Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 793: How to Strengthen Ankles, Build Knee Stability, the Dangers of Cracking Knuckles & MORE with Dr. Jordan Shallow
Episode Date: June 15, 2018Organifi Quah! In this episode, Sal, Adam and Justin are joined by Dr. Jordan Shallow to answer Pump Head questions about if “cracking” or “popping” joints, such as cracking knuckles or neck, ...cause arthritis or damage to the joints, exercises and tips for strengthening ankles, if the bosu ball and other stability things a good tool for building knee stability and the most ridiculous pieces of fitness equipment they’ve seen. Get our newest program, MAPS Split, an expertly programmed and phased muscle building and sculpting program designed to get your body stage ready. This is an advanced program and is not recommended for beginners. Get it at www.mapssplit.com! Can you imagine seeing Jordan, Ben Pakulski and Alex Viada climb up a mountain?! He shares the story of their recent trip and the challenges they faced. (5:50) Has he gained any skills/knowledge from Ben? (21:24) Being on the internet is a constant first impression. He explains why he likes to flex his intelligence when he first meets people. (22:30) Why it doesn’t sell to say the other thing? The battle inside with most people and why they continue to fall into the trap of their own beliefs in this Age of Information. (27:45) Is there something wrong with the hockey stick of growth? The viral stars and how the place themselves in a niche. (35:40) Is it starting to become cool to become responsible for you? The ebbs and flows of the market, consuming your information and how the pendulum continues to swing. (42:25) The guy’s sell Butcher Box to Jordan. (56:07) #Quah question #1 – Can “cracking” or “popping” joints, such as cracking knuckles or neck, cause arthritis or damage to the joints? (57:30) #Quah question #2 – Any exercises and tips for strengthening ankles? (1:13:35) #Quah question #3 – Are bosu ball and other stability things a good tool for building knee stability? (1:26:59) #Quah question #4 – What are the most ridiculous pieces of fitness equipment they’ve seen? (1:32:39) People Mentioned/Featured Guest: Dr. Jordan Shallow D.C (@the_muscle_doc) Instagram JOHN MEADOWS-JORDAN SHALLOW SEMINARS Ben Pakulski (@ifbbbenpak) Instagram Alex Viada (@alex.viada) Instagram Ben Greenfield (@bengreenfieldfitness) Instagram Mike Chang (@mikechangofficial) Instagram Tim Ferriss (@timferriss) Instagram Jeff Bezos (@JeffBezos) Twitter Matthew Vincent (@ihviiimattvincent) Instagram Joe Rogan (@joerogan) Instagram Jordan Peterson (@jordan.b.peterson) Instagram Cory Schlesinger (@schlesstrength) Instagram Dr. Justin Brink (@premiere_spine_sport) Instagram Related Links/Products Mentioned: Four Sigmatic **Use the discount code “mindpump” for 15% off of your first order of health & energy boosting mushroom products** Paleo f(x)™ - Conference, Events, Speakers, Lifestyle Butcher Box Improve Your Squat Mobility using Bulgarian Squats | MIND PUMP FIX YOUR SQUAT - Ankle + Foot Mobility for Squatting w/ The Muscle Doc THE EFFECTIVENESS OF RESISTANCE TRAINING USING UNSTABLE SURFACES AND DEVICES FOR REHABILITATION Improve Your Deadlift with a Single Leg Romanian Deadlift Focus Session 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. Also check out Thrive Market! Thrive Market makes purchasing organic, non-GMO affordable. With prices up to 50% off retail, Thrive Market blows away most conventional, non-organic foods. PLUS, they offer a NO RISK way to get started which includes: 1. One FREE month’s membership 2. $20 Off your first three purchases of $49 or more (That’s $60 off total!) 3. Free shipping on orders of $49 or more How can you go wrong with this offer? To take advantage of this offer go to www.thrivemarket.com/mindpump You insure your car but do you insure YOU? If you don’t, and you are the primary breadwinner, you will likely leave your loved ones facing hardship and struggle if you die (harsh reality). Perhaps you think life insurance is expensive, but if you are fit and healthy, you can qualify for approved rates that are truly inexpensive and affordable. To find out if you qualify for the best rates in the industry, go get a quote at www.HealthIQ.com/mindpump Would you like to be coached by Sal, Adam & Justin? You can get 30 days of virtual coaching from them for FREE at www.mindpumpmedia.com. Get our newest program, MAPS HIIT, an expertly programmed and phased High Intensity Interval Training program designed to maximize fat burn and improve conditioning. Get it at www.mindpumpmedia.com! Get MAPS Prime, MAPS Anywhere, MAPS Anabolic, MAPS Performance, MAPS Aesthetic, the Butt Builder Blueprint, the Sexy Athlete Mod AND KB4A (The MAPS Super Bundle) packaged together at a substantial DISCOUNT at www.mindpumpmedia.com. Make EVERY workout better with MAPS Prime, the only pre-workout you need… it is now available at mindpumpmedia.com Have Sal, Adam & Justin personally train you via video instruction on our YouTube channel, Mind Pump TV. Be sure to Subscribe for updates. Get your Kimera Koffee at www.kimerakoffee.com, code "mindpump" for 10% off! Get Organifi, certified organic greens, protein, probiotics, etc at www.organifi.com Use the code “mindpump” for 20% off. Go to foursigmatic.com/mindpump and use the discount code “mindpump” for 15% off of your first order of health & energy boosting mushroom products. Add to the incredible brain enhancing effect of Kimera Koffee with www.brain.fm/mindpump 10 Free sessions! Music for the brain for incredible focus, sleep and naps! Also includes 20% if you purchase! Please subscribe, rate and review this show! Each week our favorite reviewers are announced on the show and sent Mind Pump T-shirts! Have questions for Mind Pump? Each Monday on Instagram (@mindpumpmedia) look for the QUAH post and input your question there. (Sal, Adam & Justin will answer as many questions as they can)
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mite, op, mite, op with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
So our boy is here today.
We did a live, you know, people that are not in our form.
This is something that we're going to be doing.
You missed out going forward with our form.
Oh, get in there now, because they are going to be providing way more of
the this is just a way that we're given
back. It's doesn't obviously cost you guys
any more money, anything that that once you're
inside of our form and have access, you'll have
access to this and we've partnered up with some
of our doctors that you guys have heard on the show
before and Jordan shallow happens to be the first one
who's just a biomechanic expert, probably one of the
most brilliant.
That was fucking amazing.
We's a coach over at Stanford, right?
Yes, for the rugby team.
But he was on their live answering questions and we're going to implement that on a monthly
basis for our private forum, but he was here, he didn't have anywhere to go right away
afterwards.
So we're like, hey, what a great guy.
Let's throw you in on a quad.
Yeah, come in on our Q and A and answer some questions. So we picked some questions we thought he would answer best.
The guy is smart, sometimes hard to understand
because he's so damn smart.
So we did try to translate some of the stuff,
but you need to translate it.
He's like beast from X-Man.
He's the blue monster dude with the glasses.
That's good to know.
Right.
But anyway, so the first half of the episode,
the first 60 minutes is introductory conversation.
We talked about his hike with Ben Pekolsky
up to like 12,000 feet or something like that.
So imagine this, you get two behemoths of men
hiking in a waste deep snow up to 12,000 feet.
I wanna be like the guy behind the counter REI
when they're like trying to buy all their gear. Yeah, yeah,000. I want to be like the guy behind the counter REI when they're like trying to buy all their gears.
Yeah, you're right.
You're gonna go where?
Are you sure?
I did ask him about what Pekolsky gave him pre-hike
because I know Pekolsky's like a mad s...
We speculated that he might have
some of the four-segmentic quarter-seps
exactly the same.
I thought I know where the four-segmentic is.
Because quarter-seps are incredible
for increasing stamina and endurance now.
The best source of quarter-seps that we know of is from four-sigmatic, one of the companies
that sponsors us.
If you go to four-sigmatic.four.sigmatic.com, four-slash-mind pump and enter the code,
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Then we talked about telling people what they want to hear and then giving them what they need.
You got to kind of trick them sometimes. We talked about going viral the good way, not the bad way.
We talked about the pendulum of the fitness industry and how it swings. And then we talked a little bit
about butcher box. I can't believe you didn't know about butcher box. Right. I know. I think as much meat as he does.
I'm so excited. I know I'm going to get them on it for sure because that guy does put down the amount of business now put
up to seventy five right now he's trying to push over three hundred oh my god
so he will he will need but your box is gonna love him because he's gonna be
getting the biggest package is great grill is going to weigh as much as the
the beef that's in the
the right but but your box is giving away right now on i don't know how long
we have this promotion for free bacon forever no joke for life.
It's you sign up statement and I love it. I believe it's just this month.
They're running that so I believe it's just this month and they're going to end
that because I think they did this last year. Yeah, that is shut it down because
it got so crazy. If you go to butcherbox.com forward slash mind pump, you'll get
the free bacon for life. $10 off your first order and free shipping.
And then also what's going on with Jordan shallow here at our
so he's got he's got John Meadows with him right so him and John Meadows are hosting a seminar here.
It is Friday July 20th from 10 to 4 p.m. at the mind pump studio Mind Pump Headquarters in San Jose, California.
You guys can find that on his website at themuscledoc.com-forthslash-store.
He also right after that heads down to LA.
So if you're down in the Southern California area Saturday and Sunday, July 21 through
the 22nd, he's in LA at the ultimate performance gym.
So again, find that at the muscle doc.
.com forward slash store.
Excellent. Then we got into the questions.
The first question was, can cracking or popping your joints
like you and you crack your knuckles,
cause arthritis or damage to the joints,
it was awesome to hear.
Yeah, who better than to have a chiropractor?
Exactly.
Give us the 4-1-1 on that.
The next question was, are there any exercises or tips
for strengthening the ankles?
This person broke their ankle about eight years ago,
and now just rolls their ankle all the time.
What is the problem?
The next question was, are both suballs and stability
balls or things good tools for building knee stability?
Like a lift.
Really good conversation, man.
A lot of myths there, so we had to kind of uncover
those myths.
D-bunked. Finally, one of the most ridiculous pieces of fitness equipment that we've ever seen
We had some fun with that part of this episode also this month
Maps anywhere, which is our maps program designed for absolute minimal equipment
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So you were telling us earlier about climbing and doing stuff. I don't want I'm not gonna throw it out there I'm not that's fine
Okay, are you is that something you do? Are you into like going high altitude stuff? No, no
It's just I mean, it's just a challenge like I think we've all and I don't want to say
Transcended it as a way that like we've figured it all out when it comes to weight training
But I think we've figured it out that it's not the only thing. So Ben
Pekolsky and Alex Viotta, we, I don't know how we got it in our heads that we
wanted to try and climb Kilimanjaro. So Alex, that sounds like a binpakolsky idea right now.
Uh, if you're trying to convince me to do a Spartan race and I'm like, I don't know right now, dude.
But it comes down to like, it's just, I mean, life is really hard.
Like, and you've run, you've finished,
and once I was finished with school,
it's like, fuck, this sucks.
I just wanna go back and play in the sandbox,
but for me, it was like, because we just got off,
I mean, I'm fucking burnt red right now.
We were, we were, we were at a barista.
Yeah.
We were about like, I think we were just shy
at 13,000 feet yesterday.
So we climbed Cloud Ripper in Bishop California.
How's your stamina when you do something like that?
It's funny.
Because you have so much muscle.
It's 275 right now.
Yeah, I still would assume that because you have some more muscle,
you require more blood, more oxygen.
And if you haven't trained that way, anyway,
it's got to be kind of exhausting.
Yeah, so I mean, I've been doing
a strict regiment of cardio the past couple months
while actually gaining weight,
because I'm going up.
Are you wearing your gas mask while you do that?
Yeah, man.
Yeah, elevation training, Masro.
Get at me.
I just like doing bane impressions.
I'm really good at it, man.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But yeah, so we did a cloud.
I just like it, because it's just a challenge
and it's funny because you get to see how people,
their personalities come through and their challenge, right?
Like that's basically what character is.
And three of us are all very different.
Like Ben comes from Bodybuilding,
I'm powerlifting and Alex Viotta is like,
he's a kind of a mix of everything.
Like Super Jack, Super Shredded, super strong,
but it also does like double Iron Man's.
Like he's fucking crazy crazy and you see how each
person's personality comes out on the hill because like Alex led the way he was our track are very
technical. He had his he had his like hiking poles and I don't fuck me. I showed up in literally a
beater like you get to see my tan line was all enough to my shoulders because I'm like I'm gonna
fucking get the guns out. Could you imagine seeing this guy in Pekolsky up in the fucking high-out?
There was two fucking Sasquatch.
They probably could even move past.
We came across two people and they're both like, I think they kind of laugh because like,
oh, they're never gonna fucking make it.
But it was funny.
So Alex very, and his personality is very technical.
He's very intelligent, like extremely, extremely intelligent.
And he led the way and he was like, you could see every was calculated and that's how we that's what goes through life and
you put them in the challenge and that's the expression of kind of how he
operates Ben is you know he's very he's very conscious driven he's very mindful
mindful yeah that's probably the best way to describe very discipline and you
could be very supportive and you get like so it was was bent in the back, Alex in the front,
like fearless leader got a bend,
just like, come on, who raw guys, we got this.
And you kind of get to look at yourself and go,
like, how do I respond to this?
And it's just like head down,
don't say a fucking word and just go,
which is totally your personality.
Oh yeah, that was, it was fun because it's like,
I feel like that's very preliminary in development, right?
Like trying to just work hard instead of smart here of Alex leading the way is probably at that
particular endeavor is the best at it like he he made it at the top and he was like guiding us through dude
I was way steep in snow at
13,000 feet wearing fucking like underarm short and hiking shoes. Oh shit. Yeah, like it was it was a reals about abdominal snowman. Yeah
But yeah, so it was just to me it was just like the brute force is a very preliminary way to get through things
And it's like seeing their other two approaches is like definitely looking to adopt more
more of that sophistication like Alex has
or more of that mindfulness.
Now knowing that you went with a guy like Pekolsky,
did he give you anything to increase like oxygen,
you know, uptake or so that like court of steps for example,
is something that I like to use for stamina.
I'm assuming he gave you something like that, because I know Ben probably woke you up
in the morning with a shake of stuff.
What did he have?
So he actually did this keto.
He's in the middle of this 30 day.
Oh my God, that's a keto thing.
He's a keto.
He's a keto.
So it was extra crunchy granola.
Like, it was, it wasn't, because I don't know if that's a carb or not.
But it was, he had this like, what was it?
It was fucking, it got me going.
It was like a, it's a type of car
that's big in the keto world.
You guys might know it.
It starts with a Y.
It's like a super starch.
You'll him bar or something?
No, no, no, no.
Yaka, Yaka something.
Okay.
What is that?
I don't know.
So it's what I could derive.
It's a very complex, all I go saccharide
that won't spike her insulin.
Okay.
So that was like kind of a like a bend thing
That I was like all right and put up just when he hands you stuff you just take it
You just slam it down. I don't want to know why it's wrong if I don't take it
So I'm just gonna take it
But not not I actually read before that beats be it supposed to be good
So I had some of those and that was by my own
Kind of my my own research.
Yeah, for stamina, I would go, like, beads, cordo-seps, of course, carbohydrates, and he, if he had the carbs beforehand, and he was keto leading into it,
that would have made him very sensitive to the carbs, so he probably got some good stamina out of it.
Yeah, he, um...
I mean, considering you guys are so big and you did that, like, you know, that's pretty fucking...
Do you get sore after shit like that
because it's so many reps and so different
from what you used to doing?
Yeah, totally.
I mean, I got and did some work,
but I think the thing, like you mentioned in the beginning,
is you can't train for that kind of elevation.
You can't train for that kind of,
that decrease of partial pressure of oxygen,
and again, having a bit more muscle mass,
and requiring more of that to have oxygen while you're utilizing the muscle.
It was like my hands would swell up.
And but just being at elevation,
and the nice part is it's like,
I mean, I'm 275, I've been as high as 285.
So being out of breath isn't a new thing for me.
So it's almost like the incredible Hulk thing where they go like,
oh man, what's your secret?
It's like, oh, I'm always angry.
So we would stop at like 12,000 feet and ask like,
how you doing?
I mean, wind did obviously, like some of the,
some of the gain was really acute.
Like, the grade was really like,
it wasn't rock climbing, but you were scrambling
a little bit.
How long did it take you guys?
Oh, all told, let's see, we started,
we started at like 8 a.m.
and we got off around 4 p.m.
Oh, shit. Yeah, just bring snacks. Yeah.
Well, that's a thing, man. Like, I brought,
I brought three meals of beef and rice.
I couldn't get time. Fuck no, dude.
At the, the sharpest rock seemed like the best idea.
It's like, oh, if I die, I die.
I'm like, it was, I was crazy, man,
but like the appetite, like being at that that altitude, really messes with you.
None of us, because that was the reason for this trip, was let's see how we respond.
Because you can be the best athlete in the world, put you at altitude, and you can get
altitude sickness.
They're not really...
The only way to train for it is to train in it.
Yeah.
I think a lot of it's vestibular.
Like I think a lot of the,
because I look at it almost like C sickness or motion sickness,
where it's like there's something with that partial pressure
of oxygen that plays with like the vestibular calcular operatus
and you're kind of in the year, you're in or year.
But luckily we made it to about 12, 5, 13,000 and we were fine.
You know, Kilimanjaro's just under 20.
That's about 19, 19, five.
How are you gonna prepare for that?
Just more, just more.
Just more what you were gonna do.
Yeah, so the hard part with yesterday was,
the climb was difficult.
But the descent is, the climb is hard on your CV,
like your cardiovascular.
The descent is hard on your joints, on your body.
So, fuck me in.
We made it to like this,
like we kind of lost the trail out of the start.
Like, fuck did anyone see a different trail head?
Like we started like trending off course a little bit.
And then we intersected with this,
with the trail we should have been on.
And then it kind of went into one up to the green
or brown lake and then we went up around green lake
and then up into cloud river.
And then there was an old lady there with her dog.
So it immediately kind of gave us like, she was mid mid 60s and it kind of immediately gave us some perspective like
immediately. Yeah, she's like, oh, it's more in gentlemen. And she's like, oh, you guys took the hard
way up. I'm like, oh, fuck yeah. All right, Wicked, we're going to take old lady route on the way down.
So we keep going and then she passed us and we end up with the lake, she's playing with her dog.
It's like, fuck me in. All right, everyone got to sack up your fellows.
Let's go, and then we get to the top,
it's just crazy silent,
I've never heard a lack of noise like that.
And especially in California,
things that are that aesthetically pleasing,
there's usually-
There's a lot of people.
But it's hard to get to.
So those same, a lot of people are usually pretty lazy,
so it's different than going to Santa Cruz boardwalk, I'm like, oh, that's nice. If you took the 20,000
people out, did you have the energy to take some shots? Did you take any? Yeah, we took
a couple. You know what? I think there was a collective thought of like, we're doing this
for us. We're not doing this for social media. Good for you. Yeah. And it was cool like
to be around people who like agree with you just and we you. And it was an unspoken thing.
We're like, hey guys, we're gonna keep this off social media.
We just kind of enjoyed the time, normal people,
or I don't even know if that's considered normal anymore.
But anyways, on the way down, oh fuck yeah,
we're at the end pass, we're gonna take old lady way down.
Dead tired, I've eaten shit a few times,
Ben took a great couple great couple of tumbles
The last two miles the old lady walked two miles on a drainage pipe
What it was a fucking 18 inch drainage pipe and two miles for two miles on the way down literally So so here we're thinking like oh fuck yeah, we got this geriatric trail on the way down
It's fucking old lady walked two miles up on a drainage pipe with her dog,
and that was the easy way.
So I was on the way back down, and it's like,
so are you going down the drainage pipe?
Yeah, we can, because we're thinking like,
all right, this is gonna be like a couple feet,
and then like we go around the corner
that it's like just smooth trail all the way down.
It was a fucking drainage pipe,
and we're talking like 30 foot drop on the right side.
Like you're looking at 70% grade jagged rocks,
30 foot drop to the bottom.
If you slipped off the strain, it's probably, dude.
Like it was a level of like mindfulness that like,
it's dire consequences.
It kinda had to be like that.
It's kinda cool that happened to you.
Yeah, but it's like, I probably would have felt 10 times more,
or I mean, it didn't fall at all.
I probably would have felt like 10 times over
if I was just on a regular trail, because I was just throwing my legs in front
of me up to that point. But it's like, all right, you got to find another gear here and you need
to be very present for the next. I was just going to say nothing makes you present like that.
Oh, yeah. I did a hike in Kauai and there were definitely whole periods of parts of this trail
where you have to be entirely focused on what you're doing.
You can't think of anything else and it's at that moment, you don't
we have a time to be afraid because you're just kind of focused.
Yeah. Afterwords, you start to process it all and it's what they call it, type two fun.
Yeah. We're after you're done. You're like, oh shit, that was awesome.
But while you're doing it, it's like, you don't want to be a part of the
Napoleon Polycoast forever. Yeah. That's a real trail.
Yeah. That's your time at. You're talking about the cul-aued.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
We just got back from Kauai.
I got back from Kauai and got in a car and then went to Bishop.
Oh, shit.
So, wow.
Yeah, it's just been traveling like crazy lately, man.
But yeah, that high altitude training,
you know, it's the adaptations to altitude happen pretty quickly.
So, if you train an altitude for like a week,
your body adapts pretty quickly,
but the adaptation goes very fast in the opposite direction.
So fighters learn this the hard way
where they would go train at altitude,
then they'd come back a week before the fight,
and they'd fight and they wouldn't get
that much of a carryover.
It's literally last, last I can't bear.
Explain why you wouldn't train with an elevation mask,
because I know there's gotta be people listening.
Elevation masks, the adaptation you get
from elevation mask is you may strengthen your diaphragm or your ability to breathe in
Maybe but it doesn't reduce the it doesn't improve your your blood oxygen rate
You're not carrying your your red blood cells
You're not increasing the number of them when you do it. So it's not at all like training it altitude
Yeah, it's increasing sucking in harder. It's what you know it's
Decreasing the total amount of air you can breathe in,
but air is an oxygen, right?
60% of air is nitrogen.
So the oxygen is such a small component.
So it's relative versus absolute ratios
that you're dealing with.
So I mean, the original stimulus that they thought
was increasing your ether of poeatin, right?
Yeah, EPO.
Yeah, but it's like, there are better ways to do that.
If that is your end goal, right?
So I think, yeah, it's just another fucking,
it was just another gimmick that came out.
I just think the aesthetics of it made it really appealing.
I don't know, that's so funny to me
that that would make it appealing,
like wearing a mask on your face when you're working.
Well, it does make your workout hard.
There's a market for making your workout harder.
You can invent something that does nothing beneficial but make your workout hard there's a market for making your workout harder You can invent something that does nothing beneficial, but make your workout harder. Yeah, that's a good way and people will buy it because
It's hard. Yeah, dude that workout kicked my ass because you know while I was working out
You know I got this fucking I just put duct tape over your mouth to go work
Okay, so you have you guys heard about and this is new to me and this is you know weekend with Ben Fakowski open your eyes
And this is new to me and this is you know weekend with Ben Fakowski open your eyes to
Taping your mouth shut when you breathe
Wait while you breathe no, sorry when you sleep. Oh, yeah
Fucking blown oh, actually I was with Ben when he got introduced to that right so we were at paleo effects And they help a sleep apnea. Yes, they brought it over and it's like this clear plastic
that goes over your lips.
And it gives you like this little hole
to kind of barely breathe through.
Dude, that freaked me out.
I feel like guys buy that shit for their girlfriends.
No honey, it helps you trust me.
Put it over your mouth.
I can't talk then.
Yeah, but you want good sleep, right?
Yeah, put it on your mouth.
I have a whole gag, like a normal.
Fuck, it's wrong with you.
No, but I didn't notice the adaptation really quickly.
Like what we, Bishop was about,
or we stayed in mammoth lake,
which is about like 8,000 feet of elevation.
And to the first night I was trying to sleep,
it was like breathing through a straw.
Like it was there, but you woke up the next day,
and you're like, oh, okay, all right, yeah.
This feels all right.
Oh, interesting.
Then you go up to this.
Well, you know that carryover,
I mean, I know, you know, more red blood cells isn't gonna make you necessarily
stronger, but when you're lifting, if you're especially
if you're a big guy, those little adaptations can definitely
contribute to, you know, better lifting, better working out.
Sure, man.
I mean, I would have loved to have been able to track like
hematocard and in transit period of time to see what the
adaptation is, because it's just, I mean, if you guys ever
heard of Bjorn Reese, Mr. 60.
No. So Bjorn Reese, Mr. 60.
No.
So Bjorn was like a, he was a cyclist before Lance got popped with doping.
Okay.
So the reason they called him Mr. 60 was his, his hematicate levels when I tested him
were religiously around 60%.
Which is like the viscous, like the viscosity equivalent of like having maple syrup in your veins.
Oh, because he was on the dope.
So like he was on the e-view. He was injecting himself e-peel like you're running syrup everywhere.
Yeah, it's crazy.
You just wonder how much, like how far you can push that, but then also like relative.
And get a heart attack.
Yeah, and that's the risk, like the risk benefit ratio for something like that.
But I definitely noticed whatever, and I'm assuming that's what the adaptation was, was
more, or even maybe an increased carrying capacity of the red blood cells I already
had.
But it was night and day, from literally, and upon intended, from what I went to bed to
what I woke up, that eight hours of just being at that elevation, totally different
person.
Yep, yep, yep.
That's interesting.
Any habits that you picked up from Ben since you hung out with him?
Anything, anything do you turn you on to?
It's more the process that, and with him and Alex, it's more the process of how they think
and the levels in which they think is pretty neat.
Because I think if you can gain skills
that allow you to think deeper within a vein
that you already know,
then you can actually use those skills of depth of thought
and apply them laterally to different concepts.
Rather than most people trying to be,
and we've talked about this in the past,
where most people are trying to be a mile wide, but they're an inch deep.
I think if you can go a mile deep on something, you can start to transfer, like that's Renaissance.
That's Da Vinci, that's, you know, he's an artist, he's a poet, he's an inventor, but it's
because he's can, if you, I'm reluctant to use the word master something because that's
a mastery has become like the bay of 2018. It's just fucking over you buzz word.
But if you can really try and dig deep and that's where these guys go.
And like I get accused of being overly complicated with things, unnecessarily,
I'm buying in detail.
I know.
You know what, man, part of it is when people look at me, they think I'm stupid.
So I'm like, all right, I'm going to throw a 17 syllable word at ya.
And then once we've got that, then I'll start getting it. So this is a critique I have for you I'm like all right. I'm gonna throw a 17 syllable word at you and then once we've got that then I'll
So this is I this is a critique I have for you that I really believe that
I can totally relate to this that what we have this you know for someone meets you
They see your big buff guy right away. They're gonna think you're a dumb guy
Yeah, but you don't I think you you you cover that within the first five minutes of it meeting me
I mean once you once you meet you for five minutes and you talk like you're not dumb
They're for sure. You're not dumb. They're for sure you're not dumb. Like, you're good. So I think if you
just start like that and then you kind of shift to like this, you dumb it down a little
bit after that, then I think you can earn that you can still keep that same respect level.
I just think with the internet, it's like I'm always having a first impression, right?
Every time someone comes across a YouTube video, it's like, I need them to know that this
isn't a YouTube fitness channel, right?
Like that's not the goal of this.
This is a little bit, and because I,
the thing with me, and this is a little bit of an aside,
I don't, if you have the skill set to tune a Ferrari,
you can do an oil chain on a Corolla, right?
That's within your depth of your scope of practice,
where it's like someone who can only do an oil change
on a Corolla can't tune a Ferrari.
They can't scale up.
So for me, it's like, if I can take someone from a 600 pound bench
to a 700 pound bench, you want a bench 135,
all right, kid, give me four weeks.
That's kind of thing, where it's like having that ability
to scale down is always easier to scale up.
But there is a certain level of,
I'm reluctant,
because I don't really believe in the word
emotional intelligence,
but there's an ability to read a room
when people are starting to glass over
with the anatomy stuff.
Like, okay, the hip bone attaches to the knee bone.
Got it?
All right, let's move forward, shall we?
So, yeah, it's,
well, the thing I appreciate a lot about guys like Pekolsky
and people like Greenfield even Ben Greenfield is, it's not so much about,
and I love hanging out with guys like that
because they're not talking about what to think
as much as it's just how to think.
There's a difference there.
And I think people of that caliber,
it's the way that they think that allows them to dig deep
into different subjects and to be open-minded
about different things.
And the thing about any field,
I don't care what field you're in,
the longer you're in it, there's's a curve where you feel like you know everything
and then you can stay in it longer and you start to realize you don't know shit. And
then you start to stay in it longer and then you start to realize, whoa, there's a lot
more, some of that weird stuff or whatever, I'm going to start digging into that because
I feel like I covered all this other stuff and it just gets deeper and deeper and deeper
the deeper you go. I think it's just how it's how you source your information to like they they exist very much in the realm of like the esoteric where the majority of people who
pursue Yeah, more information are looking for like the checklist seven habits of highly successful. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right, right. You've fucked in. This is like, I have a big sticking point. And we always end up on the topic of podcast culture.
Just like the books that are coming out,
like the four hour this and this.
And it's like, that's, and I think that's a distillation
of very intelligent people.
But it's like, I wanna read the books
that these people read, right?
Like, I don't wanna fucking read, you know,
how to become a billionaire in three easy steps,
because that's not applicable. I wanna know the to fucking read, you know, how to become a billionaire in three easy steps, because that's not applicable.
I want to know the intangibles and where you,
like, who you read that inspired you to come up with this.
Now, I don't want to just read these three steps
and it's like, well, yeah, no.
Yeah, but you as a thought leader though,
and it has to know, you need to know that
you're the minority with that thought process.
You've got to know that as a thought provoking business leader now
that, and that's something that we are challenged with all the time.
It's one of the hardest things about this business right now is
keeping that integrity, and because I think we all believe the same way too,
I remember when we were first doing like our lead magnets and sales funnels,
it's like, fuck dude, how do we get these people's attention?
Because we have something really good for them that we can
Provide and we know we can help them and change their lives, but we know damn well that they we've got 15 seconds in this little feed
It's like that's one of the hardest things to do. Well, yeah, because I mean you don't want to be the fucking Mike Chang six pack abs
Thing but if that gets your attention, it's the old bait and switch right if get them in the back of the van
Then we're fucking good, right? That's kind of cool
But it's just the hard part I think
but I think the big problem is whether it's it's opportunistic or people like I would be one
thing I'd almost have more respect for people that are putting out these books that if their goal
is alright easy sell people don't people don't like to learn right every time fuck every time
I hear someone reference like stoicism
and there's some Marcus Aurelius Instagram quote,
it's like, okay, let's take a step back.
You can read Marcus Aurelius and put this out,
but that's the idea of thoughts and actions.
I would rather read someone like Primo Levy.
You wanna talk like someone who embodies
the tenets of stoicism in real time, you know, courage, justice, temperance.
You can work these things into his own life and then pervade that.
I would learn, and I would suggest that majority of people would learn from reading an
experience like that, then reading like actual, like just Marcus really is, or reading these,
you know, these checklists for your life, success, and all this stuff. So I just think there's such an echo chamber
of personal self-help and Instagram entrepreneurial shift
where it's like, all right guys, let's peel this layer back.
Let's go layer.
But you know one thing that was, I mean,
a huge paradigm shift for me years ago,
I started to realize that,
because I would see this ridiculous shit in our industry,
but then you look at all industries and you see a lot of ridiculous shit.
And you get angry and you think, why are you guys selling people this stuff or why are
you saying what you're saying?
And you would get angry.
But then you realize, that's what the people want.
Like here's a quote, I'll read you a quote from Thomas Sol, who's one of my favorite economists
of all times.
And this applies to our industry, but he's using it because he is an economist and he talks
about politics a lot.
And he says, the fact that so many successful politicians
are such shameless liars is not only a reflection on them,
it's also a reflection on us.
When the people want the impossible,
only liars can satisfy.
So when we look at our industry like fitness
and we look at all this bullshit that people are putting out,
why is it all, why are they putting it out?
Because this is what people want.
I wanna lose 30 pounds and fucking one week.
I don't wanna do any work.
I don't wanna do any, I wanna take a pill,
or just tell me one thing to do
that's gonna change my life forever
that I'll never, that's gonna be super easy.
And so that's what they keep getting.
They keep getting a bunch of bullshit.
And it's like, it doesn't sell to say the other thing,
unless you can really make,
unless you can really appeal to the psychology
of the individual, or start to get them to understand
the why, and that's a tough, that's a long way.
You also have to look at the emotional side of it too,
that if something triggers you,
where it fires you up or pisses you off,
and it changes your emotional state,
you have to ask yourself,
what is that inside of me that causes that?
Because it's normally rooted in some sort of insecurity.
You touched on it a little bit ago that,
you've got this chip that you gotta come off
really, really smart, and that's,
Brahms on your eye now, everybody in this room
knows how brilliant you are, but really what that is
is your own insecurity of feeling that.
A hundred percent.
And the more that you get comfortable with that
and understanding that and then learning how to,
okay, yeah, that's how I feel,
and that's what justifies me doing this,
but is that the best approach?
And do you have the ability to rethink that
and put something out different?
That's really challenging to do.
It takes a lot of experience, maturity, open-mindedness,
to be able to look at yourself and go like,
this passionate feeling I feel about this,
even touching on the, you know, Stoics, Stoics,
like there's good stuff in there.
And I think that if you have the ability to read it digested
and then apply it in real world,
I think that there's some value to that.
I don't think it's something that you knock.
I just think that, and that feeling that you have to want to knock that, I think, again,
that's rooted in your own insecurity of looking at another really brilliant mind or intelligent
people that are putting out information.
So I'm always about, like, okay, whenever I feel like this, feel really passionate about
it, stepping back and going, like, oh, fuck, okay, am I getting trapped and stuck in my
own insecurities, my own beliefs, and that, and it's, oh fuck, okay, is this am I getting trapped and stuck in my own,
my own insecurities, my own beliefs,
and that, and it's limited me from growing beyond
where at this current level that I am at right now.
The problem I have in with the quote that you mentioned
is the market that we're in and all markets do this,
because every time you're selling something,
you're selling a solution, but first they sell you
the problem
Right, that's that's the issue. That's the issue that I take up with like when I see these fuckers come up We've cracked the code like I think you might know who I'm talking about. It's like really really you and your 14 inch quads
Crack the fucking code get the fuck out of here, but it's like you're creating a problem and you're instilling it
It's fear-mongering and this is whether you're selling some bullshit fucking body program on Facebook or whether it's like you're creating a problem and you're instilling it's fear-mongering. And this is whether you're selling
some bullshit fucking body program on Facebook,
or whether it's your wolf blitzer
in front of a 20-foot fucking hologram on CNN,
it's predatory, and that's what I don't like,
because it's feeling of being known.
And if you get educated, you liberate yourself.
You do, and I do believe that you have a responsibility
to present things with integrity
and with accuracy and with honesty.
But I also believe that there's a massive responsibility
on the side of the consumer.
Because the reality is the power is in the numbers
of the consumers, where the ones that drive it,
where the ones that drive the market.
Because look, tomorrow, if everybody today stopped following all these stupid pages. They'd all disappear and the market would change and we try to deliver
What people are asking for one of the one of the things I love most about the age of information that we live in is
I'll tell you what you've been in fitness. How long have you been so different today than it was?
For oh, it's so different people as much bullshit as there is out there today
People are a lot smarter than they were 20 years ago 20 years ago. I used to different. People as much bullshit as there is out there today, people are a lot smarter than they
were 20 years ago.
20 years ago, I used to have to sit down and convince women that if they did a fucking
weight training exercise, they wouldn't look like Doreen Yates the next day.
I had to sit there and convince them.
Today, way less of that conversation.
Just something, and it's so basic.
Our business is an example of this.
To the average person who's on the outside looking in
and you look at our, quote unquote, social presence right now,
we look like we're still a small business.
But when we meet and we talk to some of these people
that we're picking on right now that sell a lot of this bullshit,
they've got millions of followers.
Our business is doing two, three times the revenue
that's here because we're taking care of our people,
and that shit gets out nowadays.
And we're in a different time.
See, 15 years ago, you couldn't Google search
Yelp real quick and find out all these reviews and stuff.
So you may be able to pull, you may be able to gimmick people
and pull some shit off for one or two dumb people.
But even those dumb people, they go through it,
they find out it doesn't work for them,
it's bullshit, they get hurt, whatever the make case would be they go right away
They get out there and they put that shit out there and that travels and that eventually poisons a business
Three years ago, you know
We we didn't episode and we first started on the myth of the small meal myth and what I mean by that is like the extreme
Like I got eight times a day to burn more fat and build more muscle and we did a whole episode on why that was a myth
And it's completely I mean this, this is 100% like,
today, three years later, it's totally accepted
and not a problem.
Three years ago, we did that episode.
You know how much pushback we got from people?
Telling us it was, we were full of shit
and that's everybody knows that that's super effective
and it's the best thing to do for your body
and we're like, actually know this zero science
supporting eating six to eight times a day.
If you guys looked at your statistics outside
as far as conversion rates outside the
United States?
This is something that I've started to notice is that the fitness industry and the market
in the United States is much different than in other countries.
I can go to Australia for a month and I can sell out seminars across the country.
I can charge a decently high price for it in the States.
I can do one for free and like no one would show up.
I just, this is the most competitive market
for fitness by far and it's just competitive.
You also appeal to that market just like,
we appeal that market because you say fuck a lot.
Is that what it is?
You know what if you said it's a fun guess.
That's a big one, they love that.
They love us out there because we,
I think we are like that, you know.
I think every other market other than the States
can draw a difference between notoriety and credibility. I think every other market other than the states can draw a difference between notoriety
and credibility.
I think that's the biggest thing.
That's what you touch on with the followers.
It's like, you can have social capital all you want, but if you can't transfer that
to revenue, then you're not worth shit, right?
I think in the United States, if I had half a million followers, 500,000 followers, I would be able to sell these
seminars out where they look at the initials, the work experience, the information that
I put out in other countries before they look at how many followers.
Because that's how I was described.
It's consumer trust.
It's a personal stock market.
That's what following is.
So what are you trading at?
It's essentially the equivalent of how many followers you have.
That's consumer trust in the market in the United States.
That's how I look at it.
So the hard part is how do you build a high converting following?
How do you have that thousand real followers?
Impact people.
What how do you blow that out?
Because some people blow that out to a million followers.
Because you were trying to sell. The question is, do you even need to? Because some people, like, how do you blow that out to a million followers, right? Because you were trying to sell them.
The question is, do you even need to?
But just, I mean, more is always better.
Well, that's not true.
So yeah, disagree with that.
I think that, I mean, I remember telling the boys
when we first started and we were, you know,
we kept talking about how we were gonna see this hockey
stick in one day, we were just gonna go viral and blow up.
And I was scared of death of that
because we didn't have the systems in place at that time.
Sure.
And sure, if all of a sudden, mine pump went to a million listens per episode and
just quadrupled real quick like that overnight, well, yeah, the business dollar wise would
quadruple where we're at right now.
But then I would look at it like, oh shit, well, we don't have the things in place to capture
or to retarget, to keep growing that.
That could have been $100 million that only ended up being $10 million dollars.
But do you think people that make that acute hockey stick spike
are worried about that in retrospect?
I don't think they're worried about it,
but they should be.
But would you rather have to deal with an exposed factor
than not deal with it at all?
So I would rather, I would rather deal it with it,
because here's a thing, if once you do,
in this business, if someone comes across
you on the internet or podcasts, whatever,
you really only have that one or two times to capture them and then you're fucked.
Sure.
So, if you come in and my website isn't dialed in, I can't answer your question, my customer
service is terrible that way, your program isn't legit.
If all these things are shitty, they come in one time and that's their experience.
Even if you evolve the business later on and you get better, they may never come back to you.
I think the point you're making is there's nothing wrong with the hockey stick of growth
if it's if you're prepared and ready for it and most many times people aren't.
And you end up getting here, the other thing too is like...
Because they become so focused on the spiking part.
Here's the chicken in the air.
Yeah, the algorithm. Can I hack the algorithm for Instagram or YouTube
or all these ways to gain followers?
Imagine if you could snap your fingers and make everybody fit and ripped all of a sudden. and I hacked the algorithm for Instagram or YouTube or all these ways to gain followers. What's like?
Imagine if you could snap your fingers
and make everybody fit and ripped all of a sudden,
would they be in the same position
as if they took time to learn their bodies,
grow, work with their bodies, learn nutritional?
They wouldn't be in the same position.
They might look fit and ripped, but there's not.
Now with business, you see a lot of businesses
crumble under their own weight
because they'll, for whatever reason,
something about them goes viral
and they fucking disappear because they don't learn anything
because they didn't have the time to do so.
But I mean, like, speaking in the space of podcasting
and influence it, having like a,
what was it, the fairest put up something about
some kind of mackerel fish he eats or whatever the hell.
And fucking whole food sold out across the country.
Here's whole foods whose supply chain is probably on par,
like it was one's bazos take over, you know the supply chain is probably on part like it was
Bay Zos take over you know the supply chain is on lock right and may fucking sold out
do you think the macro company is going to have fuck. We're done. Oh right or like you
guys have Vincent on the show Matt yeah right so when Rogan had that kick today in the
dick cup just sit in there like how many fucking units probably flew off the shelf he
guaranteed you back or you could definitely make the argument
that it's a good problem.
Yeah.
You could definitely make that argument.
But it's a better problem than never growing.
Sure.
But I'll tell you what, let's say we exploded
within the first six months and then we get called
by Rogan or someone big and like come on our show.
I don't think we would have done well.
I don't think we would have been ready.
You know what I'm saying?
And then that could have potentially killed us.
I think most of these kids that you see explode
on social media aren't ready.
They're not ready for a real business,
not one that's gonna last 20, 30, 40 years.
Sure, they're ready to collect revenue.
Sure, they're ready to buy clothes from China,
put their logo on it and sell it for two times a price
and make a couple million dollars really quick.
You can see by the decisions they have to make
after that too.
Like, they're always trying to recreate
that viral sort of like product that just doesn't exist.
Like it got you there, but you didn't have any systems
or any kind of business behind it to actually capture those leads.
I just think yeah, that that viral is always niche.
And then your type cast it's like 100%.
We know people and it look, I know people in social media
I'm not gonna name names, but who got really popular doing crazy wild, you know, insane shit and guess what?
That's all they can do now. They can't do anything else. How do you convert that and how does that last for?
15 years 20 years. We got to start with a broader base like one
This is gonna sound really weird, but Ed Sheeran, his illegal downloads for his one album,
Sir Pass, Michael Jackson's Thriller,
for all time most illegally downloaded albumable.
Wow, I didn't know that.
But if you think of his skillset as a musician,
he's never came out in a single genre, right?
So his bass is so broad,
that's all the snatch here, and I don't give a shit, right?
I enjoy his music, but his music is so different.
It appeals to so many people. It took a while for him to build his bass, but his music is so different. It appeals to so many people.
It took a while for him to build his bass,
but his bass is so broad now.
And that's the same thing with fitness,
is like, if you're bench press and chicks
or like, doing back flips and dead lifts and stuff,
it's like, guess what?
When you try to branch out into our space
and deal in more, maybe thought provoking topics
in fitness and more depth and detail. We're already here.
We can branch from the central point because I think it's funny because I forget what I was listening.
It was one of these lacrosse ball foam roller type people who sell you nonsense.
They sell you accessories rather than giving the education and the tools to assess your body
and just implement accessory movements into your training.
Where it's like they use the phrase
and it really stuck with me.
It's like we're creating products that liberate people.
It's like, you know how you liberate people,
whether it's fitness, fuck yeah.
Fucking right.
And that's drove me nuts,
because I'm not gonna name it
because it just came to me who it was,
but it's like every time there's some trumped up
lacrosse ball or a Thera gun.
And you wanna deal with scar tissue?
Put a three-quarter inch jigsaw blade.
That's the only way you're going to change a fucking actual structure of that muscle.
Every time you got a wine cork at the end of your fucking dremel,
you're not doing shit.
But they can sell it because they sell you a fucking problem and they give you the solution.
And it's bullshit.
And they'll tell you that they're liberating.
It's like, no, you're fucking not.
You're keeping them under the hammer and sickle you're not teaching them anything. It's such a hard-wired formula to sell a product
Which is something that again
Bit like bringing it back to the consumer that that's a that's a over hill battle for us is trying to be educators to overcome
Well sure because you're selling them on the problems. You know what your problem is you're fucking stupid
I got a solution.
You can tell your listeners that they're gonna buy shit.
Well, we don't say it like that.
I'd rather convert a higher percent
of a lower amount of people.
I don't know.
I think the people you convert,
the people who are gonna be smarter enough
to realize that they don't know it all.
Just realize this.
If you have a problem, it means you don't know enough.
Because if you did, you wouldn't have that problem.
That's really the bottom line.
I don't care what your issue is.
I don't care if it's fitness, health, your life,
your marriage, your work.
If you're in a situation where you're like,
this sucks, this is a problem.
Realize you just don't have the right information
to solve that problem.
Or you have the information,
but you don't have enough information to learn
how to implement it,
or the wherewithal, or even just the guts to do it,
all of which is just a level of ignorance.
But then you're telling people that they have to take responsibility
for themselves.
Yep, right.
Good luck selling that in this world.
Well, actually, it's funny, you say that,
there is this change in the culture that I'm starting to see.
I mean, I really follow things like politics and you look at some of the things that are
now popular on YouTube and videos and articles people are reading.
There is this shift in the culture right now where that's starting to become cool.
It's starting to become cool to tell people to become more responsible for themselves,
to be the change you want in the world.
That's something that's starting to resonate with people.
And I think it's because we've been sold
the other bill of goods for so long that leads to like,
shit, like what do I do?
Life feels like there's no purpose.
And so I feel like that old message, that old wisdom,
starting to come back a little bit.
It feels that way at least.
Yeah, yeah, but so we're high top sneakers.
It's EBS and Flows, man, you know, it's like,
it's, what are we gonna say?
I'm talking to everyone out of stuff.
What?
I'm talking to dad socks over here.
Yeah.
But it's like, and this is the thing,
when you start to look at the cyclical reiterations of ideas
over time, it's like, are we just,
who's going to be the poster the, the poster boy for the,
like what Gandhi said that before, like, you know, be the change you want to see in the
world. All right. Peter's in the new Gandhi is that the 50 year iteration of this from
1947 to liberation of India and the Commonwealth, you know, to Peter sin fucking what 60 years later.
I think he was Michael Jackson's man, the mirror.
Oh, is that what it was?
How is that much of the change?
But yeah, so for me, it's just like,
then you start to see patterns of this
and then, okay, is it just gonna fall away
side again only to research?
That's interesting.
It's interesting that you say, like, Evan and Floek
is I've always looked at it like a pendulum thing, right?
So I guess you're right.
I mean, it swings one way, we go super extreme
and then it's like, oh, fuck, this is killing people.
It's not a real idea of swing that. Yeah, right? And then we come back the other way.
Then we'll probably go to that extreme and then come back again.
And I think in the arena, in the fitness arena, there's no, there's no more concentrated
market of that pendulum effect to ying and yang like that in such a short period of time.
Because it's like, it's just hyper-extremes. Like we talked about earlier,
like, you know, you guys are at paleo-effects,
like, where would that been 20 years ago, right?
Who you never were so, but now it's too far,
rain and in, rain and in, rain and in, holy fuck.
What's going on?
Please put shoes on.
Why are you burning that shit?
What's going on?
Why are you eating?
Don't eat that.
Like, that's the way I look at it now, where at some point,
at some point it'll centrate,
but then at some point it'll veer right again.
I don't know, it'll just cost you.
It's definitely swinging hard that way right now.
It's crazy that we, I remember we went to Paleo
what two or three years ago the first time,
and I remember walking in there and it's being like,
it's so opposite of a bodybuilding convention.
But also the same.
But so same, it's so much the same.
Very, very similar.
You know what I'm saying?
It's like you traded out the pre workouts
and the stringers for blue blockers in Jesus' handles.
Like it's literally-
And bone broth.
Yeah, it's the same thing, but different.
It's really unfortunate because I, and I believe
there's a little bit of good in all of it.
You know what I'm saying?
There's something to take from all these different camps.
I just don't understand.
But I think I wanna believe
that people like all of us and the message
that we all kind of shares, I wanna think
that that's gonna become more popular
and people are gonna get wiser.
I guess. They are.
I think it was easier to fool people 10, 15 years ago.
Anytime, through our human history,
when information has become more accessible to more people,
we've made incredible advancements.
Now that doesn't mean along the way,
bad shit happened and there was a lot of pushback.
But for sure, I mean, the internet is,
it's like the printing press, but times a trillion.
You know, I mean, when the printing press was invented,
you get to understand,
the only people that access to information
were nobles and the church.
And the way you got your information was through
what they said to you, because they were
the holders of this information.
They were the gatekeepers.
And so through their voice, right, imagine how long it took like cities to get on board
with shit that was like stupid or bad ideas like back in the days, who would take like
a year for to travel from like one side of the country.
The original best-selling book of all time was after the printing press was Mark Ropolo's
books on his travels.
And that must have blown people's fucking minds to read this book about these weird people
living across the world and animals and what the hell is going on and maybe things are
little different.
You know, it's largely believed to usher in the Renaissance.
Now we have the internet where holy shit, man, I can access any, I can access all of the
recorded information that we've ever had throughout all of human history for almost free
That's insane the problem that we're having is that there is that
Curation I was yeah, you your information is being curated well
This is what we talk about so I believe in the future. You're gonna that's what you're gonna need to be able to do
And we talk about this on the show all the time, that you know, you will need to look for the opposing argument
and everything that gets sent to you.
If you don't, you gotta be very careful
because if you, and that's,
it's a marketplace for information,
just like anything else.
Because you like this, you like that,
then all of a sudden you're being fed,
all the things you already like
and all the things you already agree with,
which we know how dangerous that can be.
Well, not even just being fetid,
your ability to find a counterpoint,
if that counterpoint,
because it's all privatized, right?
Like the biggest publishing house,
you know, it's not Gutenberg, it's Zuckerberg, right?
That's it.
So when it's a burger.
He's, okay, we're not gonna pick it up.
Okay, we're gonna raise that in.
Yeah.
But like, you know,
I'm not trying to make it.
We're gonna make it.
Just the last name.
What?
When you're like, you know, when you see, like, when you see things like YouTube, you know,
taking down videos of, you know, I have patients at work and they tell me about the landscape
of the political culture within the company
and it's like they're very proud of it but that some of that pride might be based in ignorant
conscientiousness.
Yeah, bias, right?
Yeah, but bias is, I don't think it's a bad thing.
They're not able to discern bias and novelty, which is something that I think a lot of people
have a hard time differentiating with.
It's like, you're just hardwired if you see something different to just have a latent,
because it's like, oh, that's new, right? But I think if these are the,
if they're going to lengths to override the human experience online and not be able to
give you or withhold the information of some sort of counterpoint, I really think that
that's a scary process. I think that's always been a problem, but I think it's less of a problem,
far less of a problem today than ever,
because there are so many channels in ways
to deliver information and things can go viral,
and they're almost impossible to control.
It's very difficult now to control information.
If something pops out, like information,
look, here's a good example, okay?
A company like Uber or Airbnb would never, ever, ever, ever be allowed to exist had they
not existed because of technology faster than people could try to put a lid on them.
They would never be allowed to exist.
There's no way in hell the taxi cab fucking cartels or the hotel cartels would ever allow
those businesses to flourish.
The problem was they flourished, it's, because of technology, they explode it fast
and they, but he could fucking figure out what to do about.
Now they're trying to put limits on them.
Good luck.
And that's how, look at, when 3D printers go fucking live,
like just wait till 3D printers are cheap
and very, very, in very advanced,
try to control guns when you can print your own at home.
Good luck. It's not gonna happen.
Not gonna happen.
And this is with everything.
So is it a good or bad thing?
Here's the way I look at it.
If mankind is destined to succeed,
it will speed up that process.
If we're destined to fail and implode,
it will also speed up that process.
It's up to us.
I'm a firm believer and let us do what we're gonna do.
Let us be free. Let the information
about so far. It's been a fucking great thing. I just think I mean we're all speaking from a place of
When we look to get educated on topic we'll go down the necessary rabbit holes to find the education
I think the majority of people their news is just
curtailed for them and presented in their you know things you might like on YouTube
So it's very much it puts them on their own
echo chamber exactly. So I think
the the the issue is, you know, comes down to the individual, it comes down to the consumer, whether it's a consumer of fitness products or a consumer of information.
It's doing the due diligence, but like you said with fitness, it's like, give me that pill, give me that thing that's gonna
fix me in 30 days and it's with it's that same mindset, which is the base of the market.
Whether your market is a news channel based off sensationalism
or whether you're selling a fucking jazzer size
or whatever the fuck is the same thing.
It's speeding up in the question.
I know, it's actually, it's speeding up.
We have questions.
We can go get to that for a second.
It's speeding up the process.
I'll give you two more examples, okay?
You look at the gay marriage.
This is a great example.
In 2008 was so unpopular that if you campaigned
for gay marriage, no way you would have won office.
In fact, Obama and Hillary Clinton both campaigned
and in their campaign said, no, I believe marriage
is between a man and a woman.
Four years later, four years later,
you would not get elected had you said that.
That's within four years. Look years later you would not get elected had you said that that's within four years here
look at marijuana legalization
the fastest
public swing we've ever seen in in in a topic like that to the point now where we
have the president is a two-year republican
literally saying i will back
federal decriminalization of marijuana
movements like this used to take decades like the women's
suffrage movement decades, civil rights movement
decades. Now it's like five or ten years and this is technology.
It's going to speed up. Very fast. That's why I think these, so when I see these people
doing things like we see in our space as far as all the gimmicks, like it used to get
me mad, it doesn't make me mad anymore because I, it puts a grin on my face. I'm like,
that means that's lots of opportunity for people like us. Because it may be a little bit slower process for us right now,
but we're in this for a long haul.
And those people might make it quick to a million dollars
and make that quick buck.
But eventually what happens is those people that go through
all that they find out, it's a gimmick.
And then just like, they just take them,
they have to fuck up first.
You're smart enough because you've done the research,
you're willing to do the homework.
You know what you're doing? You want to educate yourself first. You're smart enough because you've done the research, you're willing to do the homework. You know what you're doing?
You want to educate yourself.
They're not smart enough to do that.
So they buy into it, they buy into it,
they find out it's for the day.
Here's a good example.
Look what Amazon did.
In the past, 10 years ago, if I wanted to buy a supplement,
I would go buy the reputable looking brand
or by the athlete that was on the cover of the magazine
that was selling it.
Today, I don't give a shit about any of that.
For the most part, I'll go to Amazon and I'll look at the fucking ratings.
Oh, 175 ratings, five star.
This is a good one.
I think I'm gonna buy this one and take it.
Will you, though?
Will you?
You're more conscientious than that to put it in your body based on the public opinion.
Oh, I'm talking about the average person.
100% because that's curtailed.
That's just as if YouTube is taking down
counterpoint videos, Amazon is rising
this public court of opinion and presenting this to you.
That's people not doing their homework, right?
I think there's some, but that's the thing.
There's way more information in that rating.
There's more information in the rating
that I can look at my Uber driver on my app
than there was in some agency that said
that this person is safe, or if I go to a restaurant,
oh, it's got an A rating versus I go on Yelp and I see,
but it's got three stars,
because they said that there was a cockroach
in their food, whatever.
Like, it's definitely, the problem with markets
always has been an information problem.
How fast can information travel?
That's always been the issue,
because by the time information gets around, people have gotten screwed.
Well, is it like how people knocked Wikipedia when it first came out, right?
Yeah, I think it comes down to publication bias though. If I have a nice, and I've had
some nice meals, I'm not going to go, I don't think Thomas Keller needs a paddle in the back.
If I'm going to go to French laundry, I'm not going to give him five stars. It's the
fucking guy who like didn't like the the waiter because he was Italian
and you know, he's frontal. Yeah, he got pissed off with the pineapple in his pizza and
all of a sudden, but it's and that's what I think is a big issue is the publication bias,
right? Like because and but you know, if I'm in a small if I'm in Bishop California and
I need to place which was the case yesterday. Sure. Yeah, fine, fine, whatever. You know,
if I need to find pancake somewhere, I'll go down that route. But if someone's doing an
interon me, you better believe I'm not I'm not leaving that that verdict
subject to the public court of opinion. Because people, especially
disgruntled people, there is no more entitlement in this country than
someone who's pissed off and has spent money. So it's like every
there's that in the incentivize other business owners, they have to rate and
review in order to then receive rate and review.
Yeah, well, don't even get me being a small business owner
in the Silicon Valley and dealing with Yelp
on a next-a-daily basis.
Oh, you know what the next level of that is gonna be, right?
The next level of that is gonna be,
you're gonna go to a business and rather than looking
at random strangers who rated that business,
you're gonna connect through Facebook or whatever
and see all the people that you know that have gone there
and what their ratings are I would be way more
I would be even another level of accuracy. I would appreciate like I have a friend of mine. He's my movie critic
If he likes a movie, I don't go fucking see it because he's got shitty tastes
So I know that I could at least interpret you know
Value in that I knew exactly all the all the people that are connected to me what they like or didn't like exactly
That would be more trustworthy than just random 500 people.
I don't like this hotel,
it's probably super fucking expensive.
I'm not gonna lie.
But superplush and comfortable.
Questions, let's do it, Doug.
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What I was gonna ask Jordan was,
Ben and his kiddo, Ginnig diet and how that's been going.
And if he knew that if he was using butcher box and not
and if you're familiar with butcher box yet.
Both questions keep it real short.
I have no idea and I have no idea.
Oh yeah, okay.
So butcher box is cool.
It's grass fed and grass finished beef
that gets shipped to your house.
And they could out the middle man.
Super quality.
Super quality. You get a wholesale prices like triple-A quality type meat.
Super dope.
It's like a subscription model and they eliminate the middleman
and the super super.
You would actually really like it.
Yeah, as you can say, off-air,
I'm probably gonna pick your brand about that.
Yeah, I know.
I'm putting it back lately.
Well, you know what we'll do is we'll give you the code.
What is the code?
Dumb pump.
Is it just mine pump?
Yeah.
Butcherbox.com.
Do they forward slash mine pump?
All right, why don't you use that Jordan
so you can get our discount?
Right.
What a friend.
I got it here, right?
So no, no, you'll like it.
Bro, we'll make so much commission off of him.
This guy's
I wanna kind of that.
That's bullshit.
We don't make commission off of him
so it doesn't really matter.
We should've done with that.
But you save a bunch of money on it
and you get bacon for life, bro.
Oh, yeah.
You get life, that's what you're really.
Well, the next time that you get a life,
I'd be pretty fucking sure.
You've got a lifetime supply of it.
But he's got three months to stop.
They just started that promotion.
I'm like, oh my god, that's like the best deal ever.
I'm fucking bacon for life.
I'm sold just on that alone.
Exactly.
Bring on the questions Douglas.
I know I have a microphone.
Oh, he doesn't get a mic because we're going with
four and he didn't have to read himself.
Yeah, all right.
First question is from Tom J18.
Can cracking or popping joints such as cracking knuckles
or neck cause arthritis or damage to the joints
before you get into this.
We got to start with the professional cracker.
We got to start with here.
Well, here's a deal.
I feel like that's what my diploma says.
Yeah.
I want to whack him in cracker.
I feel like we should say something before he does,
because he's obviously this is his realm of expertise.
Now, my understanding when a joint makes a sound where it pops,
it's like pulling a suction cup off of a mirror, right,
or a window where there's pressure that's being created.
You pull it off, that fluid goes into the space
that you created, the air comes out,
or the gas comes out, and it creates a pop.
So that's all that's kind of happening.
For my understanding, when a chiropractor does this
to your spine or your neck, and I think
it might have been you, Dr. Shalow, that told us this, which I thought was absolutely brilliant.
When you're adjusting someone, it's allowing you to move and articulate small areas or small
parts of joints that weren't moving, they were kind of frozen, and that release of the
ability to move and all the muscles were in.
I used to think it was just air in the joints.
I used to think it was air in here.
It's a gas.
Yeah, yeah, that's what I thought.
Let's hear it, dude.
Okay.
Did you see the back of your head
with that way you rolled your eyes out?
No, no, no.
It's all the-
It's called the Dr. Sharon.
No, I was very-
No, Dr. Shal is my sister.
I don't know if this is me working right now.
What about-
No, no, no, you're good.
I just think it's such a common misconception.
It depends on the joint, too.
First off, the arthritis thing is no.
From the research I've read,
based off longitudinal studies,
go to an old folks home asking
how many people have arthritis,
show hands, how many people crack their knuckles
their whole life, show hands.
You're not going to see that correlation
as direct as your mother would tell you
when you're five years old crack,
you're knuckles saying you're going to be
arthritis when you're older.
Now, the physiological effect, the popping,
especially in the spine, which is kind of the realm
of the chiropractic deal, and although we do adjust
extremities, which I think is a little bit more,
that's more, extremity adjusting is actually
more physical alignment as it pertains
to the adjacent position of two bones in the function
that they're gonna have as they work kind of symbiotically
together to go through like broader ranges of motion,
then the actual spinal adjusting, where I think spinal adjusting is way more, the popping
is almost a, it's kind of contemporaneously.
It occurs in simultaneous with the actual effective mechanism of correction, where it's
not, the pop doesn't necessarily mean good or bad.
It just happens sometimes with the...
Yeah, I think it's more so activating
a stretch reflex and understanding kind of the
the neuro musculature of your spine itself.
Like when, you know, the multifidus
would probably be the most widely used
even though that's kind of fairly rare.
Like if I said rotatories or intertransversary eye
or some of these deeper layer,
deeper layers, seventh layer back muscles
that are integrated by part with your spinal cord
that you can't consciously control.
If I said flex your multifidus, you can't do it, right?
You can put yourself in a position where that reflex loop
of that dorsal spinal nerve can activate that muscle.
The problem is, and the adjusting the cracking
of the back
and neck is when you crack your own back and you rotate it, you're using large muscles
to create an end range, and then you're creating an imbalance where you're actually biasing
a relative motion, a counter motion between two of those adjacent vertebrae, when it's passive
and I do it, it's completely inert and that stretch reflex is activated without being. So you're trying to activate a stretch reflex.
And now, by the way, when you are doing these adjustments,
is there research that shows,
because I think I read something that shows that there's a localized pain relief
that happens from, it's almost like your body's relieving or releasing pain relievers
at the site of the adjustment,
almost like when you foam roll
and you feel immediate relief.
From what are they called?
No sewersceptors that get active?
No sewersceptors, but I think to the proprioceptors
and stretch reflexes, it's basically,
whatever the intervention is,
you're more or less from a functional sample
you're trying to have an effect on the nervous system.
Always.
But think of the locus of motor control, right?
It's prefrontal cortex creates this motor pattern
against put out through, spinal cord,
through ventral spinal nerves.
So if I said flexure, bicep, or flexure quad,
that's ventral spinal nerves through the front
of the spinal cord.
Then there's a reflex sensory input loop through.
And then you kind of have this like a posterior column
that's gonna calibrate for like proprioception
and position in space and then.
So let's feed back to the brain.
It's feedback to the brain.
So if it goes brain to brain to muscle,
muscle pulls tendon, tendon moves bone,
ligament, stabilized position, bone,
why would I then start with bone
when I can go right to muscle? Right? So when I address, when I address extremity issues, I can,
you know, you have hip issues, I'm going to go right to you, the muscle first, because that's the,
it's one deviation closer to the, to the nervous system than the bone. Right. There's no
osseus nervous. You're taking out the middle, man. Yeah, there's no osseus neural junction. It's my
own neural, right? So if I can get access to that nervous system
and the perception of that nervous system
from the muscle that I'm gonna try and do that.
So the way I think about it too is like,
and I'm gonna use a very simple muscle
people can understand,
because I mostly understand what you're saying,
but it's very complicated.
And some people listening right now,
right now might be like, what, okay, so I'm gonna use
a shitch, and I pop my knuckles or not.
You don't like that.
No, I'm gonna use a very simple, simple, basic,
the bicep.
Sometimes people would come in and hire me
and work out with them, and they'd have a sore,
the front of the shoulder would be sore.
And I'm just gonna sit, I'd have to do an assessment
and all that, but then I would establish,
like, oh, you have some inflammation at the bicep joint,
or excuse me, the bicep tendon,
which goes over the front of the shoulder.
Perhaps.
Stretch out the bicep, and many times,
immediately they would have a little bit of relief.
Now, the way I think about it is,
the bicep might have been tight due to poor function,
for maybe it was overused, whatever.
It's in that kind of constant state of tonus
that might be happening from the central nervous system.
That stretch gets the CNS to relax a little bit,
and that's why they feel a little bit of pain relief.
When you go deep into these deep, deep muscles
that are, like you said, layers and layers deep,
muscles that we can't really consciously control,
getting them to stretch and move,
like good luck doing that,
especially if you're locked up
because you have poor recruitment patterns.
Then you go see someone like you
who, besides all the other things you do,
because just adjusting someone,
I think it's a small piece of really what you do,
but the adjustment gets those muscles to move a little bit
and stretch a little bit, which tells a central nervous system,
chill the fuck out for a second,
and they get the pain relief.
Am I doing it justice?
Am I explaining it in a way that?
Yeah, yeah, okay.
Basically, these muscles that we're trying to affect
are there to
protect your spinal cord, right? Because they just run
from bony prominence on like they run from bone to
bone in your back from vertebrae vertebrae very small. So
if you know, one vertebrae moves through a plane of motion
relative to its other too far, whether it's flexion
extension or lateral flexion of rotation, like the majority
of people that come in my office, it's never a good story.
Like when I get you like the very stereotypical,
like I threw out my back thing where I slipped a disc
and it's like, all right, sure,
but we don't have time for that.
But it's what's happened is they've moved in a position
usually in all three planes of motion once.
It's, I was leaning over to pick something up,
I twisted to the side and then I rotated,
it's like, okay, there's a muscle that's getting stretched.
Each time you move that.
But it's accounting for is if this bone one moves too far into bone two, in the middle
of bone one and two is a spinal cord that we really would like to go through life without
impacting because what we like walking and controlling bowel and bladder function.
So these muscles are like the second they perceive that stretch,
fuck, don't move any more.
Yeah, so it's like, you need to, you know, just like,
Wow, that's interesting.
So is that, when someone comes in,
complaining of slip disc or whatever,
is that more common that it's more related to that
than it actually is?
Well, correct me if I'm wrong, Jordan,
but many times, you know, slip disc or bulging disc,
many times they're asymptomatic.
Yes, thank you.
Okay, fuck best.
So I hope if someone's listening to this
and they know someone that has a disc issue,
because people wear disc issues like a fucking scar,
they carry it with a badge of honor.
Yeah, and it's like, oh, sorry, I can't slip disc.
It's like, dude, what, like we're just walking upstairs.
I wonder how many people would have a slip disc
if you just MRI'd everybody.
You probably find 25%.
25%, yeah.
And out of that 25%, how many of them would actually
feel pain?
Oh, it'd be 25% that are asymptomatic.
But here's the thing.
So if-
So, no symptoms.
So, if we think of it, thank you.
If we think of it, think of it this way.
Okay, so, very commonplace to herniate disc.
I'm like a subtitle.
So, a very commonplace to herniate disc is in your lower back, right?
So most axial force, we don't have any ribs.
You know, if your core is weak, you're not going to have any functional stability,
air quoting functional.
So often you'll see either at the apex of a curve, so L3, or you add the convergence of
a curve, L5S1.
So we're like, you know, the sacrum curve bends one way, the lumbar spine curves, another the thoracic spine, and so on and so forth. So what'll happen?
So imagine a nerve leaving a spinal segment through vertebra to innovate a motor function,
right? So superior gluteal nerve innervates the gluteumetius, right? Which is a lateral
stabilizer of the hip. What do you mean by it leaves it? It prioritizes that.
No, so out of that particular spinal level, and I want to say it's L4L5, L4L5, I'm going
to have to brush up on this and someone call me out if I'm wrong.
I think you're right.
So if that nerve leaves and goes to that muscle, so if we're talking purely about the glute
meat, which is a lateral stabilizer of the hip, it's the nerve that controls that muscle. Yeah, yeah, that's a good way to put it.
What happens if we think that glute meat is muscle stability, it has to stabilize the hip.
It's not a muscle of strength. So every time you get a hip circle or a booty band or do something
like that, you're not training the function of that muscle correctly. Anatomically,
base-off origin insertion, resisted abduction
and external rotation will, in turn, base off for your anatomy textbook, that'll be the
action of the glute. So we're getting it stronger. Cool. But, so say the output of that nerve
is 100%. Right? And in a non-pathological, your disc is exactly where it should be.
In a perfect world. In a perfect world. But you're training, either so you're not training your glute meat at all, or you're training it with this resistance where it should be. In a perfect world. In a perfect world. But you're training either so you're not training your glute meat at all or you're
training it with this resistance where it needs to be stable.
The actual function because you're training it to be strong and not stable at best is say
50%.
Give an example of that.
Sure.
Okay, so if you're using a hip circle to do like monster walks with and you know you
don't have low back pain. You're really only training
that muscle, the glutamine, the hypothetically 50% of whatever it's capable of.
That's because of that. That's because of the adaptations are very specific. So to use
another example, if I train my bicep to hold the weight stable for a long period of time
in this isometric contraction, most of the adaptations can be isometric. If I train it
to curl and extend, I'm going to get some isometric. If I train it to curl and extend,
I'm gonna get some isometric strength,
but not max out, I'm not gonna maximize its adaptation.
I guess the point I'm trying to get at,
and this is a bit of an aside,
is there's a difference between strength
and stability as it comes to stimulus adaptation.
Okay, like, do you speak Italian?
I do.
Okay, so if I put really,
okay, if I put you in like Barcelona,
could you order lunch and get on a train?
So sure, Latin-based languages have, there's a period over,
there's a crossover.
So a lot of the research on like, and I'm going to use the
glute meat specifically because it is so inundated
into fitness culture and buying,
exactly.
Right, I'm glad you're going this right now.
Yeah, so glute strengthening is a huge market,
because they think that's the ticket to like low back pain.
Where?
Forever thing.
Yeah, exactly, which I think is done because the glute
meat works more around helical axis, around a y-axis. Where gravity comes straight down. So the bicep is a great the glute meat works more around a helical axis or round a y axis where gravity
Go down gravity comes straight down
So the bicep is a great example because that works directly in opposition
It has a it has a it has a necessity to be strong
So if we think about it if sal didn't work out so not working out and then having back pain
So the heaviest thing that you have to lift is your own body weight and then you just want to get back to a baseline of normal
That's the equivalent of sal going to Barcelona ordering lunch getting on a train. He's not fluent
He's not he's not physically literate in the in the analogy, but he can get by but now imagine Sal is Sal
right Sal is like he's pulling 500 pounds beltless no strap in the garage
He's trying to get jack fuck you. He's exactly that's the animal effect.
He's now, that's the equivalent in the analogy of him moving to Barcelona and having to
live there.
You need to speak the right language.
If you're pursuing, like, if you're pursuing, like progression in a gym setting or progressive
overload, if you're extra physiologically loading your own body.
You need to make sure now that that split between the stimulus adaptation starts to matter.
So a lot of the therapeutic interventions, even if it's a well-trained college age male,
it's like, all right, well-trained my ass, right?
Well-trained to compete, compared to anyone in this room, they're not trained at all,
right?
So going back to the disc example.
So if we're not training the function of that glute properly, and now we have a ceiling
of 100% we're only training at 50, then you slip a disc like actually herniate or have
a bulging disc or sequestration of that fluid outside of the annulus fibrosis, then let's
say the function now or the ability for that muscle to transmit force, right? Goes from 100 to 70, relatively speaking, because you've only trained 50% of the actual
function of that, because there's some carryover, if you know Italian and you're going to
Spain, there's some carryover to building resistance against ability.
But now you've dropped 30% here.
Your 50% function goes from 50 to 20 somewhere in that range is your threshold for pain.
I would rather take 100% of 70 than 50% function goes from 50 to 20 somewhere in that range is your threshold for paint. I would rather take a hundred percent of 70 than 50% of 100, but it's just people cross that threshold.
They see a black and white on MRI and they go, there it is.
That's the issue.
It's like, no, no, it's the dysfunction.
We can fix the function and we don't have to worry about the structure.
Right.
So that's how I look at it for something like a bulging disk where it's like figure out where the function is going wrong. And that's the most common
when I see because people don't understand because you don't have to, you can't sell.
No, and they people think of it like a broken bone. It's not a broken bone. It's not like having
a broken femur where you got to let the femur heal. Like again, you could literally MRI, you
could image a hundred people. You're're gonna find a good chunk of them,
we're gonna have herniated or slipped discs,
and a good chunk of those people
aren't gonna have any symptoms whatsoever.
And then you get people with pain
for no apparent reason whatsoever.
It always goes back to dysfunction,
unless it's an acute injury.
Chronic pain is typically just dysfunction.
But the problem is we don't have standardized
gold. The majority of people don't have the facilities
in which to standardize assessment for function.
People have tried, but it's so hard because you can't.
It's too individual, isn't it?
Exactly, but you need to understand the core
times of biomechanics to really be able to apply it
across the board. Just with training, right?
Like you need to understand the different loading parameters
that people are gonna be capable of, right?
Unlike understanding that the scale for someone in this room
and that's why my practice has become so niche to athletics
is understanding that here are the core tenets,
but here's how we scale out the stimulus to have an effect
on the nervous system of someone
that can squat 900 pounds, right?
So it's being able to walk that fine line.
Like the majority of people, like if you had a 600 pound
client and you were even the most inept personal training
in the world, you could get that guy to lose 100 pounds,
right?
Just based off of like, you could food pyramid the guy.
Like you go back to 1995, food pyramid him and you still
be able to get to lose 100 pounds.
I take someone, that from 6 percent to five percent by fat.
That takes someone in this room to do it.
Right?
That's the thing.
Definitely.
All right, so the next question is from Brady Cherisse.
Any exercises or tips for strengthening ankles?
I broke mine about eight years ago,
so I'm super prone to rolling it.
Like to go on long hikes and runs a few times a week,
but inside of ankle and Achilles feels very inflamed
when done.
You know, it's funny when people say
I broke something and so now I'm super prone to hurting it,
I think what people think that they,
or what they feel is because it's broken,
it's the tendency to hurt it again
because it's been damaged is much higher.
The reality is because it broke, first off, something caused you to break it.
It may have been a bad recruitment pattern, maybe not.
But after you broke it, you definitely weren't using it in its most optimal way because
it was in a cast or whatever.
Then you were healing.
You were probably walking funny.
So now you've created just bad patterning, which makes you more prone to injury.
Yeah, but you don't really think that a broken ankle is coming from a bad pattern
Do you I mean that's it that's it could be or it could be something else?
So you think you so you're thinking along the lines like I break my ankle playing a sport and because I have a bad recruitment pattern
I my foot didn't strike the ground the way it should have
I was a stable somewhere that just came or even the ability to react to
Yeah, that's right like I mean I have a friend of mine Cory slasengers a strength coach for the men's basketball team at Stanford or even the ability to react to stimulus, right?
Like, I mean, I have a friend of mine,
Cory Slesinger is a strength coach
for the men's basketball team at Stanford,
and you should see some of the stuff he's doing with,
like, and I'm not a flow guy, right?
Like, I'm not a primal movement,
I'm gonna get the fuck off the ground.
But he thinks, but think of it,
like, I think of things like,
I'll see it though.
The rate, what's your bottleneck, right?
Like, so I look at strength like an equation, right?
Like, if my squat is a value that's expressed
on the strength of my quad,
the strength of my hamstrings,
the stability of my core,
the strength of my upper back,
what a lot of people do will do
will do the work inside that equation.
I'm going to isolate my quads to get them stronger
and then that should appreciate the strength of my squat.
But the way I program for people is what's going to be the multiplier on the outside
of that equation.
With what little I know about math, as you solve for the brackets first and then you times
out from outside the bracket.
So we can solve inside all we want, but if this multiplier outside the bracket isn't
one, again, it's just like the distance.
I would rather take 100% of accumulative 85% of relative muscle strength within that movement pattern
Then try and focus on I'm in front squad. I'm an RDL. I'm at hamstrings big my quad's big
And then have a blown ass. I joined that puts my multiplier to point five right?
So what what Corey does link? Yeah, which is really interesting in sports like you almost said it like you know kind of shit
Happens right shit happens in sports
Well, he'll he'll have his basketball players do calf raises
on his other players feet barefoot.
So like getting that reactive stability to,
well, it's not so much what happens
when you roll this ankle,
is how much can you stabilize on the other hip
on the drop of a hat?
So like, dude, we just, you don't think I rolled my fucking ankles,
walking up that goddamn hill, like 10 million times, but I trained so much unilateral hips
stability. And we had this kind of on the Q&A earlier, on the Facebook live where it's
like, I think so much of that, that rehabilitation after a break, because once you damage the
structure, it's the same thing. Like, I've, I got hit by a Chevy Suburban like five years
ago, a T-bone in the middle of an intersection. I had to melgibs and lethal weapon
to my shoulder back into place in the middle of the street.
Yeah, but I mean, you guys know rotator cuffs
enough to know that we can regain function,
we can regain structural integrity
through improving the function.
The ankle's totally different.
Contract your anterior talo-fibular ligament.
You can't do it if you broke his ankle.
I likely that one went.
So rather than worrying locally as the integrity of the foot,
worry about how we're setting the trajectory of the ground forces
for that foot to absorb force.
Totally.
First place.
Totally because what Western medicine tends,
sometimes tends to do is they'll look,
oh, your knee hurts, we're just going to look at your knee.
And it's like, yeah, well, it could be from your hip,
it could be from your ankle. It could be from your ankle.
With an ankle issue, I would look to the hip
and I would look at the foot.
Those are the most mobile places that are,
you know, more proximal to the ankle,
but are not the ankle itself.
So if your hip, if you have a weakness in your hip,
if your hip can't stabilize laterally,
does it rotate well, whatever,
and you go to make a turn or cut or whatever,
and that hip isn't strong enough
or stable enough to support you,
it goes right to the next joint,
and if your ankle's not strong enough,
now it goes to the joint itself,
and then it goes to the ligaments,
and if those ligaments aren't strong enough,
you tore something, or you hurt something.
I mean, I got blown away just by learning,
Dr. Brink blew us away with how dysfunctional feet are on people nowadays.
It's absolutely insane and how much of an impact that has on like my squat.
When I started working on my feet, I started feeling more stable in my ankles.
And it sounds obvious now, but it wasn't so obvious then.
I thought it was all about just my ankle.
So something that I'll do is I'll walk on my tippy toes.
I do tippy toe squats. I'll also get on the edges of my feet
and I'll squat like this.
I mean, is there any value to the,
doing all those things?
Do you share it?
I mean, it's just like, I like training fringe ranges of motion.
Like I talked about earlier with training purposeful
thoracic flexion in the spine.
So the series we've done on the Mind Pump YouTube channel
where it's like, I know a lot of people are like, whoa, that looks really scary, but it's so controlled. You know what's scary?
Life life is sports fucking sports
Yeah, no scary. Yeah exactly so I think it's I mean we could we could boil this out to I mean we could take this down like a like a
Philosophy route as well, right like that is essentially stoicism like it's a stoic means of training your own body. It's like put yourself in a position either mentally
where things are really bad.
And then everything relatively seems okay.
It's the same thing with building resiliency
and strength in your body.
It's like, you know, train those end ranges of motion
be prepared for the unknown, like Justin said,
where just a quick one for me would be,
like when a joint loses its structural integrity, it'll
look to gain that and cast it, like neurologically, hey, we know something's not right.
So with something like that, I would just look to address some of the muscles that just
like with adjusting, right?
The idea of like, okay, I'm trying to bring together a stretch reflex because it's perceived
a relative mate motion wellpassed physiological limitations.
That's right.
Yeah, capacity is a good way to put it.
Now all of a sudden, whether it's a multifidus, seizing up to keep L4 and L5 close together,
or whether it's the peronials that are seizing up to keep the relative position of the fibula
onto the base of the first and the fifth metatarsal, because that relative position has changed.
Unless you, again, you don't have to, you know,
you could adjust the ankle if it's indicated,
but you could address the actual muscles themselves,
because they're so superficial,
getting that neurological down regulation to say,
hey, there's no more threat.
We're not in that position anymore.
We don't have to stay chronically short,
because that rigidity leads them to being unstable.
It does, and it causes inflammation.
When a muscle is in this kind of low level state
of being activated because your body thinks
that there's an issue there or is afraid to move,
that causes inflammation.
Tense or flex any muscle all day at 25%.
Just do that, clench your hand a little bit,
hold it all day long and see if you don't start
to notice inflammation
at your fingers and at your wrist.
So with something like this, I would say,
definitely work on strengthening the ankle itself.
For sure, move it through ranges of motion,
activate, you know, create tension
in those ranges of motion,
but also work on your hips, work on your ability
to rotate your hips, work on your ability to abduct
and adduct and extend.
Because I feel like it's, when I've seen people roll ankles,
it's usually coming from a lack of lateral stability in the hips.
I can get like that.
I tend to train straight forward sometimes
that when I'll go finally remind myself,
like, well, I should do some lateral stuff.
I can feel like, if I push this too hard, it's not my hip that's going to get hurt, my ankle. That's the weakest link.
What do you think about things like, then, like, kin stretch and doing, like, a combat
stretch that's activated, where so you get yourself in this, you drive the knee all the
way over the toe.
Or isometric kind of, like, tension that you're applying in.
It's like a first-use motion.
Yeah, well, it depends on if the bottle, that could rate limit strength or stability.
If you're going to apply that PNF type principle,
where you're contracting in an N-range of motion,
that contraction is not going to be
evoking a greater stimulus of instability.
It's going to be adding some level of resistance
or isometrics.
I think it could be potentially damaging.
And the reason I think this is because we have to go back
to stability being appeased by structure and function.
When you're in that end range of motion, it's like, yeah, there is going to be a stretch applied to the function of the muscle kind of on trial.
But with that, you're also taking to end range a ligament or a tendon or a joint capsule or some sort of articulating soft tissue or something like that.
That's why I think stretching your low back is so bad.
Or the inversion stuff, or people hanging upside down with bands and distract.
Well, you know what they like that?
Because it's temporary relief.
Sure, but it's a positive feedback loop.
The more you do it, the more you're going to have to do it.
Because you're not addressing the reason why those muscles are tight.
That's right. You're bringing to N-Range, so the problem I have with some of that end range
contract 90, 90 stuff like we're discussing off air is that especially with hips is like
the issues are usually when the person is loaded on their feet and if the intervention
is not testing as close to that objective outcome as we can, i.e. you're laying on the
ground with your knees on the floor rather than standing on the ground with your feet on the floor, the responsiveness
and the neurological adaptation that comes with loading one foot on the ground as far as
evoking instability is going to be so much greater than somebody.
So let's talk about that for a second because I'm somebody who I know struggled with internal
rotation of my hips in the 1990.
I mentioned you with activating it, lifting my feet up off the ground was a,
I told you, game changer, you laughed at me.
And so, you didn't stop lifting either.
No, of course you did that.
Yeah, but I would like to hear what,
Jordan, like, because I know Jordan's probably
not getting down in a 1990, but if you were to give me movements
or exercises that you think would fit me
if I lack internal rotation of my hips,
what would that look like?
Because he's saying standing,
what would I be doing standing? Oh, so I mean, if we think and this is a thing
It's not it's not obvious to most people why we need internal rotation of the hip for bilateral load and movement
Like the squad. Why do I need internal rotation? It's what it's think of it more like an arc of rotation
It's a bit of a debate over isn't it? It kind of but it's just a misunderstanding of when we need internal tracking
So think of a baseball player, right?
Like a baseball player or a pitcher, for example, when, so pitchers are often diagnosed with
gourd, right?
Not a gut issue, but general internal, or glenohumeral internal rotation deficiency.
They're not deficient in internal rotation.
They're arc of external rotation.
Their arc of rotation is retroverted, right?
So if my biceps stronger in the shortest position
in the length of position or right in the middle?
Probably in the middle of the shoulder.
The track is short.
Exactly.
Well, it's right in the middle
from a length tension relationship.
So imagine I'm trying to generate force through my shoulder
when I'm pitching, but that end range of motion
from the prime mover standpoint is to a point
where it's stretching everything
because I'm so biased in extra rotation because that's where I'm starting when I pitch.
If you take the majority of powerlifters and get them to lay face up, their toes are
pointing to either side of the room because they're biasing that external rotation.
So when they're in that bottom position, so it's not so much improving, so it is in a
sense improving internal rotation, but it's antireverting the arc of rotation so that in
the bottom of the squat all our main
Movers that are gonna move us vertically are in a position to express strength through a ideal length tension relationship
So I think the main mechanism correction with the 90 90 it's almost like when my mom used to trick me into eating vegetables
By mixing it up in my spaghetti sauce
So it's sorry is that is that culture?
it up in my spaghetti sauce. So it's, sorry, is that culture of motivation?
No, no, you're good.
When she used to make me eat my pineapple, my pudding in my pizza.
God damn it.
It's the ability, so you don't need internal rotation in your hips until you're an extension
of your hips.
So a lot of people, they perceive as an internal rotation issue, is actually a biased
towards hip flexion, right?
Because if we think of when we're walking, when we need internal rotation, it's when this
hips in end range extension.
So work on extension first,
and a lot of times I clear it up,
but so the 99-year position does have
that hip and relative extension.
The activation, it's not so much that it's building stability,
it's more introverting that arc of rotation,
which is in itself not a bad thing,
but I think the enemy, so your question was,
what exercise could I do?
I think something like hip airplanes or
loading using like Miguel planes those
Miguel like stand on one leg Miguel airplanes or whatever you do on the single leg and then you
Yeah, so you're basically like if you can't stabilize your own body weight with one of your hips
You shouldn't try to load more than your own body weight from both of your hips because you're reliant now on structural stability rather than function.
So that's structural stability.
Or even like maybe Bulgarian split squats.
That's a great example.
Yeah, unilateral load, but then it comes down to which hand you loaded it.
Because most people intuitively loaded in the gate cycle pattern, which is going to be
more the anterior obliques length.
But you want to do it in the actually the non-intuitive pattern, which is dumbbell in the
hand of the foot that's down
Right right so if you're doing a right leg exercise you want to hold the dumbbell with the right hand. Yes, okay
Excellent
Next question is from freaky Jake. This must be one of your friends Jordan
I see
He's not my friend
Are the Bosu ball and other stability things a good tool for building needs stability. Now, before we rip into it, and I know we're going to,
before we rip into it, here's what I like about stability balls
in particular for beginner clients.
So as personal trainers, and this is, by the way,
your entire routine should not revolve around a stability ball.
But I would use them sometimes with beginners,
mainly because it's an easy reminder for that person to stay stable and tight when doing an exercise.
That's all it is. People when they tend to sit down on anything or stand, they've developed this pattern where it's almost like their joints are supporting them and they're kind of just standing there and things are,
they're not really being able to activate their bodies. When you put someone on a stability ball, especially a beginner, somebody in that super
decondition, you want them to fall off, it's like a reminder, like, okay, I got to stay
steady and tight so I can do this exercise.
That's where I see some of the benefit.
Now we can rip into it.
Okay, so there's a few things here just sort of the way the question's framed, because
it's talking about knee stability.
Knees stability doesn't exist. It's structural entirely. That's right. So yeah, it flexes and extends
It flexes and then people are gonna make the argument. What about the VMO? It's like, okay
So we got a we got to draw a hard line between knee stability and femur stability
Which we'll bring us we'll circle us back to the gate cycle
Point that I feel like I've just been reiterating all morning
So both of all first I think it's's, this is emblematic of the conversation we had earlier
about the pendulum in the fitness industry, where the middle line is education.
It's understanding that if we can implement a stimulus of instability by implementing
unilateral loads.
So all the stability you need to evoke for your body to be able to get strong, you can
generate by altering your base support.
Stand on one leg and do shit.
Right?
So I think on one end of this pendulum swing, we have this resistance, this resistance
market where it's like, well, we can't sell people standing on one leg.
So here, put a band around your knees and that's how you're going to stabilize your knees.
It's like, all right, we're missing the boat.
Plus there's nothing to sell if you tell someone to stand on one leg.
Exactly.
So on the other side of the industry, we have this extra physiological stimulus of instability
that becomes nothing more than a parlor trick and skill adaptation.
The transferability of someone who can stand on a bow suit ball or stand on a med ball is
not correlative to someone who can stand on one leg.
It doesn't translate.
But what does translate is the ability to stand on one leg and then for the ability to deviate
your own center of gravity within that limited base of support.
Do a single leg RDL.
Right, right.
Because the knee stability is ACL, MCL, PCL, else.
And those things don't move.
Those things don't move.
You can't train them.
They're inert.
It's just structure.
No.
And I'll tell you what, stability balls
and motion balls.
Stability balls and motion balls
would definitely have a lot of carry over
if the earth was made of stability balls and motion balls.
That's what I'm saying.
Now that we also got a drawing line in distinction between primary and
secondary prevention. You take an aspirin, baby aspirin every day and you
haven't had a heart attack, you're still equally likely from a primary
prevention standpoint to have that heart attack. Afterwards, there is research to
show that that baby aspirin could potentially help secondary prevention. So I
think maybe some of the benefit and I don don't know if Ne, and I remember seeing a collegiate female soccer study
that had the Bosew balls in intervention,
I don't know if it had a positive or a negative effect
on because I think it's...
Well, I think I read that same study,
and by the way, the reason why they used female athletes
is because the rate of ACL tears in female athletes
is like twice as high or something.
Pierrely morphology.
The cue angle from the hip is gonna set an inward trajectory
of that female.
So basically women have wider hips,
you know, because they're hot.
And that angle from hip to knee...
Has a big beard birth, I think.
The ratio.
Yeah, that's probably a little bit lower.
My bad.
My bad.
Out of spack check, I can't say.
No, but no, but because they're hip,
their hips are wider and the angle from hip to knee
is a sharper angle, it places more stress on those ligaments.
You want to strengthen your knee
or you want to have better knee stability,
get your hips and ankles more stable
because those are mobile as fuck joints.
Yeah.
The knee doesn't need stability,
it's own stability is, it's,
what's the word, self-evident.
It's got those, yeah. That'sident, it's got those ligaments.
But like I said with the stability ball,
you put a client, a new client on a stability ball.
I like doing that sometimes because it just reminds them
to fucking stay tall and stay tight.
You put them on a chair or a bench,
and it's like, I gotta keep like,
fix your posture, set up tight in your core.
You put them on a physical ball,
and they're like, oh shit, I'm gonna fall, so I better tighten things up.
And that's where I see the benefit in it,
but I don't see any benefit aside from that.
But boy, there was a period there in personal training.
I'll tell you, you could just push them a little
in the middle of the race.
Yeah, I'll tell you, in personal training,
there was a period there where that's all.
I remember when it happened, too.
It was like, we went from people using machines all the time to trainers
We're using bands and balls and one that ligate shit on dinodisks for every single
I think I really think that the in you you said it real quick
But I think circling back to that the single best movement that I've ever taught to do that would be a single
Like deadlift use and I think because you're you're getting both it do it barefoot, too
You know do a do a barefoot single leg deadlift use. And I think, because you're getting both, do it barefoot too. Do it barefoot single leg deadlift,
I feel like you're gonna get a lot of mobility strength
all the way from the foot all the way up to the hip,
which then in turn is gonna help protect
or keep this knee with the stable leg they want.
For sure, but it definitely went too far
with the stability stuff.
It just got so fucking ridiculous
with people doing every single exercise on those things.
So, you know, no, as far as needs,
stability is concerned, basically what we're saying, traditional exercises for the hips,
the ankles, and unilateral movements probably the best.
Next question is from Klepp Zolius Rex.
What's the most ridiculous pieces of fitness equipment you have seen?
Yeah.
God.
I mean, it's low-hanginganging fruit man. I love it though.
I mean what do we got up here? Well here how about this? Alright how about this? What are the most
ridiculous pieces of fitness equipment you see that are actually machines and stuff? Yeah how about
NGibs? These are E2. These are two. The blades the Shakeway Jocs scene on TV. I'd rather pick a part of the part of the machine core core machines load its final flexion. Oh, that's yeah. Oh,
I just yeah, like, you know, Hammer Shack makes like the loaded rotational oblique thing
and it's like, okay, you clearly know when in at hammer. So what's wrong with that? Let's
talk about that first. Sure. All right. So the obliques are so there's every muscle has
a primary action, right? Which most people can surmise based off, like,
okay, I'm gonna contract my bicep.
All right, I'll be flexing.
But it's like, it's performance exists in,
it's like a good lie.
It devils in the details, right?
So I think it exists in the peripheral secondary
and tertiary action.
So with, you know, we're gonna take, for example,
you're on your knees and then you're like,
rotating against the resistance of these pads
on your shoulders.
You guys know what I'm talking about? Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But the obliques.
Made my core look awesome.
Yeah.
But the obliques are, well, first off,
core doesn't need to be strong, right?
And I fucking feel like a broken wreck
because there's a difference between strength
and stability.
If there is one takeaway from this episode,
that's what I want it to be.
So the core is, so I look at the body
as three hubs of stability.
And basically any pathology from a functional standpoint can be even structural
if the goal is to out function that bad structure is shoulder hip and spine.
Those are hubs of stability.
Those are going to govern range of motion and strength output period, right?
So the way I look at it from a core standpoint, well, that's the,
that's the epicenter of our spinal stability.
So that needs to be able to resist force really well.
So not rotation but counter rotation. I think there is a benefit in having adequate range of
motion in trunk rotation. That's huge because that'll affect how our hips have to compensate in
high. Especially for sports. Huge, right? I think that's a big underpinning in sports hernias is a
discrepancy in trunk stability to hip or trunk mobility and hip mobility.
But I think based off of the external oblique machine,
the external oblique is a lateral flexor to one side,
to the same side, and it's a rotated to the opposite side,
but also posteriorly tilts the pelvis, right?
So these machines are just very uniaxial in a sense
that it's moving around that y-axis
Which is if the only muscle that really does that is the transverse abdominis
Pure rotation based off fiber orientation, but again, it's not about shortening the muscle
It's about isometrically resisting force rather than exerting you want you want something to be stable and rigid when it needs to be to prevent injury
But I will I'm gonna make an argument on the other side. I'm gonna disagree with you. I'm not disagree with you actually.
I'm gonna show another side to this,
and that's the aesthetic side, the muscle development side.
If you're trying to build a muscle,
so that it looks good,
nothing builds a muscle like full range of motion
through shortening and lengthening.
And so I can see the use in machines like this
when someone's like, well look, I like the function part,
like you're saying, I wanna have a stable core to prevent injury,
but I also want to develop the muscles
so they look really cool.
Developing muscles, you develop muscles better,
more hypertrophy happens when you move them
through the strength, you know, the shortening,
the contracting, and the lengthening.
And that's where I can see the benefit like if you're doing,
you know, people talk about the abs, the obliques,
all the muscles around the core to stabilize the spine, but what if you want to build muscles that pop out or show?
Well, then you're going to want to throw in some of that other stuff because it's going
to develop more muscle.
No.
To an extent, man, I think if we can improve function, we can improve aesthetics, right?
About beltless work. So this is especially with the extra level.
So let's talk about some of the movements that we would do instead of that. Like the
first thing that comes in mind for me
is like a side plank, activate my glutes,
and then put through some movement in there.
Yeah, I mean landmine press, overhead, unilateral load.
So test or even disadvantage,
some of those peripheral hubs of stability,
so that some of that force transfer resistance
as far as counter-move movement is now put on the spine, right?
So loading, you know, you load a kettlebell overhead pressed in a in a split lunge position is gonna put a lot of demand of rotation
Depending on how you load your single single arm dumbbell rows, you can set a trajectory for your hips to
Make your spine want to rotate and then use your external obliques from stopping that from happening rather than turning it into a very linear
rotation. Exactly. So I think there's great ways to do it and fuck. I mean,
you can be 200 pound dumbbells. We're rowing. Like I can that's a heavy loaded
exercise. That hammer strength rotation machine only goes up to 150 pounds
and that's on a track. What a good point. Yeah. So I always think I mean I do agree.
I do and that's something I differentiate. What's your objective outcome? Yeah. And
that's where I start. Like it's I don't like running
But if you come into my office and you want to run a marathon all right fuck yeah, let's let's get you there
Right if you want to go on stage you want to be on the Olympia all right?
We can get it because a lot of people they they understand the functional part
They understand the importance of it, but at the end of the day most people work out because I want to look better
And so I like to tell people you know both sides of it like okay. Here's okay, here's the functional piece, here's the development piece, or what's going to produce
that, that look that you want. You got to kind of marry the two, but understand this that you're
right with the core. It's about stabilization. And that's very important. I mean, if you want to
prevent injury, look, that's the most common area people tend to fuck themselves up. And nothing
will make you look shitty, like not being able to work out because you hurt yourself.
Exactly, and that's a long-term bottleneck
is gonna be that injury, right?
It is, but I also will say this,
and this kind of goes in a little bit on your side.
The most developed bleaks and core muscles I've ever seen
were on lean power lifters who'd never did a single crunch
or sit up or a rotation exercise,
just from stabilizing themselves being able to lift
Sumo deadlift. Yeah, sumo deadlift you want to bleak?
Sumo deadlift because
So when you conventionally deadlift and this is something that I have to talk to a lot when my lifter is about is when you convince the deadlift
You're using your lats your lats are crazy stabilizers of rotation of the trunk so strong, right?
And again, we're going down the rabbit hole of tertiary and quattrionary action of the muscle
strong right and again we're going down the rabbit hole of tertiary and quattrary action of the muscle but when we're at a disadvantage already
shortened position because we're taking a grip inside the knees now if the
lats are disadvantaged in managing rotational forces and we're actually invoking
more rotational force because if you have one arm that's longer than the other
or you have a leg drive and your sumo stance that's stronger on one side the
fact that you're grabbing closer in on the bar,
there's more force outside your hands
and that's longer lever on the outside.
Exactly, so that'll start, you know,
you see a lot of people start to helicopter
with the sumo deadlift.
That's trunk rotation.
Well, what do you, I mean,
you'll see a higher rate of oblique tears
or high groin sprains in the sumo deadlift.
Oh, I didn't even think that.
Yeah, that's brilliant.
So you sound totally picturing that right now going like,
oh shit, what a great way to do all of this.
Yeah, so reinforcing the anterior bleak sling,
which is the external bleak into the opposite side,
high adductors.
And if you don't have the function of that,
and you try to load a heavy sumo,
and that's what I'll see you guys go from,
the sumo puts you at an advantageous position
from, you know, if force is work.
By mechanics.
Yeah, if work is force-time's distance
and we're cutting the amount of distance,
then we can effectively exert more, or do more work mechanics. Yeah, if work is force times distance, and we're cutting the amount of distance, then we can effectively
exert more or do more work with exerting the same amount of force. So in that stance, everyone is,
you know, from biomechanics, like you said, in a position where they could technically load more
weight, but they get hurt, because their lots are out of the equation, and in the conventional
deadlift, the lots are going to remain supreme. We take those out. Now, maybe we've worked with
the belt a lot, which we know to actually diminish the output of
The external bleak so here we have this muscle. Let's stand alone now on trial trying to hold up to your max
Or if not more than your max because of the biomechanical
Now I have a question for you because we just got on deadlifts here for a second knowing the differences between
The sumo deadlift and the conventional deadlift. Do you see
Carry over for let's say somebody,
I like to pull conventional,
that's where I can pull the most weight.
Do you see carryover for me,
spending cycles getting better at sumo deadlifts?
Would there be some carryover there
to help me with my main lift,
which would be conventional?
So I look at it as a way to,
if you're stronger in your conventional pull, I would say no.
I mean, I know that I'm averse to training it.
It's just the majority of the times it's,
okay, do you want a hip injury or a back injury?
Okay, you want a hip injury?
Zoom in that lift, you want a back injury?
Conventional that lift.
The eventually, like, that's where the,
that's where the Reaper of Injury is going to rear its head
for each of those lifts respectively.
So I think if you pull Zoom out,
you should absolutely pull conventional.
I don't think for how irregular that loading pattern is based off how we're meant.
Right.
Like how many other times are you ever going to be in a position like that?
Exactly.
Yeah.
I pull 400, 500 pounds.
What would give you more carryover, like to a conventional deadlift, a Sumo lift or
practicing that or something like a trap bar deadlift?
Okay.
So I think a trap bar deadlift would carry over better to Sumo,
because Sumo is a lot more quad dominant than people think.
Because if you watch how you, it's not as fluid.
If you watch a proficient Sumo deadlifters,
their knees are extended before their backs extended,
which is rarely the case in a good deadlift.
Your knees and hips should come to that trip
at the same time where watch your ebellocate
and pull 927 off the floor belt list at 227.
Snaps is quite so fast, but it's the inertia of getting that bar moving that carries
him through that end range and extension, right?
So, sumo deadlifting is, if it's in your sport, or if you're a taller athlete, in like
a taller basketball player, using that as a way to hip hinge, that's not going to increase
the likelihood of injury by going through excessive loaded flexion in that position.
Sure, use it sparingly.
I think carry over wise, you're going to see your conventional goes up, your sumo goes
up, not necessarily your sumo goes up.
I like to do it just for fun because I'll notice how I get it one and then I'll have
to practice the other one.
And I also notice from just from a use, like a wear on my body standpoint,
like you said, if I push my conventional too long,
my low back starts to get tired and sore,
so then I'll go to Sumo and then I'll start to,
you know, have to deal with the hip issues.
Yeah, so excellent.
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