna be the platform
that uploads a retail.
That's where I think Apple will.
Okay, no, I take it back because you know why?
Guaranteed between their Apple Watch,
like that would be the first introduction
and they're gonna put the, you know,
continual glucose monitor in the watch.
In the watch, because it's just makes sense.
That would be money. So, you know, the data that they're going to get from
asking me so powerful. Just imagine like you wake up in the morning and, you know, you
look at your app or whatever because of this monitor that's on you. And it says to you
like, well, based off of the parameters, whatever today, this is you should eat a high fat
breakfast. You shouldn't have too many carbohydrates and avoid these kinds of foods.
Oh my God, that's your diet every day.
You just look at it and it tells you what to do.
And you follow, and because it's measuring
your individual body, you're gonna learn a lot.
You're gonna start connecting dots.
In fact, I think it probably will do that for you.
You know, in our trainer job,
may end up being more like,
it may end up evolving to teaching people
how to become intuitive with all these tools.
Knowing when to not be dependent on all these.
Well, that's it.
Because it's going to it's going to revolutionize how we can all help ourselves get healthy
and in shape with all these markers and feedback.
But they mean neurotic about it.
Right.
Well, then it's just like us with directions, right?
I rely on Google map quests.
I would be fucked if my if my phone went down.
I had to get to this house where we're at right now
Right, right? I wouldn't I would have to go find a map
You know what would be for me to go to a gas station find a map then try and figure out where the without the use of my phone
I'm like calculator
Math equations, I'd be fucked that's and that and I think because we're talking about ourselves that we're so disconnected from because we're gonna
Be plugged into this so that we're part of our job.'re gonna be plugged into this. So that part of our job I think will be teaching people
how to distill that information.
God, just imagine if they had that for exercise,
don't you know what I mean?
Oh, well based off of these measurements,
squats at the eight rep range are benefiting you
the most right now or something.
Shit like that.
James are just gonna be completely littered
with sensors everywhere.
They're just gonna be sensors on everything
because whatever you pick up,
you're gonna know how much weight it is,
how many reps you're doing, like all that shit.
It's all gonna be all you can have old timers like us who are like,
give me the fucking iron and the chalk.
I don't want no electricity.
Yeah, but those will have electronics in anyway.
It'll be interesting to know how much easier it makes it for people to get in shape.
You know, like if you just, because you have that feedback,
like how do I, I mean, a lot of people are just unaware
and they have no desire to become aware,
but if you had something that was buzzing on you
that just said, like you said, so,
you should eat something with this,
between these calories right now.
It's only gonna be useful with the coach
that interprets all that for you.
I feel like it'll get lost with like your everyday person.
It can't be. I don't know like your everyday person. It can be.
I don't know how to use it.
It can be.
So the future of trainers is being aware of this and then knowing how you fit into that.
Yeah.
Right. Cause as these things come out, there's going to be somebody like you said who's going to need to be able to explain this to them and teach them how to be proud of them.
So I think the sooner you read, if you're a personal trainer, the sooner you realize that your job is to change how your clients think, change how they process nutrition, how they think
about food, how they think about exercise, and the sooner you realize that teaching them
had to listen to their body is the most important thing, the more money you'll be able to make
and the more value you're going to provide to your clients.
If you believe that you are the person that just tells them what to do and I got to motivate them by getting them
excited and hyped, you can you stay on that train,
you're gonna be, you're gonna have a tough time
making a living.
Oh, dude, I think that's when we're filing
and see all that bullshit died, dude.
It's coming to an end real quick here with the hype
and motivation.
I think so, because I think anybody results.
It's all short-term results.
And the quality of trainers,
the quality of trainers has slowly gotten better
as the market's gotten more competitive.
I do believe that.
And I think they're gonna keep having to get better
as with all this technology and stuff that's coming out
because a lot of this stuff's gonna be able to do
with the average trainer to 10 years ago.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, I don't need to do that for me.
I can get all this online.
Like I don't need any of that stuff. Well, look get all this online. Like, I don't need that stuff.
Well, look how cool it is even being for us
for even consuming knowledge and information.
I mean, just 15 years ago, when I was trying to learn,
I was picking up certifications and reading textbooks,
where I mean, you fast forward to now,
it's so easy to, there's a lot of really good dudes on YouTube.
There's a lot of really good dudes.
Bro, I read a study the day after it's released now.
Right.
And I read it myself.
Whereas before, it would be an article about it
that come out months later.
They do it for a magazine subscription that dropped.
And only if it fed into their narrative
would they even publish it.
Right.
I mean, the ability to get information now is.
So I think that's gonna be vastly different in that sense.
But trainers are still gonna be,
you still gotta be a very good people.
You need filters.
I think something that drama set on our podcast
is such an important thing,
and I wish I remembered exactly what he gave
as an analogy for each one,
but it's just like the way the future is going
where business cards are dead,
and now that's like your Instagram is now your business card,
your email is your ability to advertise to you.
All these pieces that are now,
same stuff that was a hundred years ago,
it was just a different means of getting that information.
Well, for sure now, to a successful trainer,
for sure needs to have a decent understanding
of social media.
That was, that's very different from when I was training
people even five years ago, six years ago,
wasn't that big of a deal, but today,
you know, it'd be like a trainer 10, 15 years ago
who didn't have a business card.
What are you doing without a business card?
Well, where I think it's tough
is if you're a trainer that's working inside of a facility
and maybe you think that you're gonna stay,
that's what happens.
That's the thing, yeah.
You're in a little bubble and you think you don't need to.
Yeah.
No, man, start setting it up now
because you're gonna need it.
Right, I agree.
And maybe they'll come up with hologram trainers.
Did you guys see it?
Who put the car that has the hologram in it already?
Do you see that?
You didn't see that?
So you know how like where Tesla has the computer screener.
It's all hologram and you can like literally,
it's like all the icons are floating
and you can just take your finger like this.
And it's, oh, it looks dope.
That's totally a thing that a guy would want
his car to show off to a chick.
It's like, hello, yeah.
What kind of car do you drive?
It's not that big of a deal.
Brrr.
Yeah.
I know we do.
Oh, no big deal.
Go ahead and stick your hand in it.
Yeah, it dances sometimes.
Yeah.
All right, next question is from Claire DeLune 555.
What are your thoughts on necessary nutrition for children
and the best way to teach
them about eating healthy, especially when eating away from home, growing up my mom rarely
bought junk food and I would stuff myself with potato chips at friends houses.
Yeah, yeah. So there's a couple things you have to consider when you're dealing with your
kids. First and foremost, consider the context that they exist within currently and what it's
probably going to continue to look like as they get older.
That context is modern, Western society.
Now, if we look at modern, Western society, currently our best guess of what is probably
going to be the thing that they have to overcome or the thing that they're gonna have challenges with
has to do with their health and it has to do with chronic illness and it has to do with nutrition.
So this is the biggest, so if we went back a thousand years, the context was I better teach my kid I had a hunt and get food because otherwise
they're not gonna know the skill and they're gonna starve.
Today, it's I better teach my kid good food relationships, had a hunt and get food because otherwise they're not going to know the skill and they're going to starve. Today, it's, I better teach my kid good food relationships, had a navigate food,
and how to not over consume, and how to not eat these particular types of foods because otherwise,
they're going to run a very high risk of getting diabetes, Alzheimer's, obesity,
like all these different problems. So, that, so, and I'm saying that because I want parents to
understand that teaching your kids how to navigate nutrition is one of the most
important things you could do as a parent. Yeah. And I'm not saying that because I
think that's the most important thing. Period. Just because in the lifestyle that
we live today, that is becoming one of the most important things. It is all I just
don't tell them because I told you so or this is gonna make you think. Yeah well
that's the thing. It's like there has to be a lot of education
With that so it's not just like you're demonizing certain foods and it's it's you like super restrictive
You know like we're just eating clean and in this house
We only eat this and that because then you know that never we will happen
They'll go to their friend's house and they'll see cake and they'll see nothing in a chip and they'll go crazy
I think why this is really challenging is because some people,
you know, they don't think it's important.
Well, not so much that.
I think they'll argue it.
If you're listening, if you're listening to Arshol,
I think you're the type of person who understands the import.
That's why you ask this question.
You understand the importance of it.
You respect the information that you hear
from these three knuckleheads,
but then you can't maybe distill it as well to your child. That's tough to do. You know, it's already
tough to regurgitate the information that you're learning, right? That you didn't know that
much about until you heard it. And now you got to turn around and teach it to a child.
That's tough to do. So what I would, what I would argue is a lot of times some parents,
and don't get me wrong back up. And I think a lot of parents will be fucking it up. But I think there's a lot of parents that are starting to understand like a lot of times some parents, and don't get me wrong, back up, and I think a lot
of parents will be fucking it up.
But I think there's a lot of parents that are starting to understand, like a lot of these
foods are not good, I probably should be letting my kids stuff his face with it, but they
don't know the process to get it.
So here my thought process.
So first, the first thing is, and I bet money you guys will agree with me on this, the
most effective way to teach your child anything is to be it by example, by far
nothing is more effective than example.
At all, say whatever the fuck you want to your kid,
if you do the opposite, which one are they gonna listen to?
They're gonna listen to what you do, not what you say.
So that's number one.
Number two, when people truly understand
and comprehend the importance of something
on a real level.
Their behavior fundamentally changes.
Period.
So if I firmly believe, if I'm somebody that truly believes in conserving energy and in keeping
the earth clean, if I'm someone who honestly believes it, I don't just pay lip service,
like, yeah, I believe in conservation.
I believe, if I really believe it, you'll know when you go to my house.
You'll know by how I operate my life,
how I drive or how I take public transportation
or what I do with waste or, you know,
the way I live will reflect that and show
what I actually truly value,
not what I pretend to value, you know, to everybody else.
All right.
So when it comes to nutrition,
a lot of parents pretend to value nutrition.
They pretend like, oh yeah, no, my kids, yeah, I'm very serious about their health and
nutrition. I'm very serious about how they eat. This is very important. But then you
go to their house and you see how the parents feed themselves. And that tells you that
they're full of shit. The truth is, if you truly understand the importance of it, you
yourself will live it for yourself. And that by far, nothing else is a better teacher for your child.
Now as far as your kids going to other houses, here's what I have experience.
What I've experienced with kids who live in a house that just understands and values and prioritizes health on a real level,
not because of aesthetics or not because you know, don't get fat.
And I'm not talking about the negative. I'm talking about true, like, health and wellness
and the understand it.
What happens to these kids when they go to other kids' houses?
Is they either A, learn their lesson
because they seek sweets, they over-consuming,
they get sick, and then they're like,
this doesn't feel good.
Or B, here's what my kids do.
When we go to a party and my kids are like,
you know, it's a birthday party and they look at me
like, can I have a soda?
And I'd be like, yeah, you can have a soda. I don't fucking I have a soda? And I'd be like, yeah, you can have a soda.
I don't fucking restrict by the way.
I'll be like, yeah, you can have a soda.
They'll drink a quarter of the soda and they'll put it down.
They don't want anymore.
This happened.
This is very common with kids who live this way.
They have these like natural limiters and governors in their body because they normally
don't eat that way.
And as an adult, you know, who's practiced fasting the past and I've experienced that too. If I really, really, really, really,
really, you know, good and I feed my body properly or whatever, it's all I don't know.
I don't, I don't consume or over consume as much as I would.
Yeah, and so tough though, those, I mean, fucking lays chips for designs so you can't just eat
one.
For sure.
You know, I'm saying like, so you be able to eat more of them if you ate them every day.
Oh, yeah.
I agree. It's just a year. You've trained yourself to already crave them and want them and then you do them
But I think even even without that even the first time you've been into a lays chip who didn't like that?
Yep, who didn't like that? There's the time challenge that yeah, yeah, of course, you know
I'm saying like I mean you could be a kid that was doing all good and then all said you get your hands on that
Just so here's a couple things that I think things that I think where the real thing is,
is the conversation, and this is just again,
how on top of your game, or you as your parent,
you have this awareness now because you did that as a child.
So now you're thinking as a kid, this could be happening to my kid,
pay attention, they might get a stomach ache the next day,
they might be grumpy the next day.
Yes, help them connect that to how they feel.
And because more than likely,
the body will show, especially that small of a person, that young of an age, and introducing
that fucking garbage that early, their body will tell you something. They won't just run through it.
They'll act there. You see, you tell, you guys bring the simple time about sugar.
Oh, I don't even have kids. Oh, dude. And I've seen it before. Let me tell you some.
The behavior completely changes. The sugar crash in a child is, it's actually, if you really
look at, so what happened, what's the stereotype of a sugar crash in a kid,, it's actually, if you really look at, so what's the stereotype
of a sugar crash in a kid, right?
What do you see, Justin?
They get cranky.
They get what they want to cry.
Yeah, all over the place.
Irritable, like scatterbrain, right?
Now think of the state of mind, because your little kids are great in the sense that they
just act out what they feel.
They don't, they're not as aware as adults are.
Socially, they're just developing that.
They're just, yeah, so as an adult,
if I feel cranky and I'm around a bunch of people,
I might just be quiet, because I'm like,
I'm feeling kind of cranky.
A little kid's is gonna cry and scream and whatever.
He's become irrational.
Bro, think of the state of emotional being in mind
that your kid is in when they feel that way.
You're fucking doing that to your kid.
When you feed him shitty and they get all cranked,
you're giving these temporary periods of anxiety
and depression essentially is what's happening.
That's kind of fucked up right, if you think about it.
No, it's crazy.
Here's a couple of things that I do.
First off, I'm very obviously,
it's pretty easy to communicate that.
You don't tell your kid, don't eat this
because you'll get fat or eat this,
otherwise you're gonna be you know skin
You're whatever stupid. That's just stupid. Here's the one most people do that by the way
They do do I have been around and seen that multiple times you want to have a kid develop a
Eating disorder that's one of the hardest ones for me to not like jump in and say something
Oh, that's how I don't even have kids
I imagine you guys have kids you probably get even more defensive. That's how they develop eating disorders.
But here's the less obvious one that is actually
almost as important.
It's how you talk about yourself.
So if you're a mom and you have a daughter
and you're very aware of like you wanna make sure
your daughter doesn't develop body image issues,
you wanna make sure she doesn't have eating disorders,
but you constantly say, you know,
you look at the mirror and be like,
oh my God, I look fat today,
or oh my God, I gained weight, or I feel bloated,
or I don't look pretty today.
You keep talking about yourself that way, your child.
They're gonna mirror that.
They mirror that, and they learn it quite a bit.
And they learn it because they see what you value,
and your kids just want to be what you value.
So if you communicate to your kid inadvertently
that you value skinny and
pretty and you know that kind of stuff, then they're going to want to be that to try
it because they think now that you value that and that can create problems. So talk about
yourself in a way that you would talk to your own kid. So don't say shit negative shit
about yourself in that kind of a way. You can be objective and be like, wow, I made a
bad decision yesterday or I don't feel good or you know what that was. I should have done this. This would have been smarter. That's okay. But don't and be like, wow, I made a bad decision yesterday or I don't feel good or you know what, that was, I should have done this, this would have
been smarter. That's okay, but don't say things like, oh, I'm fat or I don't, you know,
they'll turn us, that's a big one. The other one too is, you know, when I say like,
it's just the way it is, like, here's an example. My house, this is something we implemented
months ago and it's been one of the best things we ever did. And this is Kudos to my girlfriend.
This was actually her her idea and it was actually quite brilliant.
When we serve dinner at the dinner table, it comes in courses and it starts with vegetables.
And so it goes vegetables first, then it goes proteins and fats.
And then if they're going to have starches that night, which they do, I'd say 80% of the time,
I'll provide them with a starch, 20% of time time it'll be maybe some fruit, then the starch follows.
They don't move to the next level until they eat at least some of the first level.
And I'm realistic, so I know, okay, my daughter's probably not going to like this vegetable
dish.
Okay, so I'm going to put a little bit on her plate.
And she'll be like, oh, can I have the meat?
Oh, but like as soon as you finish that, then I'll give you the meat.
And it was like one or two days of like
a little bit of battling.
And now it's just, this is how we eat.
They know they're gonna eat this first
and move on the next thing.
And it's no longer this discussion.
It's just how we eat.
And what's also starting to happen now
is they're starting to crave vegetables.
And they know it's dinner ready
and we'll be like, oh, it's almost done.
Now, are the vegetables ready?
Can I, I wanna eat those now?
And it's like, how they challenge you guys and ask you why we're doing this.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
Why do we eat this way?
And I say, well, we eat the foods in order of importance in terms of our health.
So vegetables are most important.
So we want to make sure we eat those first.
It's also good for digestion.
It's going to get your, it makes the food move through you better, helps you absorb things
better.
Well, why do we, the meat next?
Well, meats typically contain the essential,
and I, you know, here's a thing,
like don't underestimate your kids' ability
to understand things.
Sometimes we talk to the little kids
like they're fucking babies all the time,
we do baby talk.
So I'll say meat has the essential macro nutrients
that you need, and then I'll say,
let me explain to you what those are.
So I'll say there's three things that come in food.
Proteins, fats, and carbohydrates, but only two of them, you have to eat, otherwise you
won't survive.
One of them, you don't have to eat.
Like if you never ate carbohydrates, you would still survive.
That might not be ideal, but you won't survive.
But two of them, you have to eat or you won't survive, and meat contains both of those, and
that's why that's next.
And then the last thing is the non-essential thing
that we need, but that can also be important,
because it can provide us with energy and this and that,
which is our starches.
And so they, oh, okay, that makes sense.
And it's done.
And it's done, and I haven't had any like issues at the,
because what would happen is if I started with like,
most dinner tables will start with the starch,
and then they'll move to the meat,
and then they move to the,
by the time you get to the vegetables, you're gonna move to the meat and then they move to the meat. By the time he gets the vegetables,
you're gonna have to fucking fight with your kids.
And that's not a situation you win,
even if you win, you don't win.
Yeah, if you have it all in one plate,
it's just like gonna sit there
and they're gonna stare at it until it gets cold
and then it's like this battle to try and get that out.
No, I like that a lot.
I have actually done something somewhat similar,
but definitely highlighting the importance of what meat does for you and why you only
have two essential macronutrients. I have had that same conversation even with the four
and five year old and eight year old. It's like they get it.
It's so great. My daughter went to the dentist the other day and she had a couple
Look like cavities are starting to develop so they did something put some sealants and my daughter by the way
like is a is a A grain fanatic any grain rice
Wheat like whatever I partially blame. I'm not gonna put the blame on anybody
It's you know I mean my culture bread and pasta are such staples and it's the first fucking thing you feed kids
And so she just ate those early on along with other things too, but that's what she and obviously those foods are
Pleasure-bould to eat anyway, so she's super addicted to them and she's getting some cavities
So she got some cavities and she's asked me she goes how come you know
How come my brother doesn't have as many cavities as I do and you know do you have cavities as well?
I actually have never had a cavity.
She's like, what? Why do I get a cavity?
So I explain the microbiome of the mouth.
I explain how certain foods can affect that.
And I explain how grains and sugars in particular
create an environment in your mouth where bacteria lives
and then attacks your teeth.
And I'm just being totally honest.
I'm like, you know, so maybe you're getting more cavities
because the microbiome in your mouth is promoting this bacteria
that she's like, well, how do I change that?
I said, well, it's complicated.
Because again, I'm being honest with her.
I said, but something you can try is try to avoid eating
a lot of grains.
Well, what are grains?
You know, cereal, maybe pasta, as I said,
try to avoid eating as many sugars in particular to like if you
want to eat candy and stuff like that, that tends to give cavity. She's like, okay, and I noticed
very subtle changes in how she started eating because she's understanding the consequence of the
cavity. It's crazy. It's pretty awesome. Most smart kids will, if you say something that they
they don't understand, they'll say, what do you mean, Papa? Yeah, yeah, yeah. She'll probably say
that right back to you if she doesn't understand something like that. She's engaged. I love
Katrina used to when I when I first started dating her Nathaniel was only five years old and he's a really intelligent kid and
She'd always asked me like the conversations you have with him are so weird
She's like I'm like I love to sit down with a young mind like that and see just how smart they are
and digging into them, digging, why did you say that to me?
Where did you learn that?
And just keep at making them think and process.
You'd be surprised how fucking smart kids are
when you take the time to do that.
You ever have a straight up conversation
with one of your kids, like just a conversation?
Yeah, it's weird.
It's so funny, right?
Yeah, it feels really weird.
But yeah, I have had a few of those conversations where you're talking to them like you're just talking to another adult
You kind of get lost in it and you realize you know like they stay on course for a lot longer than I would have anticipated
Dude, I think if you guys take do a good good job of doing that what you guys do you guys do I
Think that's gonna pay off so much when they are teenagers because when shit does get hard, because you're
there used to communicating to their father, it's going to be that much easier for them to
open up and share what they're going to have to be honest by the way. We all want to understand
things, you know, I'm like, why not start early? Like really give them a deep understanding
of why not you five to seven is the most formative time for that brain and you have to be if you ever want to treat
those train those habits that's when you have to be so honest like don't demonize
like like I had a drug conversation with my 12 year old for Santa Claus. Yeah exactly.
We talked about drugs, you know, my son's 12 and I figured well it's a good time to
talk to him about drugs. You probably will be exposed to them within the next five years at some point, right?
In high school, at some point he's going to come across him or at least hear people
talking him if it's not already happening.
So I had this drug conversation with him and I was fucking honest.
When anybody, when an adult talked to me about drugs when I was a kid, it was like, they're
evil, they're terrible, they'll make you crazy.
You'll lose your mind.
And I remember thinking, I believed it, like, oh, that's so true.
How do you know what I'm going to do that? And then thinking like, I believed it, like, oh, that's so true. How would he do that?
And then you get older and then you just like experiment
because you're gonna fucking experiment
and you drink a little alcohol and you're like,
I like the way this feels.
Yeah, I was nothing like that.
What do you mean?
So I honest, so I was very honest and I told them,
I said, you know, he's like,
why do people do these drugs?
I'm like, because they feel good.
The people like the way they feel.
So let's be honest on both sides and then he said,
well, what they're bad to is,
oh, absolutely, I said, they can be very bad for your body
if they're used inappropriately.
Many of the illegal ones, there really aren't a lot
of proper uses.
I said, however, and I talked about how heroin is a pain killer,
how cocaine would use to numb things, how marijuana.
And we went, but just be totally honest,
and do the same thing with food.
Like don't demonize food.
Like this is evil, don't eat it.
I'll be like, well, it tastes really good.
Like they designed this to taste really, really good
and sometimes that's fun and that's okay,
but here's why most of the time it isn't.
And just be honest, because once you,
if your kids start to think that,
oh shit, my dad's full of shit, on these types of things,
they start to throw it all out, you know,
what the, what they call baby with the bathwater.
And so radical honesty, you know, Justin?
That's it, man.
Coming in hot.
Next question is from Jackie Martinez, 1983.
Jackie, Jackie.
It's our friend Jackie.
It's our girl.
How do you guys weigh out huge decisions?
What advice would you give someone facing a huge life decision?
Your arm wrestle.
Hey.
So she has a major decision in the next couple of days
regarding her living situation.
So.
Well, what I do is I take a massive dose of Ayahuasca and I ride the dragon.
That's my go to.
That's my go to.
Is that what you learned it on it?
Do you?
Do you, you, you listened to Ayah?
What do they call it?
Yeah.
Mother Ayah.
Yeah, mother Ayah.
She tells you what to do.
It's very really. That's your own. Yeah, exactly.
You know, I read something relatively recently, or the past couple of years, that I thought
was absolutely brilliant.
And that, and it was really, it's one of those brilliant things that I've put into practice
and I actually started working.
So one of the, so there's studies that have been done on people to show that when people
encounter a decision,
typically their gut reaction will more often
than not be the right decision.
This is true with test taking.
So when people take tests,
and then they find questions.
Always go to your first answer.
And they don't, like it's like a majority of the time,
not all the time, but a majority of the time
that's a better answer.
And I've seen the stats on it.
It's like 60 or 70% of the time more.
It's like your first initial. It is. Initial guess is right. It is 60 or 70% of the time more. It's like your first initial.
It is.
Initial guess is right.
It is.
And your gut, I mean, they talk about being your gut reaction.
Your gut is the second highest concentration
of serotonin receptors in the body.
It's where you produce most of your serotonin.
Your heart is your third.
So a lot of people say go with your heart.
Well, that saying actually has some interesting, you know,
relevance because you do have the third, like I said,
the third highest concentration of serotonin receptors are in the heart.
So essentially, you feel things in those areas because of information that's been processed.
Now it doesn't mean you're consciously aware of them like you are because you don't have
a frontal lobe in your stomach, but it does mean that you're kind of feeling what you're
thinking and it's based off of information you've accumulated. It's not a guess. That's my point. My point is a gut feeling is not a guess. It's actually a decision
or a direction of decision based on an available information that you've already stored in your body.
That's why it's more often than not. Correct. Now the problem is when you encounter a tough
decision is indecisiveness. What do I do? Second guessing. So I was reading this article with a guy
was saying, get used to making decisions.
And the way you start is by with small decisions.
When you encounter a small decisions like you're talking
to someone like, hey guys, what do you want to eat?
I don't know.
Just make a decision.
All right, we're going to be barbecue.
Let's go.
Start with small decisions and then you start
to become more confident with making decisions.
And then when the big ones pop up,
should I leave my job and do this or not?
Like, you know, like, I'm gonna do it.
And when I was reading this article, I was thinking about it.
I was like, wow, okay, I can really see how there's some truth to that,
but it still feels scary.
So I started to think about the people that I know,
who I've met through MindPump, who are very successful,
who obviously seem to have made a lot of fucking good decisions or at least ended up right and they all seem to be fast decision-makers
Yeah, the one person who comes to mind was a Sina what's the name Joe Dessina?
Yeah, Joe Dessina from Spartan
Meet us and within 15 minutes. I want you guys podcasting at the next
He leads right with his instinct. Yeah, and it's like, and the dude's obviously made a lot of,
like he's fucking kicked ass entire time.
And a lot of people I've met who are real successful
tend to be that way.
They're like, you know, I'm making that decision.
Well, they've honed in on that decision-making process.
And then even Beidro's, when we interviewed him,
he brought this up as part of the process
of like really trying to refine, you know, being better at that.
Like, I need to make all these little micro decisions constantly and I need to get better at doing it, you know, being better at that. Like I need to make all these little micro decisions
constantly and I need to get better at doing it,
you know, at a more rapid pace and being comfortable with it.
So you can get the ones that like maybe I made
the wrong decision there, you can get them out of the way
and then you can correct that and sort of make
micro tweaks as you go forward.
But yeah, the big ones are tough.
You definitely have to consider all that feedback
that you're going through.
The instinctual, just feeling towards that direction
versus the other direction, was that feel like?
And then start to kind of play out
like in your mind what that looks like.
And just go for it.
Make that decision and stick with it.
I think that, I think it's important
to think desired outcome.
Like, if I'm about to make a huge decision, like let's say a career shift and this reminds
me of what happened with Katrina, like, God, this was four years ago, about four years,
four years ago, in our relationship.
And we had just came off of a year of like not having to work.
Like her and I for like a year didn't work and we traveled just had fun and just really enjoyed each
other.
At the time we were just and I were working together and we were working on level up and stuff
and my pump hadn't started yet.
And Katrina was talking about going back to work and we talk about it all the time and
I'm like, what do you want to do?
Do you want to do this?
She goes, I've never put myself and use my degree to get myself into a job. I've always done entrepreneurial stuff. Like
she worked with her mom, the business, things like that. She's like, I've never really gone
out and used my degree. So let's, let's find a job that requires that. And honestly, my
desired outcome is that I just want to fucking make a lot of money right now. And I want
to put some money away. I want to save. I want to get the house. Like, so that was like
her mindset going into that. So that was before even looking for
jobs or making a decision like that. She really now you know, this is my goal. Right. Yeah.
So that's, I mean, this is how this girl lands in fucking concrete. I was saying like,
Katrina didn't know anything about concrete. It is now overseeing, you know, multi-multimillion
dollar projects and making a lot of money doing that. Like, she didn't know anything about that. That wasn't desired outcome.
I didn't need to do something that was fulfilling and passionate.
It made me this, but it did it challenged her in a way.
She had to learn so much and grow, like, and she's now on the executive team for this company.
But I think that when you think, like, okay, I'm about to switch over this job.
Like, I think a lot of times people don't really know why they're doing that. Sometimes they're just, they think they can get, like, I remember I'm about to switch over this job. Like I think a lot of times people don't really know
why they're doing that.
Sometimes they think they can get,
like I remember I dated this girl too,
who I remember looking at her resume
one time was helping her out,
and I'm going through, and I'm like,
I don't think we should list all this.
And she's like, why, I worked for all these,
I was like, well, because she was like, no loyalty.
It looks like you, well, they paid me more.
And then they paid me more.
And they paid me, and it's like, yeah, you just,
so you just keep, what, so it's all about making just
a dollar or more.
So what do you don't enjoy your job?
I'd rather make $2 less if, you know, I like my environment
or it fulfills me in different ways.
So not really understanding their desired outcome.
So, you know, if you're going into make a decision,
you might be taking a risk where you're,
you might not make a lot of money.
So, but that's okay. Maybe what, this is a career change for me, you might be taking a risk where you're, you might not make a lot of money. So, but that's okay, maybe what,
this is a career change for me.
Maybe like when I switched over to marijuana from cannabis,
I had no desire to be from the gym.
Yeah, from the gym, would I say?
From marijuana from cannabis.
Oh yeah, so I'm sorry.
I used to be in the marijuana industry.
Now working, then I got sophisticated.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Nice catch, it was weed and then it was cannabis.
They got you to my story, but yeah.
Yeah, so I remember that was at that point in my life.
I love the job I did.
I had 401K.
I had benefits.
I was making good money.
I used to say that the only way you could get me to leave here
is if you paid me at least double what I was.
Because I'd have clients always offer me these jobs
that were a little bit more money than what I was,
but I was like, I like what I do.
I love what I do.
Like I don't want to leave that for just,
it's not enough, but I do remember someone
sliding a piece of paper over to me and going,
like this is how much you're gonna make in your first year,
and it was significantly higher than anything
I had ever even thought of yet at that time.
And so they became a no-brainer for me.
It was an outcome, was okay, that's important.
Yeah, and the way my thought process behind it was like,
even if I hate this job, what do I,
if I put my head down, be good at it, get, and do it,
put enough money away, then it's gonna set me up
for other future potential things I could do.
So desired outcome going into that situation to me
and really truly understanding what your desired outcome is.
And then, Sal, you've said this before,
and I think this is exactly how my brain works is.
Then I think the desired outcome,
then I think, okay, what's the worst,
absolute worst possible outcome that could happen?
Sure, I switch over, it's fucking miserable.
I have a boss who just is I hate working for,
all those things could potentially happen, right?
So can I make myself be okay
with I just left this career, this thing to do this?
And if you're like okay,
yeah, I could handle that.
I could bear that because at worst case scenario,
I'll just get out in a year.
And go back to the final.
I like that you almost make a list
and you're sort of weighing it all out more measured.
Because I know like some people can interpret feedback,
you know, like it, and it's fear.
It's something like more, it's more like,
they're listening to all these options
and a lot of times fear will deter them
from actually making the right decision.
Right, right.
And so I think what you guys were saying,
I think, and this is where I think right now,
and we're at, like, but I think you have to develop
this skill to go in quick decisions.
Quick decisions, yeah. That's extremely, that's extremely important to be able to go like this.
Boom. Let's do this. I need to do this. And, and but you have to learn to get comfortable with
failing. Right. So I, I just talked about this other day about how, you know, I got really okay
with these fast decisions because I also got really okay with figuring out my desired outcome,
figuring out the worst case scenario, accepting that that could be the possibility
doing it.
There it is.
That's okay.
Boom, we're going.
Boom, we're going.
And you have to, you know, when it comes to being okay with failing, it's like it's really
more, really you have to understand this.
Regardless of the decisions you make, failures and challenges are going to hit you.
So you're kind of guaranteed that those challenges and failures are gonna hit you no matter what.
So you gotta ask yourself,
how do I reduce the amount of times that I end up
in a really, really bad situation,
which doesn't have to be just financial.
It can be an emotional situation.
You can have a high-paying job and be fucking miserable.
I've had so many clients who made a shit-tunny money in tech
and hated their
lives. We're terrible healthers, result of it and destroyed their lives. I know lots of people
like that. So you have to ask yourself which direction is going to increase my growth and get me
where I want to go faster. And that's typically the faster the decisions where you feel them.
Like, you know what, I'm going to go and I I'm gonna do that. And it's usually the ones that have meaning for you.
But I do think we are, there's a little bit of a bias
because we're all entrepreneurs.
And I think entrepreneurs naturally do that.
Or at least they value that ability, that autonomy.
100% that's why I had to wait for you guys
to say, well, this is where I don't think
a lot of people are at that level.
To make it just this decision quick, follow your gut.
That's something that we've trained that skill.
I think you need to learn to understand desired outcome first.
You need to know what the fuck, why you even want to make that move and then be at rest
with the worst possible outcome and the best possible outcome.
And once you get that understanding, then I think you can start to harness this ability
to like boom, boom, boom.
Yeah.
I think if you move forward with integrity,
so your goal is always to be a better person.
So integrity and, excuse me, integrity and competence.
So I'm gonna try and be an honest, good person,
or at least better than I was yesterday.
And I'm gonna try and become a better person
in terms of my knowledge every single day,
which improves your competency,
and you're a hard-working person,
because you can't be lazy, right?
If you have those three things,
and then you base your decisions off of those,
much more often than not,
the decisions you're gonna make
are gonna progress you forward.
You see what I'm saying?
You're just gonna play the odds,
and the odds are, if you're honest,
and you're learning more every day,
and you work hard,
you're probably generally gonna trend towards a better outcome.
Even if in between those, you're going to have some valleys where you're going to drop
a little bit, where you boost back up.
I mean, my pump is for us, I know is the accumulation of all the shit we did in the past, and all
led here.
And it didn't seem like it's all connected till you look backwards and go, oh, yeah,
I wouldn't be here, had it not been for all these other decisions I made.
And I can honestly say this is the best position
I've been in, career-wise, and it's not pay.
I made more money managing health clubs.
This is better because this is much more fulfilling
and meaningful and at the potential.
I also wanna make the point too
that what I started to put together early on was
the scarier it was and the risk here
It was the greater the reward and the greater the fulfillment always and greater the fulfillment came from it
So when when if it's scary and it seems difficult and you don't want to do it
It's like those are the those are the ones that are fucking the easy decisions
Yeah, there's no there's a lot of the real rides right right and that's so when you when you get that feeling
Oh, man, it reminds me the butterfly feeling of playing sports. I mean, it's just I
Excites me I get excited when I get that feeling inside like I was like, ooh, this is challenge Arnold Schwarzenegger
Work growth come short. So I had a quote once was so awesome
I'm I don't I don't remember the exact quote, but it was something like I love it when people tell me
That something's never
been done before.
Oh, yeah.
Because then I realized that I can be the first one.
Right.
Yeah.
You know, I'm saying like, oh, no one's ever done that before.
And people are like, oh, you know what, you're right.
I shouldn't even try.
Whereas his mentality is, nobody's ever done that.
Fuck yeah, I want to be the first one.
First market.
How awesome is that mentality right there?
That motivation is bullshit.
Self-belief is everything.
Excellent.
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