Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 764: How to Increase Number of Pull-Ups, How to Improve Olympic Lifts, Running & Muscle Loss & MORE
Episode Date: May 5, 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 tips for getting your first chin up/pull ...up as a female weightlifter, how much running each week is “too much” and begins to inhibit muscle building, if it possible to integrate a MAPS program in with a 3-day a week Olympic lifting program and who in the Mind Pump Crew has the most muscle mass/lean body mass. Facing your fears builds courage and character. Sal’s daughter kills at her comedy set at the talent show. (4:36) Facing your relationship with fear and overcoming it. The guys share stories of how to embrace change and own your fear. #RadicalHonesty #StayAuthentic (13:34) Are leaders born or developed? The guys get into deep discussion on this topic. (28:55) The Gender Pay Gap. The differences between men and women from an evolutionary standpoint. (33:30) Sports for Nerds, Politics. Reuters Poll: Black male approval for President Trump doubles in one week. (39:30) #Quah question #1 - Tips for getting your first chin up/pull up as a female weightlifter? (56:08) #Quah question #2 - How much running each week is “too much” and begins to inhibit muscle building? (1:02:40) #Quah question #3 – Is it possible to integrate a MAPS program in with a 3-day a week Olympic lifting program? (1:12:30) #Quah question #4 - Who in the Mind Pump Crew has the most muscle mass/lean body mass? (1:24:29) Related Links/Products Mentioned: Reuters Poll: Black Male Approval For Trump Doubles In One Week Gulf of Tonkin incident Organifi Clinical Evaluation of the Spermatogenic Activity of the Root Extract of Ashwagandha (Withania somnifera) in Oligospermic Males: A Pilot Study MAPS Prime Pro Bundle - Mind Pump 4 Secrets Of Soviet Weightlifting (As Revealed By Pavel) People Mentioned: Ben Greenfield (@bengreenfieldfitness) Instagram Elon Musk (@elonmusk) Instagram Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) Twitter KANYE WEST (@kanyewest) Twitter Dr. Justin Brink (@premiere_spine_sport) Instagram 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.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
In this episode of Motherfuckin' Mind Puff!
That's right, Motherfuckin'!
For the first time you started all of that, we go right into it.
Sal's, uh, his daughter's stand-up, please be my mother and Sal, it was such a sweet story.
Yeah, we talked about my daughter's standard routine
at the talent show.
A lot of crying going on between you two bitches lately.
It would have been crying at the explode.
Hey man.
Hey.
I know if we see it, we ever see Adam cry.
All right, I can't wait.
Video TV.
He breaks the nail.
We talk about fear and courage.
We talk about the outliers in society
and why we identify with some of them.
We talk about Kanye and the black male approval of Trump,
new study just came out, or Rooters poll shows that Trump's
approval rate among black men has doubled.
Is that the Kanye effect?
Crazy.
We talk about the origin of my interest in politics
and we talk about the economics of war.
We also mentioned orgasmified, excuse me,
organified.
Hey, it's getting interesting.
Got a good commercial for you today.
Listen, green juice may just increase the volume
of your semen.
It's if you needed more reasons to buy it.
Listen to the episode, you'll hear what I'm saying.
Anyway, if you go to Organified Shop
and enter the code, you'll hear what I'm saying. Anyway, if you go to Organify Shop and enter the code Mind Pump,
you'll get a huge load of a discount.
I mean, it's massive, it's shooting out there.
Then we get to the first question.
The first question was, this female weight lifter
is having trouble getting to do her first chin-up.
Pull-ups is her weakness.
She's been doing negatives, band and box assisted pull-ups and scat pulls and other kinds of variations
and doesn't seem to be able to do a pull-up.
We give her the secret in this episode.
You'll be able to do a pull-up in no time.
You're welcome.
The next question was, what are our thoughts on combining resistance training with running?
Now, this person likes the lift weights but also with running. Now this person likes the Lefoyts,
but also enjoys running.
Finds it therapeutic.
How much running each week is too much?
It's like I'm in the redheads, I'm in the blondes.
Ah, I can't decide.
You can have them all.
Ah!
The next question was, is it possible
to integrate a map program
with an Olympic lifting program?
Okay, so do we have a map program that with an Olympic lifting program.
So do we have a Maps program that would complement Olympic lifting?
The answer is yes, Maps Prime, 100%.
Here is kind of break it down and break down Olympic lifting.
In this episode, by the way, Maps Prime, you can find on our website, mindpumpmedia.com.
And the next question was, which one of us, I guess this question was between Adam Justin,
myself, and Doug, has the most lean body mass.
We get into discussion about lean body mass when people bulk or when they cut.
And are they really succeeding or are they just losing muscle and gaining body fat?
We did a little pinch test, you know what I'm saying?
Also, this month, I didn't bring the numbers out. I had to pull the calculator out and figure it out. We did a little pinch test, you know what I'm saying? Also, this month, Saladin bring the numbers out,
I have to be pulled to calculator,
I'm figuring it out.
I won, he used to calculate it.
He was doing mine.
He's like, oh fuck, that's more than I weigh,
fuck his kids.
I won, we're gonna skip past this idea.
10 inches was the biggest.
Then, oh, by the way, this month, you get, for free,
we're giving this way for free.
Free?
The intuitive guide and the fasting guide
with the enrollment of any bundled now
Why are we doing this are we crazy we like you guys have we lost our minds? No, it's because
Summer's almost here and we know what people try to do when summertime comes around
They want to get sexy hot and lean in that order sexy hot and lean
Now you're gonna have a tough time doing that
without proper nutrition.
Let's break it down.
That's right, there's a fourth one there.
Yeah, that was a fourth.
Let's be honest here.
It's bonus.
Can you get sexy, hot, and lean with poor nutrition at them?
No, absolutely not.
It's not gonna happen.
So, we wanted to make sure that people
who enrolled in our bundles, which are
several maps programs combined and then discounted,
we literally slashed the fuck out of the price of a bundle. Like a crazy ass girlfriend. enrolled in our bundles which are several maps programs combined and then discounted.
We literally slash the fuck out of the price of a bundle.
Like a crazy ass girlfriend.
Shhhh.
Gone.
And I don't know all about that.
We want to include those nutrition components for free because that's such an integral
part of getting leaner.
So again, to be clear this month, enrolling any maps bundle, you'll get the
Intuitive Nutrition Guide and the Fasting Guide thrown in for absolute free to get those programs
and to learn about them, just go to MindPumpMedia.com. Dude, yesterday was the big day.
Yesterday was? Yes. What do you mean? What happened? show? Oh, did you guys watch the video? No, did you send it to us? Yes?
Might have not come through
Dude I can't wait to show you girl do so
So you know, I'm gonna sound like a jerk talking crap about other kids
Whatever you got you got an awesome bias just the way it is yeah
Just the way it is. You got to awesome bias.
Just the way it is.
99.9% of the talent show acts.
You remember my daughter's in second grade.
And then this was the, she was the,
one of the youngest.
I think the youngest was second grade
and then you got, they went all the way up to eighth grade.
Yeah.
99.9% of them,
Kate falls under three categories.
Singing, dancing, or playing an instrument.
So that's everything.
Everybody goes down there and does one of those things.
Here comes my little daughter, my little adorable daughter,
with her dress that she picked out and her little boots.
She gets behind the mic.
And she's expecting a dance.
And she does a fucking comedy show.
I love it.
My second grade little girl goes up there and tells jokes
and everybody laughed. I had all these
parents come up to me afterwards and we're commenting on her. So check out the learning. She's
a natural. So great. Check out the and she definitely gets that from her dad.
Because her mom's not funny at all. But at least not on purpose. So she, uh, when we were going
there to do the thing,
she's like nervous, you could tell, she's nervous.
Her little, I was picking her up and stuff
and her little armpits were sweating her hands
or sweating so.
Did you write the jokes for her?
No, we went through them and she bounced off,
she bounced off, where did she get her coat?
Where did she get her stuff from?
Come on, do I tell stupid jokes all the time?
So obviously from, he's got plenty of bad material.
You know what, the best joke was?
What?
What's red and bad for your teeth
Red and bad for your teeth a brick
Great so anyway just straight to the punch line. Yeah, she walks out and right away
She tells a joke and she you know people are laughing
But anyway when we're getting ready for this thing
She's just being honest with me, you know, and she's tell she's nervous. I'm like, how do you feel?
And she's like, my knees are shaking.
So like, oh, I've pulled her a little girl.
That she's super nervous.
Yeah.
So I said, she goes, I don't think I'm, I don't,
do you think that's the first time she's ever felt that feeling?
Think about that.
Maybe, or the first time she was aware of that, right?
Right.
I mean, the fact that's so cool that she has that awareness
that you could have that conversation.
Yeah, so I'm, she's she's I'm like
this is a great
Opportunity to teach because she's feeling nervous. Yeah, and so she's like she said something like
I don't think I don't think I'm very courageous and I said why she's like because I feel nervous
She used that word. Yeah, she's like because I feel nervous and I said I told my daughter I said
Courage is not being scared.
I said, if you're not scared, then you don't need courage.
You don't need courage to go up there.
That's easy.
I said, courage is when you're scared
and you do it anyway,
and you should've seen the look on her face.
She was just like, I could see the little fire.
Come up inside of her, you know?
And she was like, hmm.
And then right before she went up on stage,
because my kids, during that generation
where, you know, YouTube is like,
that's like NBC when we were kids or CBS or whatever,
it's a big network.
And so right before she gets on stage,
you know, I, or goes back to, you know, get ready or whatever,
I kind of grab her by the shoulders
and I whisper to her here.
And I said, don't forget this, I said, you're my daughter.
I said, I get scared, I get nervous when I make videos
on YouTube because she always loves talking about
how I'm on YouTube.
I said, but I do it anyway, just like you're about to do it.
And she's fucking walked up there
and she like had her fists clenched.
Hats, face it.
Look a little champion, so proud, face it, so proud,
so so nice.
So exciting.
That's really close, yeah. Yeah, it So proud. So nice. So exciting.
That's really close, man.
Yeah, it's really fun, man.
When you watch your kids do something like that,
but I think it's important that you to tell your kids that,
because I didn't understand this one up until I got a little older,
I thought being courageous meant having no fear.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, oh, I have no fear.
They're foreign courageous.
And I wish somebody explained to me like, no, no, no, no,
it's when you scare it, when you're scared and you do it anyway. Yeah, that's so good. And I wish somebody explained to me like, no, no, no, no, it's when you're scared,
when you're scared and you do it anyway.
Yeah, that's what it's for.
It's for judges.
It would have changed my relationship.
Oh, of course, with fear.
That stuff that we put, I mean personally,
I put it together over years of that feeling, right?
And then not doing it.
Like I think it takes like a normal person
who doesn't have a father who communicates at early age.
Like, you know, I'm sure there was many things in my life that I was afraid of that I didn't do
because I was afraid of.
And I think over it took years and years of the times
when you were afraid, but you still did it anyways
and then the feeling afterwards.
You have to do that a few times before you start to connect
that like, holy shit, wait a second.
Every time I'm scared and I do it anyways, holy shit,
that's better than any feeling.
That's better than you do. I had to than just doing the same conversation with my, my oldest.
He got elected to be the big bad wolf of, of this play that like.
So it was more than just for his own class.
Like he actually had a performance in front of like a couple grades above his.
So it was like his peers that were, you know, older kids.
And so he was like totally cool that in like it's like his peers that were older kids. And so he was totally cool with it.
And it's like a lead role.
He's like a bunch of lines and everything
and he's been practicing.
And it got down to the day where of where it was like,
okay, so the day of I'm making a breakfast,
we're all kind of talking about it,
hyping him up a little bit.
And he was just like, just like ghost white.
You know?
Ghost white, like it was just like,
I don't know, he literally was just like, I don't know.
He literally was having like a little mini panic attack.
He was like, I don't know if I want to go to school.
They did, you know?
No, no.
And like, he was like, it just hit him like all of a sudden, like, oh, this is like real.
Like I want to have to like perform my heart.
My heart just sinks.
It sinks for that right away too.
And it's not even my child, you know, say, just the empathy for the kid going through
that because at that age, it's different. Like,, you know, say just the empathy for the kid going through that because at that age it's different.
Like, I can talk a big game right now.
It fucking, you know, 36 years old and she like that
because you've got a bunch of reps under your belt.
But when you're that age, dude,
that's got to seem huge.
The first time you ever had stepped out in front of like,
his peers and done anything, you know, like he's not.
So, I mean, just talking to him and like same exact scenario
where we're just talking about like facing your fears and that, you know, as you go through
that, that's what builds bravery, that's what builds courage.
And you actually learn that it's not as bad once you start getting into it, right?
Like it's, it's all about just getting there and then performing and and
going through that process and you know and I told him how I'd get scared all the time.
I do things I'm uncomfortable with constantly and just what it's helped to build my character
and help me in life, you know, and and so he just like finally I guess my wife thankfully
was able to kind of take him to school and and watch it and I wasn't able to watch it because I had to go to work.
But I guess, you know, he went up there and was just a real nervous.
And then just after the first line, it was like, he was on fire.
After that.
But yeah, I took it.
He still wanted to back out like right before it started.
Wow.
I got out of him.
I got so emotional.
I was watching her do the thing and I knew that she was nervous going into it and that,
I mean, remember this, this is, and that Remember this is I mean this is consider this second grade. She's a girl and you know girls typically don't
Being humorous or being funny. It's not as
Acceptable I would say for little girls and make funny faces or make jokes
That's something that boys you know stereotypically tend to do but it's actually kind of true
So she's up there. she's making fun of herself,
she's in second grade, she's not doing an act like anybody else.
And I knew she was scared and then she did it.
And I'm watching this and I'm like,
I'm gonna fucking cry, right in this audience right now.
But, you know, it boils down and this took me so long to learn.
And I wish I knew this as a kid.
You know, fearing fear or being afraid of being nervous is
worse than being nervous or having the fear of doing something. It's worse. It's when
you torture yourself. Yeah, you're so afraid. You want to avoid the feeling of nerves and
anxiety so bad because it's something you hate so much or you create that relationship
with it that you hate it so much. that adds like 50 trillion layers to it,
because when you stop hating fear, instead expect it,
like think about that, like, okay, I know I'm gonna go speak in front of these people,
and I'm gonna be fucking terrified, and expect it, like that's just gonna happen.
Change is a law, all of a sudden you're like, well, this is a different,
it's a different perception of the same feeling.
It doesn't. Oh, yeah, we talked about it being exciting, and I just kept trying to emphasize the fact
that it's like very exciting for you to do this, and this is something that you're going
to enjoy completely, but what feels like complete fear and the unknown, you can literally
start to address it as like, this is just just an exciting fun thing I get to do instead.
Do you guys remember moments in your life like growing up where you started to kind of overcome that feeling?
Because I'm sure all of us that when we were young so many reps to get to that place.
Like do you do you remember being terrified before having to speak or do things like that?
And it will point to you start to feel yourself overcome that? Oh yeah, the first,
the first all staff meeting that I conducted
as a fitness manager.
So I was 18 years old, so I'm a kid.
I have no experience doing any of this stuff,
and then I, you know,
I was a trainer for four years,
and then now I'm doing a meeting,
an all staff meeting,
because now I'm the manager of the fitness department.
And I remember knowing I knew I was gonna do it, right?
And I got really nervous,
but my relationship with nerves for that was different,
and I didn't identify this till much later.
And the reason why I was different was because I felt like
I had a team that needed to depend on me.
So once I realized that, oh, these people depend on me,
I was still nervous, but I had a different relationship with that.
Like, I need to do this for my team.
And I stood up on a desk and I gave this meeting,
and it was very, very different.
And when I feel, and then put that together
too much later on, it actually happened with us here
at MindPomple.
A while ago, we had the, I don't remember what we did.
We did a big seminar or a trainer seminar and I was supposed
to open it and I was kind of nervous and then I don't remember who it was. I don't think
it was, I don't know if it was Adam or Justin. When you two said, Hey, Salis and we're just
going to, you know, follow your lead. And I don't know what it is that that I knew like,
oh, fuck, my team's depending on me. And that created, it creates a different relationship
with the same feeling.
And so really it's,
and I'm putting this together now,
I'm almost, you know, I'm 39 years old, right?
It's all about your,
like, am I afraid of being afraid?
Or do I expect it, understand it,
and then I'm okay with it, you know what I'm saying?
Change is absolutely everything.
Yeah, it's interesting
because I've gone through different types of performing fear.
And you know, whether it's from sports or from music, I remember at a young age it was
music.
It was performing a piece on the piano that I had memorized.
And I think it was Moonlight Sonata.
And I still to this day,
that's like one of the only songs I can, I know how to play.
Because I took it so seriously.
I like, you see my mom has a video.
This is so fucking hilarious.
I was like, probably nine, nine years old, I would say.
Maybe eight or nine.
And I'm in front of like this whole,
it was in a church,
but it was like all of the seats were filled.
It was like this big display
because they would start with the kids
and then it'd go into like the more accomplished musicians
and like there was just so many people.
I thought it was just gonna be in front of like the kids
and the parents, like cool. no, it became this big,
huge like ordeal and so I'm up there.
I was just sweat bullets.
And the first few notes went just sour
and I stopped completely and I looked over, you know,
at my parents and I just, I had like a like anxiety.
I just like, I was, I froze and I couldn't, anxiety. I just, like, I was, I froze. And I couldn't, I couldn't, like,
mustered up again and then the teacher came up
and kind of like, you know, put her hand on my shoulder
and was like, no, you can do this.
You know, like, it's, like, you know, the skills,
like just relax, nobody's here,
blah, blah, blah, I'm trying to give you this pep talk.
And then finally, like, I just, I started playing again
and then I just got into this weird zone
where I'm just feeling it and then,
and then I'm like really feeling it
to where the music, I'm rocking with it.
There it is.
It was so funny, didn't you watch the video?
I just get through the whole thing.
You still have the video?
Nailed it, then I'm at the end.
I'm like, I play to where I soften the notes at the end
and I'm like crouching down real low with it.
It don't say, knee, knee.
After I was done, everybody's like, yeah!
You know, like burst in in the mall.
You couldn't have planned it better.
Like you made a dramatic on purpose.
So dramatic, everybody was on pins and needles
because I was like, so fucking scared.
Oh man, terrified.
Do you still have that video?
Yeah, I'll have to get it from my mom.
Oh dude, you're gonna have to bring this.
I actually would love to see pictures of everybody
when we were kids.
I know.
I would love to be with you.
By the way, Adam, I got a bump to pick with you.
Okay, you tell me about how ugly we're in high school all the time.
I was like, I don't know who it was.
Was it your sister or someone posted a picture of your high school yearbook?
He looks like JT.
You're a fucking hands man.
He's a little cross-priced.
You're a punting magnet. Let me defend myself.
That's a picture day.
You know what I'm saying?
We're wearing makeup.
We have a suit, probably the first suit I ever put on, right?
Because I didn't wear a suit before that, right?
So I know genetics and bone structure and facial features.
You were a handsome guy.
I had swag, dude.
I had swag as well.
You could feel the swag to the picture.
Yeah, absolutely.
I hate you, see.
I had swag, dude.
I think a hell of people in the forum, too.
They're like, wait a minute. Did you run a track? Notice, notice. You're a fucking handsome. Remember, of people in the forum, too, they're like, wait a minute, I think you're gonna track it.
Notice, notice.
You're fucking handsome.
Remember, it's a head shot, too, right?
And I'm closing my mouth.
If I actually smiled and showed my teeth,
my two front teeth are completely crooked.
I mean, completely turned in.
And let's be honest, when you're a kid
and you have something like,
oh, you make it, yeah.
It's a lot bigger deal than it is.
Of course, I mean, so, I mean, I had that.
And then you can't tell because I'm in a tuxedo,
but I'm a buck 35 wet, you know, I'm saying at six foot.
So I'm, you know, teased for being.
Just shredded.
Yeah, yeah, shredded to the ribs.
Like you could see my ribs, more than you could see abs, right?
So that's like, look at those oblique.
Right, and then I drove the Hammy Down 1987 brown Toyota
Camry with busted out lights and smell like Mildoo because my parents left the window down the year before right so I mean I definitely was not
And I know people put them in the form like I know I'm just I don't talk about being I didn't say it was ugly like fuck dude
Like you know or maybe I said that that's me being humble a little bit. I'm saying I know that I dated the hottest girl school
You know saying like you can't be like- That just doesn't have my accident. Yeah, and but what I, the message that I always try to give the people about that was that
it wasn't that, it wasn't a popular kid for the normal popular things, right?
I didn't have a lot of friends because I had a nice car like those, because I had a
pretty smile, because I was a starting quarterback.
I played sports, but I worked my ass off, and I got okay playing time.
I didn't start on any of the teams that I played,
but I busted my ass.
I was the same way in school.
I wasn't super brilliant, but I busted my ass all the time,
and I had crooked teeth, and I was skinny.
And so I didn't have a lot of things
like that were in your favor as a kid.
You know what's funny though,
when you start to realize is that your perception
of your self is the same way.
And you know, your perception of yourself
is probably way worse than, you know what I'm saying?
Like, I thought I was so skinny, so painfully whatever.
But if I look at old picture myself,
yeah, I'm a skinny kid, but it's not like
if I was walking down the street,
if I'd see this kid, I'd be like, oh my God.
Somebody call a doctor.
I'm gonna feed this kid.
Yeah, I would be like, oh, it's a normal skinny kid,
but I had a couple comments
and because I identified with it,
it was so much worse.
Oh, of course.
I mean, it takes years for most people,
I feel like, and some people never get beyond that.
I mean, I put that stuff together later on in life.
When I talk about my character as a young man,
that's just me being an older guy, reflecting back on it.
Like I wasn't that fucking self-aware back there.
I'm saying I wasn't fucking, I'm just running around trying
to be cool, you know what I'm saying?
Like I, I just want to be accepted at that age.
I just want to get, I have friends, I want to play sports,
I want to have a girlfriend, I want to be fucking normal,
you know what I'm saying?
And I already know that I'm at a disadvantage
because I don't have a lot of the things
that all these other kids have.
And so I had to make up with that with my personality.
I was friendly with everybody.
I was outgoing.
I was just, I was the life of the party wherever I was
as a kid.
So, you know, talking about nervous moments,
I was trying to rack my brain of times
where I was really nervous like that.
And there's been more moments in the podcasting
that I have felt that way
than anything else, which is why I love it though.
Oh, for sure.
Because I have a I have just this different relationship with these things. And one of those
is that, and I don't know where I connected this, but the, and it's probably my, I should
give my mom some love and credit because I know I beat her up on the show sometimes
is that, you know, she's one of the things that she, she established really good morals and values in us at a very
young age. And I think the radical honesty and truth thing speaks volumes to being able
to get through a lot of the stuff. And what I mean by that is when you get really nervous,
sometimes I think it's because you're not being 100% honest. I think it's
because you're trying to be a certain way for everybody else. And so part of that is because you have
to kind of fake it, it gets really fucking scary. And something I learned a long time ago was the
more I was just fucking real, like say what's on my mind? You know what? It's going to rub somebody
the wrong way. It's going to come out. Words are going to be made up sometimes. It's gonna rub somebody the wrong way. It's gonna come out words gonna be made up sometimes It's not gonna flow perfect
Yeah, but I'm speaking the truth and having that feeling of like and that integrity of being able to do that
I it carried me a long way at a very early age and I think that was installed in me
From my mother and the values that she built in me later on and then now I've seen it expressed and now I thrive in those
environments. I love to be challenged like that.
I love that if I get nervous and scared because what it shows me is now I have something
new to focus on and better and improve, you know.
So the podcast is probably the most that what what like any moments in particular.
Just a very first day.
Really, you know, I'm saying like because every day after that to me was, that
was the moment that switch turns on for me. Once I put my mind to something that I want
to improve upon it or I want to get, but whatever. You know, I'm saying like, once I make
that switch, I'm committed, every day was fun for me. You know, like the first one was
a little bit of nerves. Like, what are we doing? What are we saying? Like, who's going
to be listening to this? Like, so there was a little bit of those nerves, but I really
didn't get that much. I think it's cool, because we're all nervous
about different things about what we do,
and we're all super confident about different things,
so they tend to compliment each other.
You know what I'm saying?
That's been one of the great-
Like, podcasting for me, never,
I've never been, never been, for me,
it's like talking on a microphone, you kidding me?
Might as well ask me to breathe.
But, you know, if you want me to,
if I'm going to talk to
a group of influencers, and which I've done before in the past, and I can do it, but I always get nervous beforehand when I'm doing like a crowd of that. I always get, yeah, so you enjoy doing that.
Yeah, I love that. I do better with that because here, this, and this is probably why I was so nervous
with the podcast is because I know I don't articulate myself beautifully all the time. You know, I'm not, I don't have the silver tongue for sure out of the three of us.
And so I think my mind is analyzing that the whole time going like, God, I fucking sound so stupid,
but people don't really know in everything about me and psych, because I can't articulate it really
well. And so I think that's what I struggle with at the beginning. Well, when you're in person with
me, like, and you meet me, I can connect with somebody.
I can connect with anybody really fast too,
because when you see that,
and I feel like when I meet other people
that have that honesty piece, I feel it right away.
Like I just feel it, which is also why we all connect it.
I mean, that was one of the things that connected is,
you can just, and we talk about this all the time. Every time we have a. I mean, that was one of the things that connected. You can just, you can feel, like there's, and we talk about this all the time,
every time we have a guest, off mic,
we all are analyzed the fuck out of them.
Everybody sits down, what do you think?
We argue back and forth, you know, saying,
like, but I could just,
we have files on all of that.
No, it does because that's just,
I don't know, for me, I think it's human nature,
right? Of course, everybody does it.
Right, and you're just trying to see who's,
and really what makes somebody,
somebody who we stay connected with,
or somebody that we rep as a friend,
is the truth piece, is that they're just honest
and being real with themselves,
more importantly than anything else.
And I think there's relationships that people probably
wouldn't even think that we are really close to,
that we're close to, because maybe they're different,
the way they run their business or things like that.
And so people think they're so different than we are. But then what we identify
it with and what we connect with is their realness. It's that character. Yeah.
Real character. Ben Greenfield couldn't be more different than us. I mean, there's some elements
that are similar, but he's also a very different individual from us. But we love him. We love
him from like this first or second
time he met him because he's got good character. He's kind of a real solid, you know, kind
of individual. And however different he is, that's the part that I think we're all kind
of doing.
No, he's a great example. That's another, that's a great example of somebody who, there's
no way probably as a high school kid that Ben and I would have been connected and been
friends just different.
And I was friends with a lot of different people, but Ben's just, we were into different things.
We're not alike in a lot of ways.
But the thing that we connect in is I think he's very comfortable with who he is.
Yeah, I think a lot of times when people are living life as their true self, it may seem
odd, you know, to everybody.
Like, like, that's kooky.
That's right.
That's weird. Like, what was he?
Like, and so I think that I've always been attracted to people like that that sort of stand out of
the herd and, you know, are just authentically living their life, you know, the way they want to.
And it's, it's such an attractive quality. You know, in a lot of times you'll meet like,
really weird people and you can appreciate it, but it's like, ah, stay over here. You know, in a lot of times you'll meet like really weird people and you can appreciate it, but it's like Ah, stay over here, you know, but then sometimes you're like, oh wow like I want to be close with this.
Well, there's there's there's an extreme version of that and then the fake version of that too. That's right.
That's right. That's what they're saying. There's yeah, exactly putting on a fake sort of facade. Yeah, try me. I'm weird. Yeah. Right. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Exactly. And I think something attention. Some people would think that about Ben when you outside looking in but when you really know
He's fucking real dude. No, no, he's literally like that. Well, that's I remember I remember the very first time
I'd seen his stuff before we met and I remember thinking like oh this guy fucking just pedaling everything and making money off all this
pseudo science and shit I didn't yeah, I didn't think I was gonna like him
But then you know what I realized was,
man, if there was gonna be a motherfucker
that took all these things and tried these things
and like went back and measured it,
this is the human being I would want doing that.
You're a guy, you want to take your product.
Right, that is the guy I want because I know
he is measuring all aspects of his life
and he is very meticulous and careful about everything.
So I know when he adds something to his regimen or takes it away,
like the effects and the things that I want to hear his perspective,
probably more than anybody else's.
So that's...
I can always, for me at least, I don't know how accurate this is,
but it seems pretty accurate for me.
I can almost always tell somebody's character
if they're that kind of a person by the way they are with their kids.
And that's what did it with Ben. We hung out with him that first time and we're that kind of a person by the way they are with their kids and that's what did it with Ben
We hung out with them that first time and we're all kind of like well. I don't know
Maybe you know, he seems pretty cool
I don't know and then I saw him with his boys and I was like, oh, yeah, the students
He's legit. He's genuine and there's been a couple experiences like that where we've met people and then we've seen them with their kids
And I don't know I can just always see that like especially the way a man is with his children
Because it doesn't seem to be a second nature sometimes.
Whether or not they ignore their kids,
or they're super attentive,
or how they are with their kids,
or they treat them, how they hold them,
if they kiss them, if they hug them, whatever.
And when I see that, I can see like,
oh, this is a real,
because I've seen a lot of people, parents,
who posture around other people when they're around their kids,
so they're trying to act like they're real good parents.
But you can kind of tell,
like, oh, that's not coming from their heart, you know what I mean?
And so I can usually, that's kind of like my litmus test,
you know, for some, like,
what, what, what's the split you guys think of like,
people that are fake and all for the show type of deal,
for the attention and everything like that,
whether it be for business or personal and selfish,
whatever, and then the split that is like,
fucking 100% genuine who they are.
I don't know what the split is.
It's not a ton of people that seem to be very genuine.
Yeah, it's not a ton, but there's definitely people
that are very real.
I think, yeah, most people we've met,
we tend to just, you know, bring them in.
Like if we know for sure they're an authentic real,
we try our best to only try to bring them in or at least
Help and contribute them in their process in some fashion because it's like it is. It's such a rare thing these days to find
Like you don't find a lot of people like that. No, it's it's you know, it's like posturing psychologist explain
Explain being like everybody else or blending in it's it's a it's a safety mechanism. We evolved to be safe.
When you see a bunch of animals in a herd,
which one is the one that's gonna get killed
and hunted by a lion?
It's not the one that's in the group.
It's the one that's...
The ones on the fringe.
It's the one standing outside.
You know, when all of us are the same level,
nobody's neck is sticking out.
Nobody's putting themselves out there
to be attacked or to be ridiculed or whatever.
And so it's safe.
It is very safe to go with the crowd.
And it's very powerful.
It's an extremely powerful motivator that intrinsic that we have that we're born with.
And it's very hard to break.
Now, I'm not saying that it's necessarily a bad thing always to kind of blend in or
whatever.
Societies have to organize themselves and people have to work together.
Do you think that's already born into built into us?
It is, it is, it's an evolutionary because.
So then off that do you believe in that leaders
are born or they developed?
I think both, I think leaders,
I think there's probably a genetic,
like everything, right?
There's probably a genetic component.
Because there's something about them too
that I believe that they're out loud.
Like there's certain levels of like leaders,
it's just like you're not the guy
who wants to be in the pack with her or girl
and you've never been since day one.
It's like and I feel like there's those people.
Then I feel there's people who learn the skills
of a natural leader and they can develop that
and they can lead themselves too.
But there's some people that just seem like they have that. And they've always had that.
Yeah, I don't know. I don't know what this split is. But every time they do studies on
behaviors, it's always, it's typically a nature and nurture. It's usually genetics involved
and there's another component. And it's the right mix of the two that creates a type of
behavior. For example, let's say you have somebody who's like a super successful leader,
great character, but they grew up in a very, very tough situation, the kind of situation that
typically break people, or that create criminals, or create people that are stuck in the poverty cycle.
Well, maybe that tough life was the right mix with their particular genetic makeup and that's what produced a winner.
And maybe if that person grew up in a posh environment
where everything was provided to them
and they had all the support and all the stuff
that you're supposed to have,
maybe that would have made them more lazy,
more complacent or not that kind of an individual.
So it's hard to say what produces what
because I feel like there's enough
extremely successful
people that I'm aware of who grew up in very difficult situations and statistically
speaking difficult situations don't typically result in success.
They typically look, if you take a bunch of kids and you put them in a household that's
poverty, maybe abuse, maybe single parent parent like these are all statistics, right?
The odds are that more of them will do worse than than not, right?
But every once in a while you get the right mix and it's not I don't know like who would I be if I grew up in a different situation?
Who would you guys be? It's it's a I think it's a very difficult thing to study
Because when you're looking at outliers, how do you study the outliers?
They're already outliers. They're already not the average. You can look at the averages,
but when you look outside the averages, Elon Musk definitely, there was some life things
that made him the way he is, but he's also definitely just a different human being.
How do you study that?
I don't think you can.
I don't really think you can.
That's right.
I mean, I feel like, and it's an example of like brilliance
like that.
Like I'm sure that you could back that all the way up
to childhood.
Like I'm sure if you, and I haven't watched too many
documentaries on them that dove that deep into them,
but I would assume that there were signs of that early,
early on in his life
before he even got to the point
where he was this maniac.
So check this out.
This is kind of bringing me to an interesting topic.
So yesterday I did a post on gender pay gap
and I talk about the economics and why it's likely,
highly likely it's not based on sexism
but rather other factors.
Like the time decisions
that men and women tend to make and all these other things.
And I got a lot of positive feedback,
by the way, from all women, which tripped me out,
a thousand of pissed people off.
But I got some like 50 DMs from women who are like,
thank you, I'm sick and tired of being told them
a victim and all this other stuff.
And I was like, whoa, this is, I did not expect this.
So it was pretty cool.
That's cool.
But I did get in a debate with a couple individuals
or discussion and we went down that rabbit hole.
And you really smart people like doctors or anything?
Yeah, one of them was really smart.
So we had this discussion and one thing that I said
that really made this individual upset in this discussion
was I highlighted
how, because we were talking about the different choices that men and women tend to make.
And I was explaining, look, if you look at the middle of the pack with humans, we're all
pretty fucking similar.
There's like one standard deviation difference between men and women in certain parameters,
which is not much when you're looking at the middle.
Like if you if you took a bunch of women and a bunch of men and you rated them on something like empathy, which they can test, right?
Men will typically rank one standard deviation below women, which in the middle isn't that big of a difference. Speaking of empathy, male humans are incredible,
have incredible parental, you know, behaviors and instincts,
much more than most other mammals.
Like male humans are really good parents
compared to other male mammals
which tend to be terrible parents
and usually just protect and get food
and then if the child gets in the way they'll eat them.
That's a real statistic.
But we tend to be pretty good with kids, including other kids, which, again, mammals,
male mammals with other children are terrible and male humans are pretty good.
But nonetheless, we do rank lower than women in those kinds of categories.
In the middle, it doesn't mean a whole lot.
We're all kind of very, very similar. But if we go to the ends of the spectrum, if we picked, you know, 100 of the most empathetic
humans on Earth, all of them would be women, all of them. Because at the extreme end, you
have all these extreme levels of empathy or whatever, which women tend to score highest
end. And so you see this and all these other things. So we're having this, just this particular discussion. It would be just like comparing the top 100
hunters. There would be, it would be more likely to be men, right?
Just for that, even though there's tons of women that are bad acid, huh? That's my, yeah,
exactly. I mean, those standard deviation differences are small in the middle, but at the
ends, they start to get real big, just like if you took two parallel lines and you separated
and buy a, you know, a tenth of a degree, you keep traveling, you know, down those lines and they separate quite a bit at the ends. And so we
were talking about this and I said, look, I said, you know, here's an interesting statistic. She
didn't like this. I said, when you look at humans, most of us are somewhere in the middle in terms of,
you know, average, you know, violence or aggression or brilliance or whatever,
whatever you want to call it, we're all kind of similar.
But when you go on the ends, there's more men on the extremes than there are women.
For example, if you look at criminality and aggressiveness and violence,
men and women, women are about one standard deviation, less violent than men are.
In the middle, that doesn't mean much.
You take a bunch of average people,
and most of them are not gonna be violent,
most of them are not gonna want hurt people a lot of stuff.
But if you go on the extreme end of the most violent,
most, you know, the biggest criminals, whatever,
it's all men, and this is why the prisons are filled with men,
and there's hardly as many women in comparison.
But if you go on the other end of the extreme,
and she don't like this part, you go on the other end of the extreme and she don't like this part,
you go on the other end of the extreme
and you look at achievers,
people who can be considered brilliant or whatever,
you see also more men.
And she don't like that part.
And it's evolutionary speaking, it makes sense
because if you have a society where there are very,
very few men and a lot of women, that society can survive.
Technically, it can totally survive. You could have, you know, 10 men and 100 women and you're going to make a lot of babies.
Flip it would never work. If you had a lot of men and a little bit of women's society collapses.
And so what evolution is basically done is it's rolled the dice more with men than with
women because we're disposable because it's okay for it to roll the dice a little more. So you're
gonna see more extremes with men in all different kinds of cases. And that was just one example of
how differences between men and women can account for when you look at broadly, you see differences in
things. And what do you think that is it's it's men are trying all these
different things so they can reproduce and so that's what maybe set us off
in different ways like i'm gonna work really hard and maybe that's gonna get
some ass well that it worked out i'm gonna get really strong and that's
the thing for the saber to tired we're disposable were far more
disposable than than women are i mean uh you know we you can kill off half the
men in america right now and america will you can kill off half the men in America right now
and America will survive.
You kill off half the women in society will collapse.
You don't have enough people to carry children.
So it's just, it's just evolutionary.
I thought we covered the gender pay gap thing already.
Didn't we talk about it?
Did we do it with Kibbe?
You should just, you know what, you love that stuff bro.
You love that stuff that you even waste your time going back before.
I'm at the point now where someone asked a question that I know we addressed in detail.
Like here's the fucking episode or go download the app and search it.
No, we know what it is. I realize about myself.
I like talking about controversial shit.
It's long as it's controversial, I get excited.
If it's like, oh, that's a talk of it.
Well, cause it'll actually respond cause you'll put bait out there
and you're realizing you know, it's like,
oh, it's not controversial enough, right,
for them to respond.
Yeah, I just, I really enjoy that.
Speaking of controversial, you know how we did the episode,
we talked about Kanye song, about Trump or whatever.
Yeah.
And, you know, we made this speculation
that there seems to be a cultural shift
and I was making this big point that
you know for a long time now and again I want to be clear I have to say this every fucking episode
We're not you know I can speak for myself, but I know you guys too. We're not pro Trump or anti Trump or pro Democrat or pro Republican
We're much more independent in the sense that we're tend to be down the little the middle pro freedom pro liberty
Which means you know sometimes we agree with policy by policy. Yeah, so we were talking about this
and I said something like, you know, minorities
for a long time, the liberal party, the Democrats
have taken for granted that minority
is just gonna vote for them for a little while.
And we talked about the history of the Democrat party
and how they used to actually be pro segregation, pro slavery, all these different things.
And so on the four on our forum, there's a little bit of a debate and somebody's like, nah, it's bullshit.
You know, minorities hate Trump and I'm like, no, man, I said I can sense a cultural shift that's starting to happen.
And it's pretty crazy and Kanye's an example of that boom, a fucking Rooters poll comes out.
This poll just was done.
What you didn't even have to send or read to me
because once I knew he did anything with Kanye,
it was game over.
Black male approval for Trump doubled.
Double, like after a day.
Yes, it was at 11%.
Now it's at 22%.
Which is, there's a weird, there's a weird,
crazy shift that's happening in the political sphere
that is interesting to me.
Well, he has a lot of weight, man.
You know, like him, him voicing that like was,
I mean, that's a big deal.
It is, but it's also, it's weird because Trump,
as much as he's, I don't, I really don't like him
in many, many different ways, but he has this appeal with a lot of different people.
And I don't, I think it's just,
it's gotta be because he's, and who knows?
He may be the fakes mother fucker in the world,
but he comes across as being not fake
in comparison to other politicians,
because there's no polish.
You know, because you always expect a politician to smile
and say the right thing and to answer a question with like politically correct. And then you got Trump who's like, you know, because you always expect a politician to smile and say the right thing and to answer a question with like
Politically correct, and then you got Trump who's like, you know now will nuke them or you know calling people rocket man or whatever and you're like
What this is why you can't get into sports, dude?
Because you got wait. This is sports for nerds
Yeah, the politics is fucking sports for nerds. That's all it is to me. Yeah, it really is
It's the same goddamn thing, but I mean I goddamn thing. But I think there's that level of intelligence
in sports too, just average people don't dive in deep enough
to learn that.
That's why I think you would love it.
Yeah, I only get into politics because,
and I'm not super political in the sense
I follow all the politicians.
I just, I got into legislation and economics
because once I realized, here's the realization
I had a while ago.
When I realized, there was two things that I realized
that really, I had trouble sleeping the first time I thought
of this.
In fact, I wrote about it today on my Insta story.
When I read an article that we all pay taxes, right?
And we all have to pay taxes.
If you don't pay taxes, you'll get fined,
they'll take your property, and you keep not paying them
and eventually they'll throw you in jail.
We all know this, you know, but we all take it for,
we all kind of like accept it because we're born into it.
And I remember reading this article where this guy wrote
and he says, you know, up in the average American
up until about April 22nd, that's they did the math,
is working for the government.
I thought about that.
I'm like, holy fuck, the first quarter of the year,
every hour that I'm working is not for me.
It's for the government, which is fine
if that's what you wanna do, but what if you don't?
What if you don't wanna do it?
And I kept thinking about that and I'm like, oh shit.
What is the definition of this?
Working for someone else because you're afraid
of being hurt or thrown into a cage.
In other words, by threat of violence.
Tears sounds like the mafia to me. It sounds like slavery. That's actually the literal definition of into a cage. In other words, by threat of violence. Tears sounds like the mafia to me.
It sounds like slavery.
That's actually the literal definition of being a slave.
So when I thought of that, I was like,
that's kind of crazy and I don't have a choice.
And then I thought about this.
I said, wait a minute.
I can't do anything I want to my own self.
So think about that for a second.
Like, what if I wanted to alter my mind, my state of mind?
What if I wanted to take a drug for my body?
What if I wanted, and I'm an adult, right?
What if I wanted to have someone pay me for sex?
Because it's my body, right?
I can't do that.
In fact, if I do that and I get caught,
they will throw me into a cage or find me or whatever.
But the point is this, I don't own my body,
so I'm like, holy shit, I'm forced to work for someone else.
I have no choice in it, whether I want to or not,
I have no choice.
And I can't do to myself.
I'm not talking about hurting anybody else.
I'm not talking about any of that.
I'm talking about my own self, like I'm in my body,
I own it.
I can't do anything I want to myself.
When I realize those two things, man, I lost sleep.
I remember thinking like this is fucking crazy.
It's a situation that you're born into,
and then you don't realize, like,
so then I got into politics as I said,
oh, okay, this has a major impact on me in a real way.
I just didn't understand it.
And so then I started becoming interested in that whole process
because I thought to myself, I'm not a violent person, I'm not gonna do all. I just said, okay it. And so then I started becoming interested in that whole process because I thought to myself,
I'm not a violent person, I'm not going to do all.
I just said, okay, how can I do this within the system to change things?
And I said, I better understand this stuff.
I better start learning it.
And that's what got me into it.
So sports is fascinating as they are.
Like, you know, if the warriors lose or win, it's not gonna force me to do some, it doesn't own me,
it's not any of that stuff. And that's, but I can definitely be fascinated by sports.
You know what I'm saying? Yeah, yeah, I know. And that's how I feel about politics.
I'm serious. I mean, I'll do what I want anyway. How do I exactly?
How do I, I mean, when we talk about it off air, I mean, that's how I talk about it. I
impressed with the maneuvers that I see being made. And I love shows like house at cards. I mean, when we talk about it off air, I mean, that's how I talk about it. I am impressed with the maneuvers that I see being made and I love shows like house
of cards.
I mean, I'm into all that stuff.
So I like that part of it, but that's again, I just kind of have this like sports for nerds.
I mean, it's like all these guys are all making all these decisions and moves and what gets
put out in the media and like, we all sit back here and we argue and fight with each other
and try and debate these points.
It's just like at the end of the day,
dude, they're up there like puppet masters, man.
Oh, dude, totally.
We've just spinning wheels and nothing's getting accomplished.
And that's why you like to see this whole process
get disrupted because it's just like, wow.
And even if it's such a gamified thing,
even if there is, I mean, because it's not like,
I mean, we're still evolving as a society.
I mean, there's a lot of things we're going backwards into. But I mean, we're, so it's not like, I mean, we're still evolving as a society. I mean, there's a lot of things we're going backwards in and too,
but I mean, we're, so it's not like it's all for waste.
I don't think that.
I think that, but I definitely think that there's a lot
of greed involved.
I think that anybody that, and power,
that gets that much money and power,
I think it's tough to not try and play God.
You know, I think that any man or woman in that position
would be tempted to do that.
And if in our society, the way we are run, nobody has more an opportunity to play God than the
president and the, you know, the government, man. I mean, they have the most power over us as a
society and, you know, to think that they wouldn't want to play with that power. Yeah, you know what it
is. I haven't met a man or woman that wouldn't want.
Here's what it is, the election of Trump, I was happy with it in one respect, not because
he got elected, I didn't vote for him and for the record, I didn't vote for Hillary either.
But here's what made me happy about it, not a single, I mean, I can't say not a single,
almost nobody from either side wanted Trump to win.
Republicans hated him and of course the Democrats hated him.
So here's this guy that nobody wants him to win.
Every poll that was done showed him having zero chance
of winning.
So he was super underdog.
If you had put money on Trump and Vegas,
by the way, the Vegas odds are the best predictors of who's gonna be president. And the Vegas odds, I don't remember what they were exactly, but if had put money on Trump and Vegas, by the way, the Vegas odds are the best predictors
of who's gonna be president. And the Vegas odds, I don't remember what they were exactly,
but if you put money on Trump, you would want a lot of money because it was like Hillary
for sure is gonna win this. And then he won. And, and, and I was happy about that. Not because
you won. Not because he won. I was happy because it made me feel better.
Like, oh, wait a minute, it's not,
maybe it's not rigged, like I thought it was,
because nobody wanted him to win,
and yet he still did.
So I don't think the voting system is rigged necessarily,
but here's what I do think.
I think that they figured out how to divide everybody,
that's number rule number one.
I don't think the voting system is rigged at all.
I've never thought that.
I think the less of that,
then there's still the puppet masters
with the way they put it media and information
and you get to hear what they want you to hear.
And that's why I mean, I remember when we just recently
we got in that little debate about stuff.
It's like any time a move happens
and if I'm in a conversation,
will we get into some sort of a political debate
and somebody starts saying,
oh well, Trump just did this or Hillary just did this or Clinton
Just did this and they say some shit like that. It's like well really though. I mean do you have no idea
That's what they want you to know
You know say you're not in all the meetings you have no idea what's coming next
You have like and so we're over here fucking fighting back and forth and I think nine times that 10
That's what they want in the first place some topic that we can all debate over while the real shit's happening behind closed doors.
I'll tell you why.
Come on.
I'll tell you what, if you want to prove that point, use the easiest way you can do it.
Anytime we go to war or bomb another country, go backwards and look at the series of events
and things that we've heard in the media and heard them say, in order to get popular
support because the US government rarely
goes in and launches an attack without knowing that they have at least a decent amount of American
support because they learned that lesson in Vietnam. Vietnam created a crazy
you know counter-culture movement and part of that was because we had a draft so we have people
who are going to war who don't want to go to war.
But the other part of it was extremely unpopular, and they continue to do it.
And so they always, they're always trying to like get popular support. So if you look at like
look at the event that that finally got us into
the Vietnam War, was the Gulf of Tonkin. Okay, this is an incident which
admittedly, this is not a conspiracy theory, never happened.
Never happened.
Look at what got us into World War I.
Look at what got us into Iraq.
How are we sold on getting into Iraq?
Iraq had nothing to do with September 11th, at all.
In fact, as Shidi Saddam Hussein was, he was actually a nice counter to Al-Qaeda in the
Middle East.
Al-Qaeda didn't even exist in Iraq.
But we used that sentiment, that anger, that oh shit, we got attacked. We used that, and then of course, you know, weapons of mass destruction, which were never found. So it's all these false premises
and pretenses to get us scared, to go into war, and then people support it, and then we go in,
and that's the clearest thing you can see.
This is with almost every war.
Look back and you'll see, like, oh, that, you know,
Pearl Harbor, you know how much evidence there was
that we knew that they were gonna come in
and attack us at Pearl Harbor.
There's a decent amount of evidence to show that they,
that people kind of knew, well, though,
that people kind of knew that they were coming,
but, you know, the conspiracy is, and this is less they were coming, but you know, the conspiracy
is, and this is less proven than Gulf of Tonkin, but the conspiracy is.
Well, this, we let it happen so people get pissed off and we could jump into the war.
Does anything make more money than war?
For a special interest, it makes a lot of fucking money.
What's the thing?
I mean, what?
Well, think about the business of war.
And by the way, it doesn't make American people money, unless you're in one of these military
industrial complex companies, it loses money. Nothing loses money more than creating a million dollars something and then exploding it
Making yeah like tanks and planes. Don't they like some antimaperal while after they make too many units
Yeah, what happened is the cold war you can't tell me to that somebody who's connected like that that knows like okay
Way before anybody else knows that we're going connected like that, that knows like, okay, way before anybody
else knows that we're going to war, that I'm not also investing in Boeing and all these
companies on the side that I know is because we're going to mandate something that all of
those things are going to go up 10 fold.
Just look at Donald Russell and look how much his company, you know, we're friends
profited from the Iraq war.
You know, it's really crazy. Now, I don't know if they're like, you know, you can go the Iraq war. It's really crazy.
Now, I don't know if they're like, you know,
you can go down the line and be like,
oh, they're making people go to war.
What I think might even happen,
what I think is more realistic is
we decide we're gonna go to war for, you know,
for our own reasons.
And then the military contractors
or the, you know, these companies that make these weapons
influence how we run the war.
You know what I'm saying?
Like they sit down and go, okay, we have strategy.
We have this product.
Why don't you guys launch this kind of a war
and use this weapon and then highlight it
and whatever and make that happen.
But here's what happened with the Cold War.
One of the approaches from the...
The bunker bus.
One of Reagan's approaches was to outspend the Soviet Union,
make them spend so much money that they bankrupt themselves
and it kind of did work.
But then we were left with this massive military industrial complex
and a lot of these weapons and whatever,
they're made in America.
So now you have entire states or cities
that a large percentage of their employment
is these companies that make tanks
or bombs or whatever.
So now imagine you're trying, okay, we don't have a cold war anymore, we don't need to
have a huge military.
Now you're trying to cut spending, but what you're actually doing is now you're cutting
jobs.
And those people vote for their politicians.
Their politicians come to DC and they lobby the government to keep those jobs
and keep creating new enemies, whether it's the war on terrorism or the war on whatever,
and so that we continue to spend more and more and more.
So it's a monster, because government programs and parts of the government, once they grow
getting them to shrink is almost impossible.
It'd be like, it's like you're the owner of a business and you have access to limited money
and then people ask you to take a voluntary pay cut.
Like, no, I'm gonna give myself a raise, dude.
That's not gonna happen.
Like, once the last time Congress voted themselves
a pay cut, you know, they get to vote,
believe it or not, they get to vote their own salaries.
How fucking hilarious is that?
You know what I'm saying?
And they always have this too.
The meaning, and they have limitless money.
And I'm talking about it. It's, limited... And they have limitless money in our top.
That's why politics is shitty compared to sports.
Like sports you can't cheat like that dude.
And sports we try and cheat.
We try and cheat.
You know what I'm saying?
Stereoids, candles, doing things like that.
But not at the level of politics.
Politics is fucking super cheating bro.
Yes, it is.
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All right, I think you know real quick. Whoa, I gotta I gotta share this with the boys here
Now you know how the other day we were what we were all joking around and whatever and we were commenting on um
You know like oh, I think Justin was talking about getting a second me and how I said that
No, now how I said that. You did a topic of it.
Yeah, just kind of.
We were talking, no, wasn't on the show.
And we were talking and I was joking around and saying, oh, you can reduce your seem in volume.
And we were all laughing at whatever.
And it's funny because it's funny because like that's something that for whatever reasons
dude, guys typically want more seminal volume.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, you're really blast. And some girls. Hey. Yeah, whatever really blasts.
And some girls, hey.
Yeah.
Anyway, so, so I, uh, where's this going?
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
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Oh my God, finally.
Yes, so you may be noticing.
You have more reasons.
You may notice as you're drinking more of the green juice
that you're getting, you're making bigger loads.
I know.
Organt, I'm not as, organically I'm just gonna love
that carringial.
Bro, it's getting closer to the ceiling.
Bro, I'm gonna pay attention now because,
you know, as I drink more of it, I mean,
I'm gonna look.
I like it, I like it.
Keep it posted.
Keep it posted.
I'll keep it posted.
Actually, no, keep Justin posted.
Send him, let him know.
I'll send you pictures.
I'll bring him a cup.
Yeah, drink.
Oh, since, drink organified green juice.
Buh!
It's increased your load volume.
Just the load.
I wonder if it turns green.
All right.
Thank you, Sal. You're welcome, Doug. Our first question. I wonder if it turns green. All right. Thank you, Sal.
You're welcome, Doug.
Our first question is from O'Bourer.
Tips on getting your first chin up or pull up
as a female weight lifter.
I've been doing negatives, band, and box assisted pull-ups,
scap poles, and other variations for months,
but to no avail.
So one of the things I don't know because they didn't tell us
is but one of the things I don't know because they didn't tell us this, but one of the common
things that when I helped like a female lifter out with pull-ups or body weight dips,
I was actually in fact just helping Katrina out with it.
The first time ever, I was ever with her in the gym when she decided she was going to
do body weight dips.
And she came over and she's like, you know, I want to try a weighted dips.
I know you guys talk about, you know, the importance of increasing that.
And I don't, I've always just done my body weight.
She goes, but I don't think I can do very much weight,
you know, and I was like, well, how many,
how many can you do just, just your body weight?
And she's like, oh, I can get like 15 plus out there.
I'm like, oh, you can add plenty of weight.
God.
And so she's like, well, she would do a grab,
she would do a grab like a 10.
And I'm like, no, you grab, grab grab more weight than that you can do more than a 10
She's like well. I won't be able to get more than like five or six of those. I'm oh, yeah, that's okay
I'm like and so Katrina don't you listen to mine pump the point
I know I'm selling her out right now to sell this to tell the story right now because this is common
I used to get this a lot with
And it's part it feeds into the you know, we girls can't do low reps because it builds bulky muscle or something.
It's like, no, like actually doing,
I said, you know what would be great?
I said, do find a way that is hard for you to,
I want you to land somewhere between one to three.
You know, like, have you ever done that?
Have you ever strapped on enough weight
that to where you know you can only get one to three reps
told and she's like, no, I would never do that.
And I'm like, so there you go.
So let's put a weight on that. If you get three, keep increasing the weight
or more. So, you know, I think that a lot of times they, they'll be doing a, doing the
bandit or assisted or the, a gravitron assisted pull up machine. And they're still doing 10,
15 reps. Now that can, that will help. That'll help you build some strength. But you're
going to see a way more bang for your buck if you use enough resistance to go heavy
Yes, or enough assistance. We're gonna teach your body the mechanics of the movement and everything and it's gonna respond
appropriately, but to be able to now
Activate and recruit even a louder signal, you know to decrease those reps and to really struggle through those reps
Well, well think of it this way.
This person, this lady is trying to get her first pull-up,
right?
So she's trying to be able to do one.
Now, one is that low reps or high reps, right?
It's low reps.
So what you're actually trying to improve upon,
what you're trying to improve upon is your maximal strength
to start with.
Now at some point, if you get good at pull-ups, you'll be doing more and more reps.
But remember, there's a rule of specificity when it comes to training.
In other words, what you train is what you get.
You do get some carry-over to other things.
Most of the gains and the benefit you get is in the rep range you train, in the exercise
you train, and in the style you train. So if your goal is to try and get one pull up, which is a very low rep and
maximal strength, because you can't do any at this moment, then you should practice doing
one to two or three pull ups with assistance.
That's the point that I was trying to make. I don't know if I came off. Oh, you did. Oh,
I don't know. Perfect. Okay. I said your TZ's right. I'm back on. I came off. Oh, you did. Oh, no, no, no, no, perfect. Oh, okay. I thought you were teasing right there.
Yeah.
No, I'm back on, I'm back.
Yeah, because I mean, that's, I would, I would put a lot of weight on and use someone to
help and assist if I need to, but you're only doing a single or a double at most.
I mean, I think that, that's what I meant.
I think a lot of, what I see a lot of times is someone will then get on like an assisted
machine or a user band and they can get 10, 15 reps with the assisted and they're doing
way too many reps.
And if you can't do a single one, just your body weight.
Yeah, train that.
I mean, for me personally, too, like going through that
and lowering your reps, you tend to find out too,
where some of your sticking points are,
the hardest portion of the rep is, and where that lies.
And so that's after you get through those little reps, a lot of times I'll get
into that same position and whether it's the bottom of my rep, I'm going to really start
to increase my tension within the bottom of that rep.
So I'll stay there and like do an isometric rep where I'm just trying to harness as much
activity as possible there and squeeze, squeeze, squeeze as hard as I can and then, you know,
make a reps side of that just so my body will you know it'll further kind of respond the way
that you want it to when you feel like you're at your hardest point of the exercise.
Right and it's also, here's the other thing, when you're doing low reps, I think people
many times confuse that for maxing out.
So if I say okay you're going gonna do sets of one or two reps
That's a good point. Then they go pick a weight that that's their max and it's a super crazy struggle every single set
No, that's wrong. Here's what you do
Go to your assisted pull-up machine or whatever and pick a weight that you can max out for
Four reps on so let's say four reps is your absolute max. Now do sets of one or two.
Go in there, you go in there with a sub maximal intensity
because that's what's gonna give you the strength
because if you max out the whole time,
you're just gonna create a lot of muscle damage
and you're not gonna,
it'll take your long time of recovery
but the adaptation signal will be gone
by the time you're fully recovered
and you're not gonna gain any strength.
So go sub maximal, pick a way you can do four reps with,
do one or two, do that, practice that,
and here's the other thing, frequency, practice a lot.
I think if you did, honest to God,
if you did like three sets of a single pull-up
with a weight that you can do five reps on, for example,
and you did that, I don't know, twice a day every day,
watch how fast you get stronger.
It'll trip you out.
The other thing to take into consideration too
is this is a strength to weight ratio thing too.
So a lot of times if you shred three or five pounds
and then you go do pull ups again,
it's crazy how much that makes a difference too.
Like if you, I know every time that I've leaned out
after I've been training,
even though I'm losing strength
because I'm catabolic for quite some time
when I'm getting ready for a show, man, when I go do pull-ups, I just fly up there because I've lost five or
10 pounds.
So, I don't know how heavy this person is, too.
If you're carrying extra body fat on you and you're trying to get good at your pull-ups,
like one of the easiest things that you could do is shred a few pounds.
Yeah, they used to always fool me, by the way, like I I'd start cutting and then I'd do pull-ups and be like,
oh shit, I lost like 12 pounds,
but I could do the same amount of pull-ups.
I haven't lost any muscle and I'm like,
oh wait a minute, I lost 12 pounds.
So I'm actually weaker.
I can only do 12.
I should be able to do like an additional five reps,
but I can't because I'm skinny.
Next question is from CellCarp.
What are your thoughts on running in combo with resistance training?
I live five times a week, but also enjoy running because I'm near many state parks and it's therapeutic.
How much running each week is too much and begins to inhibit muscle building?
This, uh, this is a good question because you know how we talk about all the time how a
But this is a good question because, you know how we talk about all the time, how a while ago, people started confusing, exercise with, it just needs to be hard and you sweat and you
get sore.
And so people stopped treating it like a skill, stopped practicing it, and instead went
to the gym too, quote unquote, work out.
And so it was no longer about form or the right exercises.
It was all about like, how hard can I make this, how much can I sweat and how much, how
sore can I get? And that's what fucks people up because your, your, your, your body doesn't respond well that way.
You want to go and you will learn to skill and practice like any other sport.
It's worse with running, it's way worse with running. I don't know anybody that starts running
and thinks to themselves like, I'm going to perfect running, I'm going to perfect the skill of running.
No, I don't even know in physical education, like any coaches that have like done a good job
of teaching running mechanics, you know, with students.
They just go, you know, it's just like go and run.
Run as much as you can.
Yeah, and as hard as you can.
That's it, and like just endurance base.
Let's see how much you can endure.
It's, if you go and you run hard or you run long
and you exhaust yourself, you are assuming whether
you realize that you're not, you are assuming that you have great running patterns and mechanics.
Because the only thing you should ever train to fatigue or hard is something that you really
want to solidify in your body.
And if you have poor mechanics, that's what you're solidifying.
And so what we see, we just saw this today, as we walked in to the studio,
this young lady was running by and it looked,
grew some poor girl, she's dying, she's sweating,
she can't even look up at anybody,
forward shoulder, forward head,
feet are hitting the floor all over the place.
Green is fuck.
Yeah, and she's just, and you know she's just going
for the intensity, like how long or hard I can run,
but I can look at her and I can predict
with pretty good accuracy.
What do you guys think,
how long do you think it'll take
before she has to stop because she heard herself?
Five more years.
Yeah, maybe.
Maybe less.
Sometimes less, sometimes a lot less.
But this is where you get those kind of problems.
She was young, she was really young.
So she's resilient right now.
Yeah.
So when it comes to running,
like if you run really, really well, that's number one, and that's okay, so she's resilient right now. Yeah. So when it comes to running, like, if you run really, really well,
that's number one, and that's okay.
But here's number two, how much running is too much,
and then it inhibits muscle gains?
Well, technically, if you run, and it improves your general health,
that'll probably build more muscle, anything past that will inhibit muscle.
Anything that tells your body is more normal.
That's really vague and hard.
I know how different is that from person to person?
Well, and I just, when I answer that to people,
I just ask them which one's more of a priority.
It's like if you're really trying to build muscle,
then almost any bit of cardio is not that advantageous.
And I know there's studies to prove
that increasing cardio can increase muscle mass,
and that's because like Sal saying, you're healthier.
Your body's functioning better at that point. Your heart is stronger. And that's because like Sal saying, you're healthier, your body's functioning better
at that point, your heart is stronger.
So therefore you can then in turn build more muscle.
But once you get to a point where the running
is making you sore or the running is,
for long duration of time and you can't keep up
the caloric count, like then.
Well, we're assuming too that they're talking about
like endurance running versus like,
short sprints and short bursts
Which I've actually done, you know, in combination with heavy lifting
Mainly to emulate a lot of the durability I need, you know, for performance on the field and so having quick bursts
but having in you know being able to
Get back up and have the endurance and gas tank to keep motoring forward
and having a fast twitch response.
But I wasn't teaching my body to just go on and on
and on and on because that, when I'm heavier,
that is a disadvantage.
So that's the conflict of information I'm telling my body.
It's a really fine dance for somebody like this
because I also don't like discouraging somebody
who has found
this love for running and exercising where you're exercising five to seven days a week
and, you know, and-
And they're saying it's therapeutic.
Yeah, and it's, you know, your-
Right.
So, why-
So, it was not like we're trying to take that away.
Yeah, I would never do that, right?
I would never, if a client came to me and said, like, they were, they're happy.
They're at, were they want to be goal wise, give or take, and they enjoy running,
because it's therapeutic.
I would totally allow them to do it.
Now, if I'm looking at you and you've,
you've got all these injuries that I know are going on,
and then I know you're going on and running on that,
then which I have just had this conversation
with a friend of mine that's like a trail runner.
You know, he's got fucking hip issues,
he's got low back issues, and he just wants to run all the time.
And I'm just like, well, yeah, he's asking me
for permission, basically.
And I don't even love that.
Yeah, I'm like, well, you do what you want, dude,
but I'm not gonna sign off on it.
Right, right, exactly.
You can do whatever you want,
but you're just, you're not in the,
you have no business, in my opinion,
running, because you're all this wear and tear on your body,
it's coming from that.
And I know you don't think that
because you get the instant relief
from when you actually do the run,
and it feels like it feeds a part of you
that you like so much, but you're also taking away another part
of you, which is the way around terror on your joints body.
People want, obviously people want everything, right?
But it doesn't work that way.
There's definitely trade-offs.
So you get to ask yourself this.
And I'm gonna use an arbitrary number, okay?
But just think of it this way. What will bring you? What brings you a better or higher quality of life?
Five extra pounds of muscle or the fact that you can go run in state parks and find therapy on it
Just ask yourself that question. If the answer is oh, well five pounds more muscle will give you a better quality of life
Then there you go. Then do more weight training and do less running.
If it's the opposite, then is the five pounds of muscle worth the trade?
Of course it is.
Quality of life, I mean, you know, that's that's that trumps everything.
That doesn't matter then at that point extra five pounds of muscle or better quality of
life.
There's your time.
Because I can see I can see and I know how it is when when I was getting ready for
a show, what I love part of what I loved about competing was, you know, I was so regimented, and that's an
extreme, right?
Like that's not healthy to live that way for a long time, but to me, I have found some
things in it that I really appreciate, and it was like this organized structure of my
program.
It was this structure of me doing cardio X amount of times in the week when I was getting
ready, and like that also bled into the rest of my day
I was I was more productive and I saw these things even though okay
I might be training a little more on the extreme level
But I'm also getting some major benefits in the rest of my life
So okay, I might over do this a little bit, but then I'm also seeing it bleed over and other things that I'm I know that are
valuable to me so you know, it's it's a given take on all these things. And so it's really hard to tell somebody like what the right dose is.
It's like you have to make that decision for you how much you want doing it.
But I definitely think there's some things that you have to be very, very honest with yourself.
And if you deal with any sort of low back, knee issues already.
Or if you just run terrible.
Well, that's, I mean, if you've had those things,
you are running terrible.
Bottom line.
By the way, pain is one of the last signals
that you've indefinitely.
Right, and that's what I'm saying.
But if that's what I'm saying,
that you could be running and not have any pain right now
and still not be doing good work for your body.
Yeah, you're just waiting for the whole world.
I'm saying if you've already got pain going on,
you know what I'm saying?
If you've already got issues going on like that,
like then absolutely, it's gonna compile.
Yes.
Just keep this in mind and understand this.
Whatever you do a lot of, your body aims to become good at.
It aims to become efficient at.
It aims to become proficient at.
And so when you're doing lots of running,
think about what your body will have to,
especially the longer distance running, right?
I'm not talking about sprinting it,
longer distance running.
What type of things would your body need to do to make itself better
at running? Well, one of them is improve your cardiovascular endurance, improve your
muscular endurance. So those are kind of givens. It's going to make you more of an efficient running machine, which means you can't be too heavy, right?
More weight on your body makes you not as efficient.
And nothing burns as many calories per...
I mean, running burns a ton of calories.
That's the truth, right?
If you run for an hour, you're going to burn more calories in that hour than if you lift
weights, just the bottom line.
But so your body now is also learning
to become efficient with calories
because you are trying to turn your body into a machine
that has lots of stamina, lots of endurance,
but also doesn't use a lot of gasoline
because that would be a bad thing.
That would be not as efficient.
So you're turning yourself into a over time,
a skinny, slower metabolism type of individual,
which isn't necessarily bad.
Actually, it's not bad.
That's what you're asking your body to do.
So it does create that.
Now building muscle or lifting weights does the opposite.
If I'm lifting weights, I'm looking for strength.
And with some of that strength, needs more muscle size because bigger muscle fibers contract harder,
bigger muscles do burn more calories,
but that's okay because I don't burn a lot
of calories lifting weights anyway.
And the signal that I'm sending that's being prioritized
is strength anyway.
That's the one that's causing most of the damage
or whatever that my body seems to be responding to.
So you get a faster metabolism.
So these are the things you wanna to weigh out when you're combining
training modalities and I mean here's my view. If you're looking for overall health, you're better off doing a lot of a little
you're better off doing a little bit of everything and worse off doing a lot of just one thing. But quality of life, like for me, for example,
do I have an improved quality of life if I lift weights and get strong versus if I do long distance running? For me, I do because I enjoy it way more. I don't enjoy long distance running that much
So that's the other thing you want to keep in mind
Next up is Evans 11 is it possible to integrate a maps program in a three-day a week Olympic lifting program?
Oh the best the program if you're an Olympic lifter, an Olympic lifting is very specific.
It's very unique in all forms of resistance training.
Most resistance training requires control,
or slower tempo, more time under tension.
Maps prime would be dope.
100% Maps prime would be dope.
Maps prime would benefit Olympic lifter tremendously.
Oh yeah.
I mean, think about it.
When you're channeling your central nervous system,
like everything on command,
like that's all part of the training protocol in prime.
I mean, it's really just getting your body to respond
the way it's most effectively going to respond.
And we put you in positions specifically.
So that communication channel gets
opened up, the floodgates open in a sense. Yeah. Well, look at, look at Olympic lifters,
look at high level Olympic lifters. They're definitely muscular, but they're not massive.
And I mean, in comparison to other lifters, yeah, like an Olympic lifter, 150 pound top level
Olympic lifter is twice as strong as the top bodybuilders in the world.
And it's a very high skill to achieve.
Yeah, and what you're asking your body, of course, your muscles need to fire hard and fully, but power lifters do that too.
But what you're also asking upon your body is this perfect recruitment pattern of muscles firing in a particular sequence to
get them. It's so much skill is involved in Olympic lifting in comparison to other lifts.
It's not even there's no comparison.
It's a fast loose concept.
Yes. So I mean, Pavel talks about this, but it's a tough thing to articulate to athletes
a lot of times because especially if you've come from a strength
or bodybuilding kind of a background
where you have to learn how to be loose on command.
Oh, it's way opposite of bodybuilding.
Bodybuilding, you're taught to be,
keep tension, the entire, the whole time.
It's the opposite.
Yeah.
It's the exact opposite.
I was teaching Jessica how to do a dumbbell snatch
and she's only ever lifted weights with,
you know, when it comes to weights in terms of like a bodybuilder
or, you know, with resistance, right, to, you know,
to sculpt or build muscle.
And so I'm trying to teach her,
you gotta be fast but under control.
And she started off like everybody
who ever tries to do an Olympic lift,
after they've lifted weights for, you know,
muscle it up.
Super slow.
Yeah, it's like a, yeah.
And you're trying to teach her to be fast and explosive
and it's a skill.
And here's the thing, like if you do Olympic lifts,
you know this better than anybody.
When you go in to get your lift,
you wanna hit that lift with the perfect sequence.
You don't have, you don't even have one degree of fucking up
in terms of getting the right lift, maximizing how much weight you can lift and minimizing injury.
And so how you set yourself up to do that lift is extremely important.
This is why I got so into biomechanics and mobility and overall quality of movement.
Because when you look at athletics, it matters so much more than just the raw ability to, you know, strengthen
and be able to summon this, like, really loud strength.
Yeah, but how are you gonna use that?
How are you gonna channel that?
How are you gonna include the rest of your limbs
in the movement?
How are you gonna add anchor points
where now I'm stopping preventing certain, like, you know,
parts of my body to anchor down and to maintain
this anti-rotation while the rest of my body is rotating. So it's a very complex concept, but once
you start to really understand that you can have optimal points of tension in each movement.
And that's the part that's next level where you start understanding
that as an athlete, I can be loose and then boom,
you know, tight when I need it.
Till this day of all the programs that we've written,
maps prime is the one that I consider like the best.
And I don't mean the best in terms of,
it's better than the other programs.
It's the most unique and revolutionary.
That would be creative.
Yeah, it required the three of us to get into
Oh, I remember even a flow state
like we've never done with,
I mean, we had to fucking turn it on to figure it out.
Right.
To really figure out how it's complex
and we're trying to present it to your average person.
So it's, you know, it really took a lot of thought.
Well, priming, here's the thing that people need to understand
is that is there priming for specific lifts,
general priming?
Yeah, there is.
But it's not even in the same universe
as priming your individual body.
Oh, it's definitely not the same thing.
So if you have particular imbalances or recruitment patterns
or tight muscles or loose muscles or whatever,
you, if you prime your individual body
based on how you move the right way,
you will maximize your specific performance tremendously.
And what you do to prime your body
can be drastically different
than how you prime someone else.
I'll tell you something right now,
the way I prime my body for squats and deadlifts
is very different than the way Justin would prime his body.
And I know this because we both have different mobility patterns
and different rituals.
You know, if we call them, you know, going into the lifts,
it's all part of it.
And if I did my priming like his,
it would be better than nothing,
but it wouldn't be nearly as good as the one I do for myself
and vice versa.
And so that's what Maps Prime does,
as you go in there and there's something we,
you know, we created called the Compass Test. and you take this test and basically it's three
Movements that we came up with as the best movements that you can do that'll help identify
The right way to prime your body you do this test you pass or fail
Then you figure out okay
These are the best priming movements for my specific body and when you do them
They turn on the right muscles.
They get the right muscles to chill out a little bit.
They create the right recruitment pattern.
And then you're lift, it's like going into a lift
and feeling like you're in the groove right away.
Like better than you've ever felt before.
Now, think about Olympic lifting.
Can you think of any type of resistance training type of activity
that requires you being the fucking groove
more than Olympic lifting?
I mean, as complex as a barbell squat is,
I would, I would, a barbell squat,
not even the same page in terms of getting
in the right groove movement as Olympic lifting.
Yeah.
And so try doing a clean and jerk or a snatch, you know.
Like it's, it's so, that's why I guess I had such a
Venom when when I see it cross it. Yeah, just thrown into a circuit like it's just completely devalues that
Exercise and what the intent of the exercise is for and we know that
Over 80% of the population have no business doing it. No. Oh, yeah. Absolutely not.
You're just not you're not there yet. That doesn't mean that nobody in the top of the pyramid.
That doesn't mean that there's people that get that can't do it and or they should never do it.
That's not what I'm saying. I think there's there's so much dysfunction in us. And I think that that is
getting worse because of our habits of sitting and rounding forward on the computer and the desk
and the phone and all that shit.
These people that can't even do a proper overhead press
that are snatching.
Right, no.
Which drives me insane.
It's a high skill activity getting into the groove
is so important and I'll make this point right now.
If I was gonna teach a kid how to throw a baseball,
of course I just have him throw a baseball, right?
But that's not the full answer, that's not 100% the answer.
I would teach them how to throw the baseball correctly.
And then they would practice throwing it correctly over and over again.
Because if I took a kid and I taught him to throw a baseball like a shot put
and that's what he practiced, or that's where she practiced all the time.
They'll get good at that specific movement.
Would they ever get good at that specific movement.
Would they ever get good at really throwing a baseball by playing in a baseball game?
They'd be terrible at throwing a baseball, because all they've ever practiced is this terrible
technique.
Well, with Olympic lifting, you can go do all the snatches and cleans you want, but if
your technique is off by little, if you're not in the groove, if you didn't prime properly
and you're just going through the movement,
you'll never get really good at Olympic lifting
because you're not practicing good Olympic lifting.
If you prime properly, that's what you get good at.
You get good at good Olympic lifting
or good squatting or deadlifting
because it's also obviously for other types of training.
And so it's gonna make you better, it's gonna get you better faster by priming properly.
And so with Olympic lifting, the truth is, I think everybody should prime
and he kind of work out that they do, doesn't matter what it is, you know,
running, swimming, lifting weights, whatever.
But the one, some Olympic lifting has the rank
among the top of how important it is to prime.
It's properly.
It's funny, this came up to you.
I had one of our listeners, Susan sent me this video
of this girl doing a deadlift,
and she's going through all these robotic movements,
and she was just asking me, can you explain what is she doing?
And I was just helping Katrina's friends
with her deadlift and the mechanics on these movements.
That's not even a lip big lift.
That's not even an explosive lift
that you're throwing up over your head.
That's just a plain old deadlift.
And I'm like, you see all the way she gets her foot in,
then she gets her hands and shoulders in position,
her neck in position, retract, slides the hips back.
I mean, all that is important to get her prime her body to get in the perfect position
to lift that weight.
And so it's funny we ended up answering this question because she literally sent that
to my DM yesterday.
And that was what I was trying to get across to her is that, yeah, it looks funny and silly.
And a lot of people make fun of people that have these little rituals before they do
that.
But they're priming their body.
It's just no different than the way a baseball player walks up to a plate and he dust his cleats
off, he throws a bat over his shoulder, he tips his cap and he spits on the ground.
Like spitting has nothing to do with his baseball.
That's priming his brain.
Yeah, it is.
No, absolutely.
It's falling into that flow state where he can, yeah, sort of avoid all that.
But you know priming's more specific, even more specific than that, because it would be
him in the dugout practicing swinging the bat or
Working on the muscles that he knows he needs to work on it or right?
Well, yeah, we built in the fortification sessions in there too, so there's lots of work everything and here's a thing
Look, I'll take and I guarantee you this in five to ten years all
Personal trainers will know priming very very well
But today if you're a trainer now and you want to separate yourself from your peers,
if you want to be a trainer that's like, oh shit, that trainer is different than everybody,
and you know shit that nobody else knows, learn how to prime your clients properly
before the workouts because it's still right now a lot of trainers don't do it.
If you're, by now, I think I've said this like three or four times.
If you're a fucking trainer and you're listening to this show, you should own prime and prime
pro hands down.
If you don't, that's ridiculous.
And it's the fact that, too, you get your money back guarantee on top of that.
So it's a no brainer.
And I for sure hands down.
When we designed all the programs, I remember sitting down, I remember us going like,
God, we know what we need to provide for everybody, but we know that nobody's
ready for this yet. If we would have came out with Prime as the very first program, it would
have lost so many people that they would have been like, this program sucks. Just give me
something that makes me sweat or works me out. But we all knew that it should go with every
program that we have. So even if you have any of the maps programs, if Prime isn't involved
then or Prime Pro isn't involved then that's really the assessment tool that each and every one of us. It really it's the knowledge between the three of us of
Everything that we've accumulated overall. Yeah, and brink right so you add brink in the mix too
Have all put together on if we had somebody if we had somebody sitting in front of us
What would we do to figure out what this person how they should get ready before every single lift and work out. And that's how we develop prime and prime pro, man. That's a no brainer.
Next question is from K Cody RN. Which one of you has the most muscle mass or lean body
mass? What kind of bullshit? Well, that question. That's a style question. It wouldn't even
be close if I was competing. But even right now, I'm at 215 weight
and I'm probably sitting on fat right now.
So I'm probably sitting around, I'm fat for me.
Sorry, I'm going to offend somebody who's not
lower than 15 or 16% body fat.
I'm probably around 15% body fat.
So you could figure that out.
215, 15% body fat.
You can figure out my lean body mass.
If you know how to figure it out.
Do you remember when we went and did the test, the body fat test, all of us at what's
his name, the supplement store?
Oh, that was over in South San Jose.
Yeah, and now it's electronic impedance, so it's not going to be the most accurate, but
it gives you a general kind of idea, and I love it when Adam threw it off just by eating
carbs.
Yes, but we all went over there and we tested it and then then it could tell you what your lean body mass
Yeah, yeah, that's that's when we we all did that. I'm gonna say Doug. Yeah
No, are we talking about pound for pound or were they asking?
No, I think we had the most lean body mass. I don't know. That's a that's a good question because it's well
It's easy. Just figure out you know about what percent body fat you are right? Yeah, I'm probably at like nine
Right now. How much do you weigh?
I said body fat you are right. Yeah, I'm probably at like nine right now.
How much do you weigh?
196.
So do that.
So it's 19 pounds of fat on you.
So you're probably sitting about 180, 175.
You're about 175 lean mass.
I'm probably sitting about 190, Justin's probably.
It's hard to know what Justin, do you know what you're about?
Yeah, Justin's really fat.
So it's hard to tell.
Like at least 19 to 20 who knows.
Yeah, but I'm like two, I'm like too 30 consistently.
Damn.
That is a lot of kicks.
You know, you're not, the whole on,
you don't look like, we all joke around, fat, whatever.
You're not that, you're not obviously a master.
No, I carry it well.
But you got a lot of, you have a lot of,
all the good places ladies.
I'm like, yeah, it all goes in the rain.
It's all bad.
Damn, bro.
You imagine this guy running barely at you full speed?
We're actually probably, all of us are probably pretty close
to the same lean mask.
Give or take, I would say five or 10 pounds right now, for sure.
At this moment, yeah.
I mean, when I was all checked,
when I'm jacked on gear and fucking walk your in.
You're tall too.
Yeah, I was up at 230 and then when I'd hit stage
at 215 was my last pro show and I was 3% body fat.
So I'm 210 pounds of lean body mass on me, which, I mean, you don't even weigh that.
So you can't have that.
But I mean, right now I'm maybe sitting on probably 180, 190 pounds of lean mass.
I like the lean body mass question because not necessarily for us, but for people listening
because especially guys who try to bulk all the time, it's a good thing to know about
yourself because the scale can fool you.
Actually, no, this is a great question for everybody, including women.
How many times have you had a female client lose weight on the scale?
Be super like, ah, but you know she's doing it wrong.
You test your body fat and you show her, oh, actually, your body fat percentage stayed
the same, which means you've lost.
Well, remember this much lean body,
she gained lean.
You remember the story that I shared on here with my client friend,
Jessica, who competed.
And when I told her I didn't want her to compete yet,
because her metabolism went ready,
and she went on and kind of did it later on on her own with a friend.
And she did her body fat test at the end of the show,
and she didn't want to see it till after she got off stage,
and then we sat and we looked at it together,
and when we looked at it,
her body fat percentage stayed the same
and she lost 20-some pounds.
And so she just took off as much muscle
as she took off body fat.
And that's crazy.
It's tough.
People wonder that, by the way, how can you lose weight
and your body fat percentage stay the same or go up?
What you need to understand,
it's body fat percentage is a percentage of your body weight. So if you're a hundred pounds and you have you
know 10 percent body fat, that means you have 10 pounds of body fat on you. If you lose,
you know, 15 pounds of muscle, but you still have 10 pounds of body fat, well now it's
10 pounds out of, you know, what is that? 85. So you now have a higher body fat percentage,
even though you didn't gain any pounds of body fat,
it's a greater percentage of your old.
That's why this scale is such a terrible indicator of power.
It's stupid, it gives you false, like,
I've done this with female clients,
I'll, oh, I lost 10 pounds, I'm so happy.
I lost 10 pounds and I'll test their body fat
and I'll be like, your body fat percentage
actually went up and they'll be like,
what do you mean I lost weight?
I'll be like, well, you might have lost a couple pounds of fat,
but you also lost a lot of muscle.
So now, more of your body is body fat than before,
because you've lost a lot of your body.
And along with losing body mass,
you're not going to be able to burn as many calories.
Well, and this is most typical when people
when they first get started on their kick, right?
So they're, I'm out of shape.
I haven't been training.
It's all just the winner of the holidays, came around,. Now I'm gonna kick start my fitness right and they come out the gates
Balls the wall they tighten up the diet like crazy
We'll see you see the aggressive cardio people. Yeah, I struggle with that
Yeah, that's when you see this happens so like when and and that's the extreme version and there's everything in between
Two there's some people that think they're not pushing
that harder, and they think they're doing it right,
but they still are, too, because maybe they're not
feeding the body properly.
I see that a lot.
Like maybe you're not killing it on cardio
until in the gym, but you're also restricting calories.
You were eating 2,500 or 3,000 calories
that were fucking terrible choices,
and then all of a sudden you went from that,
so your body's now used to 2,500 to 3,000 shitty calories.
Now also you cut to 1,800 calories
and you're eating lean and clean
and your body's probably utilizing most of that shit.
Like you're not feeding it enough to keep up.
And then it ended up happening as you drop 10 pounds
in that week.
And in your head you think you did a good job
because the scale's dropping
and you ultimately want to lose body fat.
But then you find out that you lost,
you know, you lost 10 pounds
and maybe some of it was good. You lost four pounds of fat, but then you find out that you lost, you know, you lost 10 pounds, and maybe some of it was good,
you lost four pounds of fat,
but then six pounds of it was muscle and wide
or another thing.
So you've got a body fat percentage
that actually can take this,
you go up even though you're reducing your calories
and you've lost 10 pounds.
Super common.
Yeah, I mean, if you're telling your body
to become more efficient with calories,
it's going to want to reduce your muscle mass. Your muscle mass is the biggest,
your skeletal muscle is the biggest calorie burner in your body, arguably, right?
Matt per pound, I think the brain per pound of mass burns the most calories, but total,
because there's so much muscle, skeletal muscle on your body, that's the biggest calorie
burner. And incidentally, it's also something that your body can manipulate quite a bit.
Like the last things that you'll lose to save calories are organs, mass and brain mass
because you really fucking need those things.
But muscle mass, you can get rid of a lot of muscle mass and still function and be okay.
And so if you're telling your body to be efficient with calories by eating very, very little calories,
doing lots of endurance
type activity that requires lots of efficiency and also requires you to be kind of light.
Then what you'll happen is your body will adapt in a way that reduces your muscle mass.
Now, what do a lot of people's fat burning routines look like?
Exactly that.
I'm only eating 1200 calories a day and I'm doing tons of cardio every single day.
Well you are telling your body to reduce its muscle mass.
It's 100% what you're doing and that is exactly what will happen.
And here's the shitty part about because maybe someone's saying like,
I don't care if I lose six pounds of muscle as long as I lose four pounds of fat.
Fine, fair enough, I get that.
But here's a situation you put yourself into now.
Now, now you got to eat, just to stay that way.
Now you need to be more disciplined with food.
And which is, again, fair enough, that's fine.
But you live in a time where highly palatable,
easily accessible food is around all over the place.
Yes, it's a shitty place to be.
Yeah, you don't want to necessarily,
I mean, that's a great place to be if you're like
surviving in the wilderness, like,
oh yeah, it's cool, my body adapts to be off less calories.
It's better at survival.
But, you know, if you live in a regular city in America,
do you want a super highly efficient body
that will gain weight at anything over a thousand calories?
You know, well, if you plan on eating a thousand calories
for the rest of life, I get it's okay,
but shit, we celebrate with food.
We do all kinds of things with foods around us.
I don't know about you guys,
but I like to have a little bit more of a cushion
so I can, every once in a while, do that.
Doing as little as possible to elicit
the most amount of change applies to nutrition,
the same way that applies to the lifting weights.
So it's the same thing.
I think that you, if you were eating,
and I tell this to clients all the fucking time,
if you are somebody who is off the wagon,
cause this is typical, right?
You're most people are on or off.
I'm not speaking to some competitive body builder,
right now I'm talking about everybody else,
is on or off the diet, when they're off the diet,
they're eating fucking fast food,
they're not paying attention to the nutrients
that their body is getting,
they're not moving very much, they're not paying attention to the nutrients that their body's getting, they're not moving very much,
they're not weight training,
so much is not going on.
Just a simple fact,
if you're starting to introducing weight training
into your life and being sick.
Yeah, I don't do anything else.
Yeah, literally just don't do anything else yet.
And then start,
and then start to take the big rocks
out of your nutrition plan.
Like if you're eating fast food
and you're shit, that's not ideal for you,
just switch it out for better choices.
But still eat when you're hungry. Feed the body, fuel it.
If it's like, I don't want any of my clients feeling hungry
at all when they're first making this new change of lifestyle.
And you build upon that.
You come out the gates, you throw everything out of it
by the way.
Nutrition is a hard one.
So go, I always tell people, like, start slow,
step by step, because you have no idea how skewed
your understanding of nutrition is
and you don't understand how dysfunctional
your understanding of nutrition is.
I just witnessed this yesterday.
I talked about my daughter's performance, right?
The talent show.
And they have a little snack shack over there.
So I see, at intermission and afterwards,
all these kids lined up and parents buying their kids candy to celebrate.
Now my ex did the same thing.
She bought my kids some candy.
So my kids get at a line that they come over with their candy and I'm looking at them
and each kid has a full bag of skittles.
Now the average person is like, oh, it's just a treat, right?
It's not a big deal.
A full bag of skittles is something like 75 grams of sugar,
something ridiculous, like an insane amount of,
it's like two cogs of sugar that you're giving a small child.
And, you know, I'm not being a food not to hear,
it's just we're so skewed with our understanding
and nutrition that we don't think that that's a big deal,
but that's a lot for two adults to eat.
Right.
Let it evaluate.
Yeah.
It's ridiculous.
It's so much like your body has to deal
with that massive influx of sugar all at once
and it's a little body with a little pancreas
with a little bit of insulin-free-dough production.
And I'm like, hold on, I see all these kids in parents' room.
So you don't, I'm using an easy example.
Like you don't realize how skewed your mortality is.
Everybody says they're eating healthy.
Everybody says they're eating healthy. Yeah.
Everybody says they're eating healthy.
And they don't really do that much bad stuff.
Yeah.
Every fucking single person I've ever had says that.
A hundred pounds of away.
And they ride it down.
And they were like, oh, really?
Yeah, you think a caramel popcorn is a good idea.
And that's typically what, again, what I always go back to is just track for a week or two.
Yeah, start super slow.
Yeah, just pay attention.
I'm like, most people, again, you're right.
They think they're eating well,
and they're just unaware of what the fuck they're doing.
It's like, just become aware.
Where?
Just becoming aware of what you're doing already.
You'll see you naturally will start to make better choices
because you start to feel guilty.
You feel badly, you're feeling how you're feeding yourself.
Like, oh shit, I'm claiming that I'm eating well,
but then I'm looking down at my fucking food track here,
and I'm like, oh fuck, I'm not eating well at all you know. So what am I
really doing? And the other people you know is the bulkers you know pay attention to the lean
body mass too. I learned this I didn't care about getting lean ever you know through growing up
working out because I was skinny I wanted to gain weight. I remember learning this lesson when I
bulked really hard. I got my body weight up to like 240,
one or 240 or 239, right around 240,
which I don't have a big structure,
so that's a lot of fucking weight.
And I remember being so proud of myself,
like, I got a 240, fucking big.
And then I got my body fat tested.
And then I looked at the lean body mass that I had gained.
And it was like, not even a third,
I think it was like a fourth of the weight that I gained was,
was, was muscle and so all of it was fat.
Yeah.
Same exact thing happened to me.
So I layer of double.
It was right when we started getting into the dunk take
when Aaron was coming around in the fitness wave
and I was on a heavy bulk.
And I remember it was like, I remember setting my mind out
like, okay, I'm, like this is when I tell you guys
the stories of, you know, the finishing the night off with McDonald's I could crush two subway sandwiches for lunch rock star
Wash it down with like I was just I witnessed it crushing food right a monster
Yeah, and I'm so glad you and I were like super good friends back then
I don't think we would have survived. Oh, we would have been into it. Oh, yeah
I live with Mark for a while him and I would do the same thing. We push each other.
We used to call each other out.
You have an eating it?
I've already eaten three times, and you push it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You're gonna push, you have already eaten
for your friends in line before you
at the getting a burrito, and you are,
or you order yours, and then he orders extra meat.
You're like, fuck.
You can't get that extra meat.
We used to eat like that, man.
We used to eat like that, and try and gain so aggressively.
And I remember when I started tracking with the dunk take,
it was, you know, being as accurate as it is
and consistent, I could look back at all the times I tested.
And I remember how aggressively I was trying to get my weight up
and all I cared about was the weight.
I just wanna see that 240, 240 plus mark.
And I remember seeing my body fat percentage
and seeing how much lean body mass I was like,
wait a second, you need to tell me,
I fucking worked this hard to put 25 pounds on
and like three of it was muscle.
I was like, what?
Like are you fucking kidding me right now?
Like, oh, dude, that was like so depressing man.
You see that it's super common in gyms
with people who lift weights.
So yeah, putting on, you put on five pounds
of just lean body mass and you see
a pretty significant change in your body.
It doesn't require a shithead.
It's the key thing.
That's what it is.
I mean, for me, if you were to ask me back, if you were probably going to tell me the
science back then, I probably would still fucking be doing the same shit anyways because
I was filling my shirts out.
People are, oh my god, you look jacked.
You look big.
And so it's feeding the ego.
You know what I'm saying?
It's covering up the insecurity of being the skinny guy.
So yeah, I'd rather be a little softer and fatter and but bigger and buff, right?
So yeah, no, I think that's something you got to go through.
You know what I'm saying? I think if that's an insecurity of yours, you got to work your way through it.
Look at your lean body, Matt. Check it out. If you go to the app store,
you can download the Mind Pump media app. It's totally free.
It allows you to search for any topic within any of our episodes.
Go get it now.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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