Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 778: How to Design the Perfect Workout Program, Losing Excess Post Pregnancy Fat, CrossFit's Mixed Legacy & MORE
Episode Date: May 25, 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 if parents should punish any and all unde...rage drinking or allow their minor children to drink under their own roof, how to create a perfect program, if CrossFit as a whole done more harm or good for the fitness industry and if high reps are better than heavier lifts for losing postpartum fat. What the heck is kinesthetic hallucination?! (5:31) Will medical marijuana reduce the use of opioid pain meds? (15:37) Sal gives his Everly Well test results and explains how easy it is to do test and receive results. (18:34) Is Taylor picking on Adam with all their recent new sponsors? (24:00) Is Justin creating little daredevils?? He talks about his son’s recent first ride on an ATV and the guys share personal stories of being more cautious as they get older. (31:00) Celebrity Death Match! Layne Norton vs. Ben Greenfield. Who would win? (40:04) Are we hurting our kids keeping them in hyper clean environments? (43:20) #Quah question #1 – Do you think parents should punish any and all underage drinking or allow their minor children to drink under their own roof? (49:52) #Quah question #2 - How do you create a perfect program? (1:13:10) #Quah question #3 – Has CrossFit, as a whole, done more harm or good for the fitness industry? (1:25:24) #Quah question #4 – Are high reps better than heavier lifts for losing postpartum fat? (1:39:58) Related Links/Products Mentioned What is KINESTHETIC HALLUCINATION? - https://psychologydictionary.org/kinesthetic-hallucination/ 100 million Americans have chronic pain. Very few use one of the best tools to treat it. - https://www.vox.com/science-and-health/2018/5/17/17276452/chronic-pain-treatment-psychology-cbt-mindfulness-evidence TEDxAdelaide - Lorimer Moseley - Why Things Hurt – YouTube - https://youtu.be/gwd-wLdIHjs Human Garage - https://www.humangarage.net/ Phantom limb syndrome - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17684875 Phantom Limb Pain: Mirror Therapy Treatment - https://www.medicinenet.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=88097 Medical marijuana reduces use of opioid pain meds, decreases risk for some with chronic pain - https://news.umich.edu/medical-marijuana-reduces-use-of-opioid-pain-meds-decreases-risk-for-some-with-chronic-pain/ dosist – delivering health and happiness™ - http://dosist.com/ Everly Well – https://www.everlywell.com/ **Coupon code “mindpump” for 15% off all tests! Joovv - https://joovv.com/MINDPUMP Ultra-clean homes could trigger childhood leukaemia, major review suggests - https://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/2018/05/21/ultra-clean-homes-could-trigger-childhood-leukaemia-major-review/ Radium girls: The dark times of radioactive paint - https://www.cnn.com/style/article/radium-girls-radioactive-paint/index.html Europe has lower drinking ages than the US — and worse teen drinking problems - https://www.vox.com/2016/1/26/10833208/europe-lower-drinking-age Mind Pump Episode 740: The Fascinating Story of Luke Storey - https://www.mindpumpmedia.com/p/ep-740-The-Fascinating-Story-of-Luke-Storey Mind Pump Media – Programs - https://www.mindpumpmedia.com/p/rdm17-what-is-maps Pumping Iron | Netflix - https://www.netflix.com/title/60031683 Big Tex Gym: Train Like You Mean It - http://www.bigtexgym.com/ People Mentioned Jessica Rothenberg (@thetraininghour) • Instagram Mike Mutzel, MS (@metabolic_mike) • Instagram Layne Norton, PhD (@biolayne) • Instagram Ben Greenfield (@bengreenfieldfitness) • Instagram Luke Storey (@lukestorey) • Instagram Ben Pakulski (@ifbbbenpak) • Instagram Arnold (@Schwarzenegger) · Twitter Also check out Thrive Market! Thrive Market makes purchasing organic, non-GMO affordable. With prices up to 50% off retail, Thrive Market blows away most conventional, non-organic foods. PLUS, they offer a NO RISK way to get started which includes: 1. One FREE month’s membership 2. $20 Off your first three purchases of $49 or more (That’s $60 off total!) 3. Free shipping on orders of $49 or more How can you go wrong with this offer? To take advantage of this offer go to www.thrivemarket.com/mindpump You insure your car but do you insure YOU? If you don’t, and you are the primary breadwinner, you will likely leave your loved ones facing hardship and struggle if you die (harsh reality). Perhaps you think life insurance is expensive, but if you are fit and healthy, you can qualify for approved rates that are truly inexpensive and affordable. To find out if you qualify for the best rates in the industry, go get a quote at www.HealthIQ.com/mindpump Would you like to be coached by Sal, Adam & Justin? You can get 30 days of virtual coaching from them for FREE at www.mindpumpmedia.com. Get our newest program, MAPS HIIT, an expertly programmed and phased High Intensity Interval Training program designed to maximize fat burn and improve conditioning. Get it at www.mindpumpmedia.com! Get MAPS Prime, MAPS Anywhere, MAPS Anabolic, MAPS Performance, MAPS Aesthetic, the Butt Builder Blueprint, the Sexy Athlete Mod AND KB4A (The MAPS Super Bundle) packaged together at a substantial DISCOUNT at www.mindpumpmedia.com. Make EVERY workout better with MAPS Prime, the only pre-workout you need… it is now available at mindpumpmedia.com Have Sal, Adam & Justin personally train you via video instruction on our YouTube channel, Mind Pump TV. Be sure to Subscribe for updates. Get your Kimera Koffee at www.kimerakoffee.com, code "mindpump" for 10% off! Get Organifi, certified organic greens, protein, probiotics, etc at www.organifi.com Use the code “mindpump” for 20% off. Go to foursigmatic.com/mindpump and use the discount code “mindpump” for 15% off of your first order of health & energy boosting mushroom products. Add to the incredible brain enhancing effect of Kimera Koffee with www.brain.fm/mindpump 10 Free sessions! Music for the brain for incredible focus, sleep and naps! Also includes 20% if you purchase! Please subscribe, rate and review this show! Each week our favorite reviewers are announced on the show and sent Mind Pump T-shirts! Have questions for Mind Pump? Each Monday on Instagram (@mindpumpmedia) look for the QUAH post and input your question there. (Sal, Adam & Justin will answer as many questions as they can)
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Saldas Defano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
In this motherfucking episode of Mind Puff.
Of Mind Puff!
For the first 45 minutes, we're hallucinating.
We do our introductory conversation
before we get into the fitness stuff.
We start out by talking about kinesthetic hallucinations.
That's a real thing.
It's a new term I learned.
It's pretty cool.
We talk about how people can perceive pain
or feeling leprechaun.
Creep pain psychosamatically.
We talk about medical marijuana and pain
and my everly Well test.
Now, Everly Well is a company that provides hormone testing
and food intolerance testing,
and other types of testing online.
You actually get these kits, they're very inexpensive.
You take the test, you mail it in on your own, no doctors,
and then you get your results.
That'll help you direct your nutrition and all that stuff.
And we also have a hookup exclusively for Mind Pump Listler.
Listen to them.
Yeah.
If you go to EverlyWell.com, enter the code Mind Pump,
you'll get 15% off any test.
We also talk about the Juve Light and Adam's hair.
Coming back.
Run it from Bosley.
Coming back, my friend.
Taylor's really got it out for you, man
He is he's coming. He's coming actually. We got this is the red light therapy if you go to jove j o o v v
V dot com forward slash mine pump you will get a discount because we hooked you up again
We talked about Justin's son driving in a TV. What is he like seven?
Yeah, my bad I thought I was too young.
Yeah, right.
We talk about Lane Norton, our good friend, poking at our other good friend.
Actually Adam said his better friend.
We're gonna do it.
We're gonna have a celebrity death match on my head.
He was poking.
We bring those back.
Yeah, we should.
Right.
He was poking at Ben Greenfield.
What's going on here?
Should they do it out?
Who would win in that fight? A green field. A natural fist fight? Oh, Greenfield. He's like at Ben Greenfield. What's going on here? Should they duke it out? Who would win in that fight? A Greenfield.
An actual fist fight?
Oh, Greenfield all day.
He's like a guy.
I got a Greenfield.
Have you seen his hands and his limbs and shit?
Lane Strong, but it's not a deadlifting competition.
His movements are a little suspicions.
There's a deadlifting competition.
Lane's got him, okay.
For sure.
We talked about childhood cancer and the hyper-clean environment.
This is actually quite scary.
They're connecting hyper-cle, this is actually quite scary. They're connecting a hyper clean environment
to childhood leukemia.
And then we talked about the radium girls,
the random factor.
The radium girls.
So that's, yes, some 19, 27 knowledge.
You guys didn't know?
You remember the year, dude.
It's only been an hour.
Then we get into the questions.
The first question was, do we think parents
should punish any and all underage drinking,
or should we allow our children to drink a little bit
under our room?
I make them drink the whole bottle.
This tickets down the rabbit hole.
This was a good one.
Definitely did.
The next question was very simply,
how do you create the perfect program?
And it maps that.
We actually give you all the secrets.
Maps unicorns. The secrets in this part of the episode. That part of the episode. You know they create, just create it maps that. We actually give you all the maps unicorn.
The secrets in this part of the episode.
You know that Craig just created so far,
do you just set that?
You know Craig created a program called the unicorn?
No, he did it.
Yes, he did.
Our boy Craig.
Shout out to Craig.
So creative.
We love it.
The next question was, has CrossFit as a whole
done more harm or more good for the fitness industry. Do we all agree on this or not?
We got a little debate on this one. And finally that always lands on no. The last person that we answer
Always is trying to lose 30 pounds of baby weight a year and a half postpart. Is this still considered baby weight if it's a year and a half after?
Might just be body fat Is this still considered baby weight if it's a year and a half after? I don't think so. I don't know. I don't think so.
Might just be body fat.
Oh.
Anyway.
You know why didn't we call that out?
I didn't realize it.
We just did 18.
You're doing the math.
You're ever have a client's like, hey, how do I lose this baby weight?
Oh, how old's your baby?
Seven.
Yeah, seven.
She's 17.
She's working on it.
Baby weight is off.
A trainer at their gym.
No, you're just fat now.
Said they should do super high reps over a heavy weight.
And is that correct advice or is their trainer wrong
and should they listen to my pump?
Good advice here though.
Listen to my pump.
You should.
Also, this month, get the intuitive nutrition guide
and the fasting guide for, ready for this?
How much is it cost free cost free cost nothing
You get a nothing for free go to mindpump media.com
Get those two things for free. Oh, here's the catch
Oh, here's I'll be to go there before I said this part
You have to get a buy something you have to enroll in one of our bundles. We're not that nice now
Our bundles are what we take multiple maps programs maps programs, put them together and then we're crazy.
We slash the price, slash it, 30% off.
So for example,
I was imagining with a machete.
Yeah.
I was thinking about those, those use car commercials
with a slash and things.
Sleshing the prices.
Look, if you go on mindpumpedie.com
and enroll in a super bundle, Adam will eat his hat.
Yeah.
Finally. Yeah. Yeah. Anyway, we discount them. uh... mindpump media dot com and roll in a super bundle at a more eat his hat if the fasting guide, for free, go do it now.
I learned a new phrase the other day.
What's that?
This is a fucking great phrase.
I can't wait to use this in a sentence.
Kinesthetic hallucination.
Kinesthetic hallucination.
Yes, so I read this incredible article on pain. I was gonna say it's like you perceiving you have pain when you really don't. Yes. So, so I read this incredible article on pain. I was just say it's like you
perceiving you have pain when you really don't. Yes. So I read this incredible article on pain
and how it's pretty much impossible. I wouldn't say it's impossible, but it's highly unlikely or
extremely difficult to separate how you the your pain from how you feel about your pain.
rate, how you, your pain from how you feel about your pain.
So you create this emotion around the pain.
And then that changes completely how we perceive pain.
It reminds me of that Ted talk where the guy was talking about
getting bit by a rattlesnake in his ankle.
And then as he, you know, was was walking barefoot again,
in the same kind of situation,
stepped on a twig and it snapped
and it sounded like it reminded him immediately
of that pain and he thought for sure he got bit.
Dude, it just, and by the way,
this is a massive part of your pain.
And I think the reason why there's a stigma around it is
when you talk about, you know,
when I say kinesthetic hallucination,
or I say your feelings around the pain,
or I say psychosomatic, people think,
oh, you're disregarding me, you're saying,
I don't hurt, you know, it's not real.
It's just, it's real, it's not real,
but the fact that we don't address it,
you know how many people, I read,
I was reading this article,
I can't remember the statistics,
but so many people suffer from so much pain
and all these pain medications,
when a big chunk of it is really their perception
and emotion around the pain itself.
And this is why so much pain can be treated
with like behavioral therapy and or SSRI drugs,
antidepressants, people will have less pain.
Or, you know, they'll do studies
where my favorite, some of my favorite studies
where they'll do surgery on someone,
like people with chronic knee pain,
they'll do surgery, but they'll test out a placebo
where they'll open the knee up
and then just sew it back up and not do anything to the knee.
And the same amount of people who have that compared to people who'll open the knee up and then just sew it back up and not do anything to the knee. And the same amount of people have that
compared to people who actually have the knee surgery feel good.
So they'll just, they'll see the scar and be like, oh, my knee feels so much better since you did that surgery.
And then afterwards, we're like, we actually didn't do anything.
Well, don't you think too?
That's where all these gimmicky products come about because it's like, it does work for certain people because they literally believe it.
And it kind of reminds me not to knock human garage or anything, but definitely like a lot of
wizardry was going on, you know, like a lot of cues and a lot of like suggestive language that
put people in a mindset where they're like, oh, now my body's reset, everything's great,
and now I'm not feeling that pain anymore.
And it's like reiterating those points
to the person was so important
because they had to little believe it.
Well, I was reading this article,
I was thinking about it to myself,
and I know you guys have had clients like this before too,
where you train somebody who's never worked out
or maybe there was a particular type of personality
That that falls into this category, but they they have like zero tolerance for
Like the pain that comes from exercise. You know, I mean like oh my god. I can't do this. Oh hurts so bad
They literally can't handle
That kind of pain and they think of myself and because I've been exercising
For so long the pain associated with resistance
training, I have zero problem with it.
Not only do I perceive it as not bad, but I actually perceive it as good, so I actually
get, like I love it.
I enjoy the feel of lifting heavy weights and that kind of pain.
Whereas other people-
I don't even, that isn't even registered as pain.
That's what I mean.
It's like muscle soreness, which to me,
it feels good in comparison to what pain feels like.
It's a completely different association.
Yeah.
Which I think too, like that's another part of the process,
right, is like changing that association with the pain.
But to South's point, I've had many clients
that I've trained that, you know that thought they were in pain after,
if someone that was never trained before and you work them out,
and then the next day they're like freaking out at you,
like, what did you do?
Yeah, what did you do to me?
I'm hurt.
I hurt my biceps hurt, they're in pain.
Well, sometimes I'm, I mean, sure, it's a big shock.
To the system, if it has an experience,
like that kind of resistance and, you know, force.
Well, especially if you have fear kind of going into it, too, right?
Like if you already have doubt, you already have fear.
It also reminds me of like when you ever do,
you ever done something like slam your finger in a door,
like really fat, it's so, it happens so fast,
like to register, it hurts,
doesn't register until you look at it.
Yeah, you know what I'm saying?
It's dropping, right.
Oh fuck, right.
Or it's cut open, wide open, bleeding all over the place, but then, but until you look at it. Yeah, you know what I'm saying? It's dropping. Yeah, it's all fucked. Right, or it's cut open, wide open,
bleeding all over the place,
but then, but until you looked at it,
the pain really wasn't set.
That was that, that, that part of that example
I brought up with the, with the snake.
It was, it was that he didn't really feel the pain
because he thought initially it was just,
he stepped on, on a stick.
Yeah.
But then it registered later when he saw the puncture,
wound marks and all that.
And then, oh my God, all of a sudden, this rush of pain came in. So it's, you know, and it's
fast, things like phantom limb syndrome, you know, so fascinating to me. For people who don't know
what that is, this is when somebody has an amputated limb as the most common example. Like, let's say,
you lose your left arm
and then they will, so they have literally no arm, right?
No left arm, but they will feel
tremendous pain in their quote unquote imaginary left arm.
So although they have no left arm,
they feel like they have an arm and it hurts
and usually what it feels like.
Now this is common with people who have had a arm
most their life and then lost it.
Right, yeah I would think that.
Because that makes that someone who's born,
that makes sense to me because they've had a memory
of for a neural pathway for thousands of days
of being connected there and moving there
and then to cut that off completely, it's like.
But it's just, highlight, because what they'll do is they'll,
if they do have phantom limb syndrome,
it feels what they'll say is,
it feels like their arm is in this curled up,
clenched, just painful, throbbing position,
and nothing you can do takes the pain away,
pain killers, nothing takes it away.
And then years ago, they discovered that if they put
that their, you know, their body up to a mirror box so
that they could see the right arm, the one that they actually have reflected into this
box so that they could perceive that they now have another left arm, except it looks
like it's open and relaxed, then the pain mysteriously disappears.
But this just highlights how complicated pain is and how yes
there's definitely signals you get from the afflicted area, but it's the
perception of that pain that is what makes you feel it or whatever and a lot of
that is your emotion. Jessica had an experience like this not that long ago.
She hurt her shoulder, you know, doing the silks, which changed her life.
She did the silks.
It was like the first physical athletic thing that she did.
She realized that she was very strong, very athletic.
She identified very strongly with it.
Shoulder became inflamed and she created bad
recruitment patterns, probably caused an actual problem,
which meant she could no longer do the silks.
So that was a very traumatic experience for her because she had identified so strongly with it.
And so now she has this dysfunction or shoulder, but the emotion surrounding it is made it much worse
or turned into like this very depressive type, you know, depression type thing.
And then later on when she met me and worked doing all this correctional exercise and whatever,
after a while I'm like, well, your shoulder is moving okay now.
Unless you push it really hard, you don't have dysfunction.
Everything seems to be moving fine.
You've got good mobility for the most part and we couldn't figure out what the fuck it was.
And we had this conversation, this exact conversation.
And it was difficult because when I brought it up to her, of course, and I would feel the
same way. I'd be like, well, you think I'm just making this up?
It's not real.
Like, well, no, that's not the point.
The point is that you've had these emotions surrounding it.
It could be that you're perceiving it differently than it is.
And I don't even think it's a,
it means that she's perceiving it different
as much as it could just mean that it's more painful
than what it should be because you,
because you're attached to that, right?
Well, here's what happened.
She started processing it, and God bless her,
very smart, self-aware person, enough to examine this,
because I could totally see how being in that situation
you wouldn't even examine it, because you'd feel like
you were being told that you're being dismissed or whatever.
But she did, she examined it, thought about it,
and processed it, and it literally evaporated like gone. Like, and I remember
her texting me, like I was thinking about what you were saying, I've really been thinking,
and then my pain just went away. And then it came back like a week later, she did that processing
again and it went away again. It never came back, really never came back.
Now, she still has issues with her shoulder.
If we push it too hard, it'll start hurting her.
But not like it was before, it was this chronic problem
that she had for like two or three years.
And it just trips me out and I read this whole article
which you put in the show notes.
I'll make sure to send it to Jackie.
But we don't treat pain at all in that context.
You go to the doctor for pain and it's, let's see if there's a structural problem and
if there is, we'll do surgery or rehab.
And then if we don't see a structural problem but you still feel pain, we're going to put
you on opiates.
We're going to put you on some opiates and then, and then hope for the best or whatever.
And now we have this opiate addiction problem,
stuff like that.
But it's pretty crazy stuff.
On that note, got some interesting other statistics for you.
The Journal of Pain, the official Journal
of the American Pain Society reported in June of 2016
results from a University of Michigan study.
They found that medical marijuana patients were able to reduce their opiates for pain by
over 50%.
That was on average.
And there was another study done in Israel where 44% of patients with chronic pain were
able to stop taking prescription opiate drugs within seven months of using medical marijuana.
Then there's another study that found that
the majority of people now that are starting to use
medical marijuana, only 4% of it are using it to get high.
The vast majority of them are using it
to treat some kind of ailment and replace some kind of
trachea.
You're trying to say that only 4% of people that are smoking
weed are trying to just do. 4% of people that are smoking weed are trying to
just do 4% of the new users.
Oh, okay, new users.
Yeah, new users that are starting to use it.
And I believe that that's not that surprising, right?
Because majority of the people that have been smoking weed have been smoking weed because
they like to smoke weed regardless of the pros or cons of it.
And the few, the few won't stop few.
It's probably millions now of people
that are coming on board and trying cannabis now
are doing it because of all the research that's coming out.
Yeah, and a lot of them are using it to replace,
because think about it this way.
I forgot what the number was.
Something like 67% of Americans over the age of 30
or something like that.
And I don't know the exact statistic,
maybe Doug can look it up.
It's a big chunk of Americans. Use prescription drugs on a pretty regular basis, whether it's
forexiety, depression, you know, pain, whatever. And most of the people who are using marijuana as it
becomes legal, because I feel like these people who didn't use it before were afraid because it was
illegal. But now that's legal, they're like, I people who didn't use it before were afraid because it was illegal.
But now that it's legal,
they're like, I'm gonna try this out, right?
And they're already on prescription drugs.
Well, and two, I think, I think as far as the actual
experience of it, like maybe they tried it way back in the day,
but it was like the paranoia.
And like there wasn't a lot of knowledge being passed around
as far as like what strains and combinations.
And even I never even heard of terpenes and until like met with doses and like their process with that just to make
it more like user friendly as far as an experience.
Like if you're going for something that's going to relieve pain, there's actually like a
good formula for that.
Not just like, you know, oh, here's some weed.
Yeah, I know I agree.
Dude, this is, it's going to be so disrupting because opiate use and sales are in the billions.
I mean, it's so much, it's such a massive market in America.
So imagine if, you know, imagine what can potentially
happen to that market with that.
Well, it's already happening.
I mean, every state that it's legal
and the opiate use has been on a rapid decline for some time now.
And all these other medications too. So it's only, hey, you uses been on a rapid decline for some time now.
And all these other medications too.
So it's only, hey, you know what I wanted to ask, if one of you guys had done the Evernilly
test yet.
Oh, the Evernilly well.
Yeah, did you do that?
I did mine.
Oh, you have done it.
Yeah, so dude, it's super easy.
So what you do, so I did the testosterone one.
So I'm not sure if all of them are the same, but the testosterone one.
Is it saliva?
Is it pee?
What is it? Oh, just saliva
Yeah, so you wake first thing in the morning and within the first 30 minutes of waking up
They give you this little tube. It's about I don't know three inches long maybe two inches long and then you spit in it
And you have to fill the tube up about
75% with saliva you're not don't drink any water don't brush your teeth just right when you wake up
So I did it this morning at like five five ten in the morning and you just spit in the cup with saliva. Don't drink any water, don't brush your teeth, just right when you wake up.
So I did it this morning at like 5, 5, 10 in the morning. And you just spit in the cup,
you seal it, you write your name on it, you register your kit online, which is super easy,
you just type in the code or whatever. And then you mail it in. And that's it.
Oh wow, that easy. That's it. You mail it in and then you get your results. So I don't know if I told you guys this, but I did an Everly Well test last year in June or July,
let me pull it up.
Does it keep your old stats?
Yeah, so I'm gonna compare the two.
I wanna compare the two to see if,
let me see if I can log in here.
So I wanna give you guys my results.
I wanna do the testosterone.
When I had the food allergy or food sensitivity test
and so that one you actually have to like extract some blood for that one.
It's just a pin prick.
Just a little pin prick, but yes, I wanted to do that actually for my for my son.
I didn't know, you know, as far as like with kids like using it for that, but I'm
gonna have to ask for that.
But yeah, I'm definitely gonna do the testosterone
so you weren't bad.
Okay, so I did my last one in July of 2017.
Now the reason I did it,
and I don't know if I ever shared it with you guys,
I don't think I did.
The reason why I did it was,
back in last year,
I felt like my testosterone maybe was low or something was off.
My libido wasn't what it normally was, I wasn't feeling myself.
And I think it was just lots of stress, lots of processing.
You know, after I got divorced, there's like phases of difficult periods.
Like there's the initial period and then you feel better and then it hits you again
and whatever.
And I think that was part of it and organizing the
The kids and all that stuff. So so I was feeling kind of shitty. So I took this test and my results
then were I was basically right in the middle
free to testosterone of the range which
I guess is normal it says I'm normal, but I feel like that was lower than what I'm normally
Do they give you a range of what they say?
Is this standard 400 to 1200?
Yeah, no, they use a different range,
yeah, I think it's saliva.
So the range that they use is between 49 and 185,
and I don't know what PG stands for, PG per milliliter,
not quite sure what that stands for.
My number last year was 103, which is kind of in the middle,
you know, not low, not high, kind of right in the middle.
Is that really in the middle? It sounds like you said 49 to what?
49 to 185, so it's like a lower end of the middle.
You know, I called them, I'm like, what does that mean?
Isn't that like, no, it's fine, it's totally normal.
But I feel like it was low for picograms per milliliter.
Thanks, Doug.
The fuck is a picogram?
I don't know.
It's like a gram, but it's...
What's a pico?
It's a pico.
It's a pico.
It's a pico pico.
It's a...
I feel like it's a smaller...
Sounds really small.
Sounds really small.
I have no idea.
Well, I'm excited about it.
Oh, it's one trillionth of a gram.
Hey, pico, we're gonna measure.
Yeah.
That's crazy.
I've never even heard of a Pico gram.
Yeah.
So it'll be interesting to see if my testosterone level,
because now I feel better than I did back then.
So it'll be interesting to see if my testosterone levels
are higher than last time.
The only thing that sucks for me is that I didn't do this
before, so it's gonna be hard to see your comparative data.
Right, right.
But nonetheless, I'm really interested
just because I've been trying to stay away
from the test for a while just so I could put
some work in, you know, like I don't want it to be.
It's like when you start working out again.
Yeah.
You know, saying like you don't want to get on the scale,
you don't want to look.
I want to take a picture of this.
Yeah, I don't like it close.
Yeah, give me some momentum here.
It's that's been kind of like my thought process
with all this, like let me get in rhythm here
of training,
dieting, doing everything that I'm supposed to be doing
to get myself right.
And I feel good.
So I'm excited to see where I'm at just to see if I'm.
What's the turnaround, do you know,
so like when you send it out,
like when they're gonna get back?
I think it's pretty quick.
I mean, if I recall, it was like a couple of weeks maybe.
Nice.
Yeah, and you get it, if if you want they'll text it to you
Hmm or of course or you get an email of course and you just go online. Yeah everything's so nice and like exclusive
Technology is the internet de-centralizing the fuck out of everything. I really I really feel like Taylor is picking on me with all these new sponsors
We just did Boater
And now we got to test
You're trying to say something bro, or what?
What's up?
He's all getting that, uh, what's up, Bosley? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, like we may as well get paid man. You fix it all your shit, bro
I
Swarted I swear to God if he does I'll tell fuck off right? I don't care for you
And I've tried Bosley what do you mean really fried it? I did it a long time ago or not?
It's yeah, it's yeah, it's Bosley does this the shampoo whole cycle
I thought you did the hair no no Bosley also does like a you
have a whole you know yeah kid it's like $150 a bottle of shampoo right yeah
did do anything for you so it what it did do which pissed me off was because it
was right when I first shampoo runs down your back, they have hairy back. You guys, the trail of tears.
Yes, please show us.
Yes, please show us.
No, this was year, like when I first started noticing
that I was like thinning, I remember using it.
And you know what it does is it, it like grows peach fuzz.
Like so, what I, and you have to be consistent as fuck
with it, you can't be missing, you had to be consistent
and it took a couple of weeks.
And then after a week, I would kind of rub
where my hair was thinning.
And it feels like all this peach fuzz.
And when you look in the mirror real closely,
you get kind of like these micro hairs that grow.
Now, what happens is they never grow full length.
At least not for me.
I never saw that.
And I've heard a lot of people that have tried this.
This is what they say the same thing.
Is that it just kind of gives you this peach buzz
that grows in that area,
but it's not strong enough to make like full.
It's got a mandolk.
It's like a chia pet.
It's a manoxidil, right?
Yeah, whatever, right?
So, but when I took it,
and I was like, oh, this isn't helping very much,
fuck this, and then I stopped,
then when I stopped, it was like my hair started
thinning at a faster rate.
So it sucked me in for like a good six months to a year,
I was on this, and at at that point I was like,
then it accelerated everything.
Yeah, it accelerated it when I wasn't doing it.
Well, this is a fucking hustle and a half.
Oh shit.
You start using it and it's like,
eh, kinda knows it, whatever, but then when you stop using it,
then your shit starts to excel.
You know, manoxidil, which I think is what's in it.
Manoxidil was initially studied for,
I believe it was for blood pressure.
If I'm not mistaken, I think it was to lower blood pressure.
And the people studying it noticed that,
that there would be like hair growth.
So just like other medications,
the researchers are like, well, it doesn't work very well
for this, but wait a minute.
But there's a bowner.
This is a bigger, this is a way bigger market.
It was the same thing. dude. I'm telling you dude
You got a I've been using salt Paul metta. I'm cool, bro. I'm cool. I just ain't going nowhere
It's good dude since I you know since I don't fuck with it and I you know the juve light dude
I'm a believer is it growing it back bro. I'm a I'm a believe it is a growing back. No, it's not growing back
It's stopping the accelerates. Yeah, like it stopped. Like I don't feel like I've,
I don't feel like I've thinned in the last probably.
So what do you do lay down so your head is facing you?
No, I see like that, like how,
I bring, obviously the listeners can't see what I'm doing,
but mine, I have the juvenile at the edge of my bed.
And when I get out of the shower, I'm naked.
And I bring it right over to me and I sit just like this
and I drop my head down, I'm looking down at my feet.
And so it's hitting my scalp
and then I'm getting all the rest of my body,
which is great because I have psoriasis on my shins
right here, so my psoriasis in my head,
there's like right on it.
And I tell you what, and I don't know if I told you guys this,
but our boy, Metablog Mike, you guys know Mike Metzl,
I think is his last name, sorry Mike.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Right, he interviewed name. Sorry, Mike. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Right, he interviewed us.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I know that.
Him and I talk all the time and he said that he started using the Juve and he actually,
before he started, he tested his free test and it was like right around 500 and something
and he's our age, you're a little bit older, I think.
And so it's, you know, pretty normal range.
And he said he did 12 minutes of, 12 to 15 minutes of infrared therapy.
I wanna say four times a week, three or four times a week,
consistently for about six weeks.
And then he went back and retested
and his shit went to 900.
That's crazy.
Yeah.
So I said nothing else changed as I,
and he said everything else,
he's been on the same plan, same workout regimen,
everything I believe he follows maps. And so all that stuff has been consistent and the only thing that he changed was
Introducing the jube and I told him I said man, you know what I haven't gone and tested
But you know I've talked on the show a few times about how I'd notice it one with my psoriasis and you know my my
Testosterone levels I was attributing most of that to the training and getting that going again,
but maybe the Juve was helping more than I thought it was.
So that's kind of a...
Yeah, do this test, this testosterone test,
do another one in like three, four months,
or whatever, and see if there's any changes?
Yeah, what I really wanna play with the light
and now that we have this kid at home is to see that,
if you have to consistently be using it
in order to keep the levels there, and like, let's say I like fall off and I'm not using it any probably.
I would assume so, right? Anything that has an effect on you, you probably have to maintain
to keep that effect. Yeah, so I'm interested to see if that's going to be so I'm going to
just sunlight. I think it's just it's it's it's it's like get it going out in the sun.
Sunlight will definitely raise testosterone and if you're not in the sun a lot,
I think you can expect a lot of these.
And I think it's an important thing to note
for the listeners,
because for sure none of us are like the pseudoscience guys
at all.
I 100% know that I don't get enough sunlight.
Like we podcast in a fucking cube with no windows.
But I'm shelter.
Yeah, and we come in early,
and when I get home,
I'm back inside of a house working on a computer
So I get artificial light
I don't get it and I try and make an effort obviously to get out in the sun as much as I can or go for my walks and do things like that
But nowhere near the type of sun that I was getting in my my teens and childhood
So I think that's probably why I see I'm seeing so much benefit with the
I think that's probably why I see I'm seeing so much benefit with the infrared sauna and the Juve light.
I think it's because I don't get enough sun.
And if I probably was a sun worshiper, I probably wouldn't see as many of the benefits that
I'm seeing with it right now.
Justin, do you get in the sun a lot?
He looks like it.
I mean, I try like as of late, I've been trying real hard to get out in the sun because like
I do feel the difference like being in here all the time and then going home and you know being inside and I believe people like with his
Complexion need it less of course like me needs it more of course
I would think so yeah exactly
Because otherwise what would like Irish people always have low testosterone
I don't think I think they have a stronger effect from a shorter, you know, I'm out of the sun
Right, I think you like you and I who grew up or grew up are heritage because all the way back to areas that are...
When you saw how I would know inherently, I'm like, okay, I gotta get out of the sun.
Like, you guys would still be out there just like baking, and I'm just like, I gotta find some shade.
We were at Tom's Billy's house, and in between podcasts, we had like a 40-minute break or something like that.
So we all got in this backyard, beautiful.
It's got such a gorgeous house, gorgeous backyard.
And we're laying out and so I'm like,
oh cool, I'll just take off my shirt and bake.
So I lay out there for about 40 minutes,
just it was out there for five.
And then it goes like, go's in the shade.
And there's like one spot for shade,
I'm just gonna stand right there.
Later that night, you know, we get home
and I might've
gotten a shade darker, tight, tiny bit.
And I'm literally laying shirt off direct sun.
It was hot. Justin's neck and everything was red.
I got like Insta Farmer tan.
Yeah, right away. Yeah.
Right away. Yeah.
Hey, you just, you just took your kids,
I saw your picture with the ATVs.
Where was that? Oh, yeah.
It was that one of their friends house.
I went to go pick them up and they had like this little track like in their backyard.
It was so sick.
It was like it went all the way around like the neighborhood and he just pulled it out.
He's like, oh, I got this for them for Christmas, whatever.
And so like he had my son, my oldest go in there and then figure out how to drive and
everything.
And he did really well.
Like, he was like nervous at first
because it was just one part where like,
if you had a like turned real hard,
you would come down this like crazy ditch.
And so you just let him by himself.
Yeah, but we were like kind of managing like,
from the sides, it's like kind of getting
front of him at least, but yeah,
I'm already.
Do you remember the first time as a kid
getting into a go-card or an ATV,
or doing anything like that?
I remember.
Epic.
Yeah, I remember.
I remember, I remember, I was scared of this.
I remember being scared at first,
but I remember like getting over that fear
and being like, oh, I love this.
Yeah.
You definitely had that like reserve,
you know, and it's like, uh, and like stalled it
and then like tried to get going.
Then once you finally get going, like,
he actually, you started turning and he started like
putting more gas to them, and then I started getting
real nervous because he would take the turns really
hard and it was like, yeah, and you'd see like the,
the tire come up just a little bit.
I was like, oh shit, like calmed out, you know?
Like I know you didn't crash it or nothing.
No, he didn't crash.
I mean, actually I take that back.
He did crash once.
He kind of ran into the wall one time,
just like couldn't stop in time,
but yeah, I was like, fuck, now they're gonna want this
like forever.
You know, like once you get introduced
to something that awesome, they're just gonna be like,
Dad, when can we get what?
I was like, it's not gonna happen.
I was telling Justin, I was telling Justin
that when I was a kid, my first experience on like a ATV or a four wheeler,
this explains the quad, the fucking,
$15,000 quad in the living room, centerpiece.
My ca, my $15,000 coffee table,
that never gets taken out, right?
So that's awesome.
So this is where this all stems from is,
when I was in fourth grade,
I went over to a kid's house.
It was a new friend of mine at the time.
Later on, I became a good friend of mine.
And he took me out.
His parents let us take the quad out.
And he was a farm kid, you know, so they would let fourth graders just get on hop on an
ATV and just fucking take off.
Like, so, you know, I hopped on and got behind him and and then we took off and we rode, and then he let me drive,
and I instantly was in love.
Oh my God, I want to,
so every year, for every holiday,
I was asking for a quad and ATV,
I want ATV.
And of course, Mike,
you were poor.
Yeah, I know,
what do you want for Christmas, Adam?
I want a quad.
I'm not a kid.
It's like a horse,
when kids that would grow up.
So my sister, so you think about this,
don't tell about the fun of you just went that direction
because my sisters and my mom all got horses at one point.
What?
Yeah.
Wait a minute, your sister actually got a horse?
Yeah, all my siblings, all of them.
Wow.
Horses expensive as fun.
My little sister had a pony, my other sister got a horse
and then my mom and my dad all got horses.
When we got a property that actually had acreage, right?
And that, I mean, but that was like not until I was in sixth, seventh grade, but from fourth
grade every holiday, all asking, they got horses.
I'm still asking.
So I asked, well, I get a horse.
Fuck yeah, I'm gonna ask for a TV.
Right.
Well, I was asking before that and during, and I'm like, I don't even want a horse.
I want an ATV, that's all I wanted, right?
So, and I never got it.
So you better believe the first purchase
that I made when I was making good money.
I was like, I'm going out.
And it was like that too,
as I remember telling my buddy,
I convinced him to buy one,
which he eventually sold it,
because he's like, we never fucking drive these things.
I gotta sell it.
And I refuse to sell it,
because I dumped a ton of money in it.
I'm like, no one will ever give me 50.
Is yours all souped up in shit?
Yeah, yeah.
It's the only reason why it's worth 15 grand is because
you can buy it brand new for like 70, 75 or 8 grand
or something like that.
But I've dumped another 10 into the thing.
It's funny.
The guy that Ethan's friend, his dad actually went to school
with him and I grew up with him.
And so he was like, I was into sports like primarily. Ethan's friend, his dad actually went to school with him and I grew up with him.
So he was like, I was into sports like primarily.
He was a little bit at some point, but he was more of the extreme kind of sports that crew,
like growing up like more skateboards and more to cross and all that kind of stuff.
So over there, I remembered all that and was like, oh yeah, oh shit.
Cause to me, like, I still fight that tendency of like being real, like safety, caution,
you know, protective, like, and like, he's got a lot less of that, you know, like, there's
gnarly ass, like rope swings and everything he has there.
He, he showed me, he's like, oh, it's super safe.
I'm a blah, blah, like, he built he built this whole, it was like a swing set
you could climb on top of and then he could jump off
of the top with this rope swing and then like,
swing like really fucking high in the air and like,
he just demoed it from me and I was like,
holy shit dude, he's like, yeah, try it out, it's real fun.
You know what I was like, I don't know, man.
Like, I'm a little old for that shit.
I know what you're doing out here.
So I got a little nervous.
Yeah, I'm the last guy to do that shit.
Yeah.
When I was a kid, my dad brought home once,
like a little 50, the little motorcycles.
It was a little dirt bike 50.
Oh, that was a fun.
Dude, I saw my life flash before my eyes on that thing.
Cause I learned how to, that's how I learned how to drive, that thing. Because I learned how to drive like stick shift.
I learned how to change gears.
Through...
You used to be me, use a clutch.
Yeah, I had to use a clutch through a motorcycle.
So I get on that thing and he's teaching me how to, you know,
how to use the clutch and shift and all that stuff.
And once I got the hang of it, man, that thing would hit like 40 miles an hour.
And I remember I'd ride around my neighborhood
and I got a little cocky
and I went up like the curb a little bit
and you ever get the wobbles where you hit the curb
and you start and I was heading towards the car
and I don't know how I missed the car
but I never got on that bike again
because I saw my life flash before my...
I didn't have a helmet on,
nobody ever wore a helmet in those days.
Did you guys ever wear a helmet when you were right away man.
No, I was riding like my dad's haunted 90.
It was like this old piece of shit.
And yeah, it totally got out from under me.
It hit a bunch of leaves and sticks like on this turn
and yeah, road rash all upside my body.
It was it sucked.
I still wanted to do.
We got it all taken.
You know, we go down south all the time. Pismos like one of my favorite places to go and ride we should make a mind
I'll be hilarious cuz I would love to make a mind since I was a little kid since I was a little
Well, and the fact that your boys now are into that dude
It's so fun cuz you can run all those things on the beach man. You go down. Oh, this little dune buggy thing like
Oh, it's it's super fun man. It looks so rad. Yeah, I would love to do it
They're pretty safe. I mean, I know there's dangerous too,
but they're pretty fucking safe with the cages
and stuff in the other cage.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, especially out there on the beach
and like that, I mean, there's only one thing
you gotta worry about, right?
So if you're coming towards the water,
you gotta be careful.
But you don't wanna end up in the ocean?
Yeah, no, no, no, no, excuse me.
Ah!
Excuse me, it's the other way.
It's leaving the water, I'm like backwards,
it's just how long it's been stuck in there.
Because of the wind coming in,
so it makes these drop-offs.
So as long as you're heading towards the water,
everything is up, up, up.
The way you're going, fucking.
When you go on the other way,
you can, and I've had buddies
that have literally broke limbs
because they're matching the other direction,
and it looks sand, so you just see, it looks level,
and then you'll come off and you'll have a 50 foot drop in the sand and just
Go out. So as long as you're heading in heading towards the water
You'll always be shooting up
So you'll hit you could hit these you can bomb on a jump
Launch 20 30 feet in the air, but you'll land up and you'll keep going up
And you keep going up. Yeah, but when you're going the other way, the way the wind blows and makes the lips on the sand.
So I got lost at Pismo in the sand dunes once.
Oh, you really?
Yeah, I went out there, this was a long way.
Walking or riding?
No, riding.
I was, God, this was maybe four years into my marriage.
Me and my wife at the time got on those little,
the quads or whatever.
And we went out there and we were having a great old time
for an hour, riding deeper and deeper into the beach.
And it looks like everything looks the same all around.
You couldn't see anything around me except for dunes.
And then I'm like, which direction do we go?
Like how do we get back?
And we couldn't find our way back.
And the way I found my way back was what you're talking about
was you could eventually I started to figure out that the dunes
Looked a particular way and I figured well the ocean must be this way
So we just kept going I found the ocean then I rode the coast all the way back
Hey way back, but I get lost all the time. That's just one more there
There is not it anybody can get lost out there exactly so you throw me in there. Yeah, you throw some I almost died
I almost died almost starved
GPS on you yeah, I would have been in the middle of the sand saltracker surrounded by like the vacation
There's you know it's like two miles away
Dead out of the
Saying
Anyway, so you know I can't wait to we have lane coming in next week
You know what I can't wait to ask him hmm?
What's that why he was why he was talking shit about Benny there and the,
what was he doing on Joe?
I missed, you know what, he's trying to get on Joe Rogan's name.
Yeah, he's trolling hard.
God, man, I'm gonna call him out on the...
He's been on Joe Rogan's threads for ever.
You can't get all this thing.
You gotta bring me on, you gotta,
like super aggressively trying to get on.
And you know what, the crazy part is, he'll never bring him on because of that.
Right, it's not, yeah, it's not a good strategy.
Or maybe he will, or fuck with him.
Yeah, I don't, yeah, I think that he won't, I don't think he'll bring him on just for
the simple fact that he's wanting to be on.
So it's like, he's when someone's asking you that all the time, it's like, come on, dude.
Yeah, I would, I would love to have him in Greenfield on a podcast together.
That would be a fun one and then just just
Just yeah, I don't know if it's okay
You know, yeah, maybe if we're involved in it because I feel like they're so fucking different. Yeah, I think it weird
Yeah, it would get weird and Ben would Ben would just not bother with him
Yeah, Lane would probably try and poke out on and Ben would just kind of be like what yeah, Luf
Yeah, I don't think Ben would even care, you know what I'm saying?
I don't think so, yeah.
I just think it would be hilarious.
What I love about Ben is, and this is why Ben
is a really good friend of ours, right?
And Lane's a good friend of ours too,
but I would say Ben's a better friend of ours.
And I think, you know, it reminds me of what your kids,
and when you're young and you have all your friends around you,
and then they're like, who's your best friend,
and you've got like four of your friends around your side.
And you have to pick one.
He's my best friend.
You're all weighing him out like real time.
Well, I like it.
Yeah, but he's got a boat.
You know, his dad has a boat.
He's a better friend.
Right, right.
No, I just, I think, well, I think we spend way more time
with Ben, right?
We've hung out with Ben a lot, like all of us have.
And I think we've got, totally.
Know him really, really well.
And Ben's really, really comfortable with who he is.
Like nobody's gonna rattle his cage.
No one's gonna come in and like try and poke at him.
Like he's not that guy.
Like he fully embraces who he is, what he's doing.
And I honestly, out of everybody we've met,
because we've met all, especially in the fitness space,
both ends of the spectrum.
Everything from the fucking woo-woo,
all the way to the hardcore bodybuilders.
And Ben really is, if there's anybody
who's gonna be doing all this pseudo-science shit,
he's the guy I want to do it.
He is the guy, I mean, somebody that smart
who like lives their life to do a tee
like a protocol who is like testing things out.
Like, he is the guy I wanna go to,
who say,
dude, tell me, you press the boundaries a bit.
And I know this isn't evidence necessarily,
but a little bit it is.
Isn't Ben like, like, R-Age?
He is, right?
Or maybe he's a couple of years younger.
Is he just like two, I think?
He looks, he looks really fucking good
when you look at him.
Like his skin looks really good.
He looks really good. He looks really good.
He always lean, you know what I mean?
So his hair is nice.
It's not like I'm, he's smell good.
I'm crushing on him.
Yeah.
Apparently his penis grew.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No, I don't know what they, I don't think they would,
I don't think it would, I don't know if it would be
a good interview or not.
Like, I don't know, I haven't heard, I've heard lane
interview because I've listened to his podcast for a long time
and he does like all the PhD guys
and they just, they do the,
that's why,
because they're so different echo chambers.
Yeah, yeah.
I think it would be a blast.
Plane echo.
So one more thing I wanted to bring up
that was, it's not shocking necessarily,
but devastating for some people to hear.
There was a huge study done by Britain's leading leukemia
experts, and they've concluded, so huge analysis,
that there's a deadly chain of events that is set in motion
that could be causing the most common childhood cancer,
which is leukemia.
And that is a hyper-clean environment.
So you know how they've been saying for a long time
that a hyper-clean environment could be causing
or at least a major factor in the reason why kids
develop autoimmune issues like asthma and stuff like that.
And we've known this for a while.
These connections have been made for a while.
Well, they're finding now that,
and this is 30 years of research that they've studied.
So this is a lot of research.
And what they think that happens is that children in these hyper clean environments, their immune
systems become hyper vigilant because they don't really have anything to wrap.
So everything becomes an enemy at some point.
And so they just develop a shit ton of these white blood cells and it turns into leukemia.
And when I read that man,
imagine if you're a parent and you're hearing that
and you had a kid who, you know what I mean?
Cause, well yeah, especially like because if you're creating
the sterile environment, like obviously you care,
you know, you're trying to make sure that your kid is like,
safe from all these like foreign substances
and bacteria and whatever.
And that's to the, you're detriment at that point. It's so crazy and it and whatever, and that's to the your detriment at that point.
It's so crazy, and it just remind,
we've had stuff like this in the past
where like a long time ago,
and I can't remember what watch manufacturer was,
but there was these watches that had glowing hands on them.
So there were watches that people would buy,
and you could see the hands really well
because they would kinda glow, and the way that they would glow is people would buy, and that you could see the hands really well because they would kinda glow.
And the way that they would glow is they would paint,
I think, radium on them, which is radioactive.
And they didn't know that it was bad
to handle this material.
And so there were a lot of women that took this job.
And what they would do is they'd use these little tiny
paint brushes and they'd paint on the radium.
But in between, they'd, many times lick the brush
to create a fine point.
What the fuck up?
Where do you hear this?
This is an old store, this has happened in the 19,
I wanna say in the 1920s, maybe, or 30s.
And all these women were.
To that mercury, oh my goodness.
All these women were getting cancer.
And they realized, oh shit,
it's because you're licking the paint brushes
and you're getting this radioactive material.
And it just reminds me of how many times we have these situations and then realize
it was we were doing it to ourselves.
You know, and I think that this, you know, we're going to, God, I think honestly in the
next 10 to 10 years, we're doing it to ourselves when a lot of this stuff didn't exist to
fucking 100 years ago.
That's the obvious thing, right?
To me, it's like that's, like, so I think when people play this, like,
oh, I hate, I hate, I hate the radium girls,
that's what they call them.
I hate hearing this, like, oh, my genetics are all this,
all the time, it's like, dude, it's so crazy.
You have to shit that we're all talking about
that we're suffering from.
We weren't suffering from this 100 years ago.
Yeah.
It doesn't make sense.
We just want to control our environment so bad
and it's just like, we create new
problems as a result.
This is it.
Like, why are we in these hyper, super sterile, clean environments?
Where did you read this, dude?
What a random fucking fact.
That right now.
I didn't read it a long time ago.
Yeah, that's free.
Like, in 1930.
I want to say, let's say a fun fact.
Hold on, I want to snap a cap.
I want to see if I was right with the years.
What years was that?
What did that happen? They called it the Radium Girls. I mean, it? It's a snapple cat. I wanna see if I was right with the years. What years was that? What did that happen?
They called them the Radium Girls.
I mean, it's black and white.
1927.
Damn it!
One day I'll be wrong.
You were,
it's the Radium Girls.
I feel like there's a song.
It sounds like they'd be hot, right?
I mean, you wanna go meet the Radium Girls?
For sure.
We in Radium Girls.
For sure, one of the things that people
would at meet us are most impressed with aside from that,
they're like, oh my God, you're exactly the same
as you are on the fucking show besides that.
It's holy shit, Sal really doesn't have a laptop in front of him when he says all this
weird random shit.
Oh, no, people always think that.
Embedded in your brain.
People always think that.
No, I'm not looking at shit.
But anyway, you know, we have these hyper clean environments because we've been told, we
discovered germ theory, we discovered
that bacteria and viruses exist and that's what makes us sick.
And so immediately what we did is we fucking tried to eradicate them.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
eradicate them for everything.
That's the enemy.
Let's get rid of them.
Yes.
That knee jerk reaction.
And now we're seeing that that is caused its own problems.
And so it's just how often are we going, how many times are we gonna learn this lesson?
Isn't that crazy?
I know.
And it's like, that's why I'm like, go outside, go play, get dirty, it's fine.
I mean, we'll watch it out.
Just an intensely, it doesn't shower, kids.
Yeah, like drink tap water, you know, like just like, why are you like being such a
purist about all this shit?
It's not really like that good, like proved to me that that's a better method.
That, you know, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, I'm with you.
And it's, you know, we have to learn this.
We keep having to learn this lesson
where we discover something and we say,
oh, and we go, we overreact and don't realize
that there's a balance that has to be found.
God, you know, cholesterol is a good example of that.
We discovered a while ago that when arteries are clogged,
it's cholesterol that's clogging the arteries.
So we overreact and we're like,
oh, fuck, hammer the fuck at your cholesterol.
Lower like crazy because that's what's gonna cause problems.
And now we're starting to realize that
that's actually causing more problems itself.
You know, yes, ask yourself,
was it necessary for us to do that to figure that out though?
Yeah.
Just like back in the day, like I mentioned the Nick,
like where they're trying to figure out
like these procedures, like,
and like they, man so many people died
because it's part of the process of like figuring out
well this happens so then this and oh my God.
Here's Kyle. That's why when we talk about these like figuring out, well, this happens so then this. And oh my God. Here's Kyle.
That's why when we talk about these extreme things,
it's almost like as humans, we have to do that.
We have to go through that stuff in order for us to piece it.
You know what it is?
Humanity and society is like a child.
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Our first question is from Danielle 2000
Do you think parents should punish any and all underage drinking or allow their minor children to drink under their own roof?
Oh, interesting question. Yeah, you know, I have a so I have this kid that I went to high school with I'll never forget Kenny
Good buddy mine and
his parents
Used to allow him to drink and it used to drive me crazy because my I absolutely could not right
I was going to hell if I drink so I was not not really I'm gonna say what about wine?
Yeah, no, that's exaggeration Jesus made water, but But we absolutely were not allowed to underage drink.
But my good friend, Kenny, his parents would allow us
and the rule was if we were at there,
they had to drink at the house.
We all had to give them the keys
and they would allow us to do it.
Now the thing that drove me crazy was as a high school kid
who was introduced to alcohol,
it became the thing that we did every Friday or Saturday,
was like, who do we have the shoulder tap
or where are we drinking at,
or whose parents are out of town so we could go to their house.
And we always had Kenny, because Kenny didn't have
to have his parents out of town,
because we could technically go drink there,
but Kenny never wanted to drink it.
He was a 4.2 GPA student, fucking hell smart.
He didn't care, it wasn't a big deal.
Yeah, it wasn't a big deal,
because his parents had always allowed him to do that.
So it was an interesting example of, you know, and I'm not to say that that works for
every, every parent because I'm sure there's some.
You hear about that like in Europe, there's that sort of mentality where it's always around,
right?
Like within or there's wine and, you know, the little have like, a lot of their kids
have sip and it's almost like
the stigma of it and the taboo sort of vibe around it
is just completely different.
I think that, I mean, it is, there's something to that,
for sure, obviously, you know,
I have a little bit of reserve and a problem though
with like having other people's kids over
and like, yeah, yeah, my house is the one
where everybody's like drinking.
Like, I don't like that at all. I don't think I would could own that either. I think that I would allow my kids that I like, yeah, yeah, my house is the one where everybody's like drinking. Like, I don't like that at all.
I don't think I would could own that either.
I think that I would allow my kids that I don't have, right?
I would allow them.
Yeah, yeah, your hypothetical.
Yeah, but pretend kids.
Yeah, Adam number two.
Yeah, I would let my pretend kids experiment with that with me and under my roof or with
me in it wherever we're at, you know, if we're on some vacation or trip somewhere, right?
And I would allow that, but I don't know,
I don't think I would like Kenny's parents,
although what was crazy was because they taught him
responsibility, you know, and I remember,
I remember being the young kid who was always looking
to get in trouble on a Friday Saturday night
and asking Kenny, like, hey dude, let's go to your parent,
we have nowhere to party or drink.
And he's like, no, no, no, we have,
I've got a test on Monday, I've got a study,
you know what I'm ever been like.
Fucker, you're not that cool.
Right.
It's like Kenny's mentality.
A large chunk of the reason why teenagers do shit
is because they're rebelling.
It's that whole taboo, 100%.
If it's not taboo, it's not really that big of a deal
anymore.
And that's, look, statistically speaking,
kids will rebel against what their parents are most hard on.
You know, the most difficult thing that the parents are on with them
is what they tend to rebel against.
And look, the facts are this, in America,
American teens binge drink at much higher rates than they do in Europe.
Actually, binge drinking is worse in America than anywhere else.
Now, in a lot of European countries like in Italy,
alcohol is a family affair.
And kids drink with the parents and people have wine.
And the other thing too,
I remember the first time I drank alcohol.
So in my house, nobody drank alcohol.
So we were not like the typical Italian family.
We didn't have beer or wine ever and it was very
taboo in my in my house. Now the first time I drank alcohol or really drank alcohol
I was I think 19 years old and I didn't understand the consequences of drinking. I knew you got drunk and you could get sick
But I was inexperienced and so what I did was I was with my at the time one of my mentors
bought us some alcohol and I drank it and I started feeling good so what I didn't know that
what you drink now takes a little bit to hit you so I kept going and I got fucking sick,
I got super super sick and I think that and like ask me now hall off and I get sick when I drink
never I never get sick when I drink now because I know my limits, I know my body, I understand
the consequences, and I feel like I would have known that had I drank with my parents
and where someone was there guiding me, explaining to me, and it wasn't so taboo.
So for me, for sure, with my kids, the first time they drink or do whatever or anything else that's legal like cannabis
I'm gonna I'm gonna do it with them and I'm gonna talk to them about the consequences and what can happen
So the question is as a parent do you is it you you wait for that question to be asked and does it matter what age when they come to you
Like does your does it matter if it's your 11 year old asking you or does it matter if it's your 15 year old who's asking you
Like where do you where does that line for you guys because what if you're oh what's the age? matter if it's your 11 year old asking you, or does it matter if it's your 15 year old who's asking you,
like, where do you, where does that line for you guys?
Cause what if you're,
Oh, what's the age?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think for, for me, it's always been just putting,
like, downplaying a lot of, like, being really responsible
with me and my wife, like, when we are drinking,
like, they know that it's, it's an alcoholic beverage.
And like, it's interesting interesting because you get that immediate
feedback of like, I was wrong, it's in Canada.
No, you know, so you know, it's funny about this.
So I've seen several studies that say
that America has the worst binge drinking.
So I'll be interested to see what this article that Doug
pulled up that says that Europe has worse teen drinking
problems and how they're quantifying that, like what that means.
I know the drinking culture in Europe
is a little bit different in the sense that it's more,
it's more of a social thing, more of a family thing
in some countries.
Like I said, like in Italy for example,
but I mean, here's the way I'd like to treat everyone.
I definitely think it all should fall, whatever we agree, like, as a society is an adulthood
for somebody, I think that they all should fall under that.
Well, I think parents should be able to handle that.
You don't have a autonomy with that.
How could they fucking want to?
You know, like this is their family.
Like it's literally how they...
The scary part is that...
Wanna set them up for that.
The scary part is that there's a large portion of kids running around that aren't being parented. Yeah, well that's so therefore
There's an issue something in place, right? Because otherwise those kids are gonna run a muck
Yeah, and and I just think that I think it's it's a it's a something for the family to handle
I think if you want to talk about drinking age in terms of legality
I think if you wanna talk about drinking age in terms of legality, I think it's absolutely insane
that we trust in 18 year olds.
To why did Denmark off the charts?
Part of their culture.
But you know, this is percentage of 16 year olds
who report being drunk, which isn't the same thing
as binge drinking getting sick and going to the hospital.
It could be, you know, ask a bunch of 16 year olds,
hey, have you ever been drunk?
I'm like, oh yeah, I felt.
Well, I think that's a good measure.
I think that's asking a 50,
because I didn't binge drink when I was a kid.
And I was like,
you didn't get sick when you first started drinking,
you were drinking,
you drink till you got sick.
Well, yeah, sure we did that.
But I mean, I don't,
I mean, being drunk versus what you're saying
that that's, if you throw up,
you're considered a binge drinker.
You know what, there's a,
there's a, there's a way that they define bench drinkinger.
Because I think being drunk is pretty much what every kid was chasing.
Okay, so it wasn't like, let's, I'm a, so the National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and
Alcoholism defines bench drinking as a pattern of alcohol consumption that brings the blood
alcohol concentration level to 0.08 or more.
So for females, typically it's by consuming four
or more drinks within two hours.
And for males, it's five or more drinks within two hours.
So if you're a guy and average,
I feel like a kid that's being asked this,
if you're a 15, 16 year old kid
and you've been asked if you've been drunk,
you would connect the same thing.
Maybe.
Because as a 15, 16 year old kid,
that when I,
because that's about the age when I first experienced drinking
and trying to get drunk, it was a race to get drunk.
It wasn't like you were, and so if you were to ask me
the same question here, I would say, yes, 15 16 years old,
I've been drunk before.
And if you ask me, do I think I binge drink?
I would probably think, no, I don't think I'm a binge
because I think as a kid, I would probably think
that binge drinking is this like, you know, thing that you do every
single week, every single day and you're, well, look at it this way. Like let's talk about
sex. Like STD rates tend to be higher where kids are in environments where sex is super,
super taboo. So they don't learn about condoms. They don't learn about preparation. And it
tends to be these random acts of whatever where they have sex and you get STD rates on the rise
and team pregnancy and stuff.
I think all subjects are like that.
Not that you should sit down and have your kids do whatever,
I think just being honest.
Just be fucking honest.
You don't have to demonize everything.
My kids ask me, I had this conversation with my son
about all drugs and he went down the gamut of drugs.
And at the end of it, I told him the same thing
with all of them.
I said, look, I did go into the science on each one
and how people do them,
and people tend to do heroin with needles,
and here's the problems with that,
and people tend to do cocaine this way,
because he was, he had all these questions.
But at the end of it, I'm like, look,
people do these drugs, because for whatever reason,
it makes them feel good. Or, for whatever reason it makes them feel good
or many times it makes them feel like
they forget about their problems
because they're escaping or whatever.
And there's abuse potential with all drugs
and some drugs have higher abuse potential than others.
And there's also the risk of the law
that's higher with some drugs than there is with others.
Like if you're old enough to drink alcohol and you drink alcohol,
you have a very low risk of going to jail because of it.
But if you do, you know, a drug like cocaine,
the risk is much higher because it's very illegal.
So I'm just being super honest with my kids.
And I feel like that's better than doing the whole like fear thing or taboo thing,
like sex. Like if we talk about sex, the way I talked about,
and again, I talked about this with my son
because he's older, as I say look, you know,
I know that you go to Catholic school
and they talk about waiting till you're married.
And I understand that, but you also know
that I live in this house with Jessica
and we're not married.
And I said, I think the reason why that role was made
is so that people waited till they were serious
and they really had a connection with someone
and it meant more than just the physical act of sex.
I said, when you just do the physical act of sex,
very few people can do that without having,
you know, detrimental manifests,
you know, if they continue to do that
for a long periods of time.
So it's really about respecting yourself
and respecting the other person.
And I'm just being totally honest, sex feels good.
This is why people do it.
But there's much more to sex than just the feeling
of feeling good.
There's the connection that you can get from it.
And I'm just being totally honest
so that they can make a more educated decision.
Because otherwise you get this taboo where you think it's so bad
then you get exposed to it, you rebel,
you try it, you think your parents are liars
and they don't know what they're talking about. And then you start to go in the opposite direction where you, you rebel, you try it, you think your parents are liars, and they don't know what they're talking about.
And then you start to go in the opposite direction
where you kinda go crazy.
And I think that's what happens with alcohol.
Like if you drink, like if my son says,
hey, can I try some of that beer?
Yeah, you can taste it.
And then he's like, oh, it's gross.
Yeah, I don't know, it takes a while
to get used to the flavor or whatever.
Why do you drink it?
I like the taste.
And when you get a little bit of alcohol
and you start to feel kind of relaxed,
but I don't drink it off
and cause of this, that and the other.
There's no, like what's wrong with being totally honest?
Like what are we afraid of when we tell our kids?
Well, it's what everyone's afraid of is the reflection, bro.
Yeah.
That's because when you're somebody who says something like that,
you say that because you manage all those things,
but let's be honest, half of America or more,
doesn't and they need three to four glasses of wine every night
and their kids sees that, and they know inside,
they feel guilty, and then your kid asks you about it.
What are you gonna say to them?
Yeah, mommy or daddy hates his work,
or hates his wife or hates his husband.
And so to take the edge off, I drink, you know, four glasses
after dinner all the time. And so it's interesting you say that because I had a conversation with
one of my good friends who like he saw that sort of reflection. He saw that feedback that
he was getting like, like, oh, dad, you're having another, you know, margarita or whatever,
you know, and then he just was like, oh, wow, this is, this is scary. And so all of a sudden, now the whole household, there's no alcohol. And there's this dry, like, you know, and then he just was like, oh wow, this is scary. And so all of a sudden now the whole household,
there's no alcohol and there's this dry.
Like, you know, he had this like panic moment
and I thought about that, like resonate with me
and I was like, cause my kids see me drink it
and you know, every now and then and like,
and me and Courtney and it's like,
you know, is this something that they should be seeing
frequently and this and that, but like,
at the same time,
it's casual, I was like, no, this is who I am.
Like I'm not trying to, yeah, I'm not abusing it,
I'm an adult, I'm doing this responsibly,
like is this something I'll do occasionally?
The question becomes when they start asking.
And that's where I feel like.
So the dialogue needs to happen with them though,
you can't shy away from it.
Right, and my daughter, and I think where most people struggle is, and even you saying I feel like the dialogue needs to happen with them though. You can't like, you know, shy away from it. Right.
And like my daughter, and I think where most people struggle is, you know, and even you
saying that right now, they're, and what's great about someone like you though, I think
you're open-minded to this possibility that, you know, maybe you don't know or don't
realize that they are connecting that dad has a drink at some amount of times and they're
paying attention.
And one day they do decide to ask,
and you will have to answer,
like you'll have to answer, which you probably will,
but it'll also cause you to kind of probably reflect
a little bit and go like,
dude, I'll be completely honest.
I had to check myself,
because I was like, oh, wow, we've been ramping it up
because we've been stressed,
and our household has been chaotic,
and we were drawn to wanting to drink. They noticed it and it's awkward,
right? Because you're like, oh shit, they're paying attention. But then you just like, you work
through that. You're like, okay, well, I internally calm down myself and then I, you know,
sparingly, I'll reintroduce it, but like, yeah, it's fine.
That's feedback to me, is how I look for it.
I think, I think, you, another good point about this
is say what you want, it's how you act
that really makes the big impact.
Yeah.
And if you're at home and you're having a little bit
of wine with dinner and it's normal
and everybody's whatever, it's fine,
that sends a very different message than
dad is angry.
I don't know how easy you'd even say that though.
I mean, I look at wine, cannabis,
scotch, drinking, all the same to me.
Sure.
And I told you just recently we were talking
and I told you that I'm gonna do like the 30 day fast
from cannabis and you're, oh, why?
Well, you know, I'm like, well, you know,
I know that there's a good possibility
that Katrina and then in next year or two,
her and I could be pregnant.
And I most certainly will not have cannabis in the house.
Like, I just, and not because I think it's evil
and it's wrong and I feel guilty for all that,
it's just I don't want my child to see that dad has this,
even because at that age, I don't think they can process everything that I can
and understand that, and when the time comes,
it doesn't mean that I would run away from that,
doesn't mean that I would hide it and deny it.
It just means that I don't want them exposed
to it all the time, because I don't want their little brains
to formulate that this is a normal thing
in an okay pattern,, they're not developed enough
to say, hey, you know what, like, dad is just relaxing
and that's how he reacts is, well, what if I want to relax
and I'm a kid and they don't understand that the same.
I don't even know if they, if they consciously
will even make that.
Yeah, I'll give you another example.
They don't, it's probably subconsciously happening.
I'll give you an example, but it's being cemented in there, bro.
Yeah, but it's how it's done.
Like, here's an example, nudity.
Okay, is it okay to it's done. Like here's an example, nudity, okay?
Is it okay to be naked around your kids?
Depends on why you're naked and how you're naked.
Like getting out of the shower or whatever,
and just being naked or whatever?
Not a big fucking deal.
But, you know, being funny about it, whatever,
very inappropriate.
Like, you know, if, like I said,
if it's a part of whatever and there's no dysfunction in the house,
like if people are drinking and acting crazy
or if dad's pissed off until he has his drink
or mom is getting hammered at night
cause she's whatever, that is very different than
you're having a beer, having wine
and it's like a normal, not a big deal.
There's a very big difference in what happens.
And you just said again right there,
that's where I interrupt you last time
is it's a normal thing.
What does that mean?
Like it's very normal that we have to take,
I have to take the edge off with a substance every night.
No, I don't think every night,
I think every night might be too much,
but it depends on the family and the, look,
I have family members, cousins who, you know,
when I'd go visit them in Italy,
wine was at dinner most of the time,
most of the time dad would have a glass of wine.
I don't, there wasn't any dysfunction there
that I could see.
It didn't seem that way.
It wasn't like he was getting smashed.
It was literally a single glass of wine with dinner.
Now cannabis might be a little bit different
cause it's smoke and you do get high off of one hit.
I don't know if it's necessarily saying,
maybe I'm brainwashed because cannabis has been...
Sure you are.
It's been free.
Yeah, which one?
It's traumatized.
When you look at stigmatized,
when you look at what the potential
that the pathway of drinking alcohol
on a regular basis can lead to as far as dangers
in far outweighs cannabis.
So I definitely can, I disagree with the normalization
of it
is just saying that it's no big deal.
When in reality, the reason why, and I'm not judging,
by no means right now, this is me just having open dialogue
with you guys, because it's something that I've thought
about how I would handle that,
because I am 100% pro cannabis,
and it's something that is a part of my life.
But then also, I'm also aware enough to know that,
you know, as a young child, and I feel like I feel passionate about this because I see what happened to my brother.
Like I see my little brother right now and the pathway that he's going down right now,
and it breaks my heart.
And it breaks my heart because I know that he has an older brother who was involved in
the cannabis business.
And when he experienced it was years before I did, I didn't until my late 20s when I was responsible as fuck
and I understood it to a much deeper level than he does.
And I've now watched it consume his life.
You know, so I don't know, man,
I have a really hard time with just justifying it
and saying it's normal to have a drink every now and then
and to say to-
Well think about it this way.
Like, you know, let's say, you know,
dad has pain or mom has to take a medication for something.
And so she takes her prescription drug
every single day in front of the kids.
Versus bad.
Versus, just bad.
Versus, just bad.
Well, like, is it bad or is it, I don't know.
It's a very good question.
I think, I don't know, I don't know how you can, I think it's impossible to do this blanket.
Like I know what dysfunction is when I see it.
Right, I think it's just becoming aware.
Like again, like, it's become aware and like,
like, paint attention to the feedback you're getting because
you're still who you are, you know, like going into being a parent.
It's not like all of a sudden you become this, like model example. Yeah, but I would debate that right there is that
part of who you are is, is I'm less aware. And now becoming a parent, I'm becoming hyper
aware because now I have a tiny, many reflection of myself. Sure. And what I thought was normal,
but do you hate that about yourself or do do you not, like, is that something you enjoy
and you don't feel like that's a detriment to your character?
I don't know, that's something you have to ask.
Which person has to ask himself individually
is this enhancing who I am or is it?
I think that's really the question.
So it's like, that's how I deal with it from going forward.
Is like, do I not like that about myself?
I don't want to present that for my kids, so I won't.
Yeah, I would have to say that if you're,
unless you have medicinal reasons for it,
I would say generally daily use of cannabis
and alcohol or anything.
Probably, yeah, it's probably not good.
It's a little bit of dependency.
Yeah, I mean, I'm like a three day a week or four day a week
or if I don't have the kids, definitely,
if I do have the kids sometimes and it's after they go to bed
and it's outside or something like that.
But yeah, it's a good question.
It really is.
I think it does require a lot of self-reflection.
But in terms of discussing and talking,
and the reality is they're gonna be exposed to things.
The reality is that-
100% if my kid comes and he asks dad,
I'm really curious about drinking,
like son, Friday night, you and I,
we're gonna sit down and we're gonna drink
and we're gonna talk all about it.
I think that'd be fun.
Yeah.
I 100% would be that way.
Like if he can't-
Well, I just know come in and I had a very similar experience
growing up.
It was so taboo.
Like even in, there's like, my mom made a point of like putting
like little like like post it like magnets and things that
were just like like demonizing all alcohol consumption and like
having like drunkardness is prohibited in this house.
And all the shit.
And I was the only one that was like,
you know, I tried it and I actually liked it.
I was like, oh, I'm a fucking demon now.
And now that I was like, no, I'm a good kid.
It's not like what you guys had made it out to be.
And you and I, you and I connect on that level
because we were very similar with that,
which also makes me though reflect even more on myself
because I know because I was raised a certain way
on one extreme that I'm gonna probably lean
towards the other extreme, almost as a fuck you.
Right, so you wanna check yourself on the rebellion.
Right.
I struggle with that too.
Right, right, so.
You're gonna question, I mean, you end up
questioning everything you do, like.
Am I watching TV too much in front of me?
Yes, did I yell at the remote control?
I have yelled and I've brazed.
You know, it's just happened.
Which is good, I think totally.
Because you guys are, again, that's why I was saying,
with Justin, I know that no matter what,
when that time comes, I know that he's the 10th person
that will really dive deep into that instead of just saying,
because I told you so, or daddy does, you don't get to.
You don't say, I know neither one of you
or father or all three of you
even for that matter of a dog, are fathers like that.
So I think it's cool, but it's definitely something
that I've thought long and hard about as far as,
you know, how would I, how would I monitor,
I would change what I do, which I don't think is changing me.
I think it's just being a responsible adult
and having a child who doesn't have the thought process
like you have, I think I would change the way I smoke cannabis now.
I would.
Right now in the freedom of my home and I have adults
and stuff like that in their old time,
I'm fucking burned right in the middle of the living room
and I have an asterisk out, I'll leave a half joint in there
because my fucking house, I'll do what I want to do.
But if I did have a kid inside there,
I have a lock box.
It's timing with that, you know, that conversation,
I feel like there that opportunity
They're yeah, they're too young. I get that's something that needs to happen a bit later, but it will happen
Hey, buddy. Do you know what we
It's not time to look store
Right, look was it was start go gay to eight. Oh, that's what floored me. I mean, I was just like oh my god
I can't even imagine it's like unfathomable to me. It's terrible.
No, I keep everything in a lock box because it's psychoactive substance.
And I do have sometimes edibles, and I hate this about edibles.
They're all fucking fruit flavored chocolate fucking candies.
What a dangerous thing to keep an eye out.
They won't kill your kid, but for sure, if one of my kids ate that on accident, I would
that's gonna be an experience.
It would destroy my heart.
Oh, that's terrible.
Next up is via Netanyl.
How do you create a perfect program?
Yeah, how to create the perfect program?
We don't know.
We don't know.
There's none exists.
No, it doesn't exist.
I actually like that you picked this
because I think the person would probably assume
that we'd sit here and probably break down how that's done
Well think about this maps perfection. Yeah, when I thought about this
I thought okay, here's what we do when we create a program is when we create a program get really high
Right after that last question, yeah
I I think we all think about how did you write maps? I forgot I forgot, we all thought that when you were 18.
We all think about the person that we're trying to create the program for, because that's
trainers, when I used to create programs for people, there was a whole process.
We created programs for the majority instead of creating programs that played into people's
insecurities.
That is the major difference of where, and by no means is our program any more perfect
than another person's program.
It's that through the years of experience between the three of us, the thousands of people
that we've trained, we know what a majority of people, what they struggle with and what
they need to work with or what they need to help it on, what they're not focusing on,
what they should to work with or they need to help it on, what they're not focusing on, what they should be focusing on. And so with that information,
we have what we call expert programming.
And the other side, the other types of programs
are out there, we're designed based off your insecurities
because you want to look like I look
or you're trying to do this.
And so you think it's an exercise you're missing.
So I throw in all this creative shit in there
that you've never seen before.
Like that's how most programs are done.
What are you just seeing physically,
what works best out of like,
and then just to mention all the thousands of people
I've trained personally,
Adam's trained personally,
Sal's trained personally,
you just see a pattern that emerges
and you start to kind of pay attention
to certain exercises,
the cadence of the
workout, you know, what they're coming in with that they pre-existing have already as far as
like postural concerns and the way that they're movement, you know, mechanics, what that looks like,
you know, their stress levels, what state they're in emotionally, like there's just so many variables that,
you know, if you can kind of deduce that whole process down to, you know, a few things to focus on
and then sort of build around that
and then build outside of it.
Let's talk some nuts and bolts here, like maps, right?
So something that, I mean, and I remember when Sal first
sent this over, it's how I, why we were all together is
because I saw it and right away, I was like,
this is brilliant and this is the fucking message that should be given to people right now,
because this is a majority. Now, there's nothing there. For sure, there's somebody who buys maps,
and then buys some other program that's nothing like maps, and they may possibly get better results
for them for at that time in their life with running another program. But what we knew was that
there was a huge misconception
with this intensity driven culture that we have right now,
that you know, if you want to look a certain way
or get the results, it's the harder you work at it.
And that's all that matters.
Yeah, and that's all that matters.
And that couldn't be further from the truth
hence why so much energy is put into,
listen, you could train two or three days a week
and build an incredible physique.
In fact, you're better off learning to do that first before you build on top of that
and have this five day, six day, seven day a week type of regimen that's crazy high
intense.
That should take you years to progress up to that.
And along the way, you should be seeing great results.
Now, that's speaking to 85 to 90% of the population.
I'm not talking to some fucking hyper athlete or super bodybuilder
that's been lifting since he was fucking 12.
I'm talking to the masses, a majority, which is the people that we trained.
And so when we program, there's things in there that we did that like,
okay, taking that into consideration, 90% of the people that follow a protocol that's only three days a week, but a full body type of
routine with the major lifts involved is going to blow away all these other programs that
are around.
Here's the thing, when we create programs, we're creating them for an avatar.
So if we create, like when we create a math performance, we're thinking, okay,
math performance is for the person
who's interested in functional athletic movement
and performance, maybe somebody who's attracted to CrossFit
because of that, how would we design a workout
for that type of person?
Yeah, and then also have it lead into like a season.
So you could use it as an off season,
sort of a workout protocol.
Exactly. All that stuff we kind of factored in. Exactly.
But so here's what happens when I used to create programs for individuals.
Like I didn't just sit down and say, okay Mrs. Johnson or Mr. Smith, what are your goals?
Want to build muscle burn body fat? Okay, let me write your program.
That's not how you write a program. Yes, your goals were important, but I got to know your exercise history.
I got to start to decide, I got to look at your overall stress load because exercise is a stress on the body, and it's just adding
to all the other stress you have in your life, and if you have a lot of stress in your
life, you don't have that much room for a whole lot of other stress. In fact, if I put too
much on your body in combination with all the other stress that you have in your life,
your body's not only not gonna respond, but might go backwards. I'm going to look at your movement patterns. I'm going to look at your personality, like how
dedicated and motivated are you. How realistic is it that you're going to come to the gym?
Right. X amount of days a week. So that's how you create the perfect program is you got to plug
all of that stuff in and then you spit out or routine. And then even then, I would train someone
with a routine and the program would change, I would train someone with a routine
and the program would change month to month
based on how their body was responding.
Now with maps, of course, we don't have the luxury
of talking to every single person of the 10,000
or however many thousands of people
that have bought our program,
we don't have that luxury.
What we do have is an avatar, a general avatar
based on our collective 60 years of experience of
training people, and then we design programs for specific goals, you know, maps
aesthetic is for like your bodybuilder types and maps and a ballic is more for
your average person, he just wants to build muscle and so on and so forth, and
then we design the routine. So you really have to base it on yourself, and there
are general truths. Here's some general truths for you.
Big gross motor movements seem tend to be more effective
than single joint isolation type movements.
Now that doesn't mean isolation movements don't have value.
Yeah, they're not irrelevant.
That means it just means literally what I said.
Generally speaking, place more emphasis on gross motor movements.
And in example, we talk with Ben Pukolsky,
a lot who's big time on the isolation thing.
But here's the difference between someone like Ben
who's been building himself for so many years
and has put in the foundation and the hard work already
that he has the luxury to isolate and focus on certain muscles
to develop them because he specialized himself
to the end of the degree.
100% where we know that a majority people
are nowhere near his level.
Maybe we'll never get to this.
And we'll probably never get to that level.
And the majority of people are neglecting
some of the most important movements
like squatting, like deadlifting,
like the overhead press, like those three, especially.
I mean, most people are bench pressing
that sends it to be a pretty stable.
But the deadlift, the squat and the overhead press
are the three next biggest movements you could possibly do. And a good portion of people are
completely ignoring them. And even the ones that aren't ignoring them, myself included,
for many years, kind of sporadically put them in there. When they should have been the nuts and bolts
in the core of all of my pro. And we also know that training to failure all the time
for most people is not only is it too much,
so not only are you wasting your time and energy,
but it's actually detrimental.
Most people will do best stopping a couple reps
short of failure.
Most people will do best training their entire body
between two to four days a week,
and rather than training body parts once a week.
Most people will do best training with exercises
that are more specific to their goals,
especially if they have athletic or functional type goals.
Like if you want to be a better swimmer,
well, there's more carryover from some exercises
than there are to others.
And so these are all important things.
You know, once you understand your recovery ability,
once you understand the amount of time
you can spend in the gym, maybe past injuries,
and movement, and all that stuff.
Like right now I'm coaching someone
who has got really, really bad ankle mobility.
So he sent me a video of his squat
and he can barely get down to parallel
and his feet, you know, pronating his knees,
start to collapse and he's been working out for a long time. This person's not going to be squatting for a little
while. I'm going to be having him do split stance exercises so we can get a full range of
motion and we're going to work on ankle mobility for a little while. So these are all, these
are all things you need to take into account when you're designing your team. But the general
truths are gross motor movements. Remember whatever you're're asking for is what you're gonna get.
So the exercise and the intensity is pretty specific
to the results you're gonna get.
You're gonna get, don't go to failure most of the time.
Train the whole body two to four days a week.
And then if you wanna get more specific,
you get one of our programs or you start to design your own.
We really, I mean, we really designed them
with the intent of not being programs
to get to a certain point.
Like, oh, follow MAP Santa B if you want to build a bunch of strengths.
Sure, it's marketed that way, sure, it's tagged that way.
But really, they're all like tools, education tools.
So really good templates.
Yeah, they're really good templates for you to learn from.
That's what, and we tell you.
And tell me.
And tell me.
And so that is the idea is that for somebody to go through that process,
so they can learn and they can
then program even more specific to themselves, which is why too, again, if you have any of
our programs and you don't have prime or prime pro to go with it, like to me, that's
a must.
That is how we taught somebody to program for themselves.
It's like, okay, here's a good template.
We've already structured it for you.
It's very basic. It's going to get you incredible results for about 90% of the population for themselves. Because it's like, okay, here's a good template. We've already structured it for you. It's very basic. It's going to get you incredible results for about 90% of
the population for sure. And then on top of that, here is this at home test that you
should take yourself and find out where your imbalances are, your specifically. And then
here are movements to help those imbalances that you should integrate yourself into a program,
whether it's maps or another one that you develop yourself,
but that is really the intent of these programs.
It's not, get shredded in 30 days or 90 days
or sell you on this thing.
It's like, listen, go through this
because you're gonna learn a fuck ton.
Yeah, the real value of it is that,
like if you look at your body,
like we're trying to educate the body.
You've done a great job at going through the educational process of learning acquired
knowledge from all different types of pursuits and different trades and skills.
As far as what your body is capable of, what kind of attributes you can add to your body?
What do these adaptations look like? And to be able to feel and experience that, I feel
like it's very valuable because now you can understand your body specifically on such
another level.
I used to hate it when I would read like muscle magazines or people would talk to lifters
when I was a kid. And it's like, hey, what's the best routine for me? They'd be like,
well, you got to figure that out for yourself.
I used to hate that, but there's some, definitely some truth to it.
However, I wish I had a good template.
Like if somebody gave me an excellent template like maps back then,
I would have learned my body way faster, way faster.
But instead, I had to go through trial and error so many fucking times.
It took me years and years and years to figure that out and through training people and all
of the stuff.
So I mean, my favorite people who tend to comment or trainers who get the programs and then
learn more about training other people because you know they're applying some of the stuff
and figuring out for themselves and that's always exciting.
Well that's what, I mean, you're right.
When we first started this, obviously it was for the masses, but we realized that it's appealed a lot to trainers
because it's now made all these trainers,
but which is fucking awesome because I know we know
that if we impact one single trainer,
we now, it's like five to 10 clients.
Yeah, minimum, right?
I mean, minimum their training five to 10 clients.
I mean, now we potentially are affecting, you know,
five, 10 times the amount by going through a trainer,
which is cool.
Next question is from Joe Buns.
Has he CrossFit as a whole done more harm or good for the fitness industry?
I think, unequivocally, they've done more good than harm for the fitness industry.
And I've grown a monkey ranch.
I am so...
I could definitely argue it both ways.
I can, but I think, I can argue the harm,
but I think they've done way more good.
And I am so happy that I've been in the industry
as long as I have, because I could see it clear.
It's almost like there was fitness, you know,
before CrossFit, I'm talking about the industry,
the gym industry, before CrossFit and after CrossFit.
And I could clearly see the changes, the gym industry, before CrossFit and after CrossFit, and I could clearly see the changes.
Before CrossFit, nobody, nobody did Barbell Squats,
for sure nobody did Barbell deadlifts,
and for sure women didn't do either one ever in the gym,
ever, I would manage these 30,000 plus square foot facilities,
big old monster right, which get in average
to 1500 to 2000 workouts a day.
Just lots of people coming in and the entire gym,
the whole gym would have one squat rack.
And no one would use it.
And it would be, it would be dusty.
Just all over.
The plates that the gyms would have,
and still a lot of gyms have these plates,
because they bought them a while ago,
would be these fucking hexagonal stupid plates
that you never want a deadlift in. But it didn't matter because nobody ever deadlift it.
And if you've ever deadlifted with a hexagonal plate, you know how dangerous that is when
you put the weight down at shifts and it's stupid, right?
But that's because nobody deadlifted so it didn't matter.
Women, I had to convince women to use machines, let alone use free weights.
Like I had to convince them just to lift weights.
Then CrossFit comes into the scene.
Next thing you know,
guys are squatting, deadlifting women
are lifting weights, they're in the weight room.
They single-handedly did more
for women's resistance training
than the gyms did in the previous,
I don't know how many decades.
Like, single-handedly CrossFit made it cool.
I think we all agree on that. Is hexagonal a word? I just, I don't know how many decades, like, single handedly crossfit made it cool for women.
I think we all agree on that.
Is hexagonal a word?
I just, I don't know.
Maybe.
Is it?
I think it would be hexagonal, I think.
It's hexagonal.
Maybe.
I would just thought you say hexagon.
If something's hexagon, hexagon weights would be the same,
right?
It's hexagonal.
I have to call them out.
I've heard hexagonal for a second.
I'm like, you're not saying this. You should have looked it up before you're doing that. would be the same, right? It's hexagonal. I have to call him out. I've heard hexagonal for our own opinion.
He should have looked it up before you're doing that.
Now you now let's, oh, no, I'm right.
Oh, no, no.
hexagonal.
Oh, I've got you back that time, so.
Oh, or pertaining to a hexagonal.
Whoa, a hexagonal is with A.
There it is.
No, that's what I pronounced the wrong.
Hexagonal, hexagonal.
Hexagonal.
Yeah, you.
It's a hexagonal. It's you. You. That's the same word.
It's like electronical.
Yeah, same.
No, I don't make up a word.
I mean, you can say it like that.
Yeah, the pronunciation's wrong.
Yeah, hold on.
Let's see what.
There's a sound there.
You should put it up to the thing.
Yeah.
Let me see.
Let me see.
hexagonal.
Oh, not even close.
hexagonal.
hexagonal.
hexagonal.
You can see how I pronounce it.
Yeah, I think they've done a great job as far as like getting outside the commercial.
Like it was basically, you know, the backlash of like what that commercial type of gym
had created.
Like it created Globo Gym, you know, this was like CrossFit was the answer to that.
I think that they went super extreme with that idea.
And you know, it's brought positives and negatives.
Like, you know, functional exercises,
they've incorporated.
The whole thing is all functional.
Like they don't even bench pressing more.
Like it's like not a thing, right?
So, you know, there's, it's definitely has like this,
this positive impact
as far as bringing good exercises back to popularity,
but on top of that, they've also shit on specificity,
which that's where I got angry,
because it was like this,
like football teams are doing CrossFit wall.
Yeah, like that, that, oh my God,
that makes my skin crawl,
because it's just not as effective.
And it's like, and then the justification was always like this, this, this huge push of
like, oh no, academia's got it all fucking wrong.
And, you know, and then there was just no like critical, there was no dialogue back and
forth of like, well, can I be critical right now?
Can I assess, you know, what you're programming?
If that's like good, like is that something that's gonna apply towards this specific pursuit?
Like no, it's all just super general. Now with early on they in they're changing by the way
I don't know if you guys knew this or not someone messaged me the other day, but they're trying to separate the hardcore elite
Training from the everyday.
Thank God.
And it should look nothing alike.
No.
And I think that's very different than it should be like if some kid who came in who's never
worked out before, like you want me to train like LeBron James, like no, you have no business
training with LeBron.
We're going to train basics and whatever.
Right.
I think some of the harm that they did, they glorified early on in Tensity,
like hardcore to the point where there was this
like unofficial mascot for CrossFit early on,
which was a clown throwing up.
Uncle Rabdo.
And he was a dialysis, too, right?
They called him Uncle Rabdo.
It was just like machine round.
Rabdo's when you work out so hard that your muscles,
you get so much muscle breakdown that your kidneys get clogged and you actually get kidney failure.
That's, they made a joke about that.
So that was a bad thing.
The, you know, putting Olympic lifts into circuit-based programming, that was stupid.
You should never, ever do a highly complex, extremely, you know, technical lift, like
a power clean or a snatch
when you're doing a circuit or fatigue-based routine.
You just don't do those to fatigue
because your form breaks down a little bit
and then you're fucked.
So that was pretty bad.
They definitely, they definitely poked at the big gym business
from a business standpoint.
Because before CrossFit, you wanna make money in gyms, you need a big box.
You need a big box.
So the irony in you going that direction is, because I was going to play devil's advocate,
because I thought you guys were going to stroke CrossFit off the whole time.
So I was counting on you to say it was hell no.
But I do agree with Sal, though.
I think it has done more good than harm.
So before I rag on them, I just
I want to say that for I could 100% agree because there wasn't anybody doing squats and
deadlifts and other president. I mean, you're talking about a percent of the percent out there
that we're doing that in the fitness space. And so, and I think that's so good. I think
it's so good for everybody that we're doing this. Now that being said, I was talking to a trainer
who's like in his early 20s
and looking to get in a management
in one of these big box gyms.
And he's telling me that, you know, CrossFit
has exploded so much that there is a huge culture
within the normal gyms like 24s
and Planet Fitness and stuff
that are modeling their workouts
after all these walks.
So here's what I'm worried about is trainers in these
big box gyms were already kind of shitty trainers, you know, that's normally where you
get your first experiences in there, which I think is incredible for everybody. So it's
not me talking about all by the way. I was, yeah, I know, I'm overgeneralization. I fall
into that category too. So before you get fucking defensive, because I said that because
you work at a big box gym, it's like, it's the truth. It's a great place to start, I think, for everybody. And so,
you're not already at a very advanced trainer. Now you're taking these people through these
circuit-based routines. You're having them snatch and clean and fucking plios.
And even if you're not doing that, you're modeling it after it because of your clients,
you're letting your client dictate your programming because of something that's popular,
because CrossFit has come so popular,
people that are coming into,
that don't wanna pay $180 a month
for a membership at a CrossFit,
they have a $10 a month plan of fitness
or a 24-of-fitness are coming in
and they're asking to be taught,
how do I train like that?
Which is why we see these gyms now
creating these little CrossFit type areas within them because
they're trying to compete with that.
And so I think it's feeding into the worst part of the culture where what we should have
done was taking out unpacked, what has CrossFit done really good.
Like if I was still a manager within one of these facilities, would I be teaching my
staff so you know all of you managers listening, I would be teaching my staff that is teaching this type
of training to my clients is, listen,
let's unpack what was really good
and what CrossFit has brought to fitness.
And let's start to implement some of that
into our training, which would be like,
hey, let's teach your people how to squat.
Let's make a real effort towards that
and let's work towards adding
that to all clients even if they say they can't or they don't want to. It's like that
should be a goal of ours and if they can't do it right now. And so taking those things
out of it that were so good versus the marketable shit, which everybody is chasing after, which
is the intensity driven and the circuit based. They just got it wrong. What they did was,
and I know what they did, you know, you have these big corporate gems and these massive, you know, boxes and they looked
at the model and they said, oh, you know what's working. It's because there's a bunch of circuits
and everybody's getting really sweaty and sore and it's intense and that's what people want.
And they completely miss the boat. Completely. Now, exercise standpoint, it's the effective
exercises that was important with CrossFit,
but here's the other piece that everybody fucking missed, okay?
Fitness is, if you want it to be effective
from a business standpoint, if you want to have a gym
that is truly successful from a business standpoint,
there's a lot of factors, but one of the factors is,
does it feel like you're walking into a community
or does it feel like you're walking
and you're working out by yourself?
Makes a big fucking difference.
And gyms used to be that community feel.
In fact, one of the reasons why the gyms I managed
were so successful, one of the reasons was I created
that feel in my gym.
And I did it with my staff first
because they're the ones that spread it.
And the other way I did it is I would do events
all the time in my gym.
I'd have food in there, I'd have music,
I'd have things going on, I'd talk to members,
and people love that shit.
And you know what CrossFit did really fucking well?
That, you go to, you ask anybody that works out in CrossFit
and you ask them what their favorite thing about CrossFit is.
It's community.
It's the community.
And Jim's forgot that shit.
In fact, it got to be-
That's also why it's such a cult too.
That's right.
Because you can't, how you're gonna tell somebody who won
is probably in the best shape of their life
and others are training so fucking crazy.
And then they've met friends, you know,
that they now potentially have for life.
Because it's like going to war, dude.
You go to war every day, you know what I'm saying?
Like what does everyone always say about anyone
they went to war with?
They come back and like those are like brothers,
you know what I'm saying?
Like we are for lifelong brothers because of that experience. We both puke after that. war with, they come back and those are like brothers, you know what I'm saying? Like we are for lifelong brothers,
because of that experience.
We both puke after that way.
They do, they grow up without our shoulders.
They create a similar thing psychologically.
Like they create a very similar thing psychologically
that you're going to battle a war to accomplish
to get through this wad.
And if you get through it,
like only some of us survive
and it's like we've got this brotherhood now.
But there's also the community,
like when you go into a good crossfit,
you see the trainers talking to the members,
the members talking to each other.
You don't, you rarely see members with headphones on,
doing their own thing.
I don't think they do ever.
Yeah, right, right.
And that, that is powerful.
I mean, I would get more,
the gyms I would run, you know,
after short period of time would get more workouts
and I'd have better retention as a result of that,
creating that vibe.
And that's how it started.
I mean, we just got back from the mecca, right?
The Venice and you could see like what the gym used to look
like when it first started.
It was this little hole in the wall
that probably had one or two speakers somewhere in there
if at all, if there was even speakers in there.
And everybody, and you've seen everyone
seeing the movie before with Arnold.
It's like they're pumping iron, right?
They're all they're doing is talking to each other.
Everyone's, you guys yelling across the gym
at Arnold doing squats on the other side.
Like there was this great community.
And then what happened?
You know, it became very marketable.
And there was money.
And now there became an industry back then
it wasn't an industry.
You know, there was a couple gyms, it was like a small thing
that people did, and then what ended up happening
was this thing turned into something big,
and then here comes big money, big money comes in,
finds a way to exploit it, to grow it.
We were a part of that movement, right?
We were a part of the exploiting process.
At that time, we were full to think that this is
how it's supposed to be looking back and reflecting now that we are part of this, you know, exploiting the, you know,
people's emotions and feelings to want to be in shape, to want to be like Arnold. And
so that's what you see. And now it's coming full circle. Yeah. It's coming back the other
direction. I think we can, we've done this actually. We've been in many gyms together.
There's a few things that we look at, okay? But for sure, the three of us,
we walk into a gym and we can tell within 10, 15 minutes
if it's a successful gym or not.
And one of them, one of the factors,
some of the factors are the sales staff, the front desk,
do they have systems, all that other stuff, right?
All that business stuff.
But the other thing is the vibe in the gym.
I'll walk into a gym and I'll feel it right away
and be like, oh, this gym's not successful.
Or this gym is that you can feel it
and it's that community, it's that culture
that you create within your facility.
You know, big text gym, you know,
I'm not talking about all any other factor,
not the business side of that stuff,
but the culture in the gym they've got,
you walk in, you can see people talking
which are the working together,
the owner was talking to the members and you can feel that culture. And that's only one factor,
it's not all of them. But it's an important factor. And that's something that CrossFit nailed down.
And that's something that the big box gyms. And of course, the staff makes a big difference. But
we weren't taught this. This is just something that I did. It wasn't like it came down for management.
This was my own flavor. That's something that the Big Box gyms forgot.
Go to a Big Box gym now.
Walk into your typical, you know, whatever,
24 fitness, LA fitness or whatever,
plan of fitness.
Walk in there and members are in there by themselves.
All by themselves.
You get their headphones on,
nobody's looking at each other, whatever.
You go into some other gyms with a different culture,
you see people jumping in between sets. You know, people don't even know with that, that etiquette anymore. Like you go into some other gyms with a different culture, you see people jumping in between sets.
You know, people don't even know with that etiquette anymore.
Like you go into a big box gym and someone's on a machine,
you can walk up to them and say,
hey, can I jump in?
They'll probably look at you like you're crazy.
What does he mean, jump in?
Yeah, you know?
You're gonna jump me?
Yeah.
No, in a good culture of a gym,
people know exactly what's going on.
Oh yeah, absolutely.
Go ahead and jump in.
I'll help you rack the weights or whatever.
Like it's a totally different vibe and Crossfit
got that right. And I unfortunately, I don't think the rest of fitness industry picked
up on that. I really don't. But they did pick up on the circuits and shit like that,
which is what it's all that shit. Next question is from Michelle Salvis. I'm trying
to lose 30 pounds of baby weight at 18 months postpartum. A trainer at my small box gym recommends higher reps over heavier weight during class style workouts.
I prefer building strength with heavier weights, but should I take his advice?
No, yeah, no.
Well, probably not.
Unless you're like a, unless you train like a power lift for forever, in which case the...
Right, yeah, I know that.
Higher reps, that would be the only scenario.
That would be the depends, right?
So it would be, well, depends if you were,
you know, because she didn't give us that.
Like if you had just,
if you've been training in that three to five rep range
for the last three, six, or whatever time, months,
then absolutely that trainer could be giving you great advice
that maybe you should do a more, you know, higher rep range
or a circuit base or shorter rest periods, like you could probably benefit from that if that's how
you, if you've been giving yourself long rest periods and training really, really heavy,
but more than likely, at least in my experience, most especially postpartum.
Right.
There probably didn't work out for a little while or whatever.
Now, here's the deal.
Like the high reps, class style workouts, burn more calories per time being done.
In other words, one hour of high rep circuit style
or class style workouts will burn more total calories
than an hour of traditional strength training
with heavier weights.
But that's not the whole picture.
That's actually just part of the picture.
And it's not that many more calories.
You're looking at the difference of maybe, you know, 400 calories and 250, okay?
Not a huge difference.
The other part of the equation that's very important is how are they going to affect your metabolism
and how your metabolism is going to affect your total calorie burn on a everyday basis.
You would rather have a faster metabolism and a body that is prioritizing
strength over a body that's trying to become efficient because you're burning
a ton of calories with lots of endurance style training. You're gonna you'll
end up screening yourself if you do that all the time with where you'll get
this metabolic adaptation where your metabolism starts to slow down. Nice to
love, I used to love doing this with women where they come in and in and I'd say, no, we're gonna focus on strength,
we're gonna focus on traditional resistance training,
and you're not gonna lose a ton of weight initially,
but watch what happens, give us a few months
and watch what happens, and the people that would stick with it,
sure enough, they'd come to me and be like,
I feel like the weight's fallen off me.
I'm not even doing anything crazy,
and my body's just getting leaner, and I tell them,
like your metabolism is speeding up.
Your hormones are balancing.
I like this is exactly what you want to do with your training.
Especially if you're being fed.
I think a mistake that some of these people get
when they're trying to lose 30 pounds or more
is the initial get into your weight training,
whatever it is, whether it be low reps
or sort of your calories.
I think cut your calories.
I would make you keep your calories.
If I want you fed, if you're hungry,
I want you fed right now, and then I'm going to
start strength training with you at the beginning.
Our goal at the first month may not be to lose any weight whatsoever.
We're going to build some muscle.
I promise you, if you haven't been lifting weights, and I put you in a MAP Santa Ballad phase
one type of routine where you're lifting that three to five rep range, you're going to
build some muscle. And so, at the end of the month,
we're maybe a pound lighter or the same even,
or even a pound up, like we're kicking ass in my opinion,
because then I know that for sure,
you're gonna be building muscle if you're feeding the body,
and you're also giving it a stimulus like that.
The big mistake I see people make is
they may be giving the right stimulus,
but then they're starving their body because they're trying to race to that losing that
30 pounds. So don't make that mistake.
It's so hard to, and I've seen both sides of this. I would have, I would see people in
the gym who were the cardio bunny, you know, lots of reps, class style workouts, and then
they get pregnant and they try and keep it up. And they, they weren't overweight, but
they weren't super lean. They were just kind of maintaining their health. And then they'd
have the baby and then afterwards they gain the weight. And but they weren't super lean. They were just kind of maintaining their health, and then they'd have the baby, and then afterwards they gained the weight,
and then they'd try that same approach,
and I would just watch them.
It would just be this uphill, difficult battle
of trying to spend.
It's an expensive wheel.
Yeah, trying to spurn tons of calories constantly
over and over again, especially after having a baby.
Boy, that's difficult.
And then on the other end of the spectrum,
I would see people that would come in
who were like these women who'd like to lift weights,
and they have these very sculpted bodies
because they always lifted weights,
and then they would get pregnant,
and they would bounce back so fast.
Yeah.
Like, so, so fast.
We have members in our forum
who take videos of themselves working out,
like, two months or something like that, post-baby,
and they look phenomenal,
and they were like hard, you hard, heavy into the resistance training.
Makes a tremendous, tremendous difference.
I can't stress it enough.
Yeah, at the end of the day, when you have a solid frame
that you've built muscle upon,
that's where like turning the calorie burn
kind of sequence on and off,
that's where it all starts to kind of play out the way you want.
But like going through the process of building the muscle and getting a nice foundation established
is so crucial.
Allow yourself to go through that process.
It's not this race right out of the gates.
I have to shed, shed, shed, shed, shed, shed, which is such a trap.
That's something like, my wife even went through that the second because the workouts
were different going into our second kid.
And it's just, it's one of those things like it, you get this panic about it, you know,
and like, I understand it because, you know, having to deal with that mindset, it's, it's
in side of a lot of us, like we want to get to that goal, we want to get to that and smash
it up, but you're going to set yourself up for more problems down the road.
Yeah, absolutely. It's, it's, it's just traditional resistance training is one of the best things
you could do in the context of modern life to maintain a lean body because it speeds up
your metabolism better than anything. And you know, how often have you guys heard this
from women like, oh my God, me and my husband
go on a diet and I lose three pounds
and he loses just 10 pounds right away.
Well, he's got more muscle.
Right.
He's got a lot more muscle.
This is why men, you know, this is why that stereotype
or that, you know, that doesn't get talked about.
That's why it exists.
Is that guys tend to have more muscle.
And when guys go to workout, they're
less likely to do the tons of cardio.
And when women go to workout, and that's just because we've been advertised differently,
that's all it is.
It's just, it's less acceptable for women to go lift weights for their workout than it
is for them to go take a class, some type of a robys class or a dance class or something
like that. And the opposite for men, it's less likely, less acceptable for a man to go take a class, some type of a robys class or a dance class or something like that.
And the opposite for men, it's less likely, you know, less acceptable for a man to go take
a bunch of classes than for him to be like, oh, I'm just going to go to the gym and lift
some weights.
It's that resistance strain that makes the big difference, especially, especially post
part of them because you lose a lot of muscle and strength.
You know how we're going to know when that's changed, when you walk into a gym and they have two to three
weight room floors.
Yes.
You know that has it still the opposite.
It's still the opposite.
Yeah, you can double cardio.
You can, you go in at five o'clock at night
and to any gym across the country right now,
and every piece of equipment is being used.
Cardio?
Yeah, being used.
And there's, so that means there's probably double to triple
the amount of people doing cardio
than there is in the gym, lifting weights.
And so I think when that,
that's when I feel like when our message will have
resonated with the industry long enough,
will you start to see the gyms having to respond to that going
holy fuck like,
there's a lot of demand for free weights.
Well, there's always treadmill's open
because we have fucking 90 of them.
You know what I'm saying?
Like there's a 120 people in here.
You know what I'm saying?
90 of them are on these treadmills.
It's like when we no longer have a need
for 90 treadmills in our gym
and we need two to three to four weight floors
or three to four to five sets of every weight of dumbbell.
Like that's when you know she's-
Just gonna, we're coaching this one client who was a long distance,
she was in endurance, she liked to do the running,
she liked to run a lot, and she wanted to lose body fat,
and she had just had a baby, and she would send me her food
logs, and she was running anywhere, I think she was running
between 12 to 17 miles a week, so decent amount of running,
not a super ton, but decent amount of running, not a super ton,
but decent amount of running.
And this woman, first off, she had the skinny fat, right?
So she wasn't heavy, but she wasn't very sculpted
or whatever, and she that was her big issue.
She wanted to tighten up her body.
She looked exhausted all the time,
and that was another issue she had,
but she was still doing her running.
She'd send me her food logs,
and this woman was barely consuming 1300 calories a day.
You know, running 17 fucking miles or 12 to 17 miles a week.
And I told her, I'm like, listen, here's the deal.
Like, we gotta switch things up,
and it's gonna take a little while,
but your two options are run twice as much, eat less,
or we speed up your metabolism.
And we know what the other ones get,
like, do you really think that's gonna be sustainable,
especially now with two kids and so we had
to like reverse out of it and increase her protein and slowly increase her
calories and have her focus on resistance training but her body started
changing and she started tripping out and it was so crazy to her because and I've
seen this so many times it's a trip because it's like this is what they feel
like oh my god I'm doing so much less work
by my body responding so well. It feels like magic and it's like no, you were just spinning your
tires in the dirt before. You were literally trying to dig a ditch with a spoon and I've now handed
you a fucking backhoe and you're tripping over how much faster you're progressing but it's just
because we're just more effective working with your body. That's it. And with that, look, a lot of people don't realize that we're all on Instagram where you can
actually find our personal pages with different information.
You can find our personal flavors on Instagram.
My page is Mind Pump Sal, Adam is Mind Pump Adam, and Justin is Mind Pump Justin.
Go check us out.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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