Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 779: Good Mornings vs Deadlifts, How Vasectomies Affect Sex Drive, Hormones & Cancer, How Your Childhood Shapes the Rest of Your Life & MORE
Episode Date: May 26, 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 vasectomies affect sex drive, hormones... or prostate cancer, why so many poor thought or behavior patterns in adulthood are rooted in childhood, the difference between a Good Morning & a Deadlift and if it means your lame if you like working a normal job. Is Sal truly the best closer? How about those Organifi numbers?! (6:35) Should NFL Players Be Fined for Kneeling During National Anthem? The guys react to the new policy by the NFL and Trump’s reaction. (7:50) Is the "Political Correctness” movement going too far? The guys sound off and share their thoughts on this hot topic. (13:00) Coming to Netflix: The Obamas Sign Deal to Produce Shows. (26:12) Are we perpetuating the problem when it comes to the news media that is put out there? (29:29) Are GMO’s really scientifically harmful? Landmark lawsuit claims Monsanto hid cancer danger of weed killer for decades. (33:35) Is Netflix taking down the Hollywood elite? Women accuse Morgan Freeman of inappropriate behavior, harassment. (39:54) Do you buy into the notion of “eating for two” when it comes to baring a child? The guys discuss our relationship with food and the pressure women face. (45:09) #Quah question #1 – What are your thoughts on vasectomies? Do they affect sex drive, hormones or prostate cancer? (53:16) #Quah question #2 – Why do you believe so many poor thought or behavior patterns in adulthood are rooted in childhood? (1:05:00) #Quah question #3 – What is the difference between a Good Morning & a Deadlift? (1:17:37) #Quah question #4 – What if I like working a normal job? Does it mean I’m lame? (1:25:06) Related Links/Products Mentioned Organifi - http://www.mindpumpmedia.com/organifi Clinical Evaluation of the Spermatogenic Activity of the Root Extract of Ashwagandha (Withania somnifera) in Oligospermic Males: A Pilot Study - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3863556/ Trump: NFL players who don't stand during National Anthem maybe 'shouldn't be in the country' - https://www.cnn.com/2018/05/24/politics/trump-nfl-national-anthem/index.html TheMunkDebates – YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCO2aPSqobmHAeeV7SOOEtIw Political Correctness - https://www.munkdebates.com/The-Debates/Political-Correctness THE PATH OF NON VIOLENCE – YouTube - https://youtu.be/qYISefvwSfg Obamas will be on and off camera in unique Netflix deal - http://money.cnn.com/2018/05/21/media/barack-michelle-obama-netflix-deal/index.html Operation Mockingbird - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Mockingbird Landmark lawsuit claims Monsanto hid cancer danger of weed killer for decades - https://www.theguardian.com/business/2018/may/22/monsanto-trial-cancer-weedkiller-roundup-dewayne-johnson Women accuse Morgan Freeman of inappropriate behavior, harassment - https://www.cnn.com/2018/05/24/entertainment/morgan-freeman-accusations/index.html Parental Influence on Eating Behavior - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2531152/ What's In My Gym Bag?? BEN GREENFIELD's Biohacking Essentials | MIND PUMP - https://youtu.be/NAWtRv1diBA 95 percent of brain activity is beyond our conscious awareness - http://www.simplifyinginterfaces.com/2008/08/01/95-percent-of-brain-activity-is-beyond-our-conscious-awareness/ Build Your Hamstrings- How to Properly do Good Mornings – YouTube - https://youtu.be/InVuScSda8E The Proper Way to Perform the Conventional Deadlift (Part I) – YouTube – https://youtu.be/-rIp9T5ig4A The Proper Way to Perform the Conventional Deadlift (Part 2) – YouTube - https://youtu.be/aFCyGXu-_vo The Fred Factor: How Passion in Your Work and Life Can Turn the Ordinary Into the Extraordinary - Book by Mark Sanborn - https://amzn.to/2J6eSeU People Mentioned Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) · Twitter Bishop Robert Barron (@BishopBarron) · Twitter Morgan J. Freeman (@mjfree) · Twitter Ben Greenfield (@bengreenfieldfitness) • Instagram Also check out Thrive Market! Thrive Market makes purchasing organic, non-GMO affordable. With prices up to 50% off retail, Thrive Market blows away most conventional, non-organic foods. PLUS, they offer a NO RISK way to get started which includes: 1. One FREE month’s membership 2. $20 Off your first three purchases of $49 or more (That’s $60 off total!) 3. Free shipping on orders of $49 or more How can you go wrong with this offer? To take advantage of this offer go to www.thrivemarket.com/mindpump You insure your car but do you insure YOU? If you don’t, and you are the primary breadwinner, you will likely leave your loved ones facing hardship and struggle if you die (harsh reality). Perhaps you think life insurance is expensive, but if you are fit and healthy, you can qualify for approved rates that are truly inexpensive and affordable. To find out if you qualify for the best rates in the industry, go get a quote at www.HealthIQ.com/mindpump Would you like to be coached by Sal, Adam & Justin? You can get 30 days of virtual coaching from them for FREE at www.mindpumpmedia.com. Get our newest program, MAPS HIIT, an expertly programmed and phased High Intensity Interval Training program designed to maximize fat burn and improve conditioning. Get it at www.mindpumpmedia.com! Get MAPS Prime, MAPS Anywhere, MAPS Anabolic, MAPS Performance, MAPS Aesthetic, the Butt Builder Blueprint, the Sexy Athlete Mod AND KB4A (The MAPS Super Bundle) packaged together at a substantial DISCOUNT at www.mindpumpmedia.com. Make EVERY workout better with MAPS Prime, the only pre-workout you need… it is now available at mindpumpmedia.com Have Sal, Adam & Justin personally train you via video instruction on our YouTube channel, Mind Pump TV. Be sure to Subscribe for updates. Get your Kimera Koffee at www.kimerakoffee.com, code "mindpump" for 10% off! Get Organifi, certified organic greens, protein, probiotics, etc at www.organifi.com Use the code “mindpump” for 20% off. Go to foursigmatic.com/mindpump and use the discount code “mindpump” for 15% off of your first order of health & energy boosting mushroom products. Add to the incredible brain enhancing effect of Kimera Koffee with www.brain.fm/mindpump 10 Free sessions! Music for the brain for incredible focus, sleep and naps! Also includes 20% if you purchase! Please subscribe, rate and review this show! Each week our favorite reviewers are announced on the show and sent Mind Pump T-shirts! Have questions for Mind Pump? Each Monday on Instagram (@mindpumpmedia) look for the QUAH post and input your question there. (Sal, Adam & Justin will answer as many questions as they can)
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go. MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND,IND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, for between zero to 45 minutes, we think. It's a good guess. The introductory portion of this episode starts off
with us talking about Organifies Green Juice
with Ashruganda.
Apparently, my sales technique of talking about Ashruganda
can increase the amount of semen
that comes out of your wing.
It's actually true.
By the way, it's working.
More people are buying it.
No, I'll never be finding that it works.
Members don't.
We are sponsored by Organify.
If you go to OrganifyShop.com, enter the code MindPump.
We've actually hooked up MindPump listeners
with an exclusive discount.
Then we talk about Donald Trump's NFL,
National Anthem, comments.
Oh my.
The guy can't keep his mouth.
He just hates filters.
Fuck.
Trump.
No filter.
Shut up.
Then we talk about the monk debates.
This is actually an interesting thing.
This was really cool, dude.
Yeah, very interesting channel on YouTube.
She go check it out.
Controversial topics get debated by intelligent individuals.
We talk about the Ob's and Netflix. I guess
they're friends now. What's going on there? Yeah, Obama and Netflix and in chilling.
They all chilled together. Are they having sex? I don't know. Then we talked about, so
we called that Operation Mockingbird and propaganda, little conspiracy theory for you. Put on
your tinfoil hat. Yeah.
We talked about the California grounds keepers lawsuit
against Mon Santo.
Uh-oh.
Somebody has been playing fair.
This could be a big one.
Let's hope that hurts him a little.
This could be massive or not, like Justin's glutes.
Then we talked about Morgan Freeman.
Oh, this one hurt my heart.
He's being accused of inappropriate behavior.
Yeah.
Fuck.
Shinkard Dimash.
Damn it.
First in Robin Hood.
First Cosby and now, man.
Then we talked about the pregnancy eating for two myth.
Yes, you are eating for two.
But it's not like you're really eating for two adults
so it's like you're eating for somebody
that he needs a hundred calories.
And it's a really tiny person.
Let's be honest.
Then we get to the questions.
The first question was, what are our thoughts
on vasectomies?
Do they affect sex drive hormones?
Is there a connection between them?
That might have my balls go up inside my stomach.
And prostate cancer, you're not gonna need them very long.
Yeah, I'm gonna have to get rid of it.
Don't worry.
Yeah.
Can't you schedule the three times you have sex a month around
the other day?
Oh, that was a low blow.
Wow.
That was a low blow.
No, I responded to that.
That was a low blow.
Next question.
Not like a bisectomy.
That's a real low blow.
Wow.
Next question was, why do we believe so many poor thought
and behavior patterns in adulthood are rooted in childhood?
Does it have that big of an effect on how we are as adults?
Or, or, yeah.
Definitely.
And next question, what's the difference
between the two exercises, good mornings and dead deadlifts both work the posterior chain.
Good question.
Which one's better, which one's worse,
which one do we like the most?
A good morning.
And finally, look, this person asking the question
has a normal job, whatever the fuck that means.
Does that mean that they're lame?
For some reason they have the impression
that we think people are lame.
They're lame, bro.
Normal jobs, you know what I mean? Yeah, so working. Does that mean that they're lame? For some reason they have the impression that we think people are lame. We should. We should.
We should.
We should.
We should.
Yeah, so working.
Find out what we think about that
in that part of this episode.
Also, this month, get ready for the summer.
Look, do you want to take your clothes off,
walk around the pool?
No, yes I do.
But naked.
And look, hot as fuck.
Let's be honest.
It's gonna be warm. You don't be that dude in the pool with the t-shirt on that guy you want to provoke
Rouser yeah, you know from everyone
Far ladies ladies do you want guys to get bonus when they look at you?
Boy, I'm maybe not
Maybe you do maybe you do but you want to still be look good right?
Maybe not maybe you do maybe you do but you want to still be look good right?
Sometimes we know you got that power. We're given away
The intuitive nutrition guide and the fasting guide both of which will help you with nutrition Doug You misspelled guide by the way. It's not the fasting good. It's the fasting good
Very nice we're giving those away for free if you're en any bundle, now bundles where we take multiple maps programs,
put them together, and then we discount the fuck out of them.
Oh, wow.
It hits the first second.
So, no, literally, we, we, we, we,
we just a lot of preventing.
We eliminated a large portion of the price
because we, because we like you guys.
That's why we do.
So that's what the bundles are.
Pat a bundle.
Get those two guides for free. But hey, maybe you're listening, you're like, look, Sal, I. So that's what the bundles are, kind of bundle, get those two guides for free.
But hey, maybe you're listening to your like,
looks how I'm not trying to invest tons of money.
I just want one map program.
I'm a little afraid of getting super fit.
I just want to get kind of fit to start with.
I want to test it out.
I want one maps program.
Right.
Which one should I get?
I get that question all the time, Adam.
I know you guys do too.
I would say start with a map Santa Barbara.
Do I have to go like really, really awesome
or could it just be like awesome?
Yeah, if you want to test it out,
here's what you do.
Look, if your goal is maximum strength, muscle,
metabolism repair, or you're just getting started,
MAP Santa Ball is the program for you.
If you want to move like an elite athlete,
if you want maximum mobility and athletic performance,
that's MAP's performance.
If you're a stage presentation athlete,
let's say you're a bodybuilder, a physique competitor,
a bikini competitor or
Your experience and you want to sculpt and shape your body like Michelangelo did with the marble statues
That's maps aesthetic that David want to if you like to work out in the privacy of your own home
Or you just don't like to leave you as exercise equipment
You like to do body weight type of stuff or you work out on the go
Let's say you go to hotel rooms a lot because you travel so much.
Well, that's maps anywhere.
Or let's say you're a personal trainer
and you're listening, which means you're already a smart person
because it's a great show to listen to if you're a trainer.
And you want tools that you can apply on your clients.
You want to build your value.
Get the maps prime and prime pro programs.
Or if you're somebody who's not a trainer
and you just want to correct them balances
and solve pain problems,
those are the two programs for you.
You can check those out, plus the bundles,
and get the free guides, all at myimputmedia.com.
I've got to tell you guys, I did not think
this was gonna work, so, but again,
you know, I'm the first to admit, when I'm wrong,
and you're right.
Uh-oh, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
This is weird, don't be recording this.
I'm a recording duck. So I Uh oh, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. This is weird, are we recording this? Time stamp this.
Are we recording Doug?
So I guess we'll have audience now too,
whatever we don't care, right?
So I watched the numbers and the commission checks
come in and everything like that.
And organify cells are through the roof this past week.
And, oh wow, that's the seminal volume is kicking in, huh?
The organify commercials.
They don't call me the best closer for nothing.
Ah!
Like, yeah, there you go.
I give you a little inch.
You want to take a bite out like there.
You open up the gates, buddy.
Not to get all four inches.
You know what?
You know what it, no, no.
That's a massive.
The reason why I said that in the first place,
because I love reading about the stuff that we take.
And I do take a lot of the green juice.
It's one of my favorite products for more GANIFI
in the Ashruganda.
And I read this article on how Ashruganda increases
seminal volume and I thought I was fucking hilarious
and I kept doing research and it was like consistent.
That's why I brought it up.
But hey dude, for whatever reason,
people like that, you know?
Guys like that?
Hey, why not?
I'm rolls like it too.
Why not?
Why not?
You know what I'm saying. You see, uh,
it's an announcement. You guys see our boy, uh, Donald Trump commenting on the NFL.
It's going to, so no, let me back you up a little bit.
If you don't know, uh, what happened last, what guy was last year,
at the beginning of last year, whatever with Colin Kaepernick, he decided to remember
that he, he kneeled during the national anthem or whatever, right?
So that created this whole ordeal and it's been going on since then.
It's been back and forth and back and forth and there's all this shit going on.
Again, you know, at the end of the day, whether it was a good idea, bad idea,
right or wrong, doesn't matter.
It's a choice.
At the end of the day, it's now, you know, we've turned it into something that's dividing
all of us, which I think is just ridiculous.
And the irony of it is this protest is supposed to try, it's supposed to be about equality
and bringing us all together when in reality all it's really done is driven a stake between
a lot of us and caused.
I don't think it's brought any good attention to any of this stuff.
Well, you know what it did is it made people on one hand say, you know,
were against police brutality, which,
I don't know anybody that's pro police brutality.
So, you know, I mean, were against it.
And then on the other hand, you have people saying,
hey, you're against America and you're against the cops.
And then there's people on the other side saying,
all cops are bad and everybody's racist
and the other side people are saying,
hey, you know, I know people who are good
and we're not, and it's like, that's not the point, man.
It's not the point at all.
I will say this, I don't think what Colin did
was a smart career move, which I think is obvious,
but the dude is being peaceful about his protest
and you know, and I wish everybody had the balls
to do something like that and just to be,
whatever your protest is,
so you have to appreciate that.
But the fans didn't like it.
I'm kind of, I'm back, well, no, some did, you know,
I'm back and forth on like, okay, so what happened was,
so now they have, now they've made it aid like,
and it was already in the books, like it was already
something that you're supposed to do as your job title,
of being a player, you come out to the national anthem and you stand for national anthem. Do you know why? Huh? Do you know why they have to do as your job title, of being a player, you come out to the national anthem
and you stand for the national anthem.
Do you know why?
Huh?
Do you know why they have to do that?
That was a deal they made with the military.
Oh, I didn't know.
Yeah, they're getting, Dana Phil gets paid.
If I'm not mistaken, someone correct me if I'm wrong.
So listen, or if I'm wrong, let me know.
But I do remember reading that this was a deal.
Like, because that makes sense to me.
Yeah. And I see, here's the thing though,
is that any different than us being sponsored by Organifi?
You know what I'm saying?
It's our responsibility to, yeah, we use it,
yeah, we've decided to partner with companies
that we believe in, but part of that deal
is that we have to bring it up and talk about it.
So part of the NFL is deal with the military, okay,
we're funding or we're doing, we're supporting. So therefore, the way you can show support is by having your employees, IE, the NFL players
stand during the national anthem.
What I think is funny is that we turn it into this whole free speech and the, you know,
it's a black, white thing, it's equality thing, it's all this.
It's actually pretty simple.
It's a company that's requiring you to do something.
You decide not to, totally freely, totally voluntarily,
totally up to you.
The company also has the...
Dericure, to be like, hey, you're not gonna do it one.
And you can go work someone else and that's fine.
That's right.
We're just the biggest, you know, show in town.
Yeah.
Yeah, see the pent Pentagon did pay the end.
That's what's interesting about that is how we don't realize how much propaganda is put
out there to promote patriotism and nationalism so that people, because we have a voluntary military
force, and when people feel good about America, you get more people enrolling when they feel
bad about it, you get less people in there.
Dude, we've done, you know it's an example of how well of a job we've done, is that camouflage
is an actual fucking style.
I'm, you're so true.
Right.
Camouflage is a fashion state.
I'm about to choose.
Right.
Exactly.
You just bought a pair of shoes that are camouflage.
That is how well that we have to, so that we have, so well, we have sold this to you that
we are how fucking wearing camouflage. You know, if you'd make a movie, that's military based. They sold it well. Yeah, it's all well. We have sold this to you that we're out fucking wearing
camouflage.
You know, if you'd make a movie that's military based,
like if you're showing like jets and tanks and stuff
like that, you can actually get funding from the military
and they will let you use some of their stuff in your movie
so long as you paint them in a patriotic light.
Oh, wow.
So if you're doing a movie that's total anti-US,
anti whatever, you can do it, you're free to do that.
They're just not gonna get any funding
or whatever.
Yeah, can you help from us?
No, no, no, how crazy is that?
Yeah, it's crazy.
And then same.
So now they came out, made an official rule
that they can be fine.
And of course, here's the thing about Donald Trump.
And I'm glad I'm bringing this up right now
because I think a lot of times people think
they were so pro Donald on some of the things
that he's done.
I definitely think the way he explained it was really
ridiculous.
Right.
Yeah, I think he said,
I'm not all right with the way he explained it.
Yeah, yeah, no, he was just, what did he say?
Well, you basically just said, you can get out of our,
you know, if you don't want to have a stamp in it.
You still like speak English, you're getting the fuck out of here
kind of like, you know, like old school kind of talk, you know, like, don't want to stay in the middle, like speak English, you're getting the fuck out of here, kind of like, you know, like old school kind of talk, you
know, like, I don't know.
I was not insensitive, but, you know, I was having this conversation yesterday with Jessica
because we were watching the monk debates.
Have you guys seen this?
I sent you a link at him.
It's the monk debates.
The MUNK debates.
It's this channel, and I guess they've been around for a long time.
The dark web? No, no, no, no. MUNK debates, it's this channel, and I guess they've been around for a long time. But Dark Web?
No, no, no, no.
Well, you have the Dark Web intellectuals on it
or whatever, but it's this channel I found on YouTube
where they'll do very controversial subjects
and they'll have opposing views
and they'll have representatives from each view
that's very intelligent.
So they're not gonna pick like an idiot
from one side and a smart guy from a,
it's a smart guy from one side, smart person from another side arguing
and debating in a civil manner. And what I love about it is, first off, it's totally a new media thing.
This would never exist in old media because it's very objective, nonbiased. They let people speak.
There's certain rules you have to follow. And here's my favorite part at the beginning of the poll
Or at the beginning of the debate they asked the audience
How many of you agree with this side? How many of you agree with this other side?
And they'll get the percentages at the end of the debate. Oh, how cool. Yeah at the end of the debate
The winner is the one that was able to sway the other side more
So like I watched when yesterday that was called
political correctness or progress.
And on one side, you had like the, you had what's his name, Michael Dyson, Michelle Goldberg
on the other side, you had Stephen Fry and Jordan Peterson.
And at the beginning of the debate, they said, which side are you on to the audience?
Now, more people were on the side of Stephen Fry and Jordan Peterson in terms of political
correctness.
It's gone a little crazy and you know,
we think this is not progress at this point.
And so the split was something like 30, 70% at the end though,
the people that were on the side of Fry and Peterson went up 6% so they won the poll.
And I like the way they do that because it's not like who has more people on each side.
It's who can convince the other side more effectively.
So they got 6% over the other.
But anyway, there's all kinds of debates on this.
There was one where it was like,
is religion a positive force or whatever.
And on one side, they had like a very prominent atheist
on the other side, they had, I forgot who it was.
I think it was, I don't remember who it was,
but it's very intelligent debates.
So we were having this conversation.
I love to go see one of these live.
I wanna be on one of these motherfuckers one day.
I'm not nowhere near ready to do something like that,
but I would love it.
Anyhow, so the, and they talk about very controversial subjects,
like gender or you know, feminism or whatever,
things that people don't wanna touch, abortion, whatever.
So I think it's fascinating.
I think stuff like this is going to explode.
But I was having this conversation with Jessica and I was like, you know, this whole
like, this extreme political correctness, like vibe that's been happening where, you
know, you had this, when I, when I remember when Bush was in office, people thought I was
a hardcore liberal.
And at the time, I was pro-liberty, just like I am now.
But people thought I was a liberal because Bush,
you know, he pushed the Patriot Act,
which was spying on Americans.
He went into Iraq when we shouldn't have.
You know, at the time, Republicans were super pro-drug war,
like make stronger laws and throw people in jail.
So I fought against all that shit as much as I possibly could
and I marched for gay marriage
and all that because at the time everybody
was against gay marriage but especially the conservatives.
And then Obama comes in office
and who I voted for the first time by the way,
who and then he just went crazy
and became and started promoting super
kind of socialist ideals and big, super big government
and he was voting for the things that he railed against
Bush for. So then I was against him quite a bit and people
like, Oh, you're super conservative. I'm like, no, no, no,
here's a deal. Like, I'm very consistent with my views.
But my point is with this is that whole movement, I'll give
you a good example, gay marriage, gay marriage in 2008, even
Obama campaigned against that nobody supported it. And when
the polls showed that American supported it,
of course the politicians jumped on board
because they don't stand on principle,
they only fucking try to get elected.
Yeah, it's popular.
Yeah, it's bullshit.
But you know, gay marriage gets passed rightly so.
That was, I was always very pro like,
like if the government's gonna issue a license for marriage
which I think is stupid to begin with,
but if they're going to, they should,
it's a license from the government,
which means two adults who are voluntarily entering into it
should be able to do it, man, woman, whatever.
It doesn't matter.
But then you have a case where people are gonna go to a baker
and say, hey, bake me a waiting cake for my gay wedding
and the guy says, why don't you?
And they sue him.
And then I'm like, wait a minute, dude, this is going too far.
That's his business and he's an asshole.
I think he's stupid for not baking your cake,
and we should definitely boycott and put pressure on him,
but making a law against that,
this is going a little too far,
and it started pushing so hard
where the reaction was Donald Trump.
He's totally the fucking,
he's like the opposite mirror image
of the extreme ridiculousness that you see
with this crazy political correctness movement
and you know, like these, you know,
what they'll call the radical left.
Yeah, how people can't remove their emotions
and just kind of like look at that as what it is.
Like so if I'm a business owner and I have specific views
like, you know, that's my opinion, that's my right
as an American, you know, just like anybody else's rights.
But yeah, like you said, you can boycott the shit out of them.
You'll suffer.
And blackball, yeah, they're not gonna do good in business.
And rightly so.
But I think you're an asshole if you're right.
If you base that on someone's, you know, race or sex
or whatever, I think you're an idiot, as a business person.
Well, don't you think it's your an Well, don't you think the idea is the same
as the idea behind that or trying to stop that
is like the same as segregation was?
Yep, it is, but here's the difference.
The civil rights movement was necessary
and it wasn't necessary to eliminate racism.
It was necessary to reverse government discrimination.
Remember, at the time, you had government laws that segregated people.
You know what I mean?
You had water fountains in schools and places that were government properties that were
the ones segregating the most.
They were the one.
Remember businesses, and of course, at the time, they were definitely racist businesses,
but businesses had to pay the consequence of, especially today, and you got to look at the time, there were definitely racist businesses, but businesses had to, they pay the consequence of,
especially today, and you gotta look at the context too.
It's 2018, good luck being a successful business
and being a racist, a sexist, or a bigot.
Like good luck.
You might be able to succeed in your little town
and have your little tiny business.
You ain't gonna become a national business at all,
and if you're a big enough asshole
with things like Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, social media,
whatever, it's not hard for me to make it hard for you
to conduct business if you're an asshole,
and that's the way it should be.
It should be social pressures, but at the end of the day,
look, if I have a house, if I own my house, right,
let's say, and I don't wanna let you in my house
because I don't like your face, you know,
let's forget your race and your sex.
Let's say I just look at you and I'm like,
hey, I don't like your face, you got a mustache, and you got stupid your sex. Let's say I just look at you and I'm like, hey, I don't like your face, you got a mustache,
and you got a stupid looking nose.
I'm an asshole.
You know, but it's my house.
You know, what are you gonna do?
Make a law that says I have to let you in my own house.
So I'm wrong with your face.
Yeah, so this Donald Trump and his ridiculousness
was some of the stuff that he says.
And it's a react, it's a fucking wrench
that's the throwing at the other side.
National is the thing.
It's, yeah, it's ridiculous.
It's like, come on man, really you're gonna make
a big deal about this fucking NFL thing and, you know,
he's peacefully protesting.
He has the right to protest.
Yeah, you can't fucking take that away.
No, I agree, I think you absolutely,
just as equally the employer can say.
Exactly.
I don't value as an employee enough.
A double sided coin.
I was listening to the radio this morning
and they were talking about like, well,
I just, I think the NFL should be able to do what they want
with it.
And honestly, I'm gonna do differently for player.
Like, I don't value Colin Kaepernick
as much as I value Aaron Rogers.
Aaron Rogers decided,
fuck, and take a knee.
I might listen.
I might, and we might have a conversation around it.
Well, Colin Kaepernick, you might lose your job over that
because I don't think you're adding that much value
to my fucking team.
See you later, bro.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, why do you think the NFL made the fine,
the whole fine thing?
Right.
I think they did that because the consumers of the NFL
have spoken.
And they're saying, we don't want politics and football, we don't
really care. Yeah. You know, don't do that. We're not going to lot. You're seeing it a lot lately.
And like, in the Oscars. And I mean, there's just, I think that it's interesting because there
is like a lot of eyes and views. And so it's like, it seems like a good opportunity to like
have a message and put it out there and like get, but it's just like, as a consumer,
you're like, oh, here we go.
We're gonna politicize an entertaining thing
that I'm watching, shit.
And I've done a lot of thinking about Colin Kaepernick
and celebrities tend to get on my fucking nerves
when they speak out about certain things,
mainly because they're massive hypocrites.
Most of them are massive hypocrites.
Colin Kaepernick on the other side, on the other hand,
has taken a massive hit in his paycheck
and his career during the arguably the best years
of his competitive life.
So I respect him for that.
What I don't respect are the celebrities
who like gun control, we need to ban all guns.
Meanwhile, they have bodyguards with guns surrounding them.
It's like, well, it's easy for you to say
because you got bodyguards with guns protecting your fucking ass.
And then, you know, what about the single parent
that lives in a shitty neighborhood
who feels like they're gonna get robbed or whatever,
or the woman who got raped
and now she wants to carry a gun to make herself feel safe.
Right.
Like, there's a big difference there.
But Colin, he's paying the price.
He's paying the price for his views.
And so he can write a book later on.
Yeah.
His film, make my America's already proven
that's the model right there.
You can kill your wife and then write a book later on
and make it.
Oh my gosh.
Okay, did that.
Yeah, that's right.
That was the reference there.
Yeah, it's right, dude.
Yeah, this one fucked up.
How the NFL fucked me.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, right.
And then it's a good point.
It is.
That's why it's, I mean, when, I don't know, man,
all the attention that he's getting from it,
is it like maybe his NFL career was done anyways
and going out with a bang like this now,
give some another platform to,
to sell a book or to do something else.
Like, I don't know.
I, but I'm with Justin on like,
I watch football, the watch football.
I'm watching fucking football.
Oh, fucking tune into CNN. We all just stop with the shit with Justin on like, I watch football, the watch football. I'm watching fucking football. Oh, fucking tune into CNN.
We all just stop with the shit.
Like, when you watch football,
Fox News, if I wanna hear fucking bullshit,
Paul, it's so fun.
Well, even then, it's like, if you're so like,
like, don't like, put the cameras on it,
you know, like, whatever, if like you're so like,
what, like, they're just stirring it back up
and trying to create controversy.
And it's just like, I don't know, man,
like, I just wanna watch football. I know. I like, I don't know, man, I just wanna watch football.
Yeah, I know.
I don't wanna watch the game.
Yeah, I get like that a lot of times too
and I'm watching something and I'm like,
all right, dude.
Yeah, I know you're gonna be feeling important.
Yeah, that's enough.
But it is better than like,
remember when everybody's protesting
on like freeways and like blocking shit.
Yeah, did chat themselves like, come on.
Like that's where it's where it's dangerous.
This country has a long history of protest
and the most successful protest movements
have always been peaceful, civil disobedience.
That's the winning track record
because what happens when you're violent and angry or you destroy property
is you get a strong reaction.
If you're protesting against,
let's say there's a people who,
there's a bunch of businesses that don't wanna
serve homosexuals or gay men or lesbian women
or trans-xuals.
And you're protesting against them
and you destroy their property
or you're trying to enact laws against them.
You're gonna get a strong reaction.
And then you're gonna get people like me
who I'm being forced to defend them.
I don't agree with them,
but I have to defend that you're being violent against them.
And you end up losing.
Now if you do it peacefully
You you fucking went more with the king prove that yeah, man. You prove that model. Yeah, very well
I mean, it's it's a time-tested method that works. I mean, it's it's powerful. I was watching this
talk by
What's his name? He's this he's up. He's that priest. I told you guys about brilliant guy. I can't remember his name
And you're ship something.
Bishop Baron.
And he was talking about how what it means
to turn the other cheek.
And he said, it doesn't mean you run away in fear.
It means if you get hit, you turn your face
and you say, go ahead and do that again.
Reflect the other to the other person
your own terrible violence.
Like imagine if you react and rage against someone
and you throw something or you hit them
and they just stand there and they don't react to you.
They don't show you anger or whatever.
They let you reflect and try that again.
Now you may get that may cause some problems,
but again, look at how Martin Luther King did that
in when they would do this peaceful protest
and the police would be violent against them
and that shit got caught on camera,
started a national movement.
You know what I mean?
So that's really the way to do it.
And so when I see people peacefully protest,
even if I disagree with them,
I respect and appreciate it.
Takes a lot of courage, takes a lot of strength,
and control, and I see people who really actually
care about what they're saying that they care about.
Did either of you get a chance to look at the post that somebody did on our forum regarding Netflix?
No, what's going on there?
Yeah, a little bit.
Yeah, it was something about behind the scenes with Obama, some motivation there.
What was that all about?
Are they working with Netflix or something like that? Well, somebody had posted on the forum
just the strategy that they are trying to do, man.
I'm trying to find it for us right now,
so we can look at it.
I thought for sure that you had read it.
I didn't know that I was just conspiracy theory.
I do know that they're working,
that they're somehow gonna be putting together
programming or something like that with Netflix.
So, the idea behind the article,
whatever they were saying,
that the strategy behind Netflix is just,
and they're getting all this backing and funding
to grow and build this huge massive network.
And then eventually what's gonna happen
is we're gonna get fed a bunch of this propaganda
within it.
It says the headline I'm reading is,
the Obama's will be on and off camera
in unique Netflix deal.
So they're signing a deal to produce shows.
Now, the obviously what's gonna happen with these shows
is they're going to try and push
some kind of a narrative,
which you would expect from politicians or.
Oh, different than the What's Your Health or anything else.
Right, yeah.
It's already on there, exactly, there's like different motivations
all over the place.
I think it, yeah, whatever,
like if they have a motivation and want you,
yeah, exactly, don't watch it,
or another one that kind of serves you better,
I'm sure they're gonna allow that on the platform too.
I prefer to, I love watching stuff like that
because it lets me see the best arguments of every side
and then I can make a better, it helps me make a better decision.
Many times I watch, I'm like, are you kidding me?
This is so terribly skewed.
But sometimes I make a good point and it makes me think,
and so I implore, if you're listening
in your hardcore conservative, whatever they do, go watch, and so I implore like, if you're listening to your hardcore conservative,
like go, whatever they do, go watch it and see.
Break it down.
Yeah, break it down and see what the thought process is.
I think the people that are afraid,
are afraid that where it's gonna be in the next 10 years
when it's like, you know,
will it eventually look just like a, you know,
CNN or a Fox News channel,
or it's like eventually super motivated just from one angle.
Yes, like I mean maybe right now there's like a lot of variety and there's it sprinkled in there
But you know fast forward 10 15 years. Well, that would be unfortunate
I mean, I would hope that they would allow you know like multiple
Opinions and different like agendas, you know within their platform. They're just a platform
You know like I that would suck if they became
like a Fox News or like a CNN or like something
that was slanted.
Well, don't you predict that that's how,
I mean, don't you think that that's how
that probably happened for Fox and CNN and so that,
I mean, I'm sure that when it first started as a channel,
it wasn't a bunch of like hardcore conservatives
to get together and say like,
let's make a conservative channel.
They probably made a channel and then conservative news used to be.
Yeah, news used to be reporting.
Right. And so what happened, what happened with news is, and news is always, there's always
been implants. And I mean, that's this the conspiracy theory.
You guys ever watched the HBO show newsroom before?
No. Oh, great show.
No, there's a, I think it's called operat, maybe Doug can look this up.
Operation mockingbird or something like that. I've heard of that. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, States CIA that began in the early 1950s that attempted to manipulate news media for propaganda
purposes.
So they've been, you know, and I wouldn't doubt look, here's a deal.
The CIA is kind of like the secret government.
People don't realize it's, they're giving a lot of power and it was created during the
Cold War.
And what people need to understand is during the Cold War, and that's why I'm so fascinated
by it, we literally were dealing with the potential destruction of the world for
reals.
And so we did a lot of shit that under that pretense, under that context.
And so when you're looking at O-Fuck, they've got nukes pointed at us,
and we've got it at them, and we could all kill each other, everything's on the table, like all of it.
You know what I mean? Like, well, what if we do this plan where,
like, Operation Northwood, where we stage a terrorist attack to Miami
so the American public supports invading Cuba
because of Soviets are putting missiles in Cuba.
That's kind of on the table when you imagine that,
well shit, they could nuke us all and we all die, you know what I mean?
So the CIA was created under that context in the sense that
it's kind of this shadow government that operates outside
of the Constitution and does shady shit and has money coming
in that nobody knows about and you know they sold drugs for a while.
They dealt with that in order to get money that nobody knew about and this is all somewhat
confirmed.
It's still kind of conspiracy-ish.
But you know as far as the media is concerned, I 100%, if you're in the CIA and that's your job,
to sway public opinion because we are a democracy,
why wouldn't they do that?
And the way that news used to be, it was reporting.
You had journalists that would just tell you,
this is what happened, here's this, here's that.
And then we got these 24 hour news channels
that got created, I don't remember what the first one was,
the first 24 hour news network.
I think it might have been CNN, if I'm not mistaken,
where it was 24 hours a day news.
Now, how do you have something reporting 24 hour news?
That was kind of insane at the time,
because at the time you had newspapers
and then you have the news come on once a day.
We need news all the time.
So this is when they started creating these shows
where you had these journalists with opinions. So now they would report the news, but
then they also debate and discuss and have opinions. And which ones do you
think got the most ratings? Oh, the opinions, of course. And the more
charge they were or the more divisive they were, the bigger and better ratings
just go up. The ratings were. And so a lot of them kind of went to the left a little bit and I think Fox was like that
counter where they found like, oh shit, a lot of people want these conservative views.
And honestly, I think part of it is they're probably working with each political party
to promote their ideas.
I think that's definitely happening.
But I also think that the public pushes it to the extreme
because who's the ones that are going to get the most,
is it the loud fucking divisive guy,
or is it the calm kind of objective, you know what I mean?
Who's gonna get more attention?
Right. You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, I am fortunate truth.
I mean, we definitely, as consumers, have made that happen
because that's what we told them we wanted to watch.
And so that's exactly what they gave us.
And when we wanted all these charged opinions, because the drama of it and all this shit,
and now we lost like good news.
Yep, and I think what's interesting with new media is it's so hard to control.
You still see extremism in new media.
You actually see it quite a bit. But new media is interesting in that,
the long form is getting more popular.
Like, TV, and I think it's TV was so expensive
with ads and not shit, where they would do sound bites
and they'd edit it to make it sound exciting.
On YouTube, a lot of people are posting full interviews
and full without editing.
And those are the ones that are getting lots of views
because people wanna hear the whole story,
which is different than before.
But, you know, I really appreciate it.
Yeah, that's good.
Anyway, to change topics a little bit,
just read this article two days ago,
that in June, there's a California groundskeeper
who's taking a Monsanto to court.
Oh, I saw this.
What?
Yeah, and he's, they're making a claim that Monsanto
hid the cancer dangers of their glyphosate, you know,
round up, the famous weed killer.
This could be huge.
Like this could be massive.
Now Monsanto and these big biotech companies have incredible amounts of power.
Incredible wealth.
Not just wealth.
Not just wealth, but there are, you know,
these companies work with farmers that plant all these crops,
that get government subsidies.
And so you can't separate, it's hard to separate government from...
Well, it's the new standard.
Because they've created these these seeds that are
genetically engineered to be able to you know resist insects and like all like it's it's reliable
right and so it's like you know as a farmer like it's a tough that's a tough decision a tough
place to be it is but he's he's gonna say hey you guys knew of the cancer dangers and you guys
hit it kind of like I think they're taking a page out of like big tobacco would happen with the you know tobacco agent
You know industry when they were saying oh, it doesn't cost cancer doesn't cost cancer
Even though they knew that there was a a cancer connection
Mm-hmm. So I think that's the direction going if
Mon Santo loses something like this
Expect to see a shit ton more lawsuits going that way.
Oh, for sure, because they're like the leaders in it.
And it's, it will be so disruptive to the way that we do farming.
Mm-hmm.
It will be an interesting thing to do.
Do you think it'll stand up?
I haven't put a bunch of black eyes out there, man.
I, I think, I don't think it will.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't either.
I don't.
That's why I hope. Here's why I don't think it matters. I feel like the market's already going away from that anyway.
Doesn't it? Like, you know, organic and non-GMO and all that stuff.
You know, we say that a lot on the show and sometimes I feel like that's us being in our little bubble.
Yeah. I think that, but I also think they'll find ways around it.
You know, they have so much money and power and influence and, you know, in the farming communities that
and power and influence and, you know, and the farming communities that, like, I'm sure,
like, they have, like, other plans, like, you know,
from where to go from here,
if everything's going in the organic direction.
Well, we're kind of screwed now,
because most, I think I'm like, 70 to 90% of all products
that aren't organic, label organic soil.
Well, no, they just have, they're GMO. So if it doesn't say organic on it,
the odds the good odds are that it has GMO because they've dominated the market now there's
such a huge market share where most crops most corn most soy most cotton you know is GMO and even wheat
it's not GMO sprayed with glyphosate because because now they use it to kind of get it ready faster
or whatever, it's part of the process.
But when they first got introduced to the market
in the, I wanna say the early 90s,
they didn't make up a big percentage.
They were making up the market at all.
They weren't even there.
Then when they introduced them in the market,
they actually were sued because if you have GMO
corn, I don't have to label that as GMO corn.
So when I put my corn product on the shelf next to your corn product, that's not GMO.
The consumer doesn't know the difference and they wanted it that way.
They don't want nobody to know the difference because if they labeled genetically modified
on there, for sure, they would have never achieved 80% fucking 1994.
They would have never penetrated the market the way they did.
And it went to court and the Supreme Court, I think it was a Supreme Court voted that they
didn't have to label it.
The deciding vote was, I believe,
Justice Clarence Thomas, who used to,
I believe used to work with these biotech companies,
a little conspiracy theory there for you.
But if they had labeled it early on,
because anything else you do in the market,
which is kind of strange,
if I put a product together that I patent,
so it's a patented product,
it's my product that I created,
typically I have to label it to separate it
from my competitors.
Like I can't put out like a phone that looks like Apple
and not say that, you know, if I do that
and I don't say it's Apple, I get sued, right?
Right.
Everything else works that way.
GMOs don't.
So nobody knew that they were buying GMO products.
I don't know.
I remember back when we were voting,
like this is a couple, I don't know,
this is a couple of years ago,
but they had that law to reveal whether or not
it was GMO in California,
I could not believe that didn't pass.
Probably because those are scientists
and conclusive on so many things.
That's why I guarantee they leveraged on so much of that.
Well, also the amount of money that comes in from GMO companies and crops, because
they spun it.
Like, I mean, what consumer wouldn't want to know, just have a label on there.
Like doesn't make any sense to be.
Not from a consumer, it doesn't, but they battle it in court off the, off the, us not
being able to prove that GMOs are technically that harmful.
And also the cost.
It's the same thing that we get into debates with people in our space
that are pushing private like an appeal for it.
Like we did the vote passes, what I'm asking you.
So if you look at California,
the Bay Area and the coast,
we make all the money, whatever.
But a lot of California's farm,
massive percentage of California is farmland.
And a lot of it was, hey, if they forced us to label,
cost is gonna go up, we're gonna have to lay people off,
we're gonna change things, and so a lot of jobs are aligned.
Yeah, so I see.
And so I think they spun like,
the consumers aren't winning the vote there.
Right, yeah, it's the employees and the employers.
And I'm not pro, like you have to,
you know, I'm not pro, you have to put labels on things and stuff like that.
I'm anti, like being deceptive, that's all.
So like, if you patented it, which, fine,
if you don't patented, then do it every,
but if it's patented, and you're trying not to let anybody know
you have it, you're playing both sides.
Yeah, come on.
Because they're trying to say, oh, it's a natural product,
that's why we don't have to label it.
What do you mean? You patented it, it you have supposed to be a little patent?
Natural products. Oh, no, you know, it just came up in my feet right now, but dude women accused Morgan Freeman of inappropriate behavior now
No way
Damn they keep dropping like flies. I like to Morgan Freeman so much. Yeah, he's the best voice. Yeah, dude
That's fucking such a bummer. Oh, man. All these
fuckers. Yeah. Literally. Right. Yeah. I can't believe that. You know, it's man. When you're
when you're oh, that was part of that article with Netflix. So, remember when I told you, I think
there's a conspiracy. Remember when I was talking shit about that way back when it so part of that
article is is leaning towards that Netflix is part of the responsibility
of taking down Hollywood.
And that's all part of this.
Why all of these Hollywood stars, all these people are falling because-
I'm really joked about that.
I was like, no way.
Yes.
That's the theory behind that whole Netflix post.
Same thing is that these guys are part of all these people following are these guys that are making sure
that they're following.
And so they're rebuilding a new Hollywood,
which will be Netflix for us.
Our kids' kids, right, won't even refer
to Hollywood anymore as Hollywood.
Hollywood's dead.
Hollywood will be dead.
You know, it's dying right now.
And they're accelerating it right now
by exposing all these people.
And they're building up new stars and celebrities
on Netflix. So maybe that's behind us.
The one thing that I don't like about
or the way people operate is all you have to do
is make an accusation, and then that person's in a fuck,
so I'm not, I don't know if he's innocent or not,
but it doesn't matter.
No, when you've been on that end,
and I've been on that end before,
it's a really fucking shitty position to be on.
It really sucks when you're at a place where people can make an accusation like that and because it's so
damning that it doesn't matter if it's true or not, you now become associated with that and now you
have this, you know, you're tainted. Yeah. Yeah. That's, uh's who was it that there was a football player that college player who got accused of rape,
got kicked out and I believe went to jail and then was released because then the girl came
forward and said, and this is like after he'd been in jail for a few years.
So I lost his career.
All that stuff.
She comes out and says she lied.
Dude.
And that happens. I know.
See, that's what I'm always waiting for.
She should go to jail. Don't you think she's inclusive?
Yeah, definitely. She should go to jail.
Yeah, and I definitely think she.
She tends to hold, I mean, stuff like that is what it sucks
because if, you know, like real victims, I get raped,
like you're fucking that up, you know?
Like by doing stuff like that and you're fucking up
that guy's life
Like deliberately. I'm always suspicious when I see things like the article that Doug just pulled up a minute ago, and it's like
You know inappropriate behavior like what the fuck does that mean what constitutes inappropriate behavior in your eyes like
Yeah, like I wink or blow a kiss at some chick like you mean to tell me like and I did that to eight girls that worked for me at one point, and now I'm posted all over CNN.
It's like this guy who everyone now is associating with like a rapist
or someone like, God, if you're seeing the show, mad men,
like that's like how like business like you used to be back in the day.
It was all inappropriate.
Yeah, and I've seen, I've seen both men and women be extremely,
what would be considered inappropriate,
but depending on the context, you know?
Yeah, I mean, I guess this is the thing,
I was working at a restaurant and got, you know,
molest, my manager, you know, like,
she was just like, you know, grab my ass and like,
you know, grab my junk and, you know, random,
I didn't, you know, do anything about it.
Well, the difference is though,
you didn't feel threatened, I'm sorry.
No, but yeah, I'm not comparing it to, yeah,
somebody that's like a rule. I'm just saying that, like, you difference is though, you didn't feel threatened. No, but yeah, I'm not comparing it to somebody that's like a rule.
I'm just saying that inappropriate.
Like I could, that could be a labeled inappropriate behavior.
Yeah.
Well, I tell you what, this highlights something quite interesting.
And it's a bit of a grand experiment that men and women work together quite a bit.
And what I mean by that is I don't think that they shouldn't work together,
but I think that having a bunch of men
and women work together and then expecting zero
no sexual tension.
That's like, I mean, that's against human nature.
And now you need to have some personal responsibility
of course.
You get control yourself.
And there need to be kind of,
there need to be some hard line,
like this is what you don't do type of thing.
And you can't leave it so much up to the discretion
to the other person because it's like this fuzzy,
like for example, like if a girl likes a guy
and then he says, damn, you got a nice body.
She's not gonna feel, she might not feel like that's,
you know's inappropriate.
If she doesn't like the guy and he says that,
definitely could get him in trouble and fired.
And so what I mean is,
we're in this kind of strange fuzzy,
and I'm not talking about outright assault
or touching someone.
No, that's an excellent point.
And it's kind of not fair for either party in that situation
because you don't know if you're that guy, right?
Are you the guy that she does like me?
And so when we throwing signals at her,
or that be winking or flirting with her somehow,
is not a big deal?
Or she just totally repulsed by me,
and then I'm doing that.
And so she's turned off, and now it's like you said.
The inappropriate.
Yeah, so, and it's just, I mean, it's a growing process.
We have to learn how to work together.
Do talking about working together. I have a story for you guys that's more fitness related since we've
been all over the political page here. So Katrina works with this girl who is pregnant right now.
And we were talking about it last night because she's like, you know, I really feel like there's
not a lot of things that I ask for your help. but I need your help in, but when I get pregnant,
I feel like I'm gonna need your help.
And I'm like, what are you talking about?
And she's like, well, I don't know how I'm going to feel,
and it's very important to me that I stay healthy and in shape,
and that I feed the baby this way, this and that,
and I see a lot of my girlfriends and the pressures they have,
and she's talking about this girl at work.
And she's like, she's this real fit cute girl,
and she's a couple months into our pregnancy.
And the office thing right now is to feed her.
Like everybody brings her donuts and cookies and, you know,
like every day she's getting it.
And she's just like, and she's like,
she's got a sweet tooth already.
So it's already a challenge for her to say,
no, to all that.
And Katrina is telling me, she's like, you know,
she would never be eating this much
if it wasn't for all these people that keep kind of like, and they keep telling her like, you know, she would never be eating this much if it wasn't for all these people that keep kind of,
and they keep telling her like,
you know, you gotta feed that baby,
and they're like force feeding her.
And I think that it's just kind of,
not force feeding her,
it's not, they're not literally shoving the donuts,
but I mean, they're putting,
they're applying that pressure every day
and encouraging her that she's eating for two
and make sure you're eating
and make sure the baby is fed.
And it's funny that we have this culture around that, you know, when a woman is pregnant that she's really eating for two and I was explaining
to her not only is that completely wrong.
You don't need that anymore calendar.
No, it's about 130 to 150 and what's crazy when I told Katrina is that's based off of your
same expenditure naturally where you're at and your movement.
If that changes, that changes too.
Yeah, so if you move less because you're pregnant.
Right, which happens, right?
You get pregnant, your low back starts to hurt,
your fatigue, your hormones are all over the place,
so you probably take some naps, you're tired.
So your knee gets dropped significantly.
Then you're being told by your doctor or your friends
that you need to be feeding and eating more,
and you don't.
Not only do you not need to be eating more,
and if you were actually keeping up your activity level and you're't. Not only do you not need to be eating more, and if you were actually keeping up your activity level
and you're also pregnant,
then it's only about 130 to 150 more calories,
obviously depending on the person.
But I think Katrina's would eat,
you guys are very health conscious,
and you guys eat healthy now.
I think she'll eat even healthier
when she's pregnant because your understanding
of health and nutrition is not, I think a lot of people, they even healthier when she's pregnant because your understanding of health and nutrition
is not, I think a lot of people,
they go crazy when they get pregnant and they eat whatever,
because the relationship to food is not good.
But if you have a good healthy relationship with food
and you look at it is like taking care of myself,
loving my body, whatever, when you add a child to that,
I don't think this is about it.
I feel like it intensifies one or the other.
Yeah, exactly, right?
So I think, yeah, like if you already have bad poor relationship,
like it's just gonna like heightened
because now it's an excuse.
Or on the other end of that, you're gonna be researching.
And you're gonna be like, oh, you know,
I'm gonna get all the essential, you know,
minerals, nutrients and things.
I need, you know, to really help this baby foster and grow.
And that's a really good point.
And I, because that's what I said to her was like,
that's what my wife was too.
I told her, I was like, you know,
I don't see you being like that.
And I know I won't.
I said, I know the type of discipline
that I've applied myself to get on a stupid stage
in a bathing suit and pose for a plastic trophy.
If I got, if my child is on the way,
like I'm on, like I'm like dialed more than I've ever been dialed
because to me that is the,
that to me matters more than,
and it's only nine months.
Like, if I can discipline myself to make the best healthy choices,
whether it be that, to be through movement,
or feeding, or getting sunlight, or whatever it is,
that I can do to help us as a team, like, I'm on it.
Like, I'm gonna be on my game.
And what you eat when you're pregnant,
it influences the baby,
and besides, obviously, how they're developing all that stuff, it also influences the baby, besides the obvious how they're developing all that stuff.
It also influences their preferences.
When they're, and this is, by the way,
I'm not just making this up,
there's science and support this,
but I see these firsthand.
So when I was married at the time when my wife was pregnant,
she definitely was not at the same intensity
when it comes to fitness and health.
Now, generally healthy, generally, state active,
but not like I was.
And so she would just eat whatever,
but when she was pregnant with my son,
the things that she wanted to eat a lot of were vegetables.
She wanted to eat olives, which was kind of strange.
And the funny thing is my son loves those things, right?
My daughter, now when she was pregnant with my daughter,
she went nuts on the bread and pasta, you know,
and I would talk to her about it whatever very difficult conversation to have
with someone who is pregnant because they also don't feel good and all that
stuff and so it sounds like you're being insensitive, right?
But I would say like, you probably shouldn't need as much bread.
It's not good for the baby and it's whatever.
And anyway, oh, you calling me fat?
It's very difficult to have this conversation.
But she did she had a shit ton of bread and pasta
and for sure my daughter has this very interesting
relationship with bread and pasta where she has,
she'll, she has no limit on it.
She'll just keep going until her stomach hurts
or whatever.
So it's funny to see that, you know,
play itself out or whatever.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah. I mean, they just keep finding so many things that factor into that, like,
beginning stage process. So you just, I mean, the more conscious you are of everything,
your environment, your food intake, your movement and all that, the better. Oh, yeah.
I think you said it really well, Justin. I think that makes a lot of sense to me that it's,
it's like what I, how I explain people that steroids. People are like, I hear steroids make you an asshole.
You know, big pregnancy.
Pregnancy makes you fat, for sure.
No, it just exaggerates some of your issues or some of your stuff already.
So if you're already kind of an asshole, then you get on steroids.
You're just a more muscular asshole.
Yeah, exactly.
An exaggerated version of that.
And so I could see if you have a poor relationship with food and exercise already and that's a
struggle and you go into pregnancy, I could see that that just exaggerates that and then it makes it even more challenging. Whereas if you are somebody who is
extremely health conscious going into that, it probably will exaggerate that too. That because now you're not you're not thinking selfishly, you're also thinking about the babies. I can see that. One of my favorite observations too with pregnancy, and you'll see this if you guys end up
going that route is, you know, women, when you see women around each other and they don't
know each other, sometimes it's an interesting relationship, especially if you're girlfriend,
like if you go out and Katrina's dressed very, you know, provocatively and she looks good
or whatever, sometimes you'll see the looks of like, eh, what do she think she is or whatever?
You see girls do this with each other.
It's interesting to watch.
When she's pregnant, every woman is her best friend.
She'll get front of lines, they'll pull out chairs for her,
they'll buy her shit.
Women stick together to take care of pregnant women
and it's so fascinating to why.
I remember we go places and my wife would be pregnant and it's like women would just
walk up to her and just love her and take care of her and as I never happens any of the
time, I would never see it like that.
This is why I think that's why I thought it was fascinating what these people are doing
as far as like they're they don't bring her donuts and cookies during the rest of the
year.
It's right now.
It's almost like a show love.
Right. And I think they don't they don't mean harm by it.
They really think they're doing a good thing.
It's kind of, right.
It's totally misguided.
It's just a misconception that we have in our culture
that when a woman gets pregnant, that she's eating for two,
and so if you're one of these ladies
that are friends with a pregnant woman,
you're like, oh, I'm gonna bring her a cake,
I'm gonna show you.
I bet she'd love that.
Oh my God, so funny.
Everybody also just comes up and randomly touches.
You know, belly, like my wife would just like,
I do that.
People would just come up and touch her,
like all the time.
And she's like, hey, you know, like, hey,
what's going on here?
I helped make that.
Why don't you pat him?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I was like, don't be just giving me any love.
Yeah, give me a little ball time.
Yeah.
Good job with those guys.
A little ball time.
Hey, good game, man.
You're really performed.
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Oh, dude, I'm partial of being a pregnancy. This is the I'm avoiding pregnancy
I'm in the stage right now. Dude, how about the YouTube that Ben Greenfield just did for us the the what's in my bag?
And he put on the the blue blockers. Oh my god. He saw that birth control
Yeah, when he goes out. He puts them on.
My wife loves it when I wear these.
It's like birth control.
He killed that video.
That was awesome.
Oh, so good.
Yeah, I don't do that.
I don't know about this, man.
I don't.
You know, it's funny because the
sanctumies are sold as risk-free,
problem-free, super simple, easy ways to.
And yet, I've heard many a story.
Yeah, problems that had occurred.
Come on, here's a fact.
Okay, here's a fact.
No medical procedure is without proof.
It's potential side effects and issues.
So that's 100%.
And you're going in there and you are literally removing
surgically preventing the body from releasing sperm or having sperm out.
Doing something that has been in us for the entire time of existence that you are shutting
down.
Well, your body still makes sperm, it just doesn't come out.
And so there's a few things that can happen.
I don't want to scare anybody by the way.
If you compare vasectomy to like getting a woman having your tubes tied, vasectomy much safer,
much less potential for side effects.
If you compare it to like birth control,
much less side effects, much less.
So of all the strategies, besides the natural strategies
where you're timing her ovulation,
pull out method and condoms,
it's probably one of the better options.
But when you prevent the body from getting that sperm out, your body can actually develop an immune,
an autoimmune reaction in response to its own sperm. So that's been shown. So you can increase
your risk of autoimmune. So if you're somebody who has already high risk of autoimmune issues,
then your, the odds, and this is speculation, does not really any science to support what I'm about to say,
but in my opinion, if you're already somebody
who has a tendency towards autoimmune issues,
you'll probably have a higher risk
of having an autoimmune reaction to a vasectomy.
Does it affect sex drive hormones and prostate cancer?
You know, here's the thing,
some studies show that it affects hormones.
It may reduce testosterone.
I 100% believe this, because even if it's not doing it physically,
I can see how it could do it psychologically.
Good point.
I mean, so even if there are, I think there could be some possible physical things that
happen there, but even if that is not true, I could see the psychological difference that
it could do for a man.
Just knowing that, just knowing that I can't reproduce anymore,
you cannot fucking tell me
that that doesn't sit in the back of your head.
And what I know now about my own libido
and being a grown-ass man,
that's not a teenage boy that wants to hump everything.
And now that a day at work of stress
can completely affect my sex drive,
I most certainly think that if you take away
the ability
for me to reproduce, and I know that in the back of my head,
I don't know, that would be the same, not the same,
but a similar type of stress that I know my body would feel
if I knew that my bank account was empty
and I had a mortgage coming up at the end of the month.
Like, that's not physically gonna keep me
from having a kid, but you better believe
that it will psychologically, because I know
how my body operates and I respond.
Well testosterone for sure is affected by state of mind.
For sure, you could literally think something
and we can immediately see changes in your testosterone levels,
like most hormones, they can get affected through,
through thoughts, but the science,
for the worst, the worst some studies that showed a correlation
between vasectomies and prostate cancer.
And then other studies came out and said,
okay, there is no correlation.
So that one is interesting.
Hormones, there's some science to show
that it may increase DHT,
which is a form of testosterone that attaches to,
where your prostate has an
affinity for prostate in your scalp and lowers testosterone.
That's again, that's also up in the air.
You know, I don't know.
Would I ever get one?
You both have talked about it.
So I actually scheduled one and was like completely going through the entire process where
they make sure like do you really
want to do this and like you have to you know go through all the literature and watch the videos and
all this kind of stuff and like you know and so I went through all that and then was was trying
to schedule a date to then meet with the physician met with a physician and then we had like a
scheduled date for the actual surgery.
And so you get like a time of like,
I don't know if it's like three months or something like that,
where you have to go.
And then after that, it's like, okay,
now you gotta repeat the whole process.
So, they make you do a whole rigmarole before you.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Because probably to make sure people are certain
when they do a reverse surgery.
Yeah, because you're certain of it.
Yeah, well, yeah, and I think they're just,
it's a legal thing, right, too, on top of that. So, like, yeah, and I think they're just it's it's a legal thing right to on top of that like so
Like we we did all the due diligence like leave it to the back out what happened
I mean what was it? I just I kept thinking about it and I I was gonna do it
But it's just the timing of it with our schedule and everything else and so I kind of just fluffed it off and then forgot about it and
was like I need to do more research on this
to see counterpoints,
because I've heard even some of my friends
that have had the procedure,
one guy, it actually didn't even work.
So he actually got his wife pregnant.
Anyways.
Boy, I'd be fucking mad.
I was like,
so he just said that, right?
And that planted a seed in my head. Like, I'm be fucking mad. I was like, so he just said that, right? And that planted a seed in my head.
Like, I'm gonna go through this
and it still might like get my wife pregnant.
I was like, fuck.
Oh, like that would be the ultimate, right?
When you guys were trying for your boys,
was it, did you guys get pregnant right away?
Was it a process?
Well, so that's the thing, and this is very,
so you're really good at this.
Private information, but yeah,
she was on birth control and it's still.
Boom.
Yeah.
So you guys are a hyper, full-up.
Yes, bro.
Like, your DNA is supposed to mix.
Yeah, so I was just like, we were both floored by that
because it was only a year into our marriage
and it was like, I wasn't like,
we were playing on a couple of years in,
but we just were like, oh, okay, so that's that, you know?
But yeah, it was like, so it's one of the things
I do worry about.
Yeah.
So for me, right after my divorce,
yeah, you talked about this also.
Yeah, right after my divorce, I was like, done.
I'm gonna go get a vasectomy, and that's it.
And then I started dating Jessica and obviously fell in love and
still didn't, still was like I'm not having any kids at all. But you know, it's interesting,
the kind of relationship that we have, she allows me or encourages, you know, self-awareness
or allows me to express myself and I don't feel judged or whatever. And she's young, you know, she's young
and I'm sure she doesn't have any kids.
But really what I was doing is I was thinking myself,
you know, I have so much fear, post-divorce,
of ever being in a situation like that again.
Like is my decision to never wanna have kids again
based on the fact that I really don't wanna have kids ever again? Or is it based on my based on the fact that I really don't want to have kids ever again
or is it based on my fear of the fact that I got divorced after 15 years and you know, and that
whole process like it's almost like when you're with someone and then you have a terrible breakup
like you never want to date again or whatever like your fear of commitment. Now that was a real
question for me like is this really is it really because I'm scared?
Because here's the thing, if you go back 20 years
and you asked me, actually you go back my entire life,
up until maybe six or seven years into my marriage,
if you had asked me at any point how many kids I'd wanted,
I would have always said a lot, I want big family.
And the truth is I love big families.
Now, this isn't saying I'm gonna have another kid,
what it's saying is, I had to examine that
and have a sect of me so permanent.
You know?
And the other side of it is I've always used
the pullout method.
I've never, even while I was married or whatever,
I've never used any birth control aside
from the good old fashioned pullout method. And when I was married, my wife wasn't on birth control, so the good old fashioned, you know, pull out method.
And when I was married, my wife wasn't on birth control.
So it wasn't like, whatever.
I mean, because there's,
where they say there's only like really three days
of the month that you're supposed to even be able
to have a kid, like were you at least tracking her?
Never, it was always pull out method.
I'm good. I'm really good.
I'm really good at it.
So I never fuck up.
Ever.
Only twice.
Only twice. Yeah, no, no, never fuck up. I know Spider-Man. Holy twice.
No, no, never fuck up.
I know I'm really fertile because when we tried for my kids,
it was fast, it was easy.
But yeah, that's my personal opinion.
But if you're in a situation where pregnancy
would be devastating, then it's probably a good option.
I think it's probably a better option than birth control.
I mean, actually, for my opinion, I think it's very much.
Well, I think where it gets, the question is for, especially for guys like us that are now moving
into our 40s and then mid 40s to 50s and then wives and girls are not going to, well,
they're not going to want to get pregnant at that age anymore.
And so it's more about that.
Like right now, it's, I think it's pretty easy for us to kind of go,
and that's sure, back and forth.
And that's because if it were something to happen, right?
If Jessica somehow got pregnant,
or Courtney somehow got pregnant,
like it would not be the end of the world.
Like it would be...
Well, we had an experience like that,
not the long ago where she was late.
Her period for, I think it was a week or something like that.
I think I told you guys. And when she told me, of course, first I was late, her period for I think it was a week or something like that. I think I told you guys.
And when she told me, of course, first I was like,
are you guys fucking terrified?
I was like, you're kidding me.
I just got, you know, a year and a half ago or whatever.
I got divorced.
You know, yes, I'm in love and all that stuff,
but I'm still very scared and only shit would if she's pregnant.
And then I thought about it.
And I, you know, and personally for me,
if she was pregnant, there is no, I would never do,
I would never wanna do an abortion,
it's like that's my own personal view.
I think everybody has their own views, right?
So I thought about that, I'm like, okay, if she is,
and this is just how I tend to tackle situations
that are scary, is I imagine that that's the deal.
Like, okay, let's say she is pregnant.
Well, this is what we'll do.
We'll do this, we'll that.
I do lover, I do wanna be with her.
I think she would be an excellent mom.
So I told her, I said, I came home that day and I said,
look, this is what happened, this is cool.
We're gonna do this with that.
And then she told me, oh, I got my period, actually.
So it was like, it was almost like I said,
like just kidding.
Yeah, it was almost like the perfect thing.
But, you know, for me, who knows?
I don't know.
It's almost like you think to yourself,
like, well, are you the kind of person that thinks
if it's meant to be kind of person,
or are you the kind of person that thinks
that mistakes happen?
And so I've been on either side of that,
you know what I mean? And I kind of wavered between the two,
but yeah, I mean, if you show,
if you have to look at all the birth control methods
that don't include the natural methods,
or the condoms or barrier methods, or whatever,
and you were weighing them out,
I think it's pretty clear that the vasectomies
probably the safest and least likely to produce
negative side effects.
I think that's what we came to conclude,
and that's why I'm still debating on it
because it's like, she's been on birth control
for a long time now, so it's like,
I wanna get her off the birth control, so.
And but anyway, we'll see, stay tuned.
Ha ha ha ha.
Our next question is from Thayer 2.513.
Why do you believe so many poor thought
or behavior patterns in adulthood are rooted in childhood?
Because they are.
Yeah.
That's why the sky blue, because it is.
Because it is, because that's exactly what happens.
I mean, you can't help it.
People don't realize that, you know, 98% of what you,
what you see and hear throughout your day,
every single day, your brain is downloading.
It is downloading and it's storing,
and it's saving it in there.
And when you see,
and you're not even aware of it.
You're not even aware of it.
98% of it is subconscious.
We're only conscious of 2% of the information
that we're downloading and processing throughout your day.
So yeah, you better believe that if you grew up in a home,
where you saw things that
Habitually all the time over and over that was you're you're downloading that information
All the time all the time all the time all the time all the time and so
More than likely you're gonna have tons of pathways that they lead to this potentially bad behavior
That is your default that when you get angry or sad or feared or things that will trigger those moments of what you probably felt when you were 7, 8, 9, 9 years old and don't even remember anymore, that naturally you kick over to that pathway.
And it's very, very hard for people to break that. And the first fucking step is recognizing you got that.
Yeah. You know, say is meaning that you got that I do have these patterns that are that are and it doesn't mean necessarily so I know give you an example of like it doesn't necessarily mean because I grew up in a around an abusive home
it doesn't mean I'm going to go turn around and abuse somebody it doesn't mean that like that's not
what what I mean like least when I talk about these behaviors or patterns that you get from childhood
but I'd most certainly am influenced by them now luckily for me for me, I've made the conscious decision
to make an effort to go the other direction.
But part of what makes me so extreme,
the other direction is because again,
of those pathways that have been formed and shaped
in my brain from my childhood.
So absolutely, it's there.
And I still have to work on the opposite, right?
Because I'm so extreme the other way.
Like I was the type of guy where literally,
if a girl raised her voice to me,
or even like slightly got into an argue with me,
I was deuces.
You're out.
Yeah, I would be living with me too.
You could be living with me,
we'd been together for over a year.
Like I'm packing the bags at night.
Like I was so, I'm so afraid
of, you know, controversy and argument and fights and stuff like that. And some might
even argue there's some healthiness to that. Like I'm so, no, there's nothing healthy
about it because I've had these, these patterns that are formed in my brain from what I
seen. So it doesn't necessarily mean that you're going to be a bad person or because of
your, your, these bad behaviors you have that it's all from childhood. It's't necessarily mean that you're going to be a bad person or because of your, you, these bad behaviors you have that it's all from childhood.
It's not necessarily.
It's not all or nothing.
It's not guaranteed.
You're going to be a certain way, but absolutely it's downloaded.
Well, the brain is, the brain is very plastic.
It's, it's in plasticity meaning that the brain molds and shapes itself based on its,
you know, input, based on input, based on, you know, what's around you, the thoughts
you have, the experiences you have,
and all that stuff.
But it's extremely plastic, or at least the plasticity
in a child's brain is far higher than it is
in an adult brain.
So here's a simple example.
If you learn four languages from birth up until adulthood,
you'll speak all four languages without an accent,
fluently and perfectly.
Now, and as an adult, you can also learn four languages,
but the primary language that you understand,
the one that you learned as a child,
will be the one without an accent.
All the other ones, you'll always have an accent.
So that's just an example of it.
So a child's brain is literally like a sponge
because what it's doing is it's
pruning connections that it thinks it doesn't need and it's solidifying connections that
it thinks it definitely needs. Meaning if it's something that keeps seeing
repeatedly over. It's solidifying. And to break that connection is very, very, very difficult
as you become an adult and may in fact be impossible in some cases, but definitely very, very, very difficult as you become an adult and may in fact be impossible
in some cases, but definitely very, very difficult.
So your brain is molded and shaped during its most plastic period as a child based on your
experiences and then when you become an adult, although you don't lose total plasticity,
you lose a huge deal of it.
So it's no different look, it's like this.
It's crazy to me that we only give credit to this
or we only talk about it when it's like an extreme version of it.
Like no one questions why a child who was molested
their whole entire childhood,
why they're so fucked up,
sexually, all their entire adulthood.
No one questions that because everyone sees and goes oh my god
I can't wonder but that's just an extreme example of exactly that
Yeah, it's there's there's much lesser cases that nobody talks about that
Yeah, like you're in a ship of food or leisure. Yeah, if your parents constantly told you that you you know
You weren't gonna be good at something or you're whatever like and you were told that
Forever like and you don't think that that is affecting you
as a 25 or a 30 or 40 year old grown man or woman,
like you're fucking tripping.
Oh, you identify with your peers that say things about you
or your body growing up.
It makes like a huge impression on your psychological
health going forward, like what you're gonna fixate on.
And there's things that come up too
that are really subtle,
that it's interesting because people around you will notice.
If they know your childhood, they know your parents,
then they'll start to see these patterns come out.
I start to talk in a certain way,
or just funny, because Courtney kind of checks me
and sees things that like my parents do
that like I'll start to like recite or repeat
and I'm like, ah, no, you know, like the whole,
you're turning into your parents kind of thing.
Right.
And then you, you know, immediately that
that sends like shockwaves down, you know,
I'm like, oh my God, no, or it's the good things too.
So it's just recognizing that now is an adult
that those impressions, they really stayed with you.
It's rooted.
Here's a good analogy.
If you have a 23 year old who starts working out,
their body will adapt and respond to the workout
and they'll build muscle and burn body fat.
If you have a 70 year old that starts working out,
they too, their body will also adapt
and react and respond to build muscle and burn body fat.
The difference between the two is the potential,
the capacity, the 23 year old,
has a much larger capacity for those changes
and the seven year old doesn't.
And this is what I mean by the plasticity of the brain
in a child versus in an adult.
And it also to add another layer to that,
those changes when they're made during those formative years,
it becomes very hard to change them back or reverse them
when you're an adult because you lose a lot
of that plasticity.
So you just,
you must have most of the foundation is set in five to seven years old.
A lot of it is.
A lot of it is. If your brain is like building a home most of the foundation is set in five to seven years old a lot of it is Yeah a lot of it is the if your time if your brain is like building a home like the foundation is five to seven
Dude they'll do the they have people will adopt children from like you know
Eastern European nations or whatever right. I'll get just an example and they'll have a child is two years old
Or one year old or even maybe younger than one,
and they'll adopt this baby,
but the child or the baby has a history
of terrible abuse as an infant.
They will still have developmental issues
and stuff later on.
It is like, especially in the early, early years,
that brain is changing and molding
at such a fucking rapid rate
that, I mean, it makes a huge impact. So the things you grow up with, they kind of stay
with you. I think the root, the key, I should say, is to know that, be aware of it so
that it doesn't rule you or run your life. Or so you don't have these irrational fears or irrational behaviors or bad
relationships with people based on experiences in the past that have nothing to do with the experiences
in the present. I mean, I love that you pick this question because so much of this is I think is
matter so much for somebody who's trying to change their physique, right? Whether it be lose 30 pounds or build muscle or like much of the drive towards all of that,
that goal is rooted in something much deeper than you realize.
And when you get to the bottom of that, and that's not demonizing wanting to get in shape at all,
it's fucking, that's a great thing to be want to be healthy and in shape,
but just really understanding where your motives come from.
And I think being able to unpack that is so important.
Dude, I was so, I mean,
like if you call me skinny, you know, when I was a kid,
it's like the worst fucking thing you could say to me.
And it's all because I had developed this self-conscious,
you know, this bad association
with the word because I was called skinny all the time.
And I felt inadequate.
And then I've got this, you know,
super fit athletic dad that I wanted to be like
and I was nothing like in that particular regard.
And so that drove me for so long.
It's still in me.
I'm just aware of it.
So it doesn't rule me anymore, but it's still there.
I know it's still there.
I can feel it. I can see it when me anymore. But it's still there. I know it's still there. I can feel it.
I can see it when, you know, but am I, but does it, does it run me and rule me? Like it used to,
not even close. It, it drove me so much in the past and I was so unaware of how it drove me,
that if you brought it up to me, I would have consciously denied it. Like, what are you talking
about? That's not why I, that's how I do this That's not why I force feed myself. You know, I'm eating healthy. I'm into fitness. When looking back, I could clearly
see dysfunction, you know, the entire time. My relationship with food with my kids, boy, that's a tough
one, man. I was raised where, you know, you show a kid love by feeding the hell out of them. And if
the kid leaves the house without eating, that's your terrible parent. And that was so ingrained in me.
I mean, you know, parents following their kids around with food, my grandma would follow the house without eating, that's your terrible parent. And that was so ingrained in me.
I mean, parents following their kids around with food,
my grandma would follow us around, and she would pride herself
in being able to feed her grandkids more than everybody else.
And people loved it.
Oh, have not enough feed the kids.
She'll get them to eat everything.
And everybody like, oh my god, she's the greatest.
Like, what? I just did this the other day.
We were at my daughter's communion and we were all eating or whatever
and my cousin's daughter finished her whole plate.
And so, and this, nobody's bad here.
This is not a bad thing
because you're doing it on,
you're not, you're doing this with good intentions.
She finishes her plate, so mom makes a big deal about it.
Hey everybody look, she ate everything.
Everybody say yay, the whole table's like, yay, you ate all your food. And I'm like, why? Why are we doing that?
Like, why are we all clapping that they ate everything? Like, if they want to eat, they do,
and if they don't, they don't. You're making it seem like you're good if you eat everything,
and if you don't, you're batting. I was raising that environment.
And the old mindset, the scarcity, you know, back in the days, like everything.
So crazy.
I think learn how to make peace with it and use it to your benefit.
Sure.
I mean, I think that's what an example for you would be talking about like the workout
thing.
I can totally relate to that.
Now, the strength of that, that's why a guy like me can compete at the professional
level, because I have this switch, but I also have the control to get myself out of it.
You know what I'm saying?
To know that like, I don't identify with that guy, but what's dope is I know that I have,
I've got this power that I've been given because of the shit that I've been through that has
now made me into this machine where I can turn it on where I go, okay, everything else,
tunnel vision, boom, I can hit that cheap, cool, right? But the, you know, 19 year old version of
me, which is so good that I didn't find
even competing in bodybuilding until now.
Oh yeah.
Because I could have easily been sucked into that.
It was spiraled.
Yeah, it would have easily spiraled me
and I could have easily caught up
and got caught up in that and identified with that.
But I went into it already not identifying with that
my body and the skinny.
You already done a lot of work up to that.
Yeah, I've already did that work.
It was good for me to experience it like it's 30 years old.
Well, I would be able to say what I say
or communicate the way I had I not experienced that.
Like when I would get clients with eating issues
and body image issues, man, I was really good with them.
But it was because I know exactly what's happening,
what's coming from, I had that experience.
And so I don't regret it at all.
I think it's a blessing.
I think all of these things can be blessings.
But for sure, we're somewhat a product of how we grew up
and our experiences as children.
Next up is Jopini.
Hey.
Hey, hey, hey.
What is the difference between a good morning and a deadlift?
A Jopini, yeah.
Jopini, kind of a wini.
That's probably why you asked.
What's the racist?
This actually a cool question, because I think it's a good question.
I think that they could look very similar to people.
We're working the posterior chain,
but I would use them totally different.
So different, but the feel is so different.
I mean, a good morning is all,
yeah.
It's your knees.
Yeah, your knees are supposed to be,
you know, in a bent, but fixed position.
So you're not getting any knee flexion or extension.
It's all in the hips.
The weight is on your back.
And the reason why I like a good morning,
the reason why I do good mornings,
all on top of stiff, like a deadlift,
which I'm assuming they're talking about, right?
A stiff, like a deadlift or something morning. Oh, I see talking about, right? A stiff-legged deadlifts for some morning.
Oh, I see.
Yeah, because that would be the most similar.
Yeah, it's the posture top.
Because when you have the bar on your back
with a good morning, you have to squeeze the shoulder down
and back, stick the chest out, like you're squatting,
and then bend forward versus a good morning.
Do you know what I really like about a good morning
in comparison to the deadlift?
It's a great way to teach the hip hinging because you have,
because like you're saying how you have to keep the bar balanced on your back like
that, you just, you can't fold.
You can't.
You can't.
Right, but if you did a deadlift, you could round your back, you can fall,
you can do it.
You can contract the shoulders easy.
Yeah.
So it's a little bit, and the cue to hinge at the hips versus bending over is one of the
hardest things as a trainer to teach a client to do. We lose we lose this ability to hinge
slide the hips back and forward and control it through the glutes instead of bending at
the knee and using the quads to go up and down and that's a good point. I mean I always like
I mean trying to reiterate that as they're going to pick it up because your body just like innately wants to kind of help. It wants to bend and wants to bring
those shoulders down and forward and then rip off the ground and you have to fight all these
natural tendencies and so to be able to have the bar placed and put your body in a position where
it puts you in that optimal posture, that's a great teaching tool. I think I think of like a good
morning is like teaching a like let's say we're trying to's a great teaching tool. I think of like a good morning is like teaching a,
let's say we're trying to teach someone a golf swing,
I'm using like the, a good morning is like the half the swing,
like just the breaking of the wrist
and just kind of learning how to do that.
And I'm talking about golf,
and I don't know what the fuck I'm talking about,
my point here, you can look at the poor right?
Well, I'm in, yeah, I was keep going.
You're getting ready to ride a golf thing.
Yeah, we're getting ready.
Just as you're here quizzing me like, oh, that's actually not at all.
You're easy to know about that.
But you know that if you're, if I'm breaking that all I'm doing is I'm working on one
part of an important part of this compound movement that I eventually want to get to, which
is the deadlift.
The deadlift is the full swing.
And I think that I like using a good more and they both are, can be practiced separately. So I think there's a lot of benefit to practicing them
separately. I think there's a lot more benefit to teaching somebody a good morning
first before a deadlift. The deadlift has more moving parts and it's more
challenging to not allow your body to cheat or to go to default bad patterns.
Yeah, boy has times changed. You know, Wasn't that long ago that if somebody in the gym
was doing a good morning, they would have been stopped
by every trainer in there,
and everybody that was working out and say,
stop, don't do that, you're gonna hurt yourself.
Cause it looked bad back then.
You gotta wait on your back and you're bending over,
which, not joking, 15, 20 years ago,
like everybody would say don't do that.
That's terrible for you. Before that, 40, 50 years before that like everybody would say, don't do that, that's terrible for you.
Before that, 40, 50 years before that,
a good morning was a strength exercise.
It was one of the top.
It was a staple in strength athletes routines.
In fact, they would compete,
today if you say, how much can you bench,
that's a very common thing to hear.
Back then, how much can you do overhead press
in good morning, those were kind of two exercises,
bent press and other kind of stuff,
but that was an exercise that people would test themselves.
You can get tremendously strong doing good mornings.
If you practice them right and you train them properly,
one point of thing that myself up to almost four plates
on a good morning, it's a very strong hip-in-ging movement.
It forces you to focus on retracting your shoulder blades,
holding good posture while you bend forward,
bracing your core.
I noticed a lot of carryover from good mornings
to deadlifts and good mornings to squats.
I remember when I started to do good mornings,
I was able to squat more away.
No, it's an excellent way to teach the hip-in-gen.
I think that that's a hard thing for people to understand.
Even when someone goes to squat,
most people are just bending at the knee,
they let their shoulders roll forward.
Good morning is excellent for getting you good
at those things.
Did anybody do good mornings back when you got,
I don't remember anybody.
No, you're right.
When you would see it, you would think somebody is,
Yeah, you would freak out like someone's doing something.
I did it.
I remember going into a gym and I was doing good mornings and like I
would have people actually stop and like random old guys and come over and be like,
you hurt yourself. No, like, like, like really concerned, you know, with the movement
because they just haven't seen people do. I'm like, no, this is an actual
exercise. I got this cramp on. Yeah, I'm on my damn
last episode. Go to the good girl bad girl machines. What about, what did it take?
It's like, what about the Jefferson curl?
That would have been one that would have got to get to you.
Actually, somebody brought that up recently.
We ought to do a YouTube video, Doug, on a Jefferson curl.
That's been on our list for a long time.
And people will freak out over there.
Oh, they will.
You know, it all kinds of hate on YouTube.
Because we're taught, while we've been taught now,
that you're not supposed to ever round your back with weight on it now for a lot of exercises. That's true
But does that mean you shouldn't strengthen your spine's ability to flex and extend?
Of course not. It's a movement. Here's a here's something that's important that you need to understand is
If you can if your body can move a particular way with good stability good balance good strength
Then that's okay. Then that's an option. Then that's an option.
And if it can't, then you should be, one of the goals of trying to get your body strong
to move in all these different ranges of motion and all of our, and the spine, although we
do want it to be stable with heavy exercises like squats and deadlifts, the spine is very
mobile.
Lots of joints.
There's more joints in the spine than there is, you know, in terms of, you know, like
you have one joint in your knee or whatever,
so a few moving parts, right, your kneecap
and your knee and your shoulders got your shoulder blade
and a lot of stuff.
Your spine is a bunch of joints.
I was amazed going through FRC just to see
how people could connect to the spine, you know,
and like how they articulate it.
They have, they can articulate each individual,
you know, vertebrae and like,
how they could just like go through the process the process of with the central nervous system,
like, oh, now this part of my back is activated.
You'd actually visibly see that
as their back would raise or lower.
And it's just like the human body is so much more sophisticated
than a lot of the, we just put red tape all over the place
just to make sure people don't fuck themselves up.
And yet, everybody's okay with CrossFit,
so that's all I have to say.
Yeah, exactly.
One of the best butt building exercises
that you can do that nobody ever does
is a good morning with a band attached on your waist
going behind you.
So it ends up happening is you lean 40 of the resistance
of the weight when you come up,
which a regular good morning hits your glutes anyway,
and hamstrings, hamstrings especially.
But with the band around your waist,
when you're coming up,
now you have the resistance at the top of the rep
where you're trying to squeeze your glutes.
I tell you what, man, I've had people do that
and it's like, they feel their butt
like they've never felt before.
We should do a video, in fact.
Yeah, there's another video, Doug.
There it is.
Doubleing up.
Next question is from very cool Alan.
What if I like working Alan?
Yeah, let's be honest.
Yeah, you gotta say it.
What if I like working a normal job?
Does that mean I'm lame?
Well, you're obviously not.
You answered your own question, Alan.
Sounds pretty Ned Flanters to me.
Very cool Alan.
Yeah, I mean, we didn't use the word lame more often.
No, I love lame, I always use lame. I love lame too. No, I don't think you're lame. And I
think there's nothing wrong with that. I think there's some people that I think that
were born to serve that were okay with with that. And I think there's nothing wrong with
it. Good book, Fred Factor. I used to have all my like front desk and sales guys all do
this. And I think that it's a good little read
that you can find fulfillment, happiness and success
working in a position where you work for a company
or others or serve other people.
Like there's a lot of ways that you can be fulfilled
that way that doesn't necessarily mean
you've got to own or run your own thing.
I think a lot of people, I think there's more people
that think, oh there you go Doug, thank you.
Mark Sanborn. I think there's a lot of people, I think there's more people that think, oh there you go, Doug, thank you, Mark Sanborn.
You know, I think there's a lot of people that think
entrepreneurship is cool.
It's fucking wrong.
Yeah, it's not as cool as you think it is.
That's annoying.
Right, yeah.
Yeah, that is.
It just like, like, breeze right over,
like all the difficulties and the challenge
and then just glorify, you know, like it's this like,
awesome experience.
It's not even cool, everybody. It's not even cool to say entrepreneur anymore. I hate when I
catch myself saying it's still like, oh, I'm a serial entrepreneur. It's like, you know what?
I just that lumps me in with a bunch of fucking lazy ass people, dude. Yeah. Yeah, exactly.
They're too lazy to get a fucking job and work for somebody. So they want to say they do their own thing,
which is really nothing. Somebody with a social media page. I was like, I've got to change this dude.
I don't want to call this entrepreneur's anymore
because he didn't love to.
No, I think this is a good question
because it kind of highlights a problem sometimes
that kids run into where they're sold so heavy
on what you need to do that makes you happy.
And if you're happy doing something else,
something's wrong with you.
Like what if, you know, and here's a great example.
Wow, he's a fantastic example.
And we've done this terrible disservice
to the trade arts in this country, terrible disservice.
For a while there, it was popularized
through the media and TV and movies and whatever
that working with your hands and being in a trade like a plumber
Construction worker mechanic electrician was somehow, you know, not good
And it was better to work in an office get a degree and do those kinds of things and as a result all these kids
Went to college to get many of them worthless degrees
Because that you know that's what they're supposed to do
and this is the way to guarantee whatever.
And these other trades lost a lot of people
when they're good paying jobs.
You can make a shit ton of money
as a plumber and a lacrition.
And if you like doing that,
well then fuck, that's great.
That's a great job.
That's something, it's a great career.
And there's a lot of ways you could take that career,
you could work for someone else,
or you could start, I have a cousin who's a plumber,
he's got 15 employees working in the room,
he makes a shit ton of money,
and that's what he wants to do.
And I think this kind of highlights that.
And here's the thing with entrepreneurship,
here's why it's cool,
because all the stories that you know about entrepreneurs
are all the extreme successes. That's why.
When I say, hey, tell me a story about an entrepreneur
that you've heard.
Oh, Elon Musk, he's a fucking, you know, Bill Gates
and Steve Jobs.
Well, yeah, those are the successes.
You don't know about the other, you know,
million people that tried it and failed miserably,
lost their money and time and whatever.
And it's a very difficult, very, very difficult path.
Just like a lot of paths are.
And some people are wise enough to realize
they're not cut out for that path
and they don't want that stress in their life.
They'd rather spend that time instead of spinning their wheels
trying to become something that they're not,
doing the tagline for this book, right?
To Doug just pause it out there.
How the Fred Factor, how passion in your work in life
can turn the ordinary
into extraordinary.
Ooh.
Dude, perceptions, everything.
That's it, man, if you enjoy your job,
like why should you feel like insecure about that?
Like it's like enjoy that.
You know, you found a job that drives you.
I think that people just like,
who cares about the social stigmas?
Or like, you know, like you mentioned with trade schools
and like I, I was honestly like thinking and debating that and that was one thing.
My main motivation to go to college was just because of the proof of point and that like,
thinking back like how stupid, right?
Like I could have easily just done like something that I was good at.
I was definitely good at working with my hands and like that was a passion of mine at
the time, you know, but I mean, I wouldn't trade anything for the world
for how everything ended up,
but at the same time, that's totally like a valuable skill
that I was taught and would have loved to develop it further.
And I think that people,
I think that that type of a thing with having a skill
again is gonna be so valuable in the future.
It's not what you work, it's how you work. You know, what you do is not that big of a thing with having a skill again is going to be so valuable in the future. It's not what you work, it's how you work.
Yeah.
You know, how you do is not that big of a deal.
It's how you do it.
I think that's what's important.
So, in happiness and success, you know who defines that, by the way, in real life, you
know, define success, you do.
You define your success.
You may find your success living in a motor home
and having odd jobs and having very, very little
material possessions or things that tie you down.
Or things that tie you down and you travel around
and you learn things and you meditate all day or whatever.
And that's your vision of success.
You may also be a business tycoon who's making hundreds of millions
and dollars and you're fulfilled and you enjoy what you do. And that's your vision of
success. You may want to be a stay at home parent and you're you find pleasure and fulfillment
in raising your kids or running the house or whatever. That's your version of success.
That's pretty much the bottom fucking line. It really doesn't matter any other way.
Now, the problem that I have with people
is when people are miserable decide
that they don't wanna do anything about it,
and Rad would rather just sit there and complain
and be jealous of other people.
That's when I have a pro.
Those are the ones I don't like.
Those are the ones that I are getting lumped
into our category.
Yeah, that's how it goes.
Yeah, like you said,
because everyone who was an Instagram handle now
is considered an entrepreneur.
Yeah.
You're a god.
That's my problem.
That's when I have an issue when somebody's doing something
and you know, it's obviously their choice to do it,
but they decided that they don't,
they're gonna fucking complain about it.
They're gonna hate about it.
And not only that, but they're gonna hate other people.
Or I should have got that job.
Yeah, and this entitlement.
Yeah, I had this experience and perception
is everything, I'll tell you what,
I had several of these experiences
where I was in a situation where I was miserable,
and then I kind of reevaluated,
like here's a good example,
I was driving somewhere with my kids,
and Jessica, we were going somewhere,
and we were stuck in the worst traffic
I've ever been stuck in my life.
We were supposed to be somewhere that took,
supposed to be take two hours,
took us six hours to get there.
And we were stuck in traffic,
and of course you're with kids and blah, blah, blah, you know,
whatever, and I was just angry.
I was just pissed off the whole time.
And Jessica looks at me and she goes, look, she goes,
we're driving to be somewhere
so that we could be together as a family.
We're right now together as a family.
We're just in a car.
And it was like a light bulb went off.
And I was like, why am I angry?
Why am I choosing to perceive this as such a negative thing?
And it totally changed.
Same thing is true for doing things around the house.
I never did anything around the house.
And when I finally made the realization,
that way, I live here too, what's the big deal?
And then I started doing them.
I started finding pleasure in doing them
and finding that I could meditate what I did them
or listen to music while I did them or whatever.
It no longer became an issue.
And so I think there's a lot of that stigma of like,
oh, I'm supposed to be making this much money.
I'm supposed to be an entrepreneur. I'm supposed to be making this much money, I'm supposed to be an entrepreneur,
I'm supposed to be doing these other things,
and you know, listening to other people too much.
I mean, I had the same sort of experience as far as like,
I understand that the mundane things,
like, why am I, as I'm doing it, why am I dreading this?
Obviously, I'm doing this right now.
Like, why do I have to put all that extra shit on top of it?
Why not just be like cool with it?
Like I have to do it anyways.
Or get the fuck out.
Yeah.
Say you don't like it, you want to be a part of it.
Just be like no, and like draw a line
or just stop bitching about it.
That's it.
What is it?
It's usually, the thing is never as bad
as the thing thinking about the thing
or the thoughts about that thing.
That's usually, not always, of as bad as the thing, thinking about the thing or the thoughts about that thing.
That's usually, not always, of course,
just terrible shit that happens,
but many times, you know, that's the case.
So, no, you're not lame, man.
You like working a normal job, whatever the hell that means.
I don't know what it is.
I know what it is.
That's pretty big.
I'm gonna, I'm gonna, I'm gonna,
what is a normal job now, it is.
Let's look at this page right now.
But it's very cool, Alan, I'm gonna look up.
I'm gonna look you up. Very cool.
Alan, see how cool.
Let's see.
Before we sign off here, let me see if I can co-sign for how.
I know.
Very, we see what Alan's wearing.
Very.
I almost tell everything.
Cool.
Oh, there he is.
He's just pulling up.
Oh, you pulled him up.
He's a, it doesn't say anything.
He's an Android, he likes calisthenics.
He's a wannabe gymnast. Okay. Doesn't show. He just needs. He's wanna be gymnast, okay.
Okay.
Doesn't show.
He's just gonna make it happen now.
He's a young kid.
The next American ninja.
Oh, yeah, he's for you.
He's super young.
No, you're not cool yet, bro.
You can't be.
You're too young.
You will be cool.
Cool takes a lot of practice.
It takes a lot of time.
Especially if you're a man.
You're pretty much a dork until you're like 30 or something. But if you own that you're a dork, that makes you cool. Or if you're a man, you're pretty much a dork until you're like 30 or something.
But if you own that you're a dork,
that means you're a salier still a dork.
This is like, a salier secret weapon.
Well, that's why I'm cool.
So that's why I'm cool now, because I embrace it.
Yeah, the senior you've raised it.
Okay, so Alan, you could be salier cool right now,
but I think you got a lot,
I think you got plenty of time ahead of you.
He's not, because his name would be very dorky Alan.
All right, and he says he's cool, so he's not. I don't see his name would be very dorky Allen. You know what I mean?
And he says he's cool so he's not.
I don't see his job though.
I try to see what he did for Larry.
Sorry, anyway.
You might get a lot of followers now.
Yeah, there you go, very cool.
So check this out.
A lot of people don't know that we're on Instagram.
That's like our number one social media outlet of choice.
All of our pages, we'll troll you.
All of our pages are different.
They have our own flavors. It's different material and information that you'll find in the podcast.
So I love them DMs.
My page is Mind Pumped Sal.
Justin is Mind Pumped Justin.
And Adam is Mind Pumped Adam.
Come check us out, subscribe, follow.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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