Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 798: Best 1-Rep Max Protocol, How to Fix Childhood Obesity, Regrets & MORE
Episode Date: June 22, 2018Organifi Quah! In this episode of Quah, sponsored by Organifi (organifi.com, code "mindpump" for 20% off), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about the best way to attempt a 1-rep max, why ...childhood obesity has become such a problem and how to fix it, any regrets they have and their top 3 books that impacted their lives. Has Mind Pump officially arrived??!! Dealing with bullies and haters. (4:54) Justin creates the ultimate Instagram story for Butcher Box! (10:34) Why removing the middle man SAVES YOU MONEY. The benefits of services like Thrive Market vs. going to Whole Foods. (14:40) The Mind Pump Testosterone Protocol Experiment. The importance of testing early, using companies like Everly Well, to find your range. (21:40) Real Talk: What are the guys opinions on talking to therapists? (37:55) #Quah question #1 – Is there any reason to attempt a 1-rep max? If so, how? (49:42) #Quah question #2 – What are your thoughts on why childhood obesity has become such a problem and how to fix it? (1:03:01) #Quah question #3 – Do you guys have any regrets? (1:21:00) #Quah question #4 – What are the top 3 books that impacted your lives? (1:37:38) People Mentioned: Dr. Jordan Shallow D.C (@the_muscle_doc) Instagram Doug Egge (@mindpumpdoug) Instagram Related Links/Products Mentioned: Butcher Box **FREE Bacon for LIFE** Thrive Market One FREE month’s membership $20 off your first three purchases of $49 or more (That’s $60 off total!) Free shipping on orders of $49 or more Long-term Effects of Obesity on Pets The Growing Problem of Obesity in Dogs and Cats Everly Well **Code “MINDPUMP” for 15% off any test** Four Sigmatic **Code “mindpump” for 15% off** Joovv **$25 off purchase** Serum Testosterone Levels and Symptom-Based Depression Subtypes in Men Human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG) Man's Positive Pregnancy Test Reveals Testicular Cancer Childhood Obesity Facts – CDC The Risks of Not Breastfeeding for Mothers and Infants God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything - Christopher Hitchens New American Standard Bible The Science of God: The Convergence of Scientific and Biblical Wisdom - Gerald L. Schroeder Ph.D Developing the Leader Within You - John C. Maxwell Free to Choose: Part 1 of 10 The Power of the Market ... – YouTube The Rise of Superman: Decoding the Science of Ultimate Human Performance - Steven Kotler Stealing Fire: How Silicon Valley, the Navy SEALs, and Maverick Scientists Are Revolutionizing the Way We Live and Work - Steven Kotler and Jamie Wheal 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! 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. MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND super commercial with us because this is not how this works where we talk about four or five people, but we are just having conversation.
Yeah, I just came out.
Yeah.
The conversation.
So we do a 47 minute intro.
This is before we get to the fitness stuff.
We start out by talking about online bullies.
We talk about Justin's butcher box Instagram story, probably the best story anyone's ever
done ever.
Yes.
In the history of Instagram.
They are one of our sponsors.
If you go to butcherbox.com, forward slash mind pump,
you will get ready for this.
Free bacon forever.
What?
Free bacon for life.
Plus $10 off your first order and free shipping.
Is that like a weird strategy?
Like to get people to sign up,
but then knowing if they ate bacon like crazy
because it's unlimited, they die.
Yeah, man. They calculate that. It's in fact free cigarettes for life. crazy because it's unlimited, they die. Yeah, man.
They calculate that.
Three cigarettes for life.
Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
No, they're baking quality so good and it's minimally processed.
So it's the healthiest bacon.
No, this is true.
Fine.
Oh, we also mentioned thrive market versus whole foods
and Adam discovered that thrive market sells pay food.
I did not.
No, this just goes to show you too.
How this was again, not a planned commercial whatsoever.
We were just talking about, I don't know how we got into it.
Eliminating middleman.
Yeah, eliminating middleman and then how great that is.
You talked about Thrive and how great they were.
And then somehow, oh, I just talked,
because I just bought dog food yesterday from Petco
and they have the thing for Petco delivery.
And I'm like, why am I still picking this up?
And then Doug all of a sudden pulls up on the screen,
what an asshole I am.
I had no idea that Thrive Market,
which I already ordered from every single month,
could be shipping me my dog food.
I'm stupid.
And now we gotta hook up for you with them.
If you go to thrivemarket.com,
forward slash mine pump,
you will get one month free, $20 off,
$3 orders of $49 and more, and free shipping.
Then we talked about our testosterone test that we just did through Everly Well, $20 off three orders of $49 and more and free shipping.
Then we talked about our testosterone test
that we just did through Everly Well
and how mine was the highest.
No surprise.
You're the winner.
But we also talked about we're gonna go on some testosterone
boosting protocols and then we're gonna do more tests
to see how what we're doing affects our testosterone levels.
Last one, Everly Well is one of our sponsors. If you go
to EverlyWell.com and to the code MindPump, you get 15% off any test. Part of the testosterone
boosting protocol was Adam using the Juve Red Light. You can go to j0ovv.com, forward slash
MindPump and get a discount on their red light therapy. And finally, we talked about the value of talk therapy
that was something personal for me.
Then we get to the questions.
The first question was, is there any reason
to even attempt a one rep max?
And if so, what is the best way about going about it?
So should you test out your strength?
Should you do that?
And if we do think you should do that,
how should you do that?
Hopefully, don't piss off all the crossfitters.
That's right.
Next question was, are thoughts on childhood obesity
and what may be causing it definitely an epidemic,
definitely a scary epidemic?
Or a trigger warning?
One that may actually bankrupt us if we don't solve it.
So we speculate as to why we think that issue is happening.
The next question was, do we have any regrets at all?
Great discussion this part of the episode.
Finally, what are the top three books
that each of us have decided have impacted our lives?
The most, we all mentioned books
that we think were important for our development.
And we also mentioned, or at least I mentioned
some YouTube videos that I watched that important for our development. And we also mentioned, or at least I mentioned some YouTube
videos that I watched that really changed my paradigm.
Or at least got me to think a little bit differently.
Also, it's important to note, this month,
Maps Anywhere is half off.
Maps Anywhere is our Maps program that requires
almost no equipment.
All you need is bands, resistance bands, and a stick.
That's it.
Resistance bands and a stick, you can do these workouts anywhere, super effective,
the program is now half off, so you say 50% off the price.
We also have other maps programs for other types of goals,
and we have bundles that put some of these programs together
for specific types of adaptations or goals.
For example, our super Bundle is designed for people
who wanted all set up for them.
It's designed for people who are like, look,
I wanna get started, I wanna get fit,
I wanna get in shape, I want everything I need to do this.
The Super Bundle does that for you.
It's one year of exercise programming.
It's also discounted off of the retail price
of just buying all these programs individually by almost
or over I should say 30 percent. You can find all of those programs at minepumpmedia.com.
I think minepump has officially arrived. What happened?
So I used to always think this was really strange about our business that we really don't
receive a lot of hate and I used to think it was because-
Was it because we're getting hell of hate?
Yeah.
Yeah.
All right.
Yes, finally.
Well, I mean, like, for example, you just did
an incredible back-to-back videos on YouTube.
You did a great video on split.
You did an incredible body part split
versus a full body workout routines that just went live a day ago.
And you just did a killer one on protein.
Both are just great videos.
There's very few videos that we do
that I turn around and watch again,
and I watched it and enjoyed it
because the information you provided was so valuable,
and you could see how comfortable you are
with now talking on just one camera,
which I know how weird that is.
So, and then I read the comments,
and it's like a 50, 50 split.
Like, it's such a great video that there's always gonna be people that are like, oh my God,
that was awesome.
They share it.
But then there's just people that are just straight hating and trolling.
You know what I'm saying?
Have no idea who you are.
Talking shit.
And even the stuff they're talking shit about is like, oh, this is hilarious.
Like, you obviously don't know who Sal is or who Mind Pump is whatsoever.
But we've gotten to that large of a scale now
that a video goes out and it instantly sees
seven to 10,000 people and it's inevitable
seven to 10,000 because it's being shared
and it's being put on, it's being, you know,
recommended on other pages and shit like that.
So we're definitely attractive.
Plus, you know, here's the thing,
if you say things that matter, okay,
you're gonna get people pushing back.
If you never say anything that matters, you'll never get push back.
So it's just the reality.
Now of course you get tons of hate, that's different.
It could be a signal that you're maybe an asshole or whatever.
Right, right.
But if you say thing that really, really matter, then you're gonna start some conversations
and there's gonna be people who are gonna disagree with you and that's okay.
And YouTube is like,
people used to always say that,
you'll see when you guys will get all this.
And I'm like, man, I'm really surprised
because the businesses running and we're doing well
and all these things are going great.
And I really feel like we've been well received
and we get a lot of great reviews.
And I really didn't feel like we ever get any hate put.
And maybe it's YouTube too, like YouTube is just.
So the people on YouTube are different.
They're like podcast people.
Yeah, it's like a cesspool of hatred.
Bro, you go through some videos on YouTube.
I've seen the most racist, sexist, terrible shit
that no one would say in public ever.
And I see in the comments in YouTube,
and I don't know if it's because it's super anonymous,
or because it draws that kind of crowd.
It's a lot of the same thing, like you see,
with online gaming, you know, there's a lot of that too,
where I don't know, it still exists,
like people will just like talk shit and say,
race this stuff, because they feel just like,
I don't know, they get something from it,
like they're anonymous and they can get away with it
and they can sail this shit.
Well, you could argue it's another,
it's not check them on it.
It's a type of bullying, right? Yeah. It's a type of bullying that people are doing and that they can sail this shit. Well, you can argue it's another, not check them on it. It's a type of bullying, right?
Yeah.
It's a type of bullying that people are doing
and that they can get away with.
And I wouldn't be surprised if most of the people
on the other side of that are bunch of little weasels
that in real life, they could never bully somebody.
Which is kind of funny, right?
Where we're at now.
So we're all this anti-bullying stuff going on,
but in reality, we're probably bullying people more now
because of the ability to do it virtually,
because now guys that are,
because when we grew up in school,
the bully was like a hundred pounds, 50 to 100 pounds
bigger than you, like he just, you know,
he hit puberty two years before.
And he ran the risk if he bullied someone,
there was always the risk that someone may fight back.
Right.
But when you're online and on him is like, there is no fight back, there is someone may fight back. Right. But when you're online and not on the slick,
there is no fight back.
There is no risk of that.
So you have a bunch of.
And you don't have to be big and tough.
You know what I'm saying?
Which, or smart.
Yeah.
Right.
So that's a lot like road rage.
Yeah.
Somebody talks a little bit.
Oh, it just doesn't say drive off.
You know, like, have you ever had to check someone
in a road rage incident
and seen the switch happen so quickly?
Oh, yes.
Oh, I had a guy yelling at me once,
and he was, oh, cussin' and get out of your car.
What are, all I did was open my door, and he took off.
Yeah.
Cause you saw me start to come out of the car.
Oh, shit, it's happening.
I'm not here.
Oh, my job is kidding.
And he drives away.
Nothing is, and I try and tell Billis all the time,
nothing is scarier in a situation like that
Where someone screaming yelling acting all crazy then being the calm motherfucker who just walks right up
Ready to get you throw down
Stance nine times at a ten dude. I'm telling more than nine times a ten almost every time
It's very rare. I'm trying to think of a time where I walked up on somebody like that
And then we went we went after it Most people that are screaming acting all crazy
when you walk up real calm and say,
ask them if this is what they wanna do.
Yeah, the most of them are like,
oh, you know, hey man, hey man.
I was kidding, I was kidding.
He's like, hey man, well you come on man.
Are you sure, so you wanna fight right now?
Cause we can, you know, no, no, no, no, I'm good.
You know what's funny?
Because you see this sometimes with girls, women,
in particular where they're, they'll,
cuss and scream and say stuff,
because they know that there's not gonna be
any physical recourse.
And so you'll see this sometimes
when there's a girl with her boyfriend,
you ever seen this at a bar?
Where the girl's talking shit to another guy?
Cause her boyfriend is there. And she knows knows she hypes up her boy and you can
see the look on the face where the guys like the boyfriends like listen you need
to shut up because I'm the one that's gonna have to fight bro the best one of
my favorite intros to a movie I shared with you just recently the way of the
gun yeah the girls like running her mouth like crazy and it's like a fun 10
minute scene and you just think that it's gonna be this big bra and then Benicio del Toro just straight open hand slaps the
Yeah, you know, I'm sitting here complimenting Sal on how how great of a video
I feel obligated to compliment you too, Justin. I think
No, no because I had thought about it and I hadn't sent anything to you
I think you have done the best commercial slash Instagram story than anybody else.
And it was for butcher boss.
Oh my God, that was so funny with the bacon that you did.
I thought that was so close.
How long did that take you to do that?
Not long.
I mean, it was just one of those things.
It's for me, it sucks because a lot of times I get random ideas and then I'm like,
oh, this is kind of a good idea.
Maybe I'll go with this and I've been trying a lot
to think in terms of stories
because that was one of those things.
You know when you try something for a long time
and then all of a sudden finally it clicks,
I'm like, oh, this is how people view stories
and they want to actually like, okay, this part,
yeah, and you line it up and so now my
brain starting to kind of click in that direction so yeah I was I was happy that one was received
well that's right you know we it's been a while we we we pride ourselves on being very open about
our business and sharing things like that I think that's a really important thing for somebody
else that's trying to to build their business to understand like how you how to utilize Instagram
stories correctly I think Taylor out of all of us is probably the best. I think each of us
evolved and gotten better at taking a lot from him. Right. And you know not a
lot of people know that when you I see this all the time on people's
Instagram's where they you know they're trying to sell their shirt or their
supplements drive here for a coupon like what a lot of kids don't know that are
watching that and they're emulating that is that that gets like no clicks. Like you're not making it. If I put up a, which
is why you don't ever see that on my click here, this is my sponsor. Yeah, buy that or get
20% off these supplements, like nobody buys that shit. Nobody clicks on that. Nobody is making
any money on that. Even if you've got millions of followers, you may get a half a percent
of people doing that and that might seem like a little bit of money to you,
but that's terrible.
So not valuable.
But if you actually put together a story
that leads to something, you'll drive a significant
amount more people to the actual length of your business.
How often are you doing the butcher box?
Are you monthly or every other month?
Yeah, I do every other month.
Because we end up, I mean,
we eat a lot of meat, you know, to begin with, but it's usually just for dinner. So it's not like
I'm using that for lunch and breakfast and all that, like, so we usually kind of, I mean, it lasts
for quite a while. It's such a brilliant thing that they did by doing that. I'm glad they did that.
It goes either every month, every other month or every every three months, right? And it's frozen so it lasts forever.
I went, so I actually bought some grass-fed meat
whole foods the other day, which is more expensive
and it doesn't taste as good.
Grass-fed meat, I mean, look, here's a deal.
Grass-fed meat, healthier for you,
but I'm gonna also be honest and say,
it's brain-fed meat tastes better a lot of times.
Yeah, because grass-fed meat sometimes has that gaming-ness to it,
or it doesn't taste as, I don't know,
doesn't have as much marbling or whatever,
which is what I like.
The reality of it, is it?
The taste how it's supposed to taste.
That's right, that's right.
But now that I know the difference, you know what I'm saying?
But the butcher-box stuff is fucking good.
If I didn't know it was grass fed, I would,
I don't think I was yesterday. It's the best grass fed I've ever had, hands down. It's not even close If I didn't know it was grass fed, I would, I don't think I was yesterday.
It's the best grass fed I've ever had.
Hands down.
It's not even close because I don't,
and even then, if you compare it to,
you know, one that's been grain fed,
it's gonna taste better.
There's more fat and they're more marble.
Yeah.
What's the cut that they, it's like a tri-tip,
but they don't call it a tri-tip.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's a steak, it's like a,
is it's sirloin tip? Yes, sirloin steak. Is that what it is? Somethingtip. Yeah, yeah, it's a steak. It's like a, is it sirloin tip?
Yeah, is that what it is?
Is that what it is?
Yeah, something like that.
Yeah.
What's up, Doug?
I think it's sirloin cap.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
There you go.
Really good.
Yeah.
No, that's my favorite one actually out of the group.
And I do, I do make quite a bit of burger meat and stuff
like that, like they have the patties too.
So, but yeah, the bacon.
I was like highlighting that primarily in the the bacon. I was like highlighting that.
Primarily in this story, but I was like,
so stoked, because literally my two boys
eat so much fucking bacon, we fight over it.
So I was really happy about that deal
that they had going on.
Well, it's this whole model of a thrive market
does the same thing, where they'll take products,
deliver them directly to your door.
What people don't realize is there's a lot of cost involved
every time you have to include a new step
in the distribution, producing and distribution process, right?
And what grocery stores you have a lot of middlemen,
you know, it's not as direct like it is with these,
these so many.
You have someone that has to drive it there in the truck.
You have something that has to unload it.
And then they have to sell it.
And then they have to put it in the shelf.
And then you have somebody that has to scan it at the register.
And then they have to sell it for a higher price in order to make their own profit.
And you also got to pay for the place.
That's, I mean, the, the, the land.
Oh, man, it's a, that's what I'm saying.
So, so you have like, thrive markets and other good examples.
That's why they're going to put everybody on it.
Oh, dude.
Doors like that.
Have you calculated the, the, the savings? Yeah. It's ridiculous. It's why they're gonna put everybody on it. Oh, dude. Do doors like that and you do. Have you calculated that the savings?
Yeah. It's ridiculous.
It's like half.
No. It's a big savings.
I used to just go to Whole Foods and I'm gonna,
I'll be all admit, I'm one of those people
that sometimes doesn't even look at the price.
I just buy it because, you know,
quality of food is so important to me
that I'm willing to spend a lot on it.
I am or a lot more than I guess most people.
Because it's important.
But when I do the savings, when I calculate the savings,
when I go to the thrive market versus Whole Foods,
it's like, it's insane, it's like 25 to 50% lower
on shit that I'm gonna buy anyway.
And it's so convenient, because I'm trying to get to a point
where I have all my stuff like that.
I have to, in fact, I just picked up the dog
for the other day and I'm like, why am I still doing this?
Because Petco does it.
So there's all these wags, and I forget all these other
companies that do this that I can get my dog food,
literally delivered to my doorstep on a certain day,
every single month or every other month.
However, I want to set it up.
And the irony in all of this is that I just
been too so lazy to get it set up.
But it's like, I need to, because it frustrates me
every time that I have to go to the store because I'm like,
I have to go out of my way.
So it was a last minute thing.
It is a last minute thing.
Wait till a dog food's out.
I'm like, ah, fuck, I gotta get to avoid some more food.
Oh, there you go.
There's some good ones up there.
There's some green-free dog food.
Oh, shit, the ride does dog food.
I know, I throw my market food.
That's a rad.
I'm gonna have to take advantage of that too.
Are you kidding me, Doug?
Yeah.
Well, I feel like such an asshole right now.
I actually didn't know that either.
And it's all like non-GMO, you can buy lots of organic.
What?
Well, we'll go back up right there.
I think that's my dog food.
Which one?
The brown one, what?
Organics, organic chicken, oatmeal dog food recipe.
Then they have the wet dog food too.
Because you mix it, don't you?
No, I do half an, well,
half and half and half, I don't literally mix it together.
Like, one, they eat twice a day, one meal I normally do
is like raw chicken.
I do like these and these patties that I get.
But wow.
It is good to see that the animal food,
pet food is the quality of that now is gone up.
Well, so let me tell you,
I believe that I can't think of anything
of any more processed and popular food.
I believe that anybody who's listening to this right now
that has involved in anything to do with that world,
it's a very smart trend to get on right now
because the animals are behind the humans.
Like we're starting to figure that out.
We see how huge organic is going with humans,
but the way that we treat our pets,
and we've watched this evolve in our time,
like we now treat them like humans.
Like everyone treats them like humans.
So why would we not?
I mean, it's expensive taking them to the vet.
And it's like we could put all these preventative practices
in place just like we would for ourselves
to keep them healthy and cancer free.
And you know, it's just like,
and when you look at, when you look at all the things
that we talk about in humans,
the rise of like autoimmune,
the rise of obesity, the rise of diabetes, the rise of all these things.
Our pets have been coming with us.
Yes, the pets are on the same exact slope.
So you're going to see the pendulum swing back and we kind of see it a little bit, but
there's still room for people I think to get into this space and make really good money,
because I think this is going to be the future is definitely like the next trend.
Yes.
I wonder what, how many?
Do I can't believe they sell dog?
I feel like so.
Do we know, do we know what, I don't know if you could find this dog, what percentage of
pets are now on medication?
Because I would assume it's exploded and this is my own anecdote, but almost everybody I
know has had a dog for a long time.
Their dog has died of cancer.
It's like super common.
Very common.
That's what I'm saying.
It's very, and the stuff that they get,
I hear these people doing, and I look at their dogs,
and I'm like, dude, this is crazy.
I had this conversation with Katrina,
because people that see the bulldogs,
they always want to feed them more,
give them, and they're not a lot.
First of all, they don't eat table food at all.
No human food, other than raw chicken or steak,
or whatever, stuff like that, that I'm giving them. But these guys literally, they'll just keep eating. If you keep feeding,
it's cute though. They will. And they'll get just, they'll get so fat. And then their lifespan is
only like seven years. And like half the reason why that is is because people are overfeeding them.
Yeah. Well, yeah, I want to know what number is, that I'd love to look up and see,
because if their health is starting to get really, really bad,
I mean, there's something definitely going on.
Dude, it is, I've seen the charts before.
Have you?
Yeah, no, that's why I'm talking about this.
This is why I think it's a smart space.
When I was a kid, I even thought it was crazy.
People just aren't talking about very much.
We're still, people are still coming around
to the organic thing with humans.
I mean, even when I was a kid, I thought it was weird.
I remember, we had a dog, and I remember looking at,
all the dog every eats the same.
It's the same thing.
Dog food, hard food, and it's super fake.
Aren't these, didn't they evolve from wolves?
Why are we giving them cereal? are we giving them like cereal?
Yeah, they're the meat and like.
Imagine if, imagine if all you ever ate was Cheerios,
you know what I mean?
Someone's poured dry Cheerios in your bowl, here you go.
Here's your meal, you know what I mean?
And then you get cancer, like that's weird.
How did he get cancer?
Yeah, one of these lumps all over him.
Gosh, damn it.
Anyway, that's crazy.
No luck to us, huh?
No.
Oh wow.
There might not be statistics for it. No, no, no, I've seen this. Yeah, I'll look for it later. I'll check it anyway. That's crazy. No luck Doug huh? No. There might not be statistics for it. No
no no I've seen this. Yeah I'll look for it later. I'll check it out. Well now you know they've got
the wet and the dry dog food. Although you know saying wet dog food it sounds kind of gross doesn't it?
I see a bunch of one and a half pound too which is nothing. I need like a 20 pound 30 pound bag. Did
you see any big bags? Oh there's a 13 pounder. Yeah. Yeah. There you go.
There's a 13 pounder right there too. It's a decent size. Good deal. I can't believe I didn't know this though on
what does thrive not have? Maybe I should start thinking like, what am I what am I ordering from somewhere else?
I could be just having shit in my house. My other stuff with thrive. Oh, they have they have they have household
home improvement. Yeah, they have cleaning cleaning supplies. They have which we know that we know that the clinic cleaning supplies
Sal suds my favorite thing Doug you got to order some more of that have you guys tried the
Sal suds? No, I'm not saying that just because it's
saying it's a good product. I'm not saying because they're fans of my
great brand. Yeah, they named it after me. It literally is a good soap. Yeah, it works really really well.
Well, I think I think Justin wins the award for the best Instagram commercial though.
That's the moral moral this.
Sal's winning the YouTube doing as far as the best YouTube.
Sal's winning the best in the story.
You know what?
You know what?
I'm sucking it everything out.
Doug, did you do the intro guy, man?
Doug, did you mail in your test-house?
Did you mail in your test-house?
I didn't yet.
Okay.
I need to do that.
Yeah, I want to see what's going on there because what I wanna try with everybody is to,
we'll do some kind of a protocol.
I've already got one, I've already started,
I'm not sharing it.
Oh, really?
Not yet, I don't.
I think it would be cool for all of us to share it.
Oh, I was gonna wait.
What?
Yeah, like I'm like formulating it myself.
Like I'm like trying.
Because you're competitive, damn.
I am.
I want you to do your protocol,
do my protocol, just a desert protocol,
we'll see what's up, we'll see what time it is
in another month or two.
To this point.
Well, though, I just wanted to implement one thing
so we could tease out what those impacts are
rather than doing a whole bunch of.
Okay, well, what I'm open to to discuss with you is
I'm open to us, because I don't know about just one thing
I wanna do like one or two things.
I think one is like too small. Well, I'm not gonna help you now. Yeah, I don't need your help.
What I think we should do is like maybe you pick two like I know you already like the four
automatic quarter-steps and those types of things like that and I think maybe you do that and
something else. No there's already one thing I'm already doing. And I've got the Juvely and I
love using I probably used I know not probably I for sure use our sauna and Juvely more than anybody else. You're gonna blast the tessies
Yeah, right on the test. I'm gonna do the kids because I was doing that anyways like pretty consistently
But then I laid off before the test. I'm just gonna jerk off more
That's all you're gonna do more more. That's a lot just in hey
I gotta get those numbers
You know your number will actually go up and I'm helping you out. Okay, so. Hey, I gotta get those numbers out. You know, your number will actually go up
and I'm helping you out, okay?
So I'm not, I'm not listening.
What's a deal?
I don't have a scarcity mindset.
Your test goes, that's because you're,
you're already, it's because you're already crushing us.
Not, well, yeah.
So here's, here's what I was thinking is,
well, not thinking.
This is what you can do in that regard, Justin.
Don't jerk off.
Don't do anything for,
hold it in for a week.
Because within a week, like one to two week period, that't do anything for a week.
Cause within a week, like one to two week period,
that does cause a spike in testosterone.
But I don't know if it's a permanent one.
Here's what I'm doing, cause I do know that study,
and this is pretty established that if you go
really, really low carbohydrate for long, long periods of time,
it will lower testosterone.
Now, it's not, I don't know if it lowers it a lot, but studies will show that it will lower testosterone. Now, I don't, it's not, I don't know if it lowers
it a lot, but studies will show that it does lower it. So now I've been eating starches.
My gut health is really good. I don't need a ton, but I am eating more. So I'm wondering
if my, what my numbers are going to look like just from that to see what that goes up to.
My goal is to go over the, I want to see if I can get my number outside of range. I
mean, whoa, yeah. Oh, somebody Dan Gittenslee. I meant to ask you this. get my number outside of range. You know what I mean? Whoa. I want to be doing that.
Oh, somebody Dan Gittensley.
I meant to ask you this.
I thought the kid.
Yeah.
Yeah, his numbers would add a range too.
Wow.
Yeah, which made me feel worse.
I know.
He was scared.
I was like scared.
I'm like, that's awesome.
I'm jealous.
Well, his estridial was a little high.
He thought it was too high, but I'm like, no, it's not high.
It's within range.
His estridial, whatever.
I don't know. I want to see if I can get mine out of range,
which the range they had was up to 186,
I think it was, right?
That was 112, I think.
That's some high standards, bro.
I think I can get mine.
Charging it up.
It's totally fine to know.
I got nowhere to go, but I'm okay with whatever range.
You guys should go down.
Oh, God, fucking, I'll go crawl in a while. Justa was angry about that. I was angry about it. He doesn't like losing. No
Especially the guy that's home on the bottom bottom of the totem pole
Bullshit, I'm not gonna lie dude. I felt really good about beating
I know you did you guys because I was just like and it's less about about beating you. I know you did, you guys. Because I was just like, and it's less about beating you,
just more like, I don't know.
Oh my God, I'm like, wow, that's weird.
I've been so hard on myself on how horrible my
whole level is.
And then I was like, wow, this explains things for me.
I was using it more to interpret how I've internally
been feeling this fight to get shit done and do things
in the weight room.
It's just been a fucking struggle. Isn't that interesting? Like, it's, you know, being
somebody who has in the last five years, I mean, I, I don't know, well, personally, I don't
know too many people that are friends of mine that have experienced as dramatic of swings
of hormones as I have in the last five years. And there's definitely this really, you know, when I, when being low, uh, man,
it's a, it's a fucking place to be. I have so much empathy now for women that go through
minipause or women that are on their period of times or guys that are getting older that
just have really stressful jobs, don't get a lot of sleep, don't even realize that they
probably have low, low hormones because they don't ever get it tested. Like it's like this.
Hormones drive emotion, they drive feeling, they drive sometimes perception.
Like Justin said, what I find the hardest is a guy who has so much passion and love for
training like I do.
I just, I love to train, man.
And it was hard for me.
It sucks when you're very, very hard to muster up the energy. Imagine if, I mean, for people listening,
don't know what that feels like.
Imagine working out and every workout feels like it sucks.
Yeah.
That's literally what it was.
Yeah, and it's compounding on many levels, right?
Because it sucks because your strength isn't there.
It sucks because your energy isn't there.
Your drive, your drive to do it isn't there.
The results are terrible.
I mean, when you have low testosterone
and you low testosterone versus mid to high,
oh, huge difference.
I mean, I already feel like the way my body is responding now,
like I'm not putting in that much more work today
that I was just two months ago.
But now it's responding.
It's just that my hormone levels are finally starting
to recover a little bit.
And so now my body's starting to respond,
which then that compounds,
because it gives me a little more motivation.
It's like, oh, oh, this is awesome.
I can actually look in the mirror now and see that the sacrifices I was making
nutritionally and the hard work I was bringing the gym is actually changing
in my body a little.
Well, it's going to be, I tell you what, I don't know if I want to see Justin
with higher testosterone.
Because that's exactly what my wife said.
Yeah. She's kind of, she's like worried.
She's like, no, you're so nice and thoughtful.
Like you're gonna turn to asshole or something.
If you start crying.
You're talking about, yeah.
Made you cry, you're like, thank you honey.
Yeah.
It is a little tug.
It is a little weird though that that is the one thing too
that I noticed that I think is the positive side of all that is it did make me very
I don't know what the word is that I'm looking empathetic. Yeah, maybe you know what though
So here's so here's the thing about that. It's not that testosterone
Causes you to want to be an asshole on all stuff. That's not that's not what it is
Here's what I think it because the reality is that the studies will show that low testosterone
also causes irritability, anger, all that stuff.
Because what I think it is, is,
because I know for me, when I feel shitty,
you just feel shitty.
When I don't feel good, I almost feel empathetic
to other people because I don't feel good.
So it's like, you know what I mean?
So it's almost like I feel bad for my girl
or whatever, like look, I don't feel good, look, I'm sorry, or whatever, or if she doesn't feel good, I'm more empath, you know what I mean? So it's almost like I feel bad for my girl or whatever. Like, look, I don't feel good.
Like, I'm sorry or whatever.
Or if she doesn't feel good, I'm more empathetic to it.
I think that's what it is.
Because if you always feel...
That's an interesting perspective.
I could get on board with that because you're right.
Like, I could, I remember myself kind of processing.
You like that sometimes where, you know,
I feel down and sorry for myself and this and that where...
And you almost like, you almost want to kind of like tell them.
Like, look, I'm sorry. I would, I would even communicate. I would tell Katrina, I would say, Sorry for myself and this and that where and you almost like you almost want to kind of like tell them like look
I'm sorry, you know, I would even communicate though
I would tell Katrina would say hey, I just want you to know like I'm just I'm not feeling myself today
And I'm just I'm feel like unmotivated and tired and so if I feel shorter irritable
Let me know but the fact that I I have the ability to communicate that and say that makes me seem like a more empathetic and that- Because low testosterone, by itself,
will make a guy more irritable, angry, depressed.
And when you look at studies on men
who get testosterone replacement therapy,
who need it, who actually need it,
they'll say they feel more confident,
they feel more energetic, they're happier,
they're more connected to people.
So it's not that testosterone is this poison
that, oh, if it's low, I'm this
better person, that's not the case. I really think that this is an important thing that
everybody over the age of 30 does. Test it. I think people under the age of 30, you know,
why? Well, yes, I think they should find out what they're, what they're, well, that's
what hormone levels are. That's what my original hormone therapist said was, you know, and
that's kind of what led me. Yeah Because you need to know what your normal is.
That's what he said.
That's what he said.
Before 30, you should at least test it one time
so you can kind of see where you're at.
And then after 30, I think it's highly.
Because I know me, I know me,
and although my number put me right
in the middle of that range,
I know that it's low for me,
based off of how I feel.
Well, then know what I normally feel like.
So, like, I'm in the, quote unquote,
normal range right now, but I definitely don't feel
the best me.
I know what the best healthy version of me feels like,
but I at least feel better.
You know, so it's funny too,
because I told Jessica I'm like, yeah,
I'm gonna, I think because I've gone low carb for so long
because I've been trying to heal my gut,
which let's be honest, if you're trying to heal your gut
that if you have unhealthy gut or you have inflammation,
that's gonna affect your testosterone more than the fact
that you're not eating carbohydrate.
So I think though that because now that my gut
is so much healthier due to some of the fasting protocols
and stuff like that that I've been doing,
then now I can introduce those starches again
and they seem to be okay with me.
I think my testosterone levels are gonna get higher.
So I was telling her this and she's like,
oh shit, she's like, you're gonna get higher testosterone?
Because I, and I'm trying to explain to her like,
how you know me now, however high my libido is now,
and that kind of stuff, trust me,
it's normally a lot higher.
When I'm fully on, when I know my testosterone levels
are where they're normally at, I have
an extremely high libido.
So even though it's now in the mid-range, this for me feels like it's low.
This is why I want to see what will happen.
I'll see if I'm able to get it even higher.
Well, that's originally how I was able to even get on hormone replacement therapy, is
I technically wasn't in like a dangerously low where some doctors, some doctors are different.
Like some of them will tell you like,
you know, oh, you're fine.
You know what I'm saying?
You're not dangerously low
or it's not gonna be bad or unhealthy for you.
And so they're like, they don't prescribe it.
But if you're towards the bottom of the normal range
or right on the cusp or like that,
some doctors will be like,
and you're only 30 something years old,
and you're a guy like me who exercises,
that's how my guy looks like. You exercise, you 30 something years old, and you're a guy like me who exercises,
that's how my guy looks like.
You exercise, you do all these things,
like you should be higher than that.
And if I'm telling him, giving him feedback,
I don't feel right, you know, then he's like,
okay, you're probably used to being more closer
to the 900 range and you're measuring it to 50,
which is extremely low for a guy like me.
Right, right, yeah, I'm your best.
And some hormone replacement specialists will say that the higher end is where men should
be.
I don't know if I buy that though.
And it's almost like a doctor who's trying to prescribe cholesterol medicine telling you,
your cholesterol has to be super low.
I feel that's why it's hard for me to believe because I think it has to be based off of
your own subjective perception because when they say when you have hormone replacement
specialist saying,
oh no, they need to be this high.
It's almost like they're setting the bar higher
because they know they're gonna get, I mean,
more customers.
No, I think if you're gonna go to them today.
I think if you have a good guy, like the guy that I had
when I did it originally, like I think that it's,
it is part of the, you know, is the test,
and then the other part of it is asking you,
like, well, what do you feel like?
Like, does it do you feel like your libido's there?
Do you have the same sex drive to it?
Do you have the same motivation to do a task
like you did in the past?
And I would be interested to see what an actual
medical intervention would do to raise testosterone
like HCG.
I'd be very interested to see what that does to a number
because that's, well, I tell you what.
So I have that.
So I still have, I have quite a few kits of HCG
because that was some of the protocol that I did before.
What I'll do is, I wanna do the natural route right now
because I, yes, I'd love to compare the two.
Right, so I'll go the natural route right now
doing the things like the JuveLide
and using supplements and things like that
and then meditation, I'm even gonna come off weed
before I test, I'm gonna do some little things like that
to see if all those things can help.
And then after that, then I'll do an HCG four week cycle
and then I'll see how much.
That's for sure, I'll raise it.
I just wanna see if it'll last.
Yeah, so do I.
And I also wanna see how much of a cycle it do.
We'll just give me a little bit of one
and like, or will it be a short live?
I think sometimes it'll push you even off the charts.
For some reason.
Yeah, I've had a few clients, males who had low testosterone
and usually through nutrition intervention, sleep,
exercise, proper exercise, stress management.
Usually I can get their testosterone levels
to boost considerably.
Like I got one guy's testosterone levels from 300 to 700.
I had another guy raise his another 30%.
But then there was this one dude that,
it's like we got him up,
but it was still really low or in that low range.
Well, so he did HCG and that should push him out of range,
but through a couple cycles of doing that,
we eventually got it to normalize and it actually stayed at a higher...
So what I felt, even though I didn't test,
I only did the well test once so far,
what I felt was the drop back down.
So I felt really good while I was taking it.
I felt really good a little bit afterwards.
I think you could tell it went down.
And then I felt like it came down again.
Yeah, so now you know, HCG by itself,
if abused can also cause the lighting cells
of the test days, the ones that help make testosterone
to become desensitized and actually start producing less.
Right.
So you can actually create a negative feedback loop
even with HCG.
And you can get side effects of like you're taking steroids.
Right.
Oh yeah, no, I've made it.
I want to say that because I know people listening
are like, oh shit, that's going to solve.
No, no, no, you had to be very careful with hg2 because there's so much information out there that gives different
recommendations on the dosage of it that's really and like some of these bodybuilder recommendations are extremely high
Mm-hmm, and you know
I remember the first time that I that I used hg for a post cycle therapy
I actually felt my
Kind of mast you oh guy know yeah, I felt you'll get a set of effects I actually felt my, kind of, astia, flak.
Oh, Gino. Yeah. I felt that.
You'll get side effects.
Yeah, I felt it flare up because it actually will.
It was too much.
Well, here's a cool thing about HCG.
The black market, which is a lot of people will get this
because otherwise you have to get a prescription.
The black market for anabolic or hormones is sucks
because so often is the ship fake or under dose.
So often, actually probably more often than not. Yeah, water down. But the cool thing with HCG, well, that cool, hormones is sucks because so often is the ship fake or under dose or so often actually
probably more often than not.
Yeah, water down.
But the cool thing with HCG, well, that cool, there is a way you can test to see what
you have has HCG.
You can't test how much is in there, but you can actually, in a very inexpensive way, figure
out if your kit has HCG in it and that is through a pregnancy test.
Oh, that's right. kit has HCG in it and that is through a pregnancy test.
Oh, that's right.
Yeah, you have, if you scored it on a pregnancy test
because a pregnancy test will pick up HCG,
or that's what it does to detect pregnancy,
it'll call, it'll show up.
And so you can actually test it that way.
It's just kind of cool.
Did you guys hear about the guy who did the test,
the pregnancy test and showed up positive,
because he peed on it and thought it would be cute.
And what happened?
No.
You didn't hear about this?
No, no.
So this dude peed on a pregnancy test.
His wife's some assuming?
Yeah, like his girlfriends.
And it said he was pregnant and he thought it was hilarious.
He's like, oh, it's just fucking hilarious.
It says I'm pregnant.
Obviously, I'm not some of God's.
Cancer, tumor, some of that fucking hilarious. It says I'm pregnant. Obviously, I'm not some of God's.
Cancer, tumor, something.
Yeah, to stick it to cancer.
Because when you have to stick it to cancer,
you'll start producing this particular hormone.
And so he posted it on his social media.
And I guess one of his friends
or there was a doctor on there and he's like,
yo man, you need to go to the doctor right away.
Wow.
I'm sure enough, you had to stick it to cancer.
Well, I mean, that joke panned off.
That probably saved his life, right?
Is that funny?
Yeah.
Wow.
That's fucked up, huh?
That is fucked up.
That's one of you newer, just something you saw.
No, no, no, I read about it a long time ago.
We don't pranked it.
Yeah, fucking stupid test.
You got cancer.
You're going to talk from now.
Just imagine his face just to be this one.
I mean, I would have never told that.
I would have never known that though.
I wouldn't have known it better. You know what I'm saying? If someone told me that I would have never known that though I wouldn't know better you know I'm saying if someone told me like oh yeah
You could totally piss on the pregnancy test and I would immediately think something fucked up with the hormones if you're gonna
Test positive for pregnancy like come on
Yeah
It's like worse than then finding out someone's pregnant. You know what I mean? Yeah, oh shit
Why does it say pregnant girlfriends like well, I didn't pee on that.
He's like, oh, thank God.
I just have cancer.
Thank God.
It's actually worse.
Yeah.
You've got cancer.
Anyway, I want to ask you guys to advise on something kind of personal.
I'm going to do it on the podcast.
This is my therapy.
Oh, yes.
I was wondering what your guy's opinion was on talking to therapists.
I know you're in're your childhood Adam,
you went to therapists.
I've been in a lot, man.
Yeah, what is your opinion on something like that?
So I've never, I've never been to one on my own.
I've went to one towards the end of my marriage.
But first of all, I guess let me tell you why
I've been kind of throwing this around.
You know, I got out of a long marriage for 15 years,
which I could say probably the last eight to 10 of that marriage
and was dysfunctional, was quite dysfunctional,
especially the last four years or so,
was really, really dysfunctional.
And I find myself now so apprehensive for certain things
because it's almost like, it's not post-traumatic
stress but it feels like something like that. I'm watching the Jersey Shore with my girl,
right? And there's all these episodes where Ronnie and his girlfriend getting all these crazy
fights and shit and I can feel myself getting triggered. I'm getting disgusted by it
to the point where I almost don't wanna be
in a relationship myself because I'm watching something
on TV.
Oh, that's interesting.
Like really bad, you know,
and it's all the fighting and dysfunction.
Right, right.
But I've never gone to anybody for anything like that.
I think there is an incredible amount of value.
I think that I don't think you could go to it
and especially someone like you who has an open mind, like leading into it, like, because a lot of times,
like when people do therapy, it's because they got drugged there, or because like, you know,
their marriage is falling apart. Yeah, I would imagine a big part as you're
willing to. Yeah, exactly. A big part is just you being open-minded and willing to do it. Now,
where it may be less valuable for you in comparison,
do I think to a lot of people is that,
I think you're a very self-aware and intelligent person.
Katrina brought up something for me.
There was something that I was struggling with.
I don't know that long ago.
It might have been this hormone thing
where she like, I think,
I recommend that.
Yeah, she recommended that to me
and I kind of chuckled at her.
She goes, why, why you laugh?
She goes, you know, you don't think you can benefit from it?
I'm like, no, I'm not saying that.
It's just, I've been in a lot of therapy.
You know what I'm saying?
I've been in and out of that stuff and had a lot of people that, even like when I didn't
do formal therapy, I stayed in contact with a youth pastor mind and then a senior pastor
mind for a long time.
And I used him kind of like that.
And so I've had a lot of, you know, and I also train a lot of therapist.
And so I used a lot of training sessions like that.
So I think there's incredible value to that.
I think where I'm at in my life now, that I also have the self-awareness
to be okay, like, okay, let's say there's something I will use my struggling
with hormones, depression, things like that that I was going through.
Like, I'm aware of it.
And then I'm also aware enough to like start to do the research and start to like read and dive into things.
I think that's where I'm at right now.
I meditate on the process of all that.
I think that's where I'm at.
I have yet to like buy books specifically about, you know, what I'm talking about.
And so I feel like I want to go there first before hiring somebody and sitting down.
And I also have you guys, I talked to you guys all the time and I
appreciate that and we have the podcast and I'm an open person you guys know
that I'm not I'm always talking and you know express how I feel I'm not
embarrassed I mean hey I'm doing it on a public podcast but it's just I
don't want the problem is I feel like you know if I have an argument with my
girlfriend for example I don't want to be so deep in how my past was that she pays for or that. I'm not sure if I can
even accurately, if I'm being accurate with what I'm saying, because am I saying this because of
how I've always felt before or am I saying this because of this one situation? And I don't want to
be in a position where I question that. Right.
You're trying to be proactive about things.
You've already recognized, like, oh, oh,
shit, I built some walls up here, you know,
just by seeing this, it had me react a certain way.
Like if we do get in a fight, you know,
this is gonna be something that's like, ah, like it's,
it feels like, you know, something that you've already gone
through and that.
It's a lot like hiring a personal trainer.
Yeah.
And I would think that all three of us would agree.
We probably highly recommend to most people
that you should hire a trainer at one point in your career
if you're not one already, right?
Well, it's an outside perspective
that gives you great insight.
A lot of times you can't find that yourself.
Right.
And if you can find that yourself,
or you're seeing self-awareness wise,
like I think that's,
it's valuable then to dive into it
and do research.
And that's just that you have to ask yourself
if you're the person that will do that.
Now I know you, and I know the type of people we are
and where I'm at in my life
and where I think you're at in your life
that you will read something and start to dive in
and learn, and I think you'll get as much value
if not more value than even sitting down
and having someone tell you, right?
So, yeah, I think that's kind of where I'm at.
I think I'm gonna start with something like that
because it's like this, it's like,
you know, by the way, I have a tough time saying this
sometimes not because I have a tough time saying it,
but because I don't want people to have a negative view
of my ex-wife, because believe me,
there's two people in that relationship.
There's definitely two sides to it,
and we both contribute it.
And we're,
Which is also what makes you,
why I said what I just said,
is that because you have that ability to see that,
it's like when I talked about,
I've talked about being cheated on by my ex,
and that was the first time that ever happened to me,
and so many people were like,
Oh my God, fuck her, and I'm like,
No, not fuck her, like, you recognize your side.
Yeah, what did I do?
Like this is definitely a growth opportunity for me, no, not fuck her. Like, you recognize your side of it. Yeah, what did I do?
This is definitely a growth opportunity for me.
There's something in this relationship,
like the fact that she felt the need to go outside
of our relationship for some sort of attention or love
or whatever it may have been,
there's something that I can't control her.
I can't do anything about your ex-wife.
But what you can do is dive deeper into what role of that did you play in?
Oh yeah, no, I'm not.
You're the type of person who I think,
Oh, I've dug very deep into that.
I've admitted a lot of things that I've done wrong.
And I understand that.
But the last, especially the last four years or so
was just this constant dysfunction,
constant fighting, constant.
It's just a terrible environment overall.
And so what I don't want is for, because then I got divorced, and I was done, trust me,
I was done years before I actually left.
I think both of us were, which is why we both transitioned in, in we're able to be
amicable at the end, because we both agree this is what we need to do.
But it's like, if I get in an argument now, I don't want it to feel like it's like a,
it's almost like you have a limit, right?
You have this limit of drama that you can handle,
and it's not fair to the person I'm with now
that my limit is so fucking hot.
You ramp way up.
Well, I know this, like I know when somebody mood changes
in a way that feels irrational to me,
first off, irrational to me is probably,
I'm probably extra sensitive to it because of how things were before, right? And number two,
like, there's not that much leeway. If somebody, if there's any kind of a raising of a voice, voice,
or any kind of an emotion shift, I'm like, run. I don't want to, like, I don't want to deal with
this at all because I dealt with it for so long beforehand. So anyway, I think that's where I'm at.
I think I'm gonna buy some books
and just start doing my own research and reading about it.
Yeah, I just want to say to the audience is listening,
or I think that I am a big fan of it.
And I do think that a major,
I think everybody can benefit from it.
So I think it's overall, it's a really good thing.
It's like everybody can benefit from it.
Persona, even if you are a personal trainer,
could you not benefit from going and being trained
by someone who's even more educated in that field?
Absolutely.
Do I think it's necessary?
No, I don't think it's necessary.
And I think there are people out there
that just like with personal training,
I think there's people that can never,
I mean, I've never hired a personal trainer.
Everything I've always, you know,
I've figured it out myself.
So if you're, if you're passionate about
growth, you're passionate about learning about yourself, which I feel you are, I think
you can accomplish a lot of that stuff on your own. Could you fast track you there by
hiring a trainer and sping them? I mean, hiring a therapist.
And there's also, too, just with your partner. I know you guys probably, it's really easy
to discuss things because it's something that you guys probably, like, it's really easy to discuss things, because it's like, you know, something that you guys
have established in relationship.
And for me, like, with my wife, you know,
we did go through a little bit of counseling,
which is, you know, not therapy,
but it's definitely having somebody else in the room
to identify things and present things and contemplate,
you know, what problems may arise based off of our value system.
So we went through that whole process and it was very, very helpful.
So I definitely, I think relationship wise too, because I mean, you can get so far as
to explain things with your partner and want to one, else, they just, they frame it in a different light
to where a lot of times my wife could be like,
oh, okay, and then she gets what I'm trying to say.
Yeah, I mean, I've been before,
like I said towards the end of my marriage
and it was definitely helpful to help us, you know,
make that decision to, you know, end everything or whatever,
but I wanna feel like totally ready,
like, okay, that's what I want right now.
And I have, I don't feel like I've done
the other stuff yet first, which is like, read some books on it and dive into it.
What they're really good at doing is like asking you like a question like, you know, hey, when you
watch Jersey Shore style, like, you know, what do you feel? They ask you that first and then you
explain yourself and then they say, well, why do you feel that way? And then you explain why
that? And then they, and then what they do really good is like, you make start to take off on them,
like, well, you know, where I used this and then my wife and then you start going. Oh stop right there
You know, you just said something right now. You know, I can do this with you all day
And they just get you to start to think about what you're saying which I think like I think you do a really good job
I think I have a good partner too, because she allows us to,
you know, we can talk, we can talk a lot,
but, you know, I don't want her to have to, you know,
bear the brunt of, you know, whatever else comes out of it.
So we'll see what happens.
I'll tell you what though, it's been,
I've definitely changed and grown a lot since that period of time.
And I am a growth-minded person.
I just want it to happen faster.
So we'll see what happens.
If you're a listener of both Mind Pump and RX Radio,
you guys will have to tag Jordan shallow and talk shit to him
because I'm gonna punk him right now.
What do we do?
Oh no.
No, I'm not letting him on the show anymore.
That's not gonna tell him.
No, what do you do?
No, no, no, I would totally let him on.
I'm just saying, just, we love him.
But my inbox is just,
and I apologize if you're somebody who's still there.
I saw that I still had people from six days ago.
I don't ever let the thing get that crazy,
but it's just been overwhelming this last week,
especially since Jordan Shadows episode,
because I must have had 50 DMs on people
asking me to interpret half the shit
on the podcast.
You know, it's funny.
So, you know, we bring them on the show and he just added work to me.
Dude, I was like, the whole point of having you on here is to take some of the load off for us.
Bro, nobody, nobody DM me about that.
Nobody did?
No, but I think it's because they feel like I'll explain it the same way.
Yeah, you will.
They know I'll dumb it way down. Like, ask feel like I'll explain it the same way. Yeah, you will. They know all dumb it way down
Like ask Adam. He'll say in way simpler terms. What was he saying? Ben your elbow when you do that left. Oh, thank you
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First question is from Robert M75.
Is there any reason to attempt a one rep max?
If so, is there a way you suggest going about doing it?
I have two thoughts on this.
Yes and no.
Yeah, you can make an argument for both.
The idea.
Yes, you can.
You have to take a position, Adam.
I'll make the argument for, but you go ahead.
Well, okay, so if you're gonna make the argument for,
let me make the argument for not but you go ahead. Well, okay, so if you're going to make the argument for, let me make the argument for not at first.
Yeah.
Um, what I, what I see and what I've experienced myself when, when, when chasing the one
rep, you can build an incredible physique and be extremely healthy and never test your
one rep max your entire life.
Yeah.
For sure. Totally. For sure, you can never, ever max out on a lift.
And I would argue that that may be a good strategy
for a majority of people because there is risk
that comes with lifting that heavy weight.
And you need to be pretty damn experienced on how to bail
on a squat or a dead lift or a bench press,
the right way if you're gonna be max lifting and
Then on top of that the other knock I have on it and this is to knock crossfit a little bit is
We got into this this PR culture like PR didn't even exist when I started as a trainer
No, I didn't even know what PR was until like after like year a couple years of hearing people like oh my PR
I'm like what the fuck is PR like I never heard that term when I first started as a trainer,
but it's become so popular that everybody is chasing
their one rep, wrote one rep max,
and I would argue that it's contributing
to a lot of the injuries that you see in things like CrossFit.
That's my no, even though I have, I could say yes.
Well, I'm gonna agree with you,
and I'm gonna add more to that and say that,
if you just, if you wanna be fit, strong, healthy,
whatever, there's no reason.
I don't see what the reason is.
As long as you understand how to judge
your perceived effort and train relatively intensely,
I don't know why, I don't know why that would be important.
The only thing I can think of why it's important
to test out how much you can lift for one rep for a max.
And by the way, we're not talking about training with low reps, like doing sets of one.
We're talking about maxing out for a rep.
That's a big difference because I've trained many, many clients with reps as low as one,
but when you're doing that, you're not maxing out, you're doing something like 80% of their max or whatever.
It's heavy, but it's something that they can do and they can duplicate for sets.
A max is literally the most you could lift for a single rep.
And I guess the only benefit I could see to that is if you're trying to figure out your percentages
of your max or you're trying to figure out if you're, you know, you're getting motivated
by the fact that your max went up.
But here's a deal. You don't need to max out to see if you're, you know, you're getting motivated by the fact that your max went up. But here's a deal. You don't need to max out to see if you're stronger.
If, if, let's say you're working out with me, let's say you're my client and we're doing,
we did six reps on the squat, six heavy reps on the squat and your perceived effort was
pretty hard. Like you're like, oh, that was pretty intense. I feel like I maybe would
have been able to squeeze out one or two more reps, but we did six. The next time I train
you and you do the same weight for six reps, you'll know if you're
stronger because you're like, oh wow, this is easier.
I can actually do seven reps with the same perceived intensity or the same perceived effort.
And so that's why it's hard for me to even justify.
I don't think I've ever had any client, except for maybe Doug and a couple others who are
very competitive and with good instruction.
Sure, I agree with you guys, but at the same time being an athlete and having gratifying
moments that I can think of in my weight training career, in my athletic career, a lot of them
were when I pressed my body to the limits.
And this is one of those things.
If you feel like you've been doing the work,
and this has been a few years even in the making,
like I'm not talking about doing this
like every year even, or like every couple of months,
like I'm trying, like I'm talking about,
like this is something that I've been working my ass
up towards.
And if I wanna see tangible evidence of strength that I can summon, there's
nothing better than a one rep max. So I do see that the argument that like it's unnecessary,
yes, it's unnecessary, because I could still just do multiple reps and get gratification
from that and still be able to, it's not gonna hammer my body
to where, you'll still see you're stronger.
I can get on board with the athlete thing.
And the reason why I can get on board with the athlete
thing, because if you play sports competitively,
there'll be times when you're playing
where you're going to stretch your limits
or you'll be challenged with that of wanting to fold,
wanting to break, wanting to give up
because your body is wanting to shut down.
And there's something about the,
what's a mental, the CNS, the positive things
you're gonna get for your CNS,
the positive things you're gonna get
for the psychological piece,
there are some really good benefits
to pushing to that limit.
Now, the greater the benefits with things like that, the greater the risk. And so who I'm talking to would would would totally change this would
change my advice, right? So if it's somebody who's extremely advanced, you're an athlete,
you're I get it or you're or you're or you're competing in powerlifting. Like that makes sense.
For sure. That makes right. That makes sense. But if you're a mind-pump listener and you love to lift weights, you want to be healthy,
you want to be strong, you want to look good, and those are pretty much your main goals
of why you work out, it doesn't really serve that big of a purpose in your routine.
The risk is too high.
Look, here's what happens when you go, when you go to failure on any set of resistance.
As you go to failure, your form starts to break down.
And so now you're supporting a weight
or holding a weight or lifting a weight
with sub optimal form, which increases the risk of injury.
Now with a one rep max, it's even worse
because you're lifting the heaviest weight
you could possibly lift for one rep.
And so if your form is off a little bit,
like look, if I'm doing a set of 20 with a squat
and my form is off, I may be doing that
with 275 pounds, right?
If I do one rep max and my form is off a little bit,
I might have up to 400 pounds on my back,
the risk of injuries quite high.
Now that being said, I test my one rep max all the time.
Why?
Because I'm experienced and I enjoy the challenge of it and I enjoy seeing the progress.
So from that standpoint, then I can see the benefit.
But I don't see that happening with a lot of people.
I see that happening with a small percentage of people or at least a small percentage of
people that I think should be attempting one rep max.
That being said, if you are gonna test your one rep max,
there is some advice I have for you.
Don't guess what your one rep maxed
by throwing a bunch of weight on the bar.
Well, we're laughing, but that's what people do.
No, no, no, no, no.
They'll be like, oh, well I just feel it.
Yeah, normally I lift 135.
So yeah, let's try 225 and see if that's my max.
No, no, no, no, no, no, bad strategy.
Give yourself a lot of time to slowly
inch your way up to your one rep max.
So I'll give you an example.
Let's say I can do three 15,
I can squat three hundred 15 pounds,
let's say 10 pounds, 10 times.
Let's say that's my, I know I can muster out,
at least 10 repetitions.
I'm gonna go up, I might start off going up 15 or 20 pounds,
and then as I get closer to the weight
where I start to feel it starts to really get heavy,
I'm only going up by two to five pounds,
and that's it, I'm doing one rep each time
to not fatigue myself, but the last thing you wanna do
is overshoot what you think your maxes fail.
That's good advice.
Yeah, you don't wanna fail,
because now you failed, which is tough.
Let me tell you, failing on some lifts,
like a bench press or an overhead press or a squat,
you need to have a technique on how to fail, by the way.
There's a technique to lifting it,
and there's a technique to failing,
because you could have a great squat
and not know how to dump the bar
or not know how to drop it on safeties,
and that's what people tend to hurt themselves.
So you gotta have that technique.
And also when you fail at a one rep max attempt,
you're fried.
So now your one rep max is lower.
So now you try to back off on the way
and you really not, you don't know what your one rep max
could have been because you've literally just
done a force negative with heavy weight,
which fucks you, it flies you.
I have never been someone to really calculate the percentages out for some of this,
because I've never been in the powerlifting competing, but I have checked,
I have checked my one rep max, and I was kind of thinking,
like, how do I get to that number?
How do I figure that out?
And listen to you talk, I'm like, you know what?
There is like a formula or a pattern that I have when I'm trying to test this, right?
And if it's, if it's upper body, like bench press, overhead press, I'm, bench press, overhead press, I'm testing a max
there. I'm going to keep going up and wait until I find a weight that I can only get about
five reps. Once I get to a weight where I can get only about five reps, then what I do is
I incrementally go up five to ten pounds because it's upper body, right? And then I just keep going up, each and I give myself long rest periods in between
then I add five to 10 pounds,
long rest period five to 10 pounds.
I keep going until I can always squeeze out one or two reps
and then I've got an idea of where my one rep max
is gonna be at, right?
If it's legs, I can go a little bit faster
than five or 10 pounds.
I can go like 15 to 20 pounds every single time.
So I'll go all the way, I'll squat or deadlift until I can only get five reps with that
weight.
And then from there, I'm inching up 20 pounds at a time.
So 10 pounds on your side until I can kind of get to the point where I can find what my
singles or doubles would be.
Yeah, yeah.
Same thing.
And as far as how often you should test your one, Rhett max, if this is, if you're that person who's experienced
has good control and knows how to dump a weight
or knows how to fail, I would say it's probably safe
to max out once every other month.
It's probably a good idea.
Once a month, you might be able to get away with two,
but that's probably pushing it.
I would say probably once every two months
because you got to give yourself some time to build your strength up or do some back off.
Well, a perfect world if you're following maps, like if you were to incorporate this with
maps program or how I would do it, it is the end of your program.
Well, I would do the end of every strength phase.
So like, there's usually three to five weeks.
Right.
And then as you cycle back through, I would do it again at the end of the strength phase.
So run any of the maps programs,
and when you get to the end of the strength phase,
that will be when you test it,
and you would go and transition the next phase,
when you come back around through that maps program,
or another maps program, you could test again.
I mean, that being said, training at that limit,
or that type of max capacity for a rep,
there's definitely a skill that's involved,
that's unique to it.
So what I mean by that is for those of you who are competitors
or who do find lots of value in this,
who also again are experienced and know what they're doing,
the more you practice one rep maxing,
the better you get at it,
because there is a skill involved.
The weight moves different.
It takes a different type of intensity and drive and focus
and finding that right amount to ramp up to,
the ultimate output is definitely part of the process.
The skill you need to learn,
like did I do too much?
Is that gonna take away from my one rep max?
Did I not do enough?
So I primed my body properly for this.
So this is all things that you have to literally practice
and to build up to that experience where now,
this is something that you start to get good at.
Are there any lifts that you guys will test more often
than others or lifts that you don't like
to test out with one rep max?
I test them most.
Test my squat.
Oh, you do?
I test my squat and I used to test my bench a lot.
Really?
Yeah, yeah.
I got a lot of pride in that for a while,
and then I haven't in years.
So it's been a skill I've lost, you know?
But squat and deadlift.
See, I never had press.
I mean, I never test my bench because my shoulders are okay
if I don't push it too hard.
But if I max out, my form always goes off a little bit,
and I end up feeling at my AC joint on my right shoulder.
Yeah, yeah.
I rarely ever max out in squats,
because I hate failing on a squat.
That is a terrifying feeling.
And dumping a bar is a very loud...
I've gotten really good at it.
I've been...
Yeah, I've been on squats pretty good.
So getting out of...
That's what I'm saying. It's a skill. I scare people around me, I've been on squats pretty good. That's so squat, getting out of my mouth. That's what I'm saying.
I feel.
I scare people around me.
So I can dump it behind me.
That's why.
Yeah, I feel okay.
I feel the best about pushing my limits on the squat
because I feel the most comfortable
with actually getting out of it.
There you go.
Chast and overhead press, I don't.
Though, if I'm pushing an overhead press,
like if I'm gonna compensate anywhere,
it's gonna be my low back arching
and I'm afraid of stuff like that.
Exactly.
So you gotta know this.
Right.
And Deadlift for me, I'm a little weary because of an injury I got while doing it, you
know, the other time when I hurt my QL a bit.
But yeah, it's like, that's one of those things that just sticks in your head.
So now you have to overcome these barriers that you've placed.
Oh no, Deadlift psychologically.
Deadlift for me, that's the one that I'll test because I just feel most comfortable.
You can drop the bar, it's right down in front of you.
And I've been through some grinders, let me tell you.
I've been through some deadlifts that were,
they felt like it took me five minutes to get the bar
up into position.
Those can be pretty nasty.
Those can be very, very nasty.
Yeah.
Next question is from CellCarp.
What are your thoughts on why childhood obesity
continues to grow? Your
opinions on how it got so bad and how we should fix it. This is a this is a scary problem. You know,
childhood obesity is it's scary because it wasn't that long ago that childhood obesity almost didn't
even exist. No joke. Like it almost didn't even exist.
When I first got my first personal training certification
back in 1997, they called Type 2 Diabetes.
In my book, in the actual certification,
it was called Adult Onset Diabetes.
It wasn't called Type 2 Diabetes.
It was Type 1 Diabetes where you're not making insulin and you need insulin. And then there was adult onset diabetes because
this was the type of diabetes that you developed as an adult through, you know, poor diet.
We believed you could only get it as an adult. That's because that's all that ever had.
It never happened that way. Never happened where a kid was born with diabetes.
What do you mean? I don't understand how that's not so fucking scary as a parent to see Never had, it never happened that way. Never happened where a kid was born with diabetes and they got it until...
I don't understand how that's not so fucking scary
as a parent to see what has happened
just in the last 30, 40 years with childhood,
with obesity and diabetes in children.
That's crazy to think that it didn't exist 50 years ago
and now it's something that is been on the rise.
There has to be like an epigenetic component where
like, I don't think so.
I think it's less, I think it's less of that
and more of what we see, more of this sitting in front of
video games and computers and phones
and then eating fire cheetos and drinking so much.
I'm drinking so much.
I'm drinking so much.
I'm drinking so much.
I'm drinking so much.
I'm drinking so much. I'm drinking so much. I'm drinking so much. I the womb. Well, I'm not disagreeing with you that that may not be a
role-bombed, but I think it's less of that and it's more
of our society right now.
Well, I don't think that we've never been here before.
We're a kid, I mean, when you were a kid,
we remember, it wasn't that long ago.
You know what I'm saying?
When you were a kid, you died.
It's one generation.
Yeah, it's like one kid at school.
You knew it was like the fact kid.
Right.
And now it's literally, it makes up almost,
I mean, it's not the majority,
but it's a very high percentage that, yeah,
it's totally a brand new thing that like now we're like,
oh, this is like the new normal.
Here's what, here, here, check this out.
So I just looked at the statistics.
This is from the CDC.
And it shows that childhood obesity has tripled, has more than tripled since the 1970s.
This wasn't that long ago at all. It wasn't that long ago at all since the 1970s.
Today or data that we have from 2015 and 2016 shows that one in five school age children
has obesity, one out of every five. So that's tripled from 1970.
Here's the part that really bothers me.
As I'm going down and scrolling down the CDC website,
they say many factors contribute to childhood obesity,
including, ready for this.
Here's the top two, genetics, metabolism, which is okay.
What do you mean, metabolism?
What the fuck does that mean?
That could be changed, whatever.
Genetics, wrong, sorry, we did not evolve,
we didn't evolve rapidly since, you know,
for the last 40 years where all of a sudden,
we went from, you know, one out of every 15 kids
or something like that to now one out of
every five has obesity. That doesn't work. Then number three is community and neighborhood
design and safety. What short sleep duration maybe? And then finally the last one they
put is eating and physical activity behavior. Oh, you think. The last part. Oh, you really think.
Right.
Here's what's scary about this.
Besides the fact that these are children, and that's terrible because in many cases these
children are not at fault for their poor health because, you know, kids don't typically go
grocery shopping.
They don't typically buy the foods.
They don't, they, how you eat and you're eating behaviors and patterns.
There's a large part of it that is learned through your environment.
It's a direct reflection of the environment that, you know, the parents have provided.
And, you know, however you want to spit it, they're dependent on, you know, this food coming
from, you know, the source where it's coming from.
That's from the parents.
But what the scary thing for me is less about the kids being obese
and the fact that a child that's obese has a very, very high likelihood
of growing up to be unhealthy adult.
And what we know about health is this, is that the longer you're unhealthy,
the worse that unhealthy becomes.
I wonder what if you are, and here's another thing too, some parents, like, I see
this a lot.
I remember having this conversation with Katrina years back and we were talking about, you
know, kids in overweight and I was pointing out a kid that was overweight.
Oh, that's, you know, because he's really young, that's his baby fat or what I'm like,
no, you know, he's carrying like 20 pounds for the excess weight as a child. Like, that is not baby fat or what I'm like, no, you know, he's carrying like 20 pounds of excess weight as
a child, like that is not baby fat. That's not like he's not gonna grow out of like transitional.
Yeah, no, there's a lot of parents they just think they're going through a phase and
that they'll grow out of it or grow into their body and it's like, no, they have a belly
that is hanging over their shorts and they're 10 years old. You know I'm saying like that, they're being fed
and they're not moving enough.
Well, yeah, and the play's different now.
Like, you know, it's the focus with all their friends
is different, like what they do now is different.
There's so many different contributing patterns to this
that like all these variables now, like it's so much set up
for obesity to occur.
I have a very, very strong opinion on this.
This is just a subject that's been a passion
of mine for a very, very long time
about what I think is to cause for.
But before I go on that, check out this statistic.
If you have an obese two year old, two, okay?
So this is somebody who was born two years ago, right?
An obese two year old has a 75% chance of being obese at 35.
Now, a normal two-year-old today has a 57% chance
of being obese just because that's our obesity rate
among adults.
So that's a big difference.
That's a difference of about 20% increase in risk.
A 19-year-old, that's obese, has an 88% risk of being obese.
A 19-year-old who's not obese only has a 44% risk.
So what this tells us is the longer you're not obese,
the lower your likelihood of being an obese adult.
If your obese, when you're young,
the likelihood that you'll be obese increases.
And the longer you stay obese, like if you're a teenager,
that's obese, the odds that you're going to be an obese adult
is almost 100%.
It's close to 90%.
I used to tell my female clients
that I get that we're in their 20s,
this is totally my experience.
I have no studies or anything to prove this,
but in my experience, if I had met somebody
who had not figured out a healthy eating habits
and an exercise routine by about 25 or 26 that the likelihood
of her being, you know, overweight or obese in the future is really, really high.
And the likelihood of them ever getting in really good shape is really, really low because
they haven't installed those behaviors and habits by the time they're in their mid 20s.
They're so ingrained.
It's so rare.
And I do have examples.
I mean, I've trained thousands of people.
So of course, I've got handfuls of 40-year-old clients that came to me that were obese and
I changed their lives and one of that, but they're so small.
So, so small.
It's a very hard thing to change.
Here's what I think.
Look, I think the lack of physical activity is not the main culprit when it comes to obesity.
I think the lack of physical activity
is the main culprit for the physical dysfunction
that we see in kids, like forward shoulder,
forward head, the fact that kids now have,
you see a lot of pronating feet and issues
with knees and back.
And it's all contributes to even less movement.
Yeah, that's what I blame on that.
But as far as obesity is concerned,
you could place that squarely at the feet of how we feed our kids.
100%.
Yeah.
Look at, do this for me.
Go to a grocery store and go to the kids' food section
and try and find foods that are not totally bad for you.
Like, good luck.
The vast majority of the foods that are dedicated to kids is fast, it's heavily processed,
long shelf life, heavily, it's easy to access.
Well, even before that.
Highly palatable.
It's tons of sugar.
Highly palatable food.
Now, why is that?
Is it because we have an evil food industry?
No, I think the food industry is smart.
I think there's definitely some evil people in the food industry.
They're just smart. They're trying to their job, their job is to sell. And they're not only gonna fuck who eats it.
What happens at? If you eat too much, they give you what you want. That's what selling is. You give someone what they want.
Now, what do parents want? Well, they want fast, easy, and they want highly palatable for their kids, because I'm a parent of two children, you know, Justin can probably echo this.
One of the most stressful things or times of the day with kids is feeding time.
Always, ever since they, you know, they're in a high chair and you're feeding them yourselves.
It's a battlegrounds.
Always.
I mean, it's not always, but it's common.
It's a common battleground.
And so if you can create a child's food that the kid will just love to eat,
I mean, the parents are just like, oh, thank God.
They feel like, oh, yes.
Oh, good.
Goldfish, look at goldfish.
Why do you think goldfish is so popular?
Because kids love eating them.
And so parents are like, oh, easy snack.
Eating something.
Yeah, eat some goldfish.
This is so easy for you.
So that's the big problem.
The big problem is the food and the big blame goes on the parents period.
I mean, it's uncomfortable, but it starts early, man, with your decision-making process.
Like, you know, like, I'm sorry, but breast fitting is fucking hard.
It's one of the hardest things like women can do.
You know, and I know my wife going through that was like expressing that to me.
Like, this is so difficult. And all it's very tempting to stop. And it's so much easier
to do formula. It's very easy to do. They have connected formula to higher rates of obesity
and how nobody wants to talk about that. You know, sorry. It's a very sensitive topic
right now. For my, I have my two best friends who are having kids right now and like, you know, it was, they have a newborn right now
and I've already feeding her.
But you can pump.
Yeah, there's options.
There's things you can do and there's also like,
was it wet banks or whatever or two?
So anyways, I mean, obviously that's like through.
That's one factor by the way.
Yeah, that's just one thing.
I'm just saying like, like thinking in terms of like setting up,
you know, your child's like health in the future.
It starts like right away.
It does have a lower risk of obesity.
That's a fact when they breastfeed.
Part of it is the, could be the health aspects of it.
The other part of it could be,
because I don't want to throw this out either.
And I'm not saying breast milk isn't the most healthy
thinking of your child.
I believe it is just as we evolved to have it. So I don't want to throw this out either and I'm not saying breast milk isn't the most healthy thing you can give your child I believe it is just as we evolved to have it
So I don't think scientists have created anything that can that can mimic nature perfectly yet
I think we will in the future, but I don't think we have yet
But I think the other part of is this the kind of parents that tend to
Not breastfeed and want to give their kids formula probably also the kind of parents that are very busy
Right and that don't have the time to throw the goal face of access.
Right.
And so there's, you know, expediency becomes, you know, like modern life is very difficult.
Yeah.
Modern life, you know, there's a lot of shit going on.
And so, I mean, look, parents used to spend time on making food and making meals and taking
the time to feed them and all that stuff.
And it's not like that anymore.
And here's the other thing too, likely,
it's highly likely if you see an obese kid,
they have obese parents.
It's highly likely.
It's actually, I can probably bet you nine at a 10 time.
Well, that's the real challenge is that it does
start with a parents.
And I know it sounds like we're over here.
Yeah, because you can't just change your kids eating.
Yeah, you got to change your own.
Right, you know what I mean?
And that's where the real challenge comes in.
Let's be honest, it's like, you like, the parents are struggling with the kids,
the habits, but I mean, if you're a parent
that didn't have any of that stuff in your cupboard
on the weekends, you guys did things like hikes
and played sports outside and you did physical things.
Like, oh, I doubt you'll be struggling with this very much.
But if you have a kid that is obese or really overweight
and they play video games, they eat fire cheetos all the time
and on the weekends, they muck out on video games
why you do other things.
Like, yeah, fuck, it's gonna be really, really tough
to manage this.
I feel for parents in situations like this
because let's say you're a parent
and you've got two kids or three kids
and let's say your youngest is four and your oldest is, I don't know, 12 or something like this, because let's say you're a parent and you've got two kids or three kids, and let's say your youngest is four,
and your oldest is, I don't know,
12 or something like that, 11.
And you're like, okay, everybody's obese, I'm obese,
my kids are all obese.
I need to change everybody's eating habits
because it's just not healthy.
And I know that I'm also somebody
that needs to change my eating habits.
Let's say you're a really self-aware parent
and that's your position.
Well, now you have to be willing to go through that I'm also somebody that needs to change my DNA. So let's say you're a really self-aware parent and that's your position.
Well, now you have to be willing to go through
roughly two or three months of shit.
That's at least, it's gonna take that long
because kids may not be on board
and the kids eat what you buy.
And so they're gonna protest, they're gonna fight.
They may not eat.
You may have your kids say, fine, I'm not having dinner at all.
And now you gotta play that game where you waited out
until your kid is starving and decides to finally eat.
So you have to commit to a shitty house life
for a few months.
You have to go through a little bit of hell.
It's gonna be that way, but what is the benefit?
Well, I can tell you 100% what the negative will be if you don't do that. Here's what's guaranteed you're guaranteed to have children who are going if they're obese and unhealthy
Less mobility. They're gonna find less pleasure in physical activities
Of course risk there raises the risk of things like ostrich being ostrichized with other kids
Bowling a lot of stuff and then health problems the health problems that you're setting your child up for when they're older is very,
very high.
I don't buy the whole, but they don't do what I say bullshit.
That's bullshit.
Sure, if you have a teenager that's got a car at that point, very, very difficult, but
if it's your house, you buy the groceries, you're the one that's in charge.
So when they go to the cupboard,
open it up to find a snack and all they see is nothing
and maybe there's cheese, wheels and carrot sticks and apples
and you're like, well, that's what we got.
So if you want a snack, you can eat that.
If you don't, then there's nothing else.
Then watch what happens.
But it's gonna start with the parents.
I've never seen a parent.
It's funny that we're at right now in our lives know, then watch what happens. But it's going to start with the parents. I've never seen a parent say that
where we're at right now in our lives
that seems like punishment or so evil to do that.
Just a few hundred years ago,
you know what I'm saying?
Like if you had food, if your child was hungry,
so you have a capacity that you're like dying
to get them food.
Right, no, and like that was like the priority
was just to be able to get them food and nourished. And now it's completely the opposite problem. Yeah.
I think also part of the problem is that we're oversaturating in our children with stuff like that.
And they, they're already training them to these meal times and thinking that they have to eat
every single two to three hours or three or four times a day when in reality they probably,
especially if their activity is low, they probably don't. And I hate them draw the same,
draw a parallel to my dogs
because humans and dogs are different in a lot of ways.
But I mean, it's the same way, like I feed the boys.
It's like, if I didn't get off my ass as an owner,
because this is true, I'm not a perfect dog owner all the time
where I walk my dogs and exercise them like I should,
I feed them differently.
They don't get fucking four cups of food every day
if I don't go out and exercise them.
Otherwise, they put on the weight really fast.
And so why would we treat the kids any different than that?
Why would you?
When they eat the snacks that are like crackers
and sugar stuff, that makes them more hungry.
Well, and it is like, now you're just overwhelming them
with even more calories.
And typically when we let them do it, is at the worst times when they're sitting down watching TV for two three hours straight
Or playing video games for four or five hours and I mean they're and they're drinking soda and shoveling the food
It's like man, it's I'm not trying to demonize certain foods or say your kid should never be allowed to ever have a fire cheeto
It's not trying to say that at all, but it's like, we're, it's compounding because of all these other things,
because they're not moving,
because they're sitting still and on top of that,
you're feeding them these types of food
or allowing them to eat these types of foods.
They're doing that.
Yeah, they still have the flexibility
and it still makes this way.
And I just recognize the battle of it.
Like that that's always there,
and then I'm willing to, you know, at least recognize, you know, like, okay,
I need to, I need to like handle this and make sure
that I'm on top of this.
And by the way, like, you know, we always recommend
when people change their own eating habits
that they do it slowly.
Yeah.
One step at a time.
If you're a, if you have to stick.
If you're the head of household or whatever,
your mom or dad and you have kids and you're like,
okay, we need to change our eating habits.
And you've identified that you need to change your own
because nine out of 10 times,
it's everybody's eating shitty, not just the kids,
it's everybody.
Start slow, start real slow.
Maybe you do it so slow that kids don't even notice.
You know what I'm saying?
Maybe it's just like, hey mom,
why are the snacks this way this time?
Or wait, how come we're not having, you know,
bread with our dinner tonight?
Or what, you know, why aren't we drinking soda, or why did you change the juice from this brand to this brand?
Because you can slowly start implementing these things for yourself and for the family,
and make it a little bit, and then their palate will change, and then you can
introduce more healthy stuff. That's right. It totally is. You have to do it at the speed of what
they're gonna accept. But I'm telling you right now, this doesn't change. If this doesn't become something
that parents start to do now, we are going to be footing the bill for this younger generation.
When they become adults, it could screw us up pretty bad. Next up is mind a muscle. Do you have
any regrets? You know, it's crazy that we went this way
because I wanted to ask you in Justin
because I think this is a great segue into this
and gives an opportunity for you guys to kind of talk about.
I know you probably are thinking of regrets personally,
but be interesting to hear you guys talk about like,
you know, as we just sit here and talk about childhood obesity
and the challenges that you guys both probably deal
with with the dinner table and these things like that. You know, is there a little bit of ownership on your part where
you go like, you know, fuck, I did allow the kids to do certain things five years ago or six years
ago that I wish I would have done differently now. Can you think of things? All the time. I can
think of this all the time. You know, for me personally, part of this issue when it comes to feeding
and eating, especially with my kids,
you know, in my culture, or at least in the culture of my parents, right, the one that I was raised in,
food, you feed the hell out of your kids, and that's how you show them that you love them. And if
they don't eat, you know, it's a, it's a big problem. And so you're constantly force feeding kids.
And when I was young, I remember, my, me me my grandma would say things like to me and my cousins like let's you can finish first
Whoever finishes first gets five dollars. Oh my god, you know, you guys really did she like that? Yeah, they would actually make his
Compete straight straight bribing you to eat more food. Yes
If we didn't eat we would get in trouble
Meals
Always started with starches.
So, you would start every meal with pasta and bread.
And then you'd end up finishing with the protein
and the fat or whatever, and the vegetables.
That would be kind of at the end.
So it's kind of like this backwards order of how you eat.
So it's, those are things that I've done
that I did with my kids.
Like we would have meals and they would start off
with pasta and bread.
And then we would move towards the healthier thing.
So that I regret, you know, doing, I don't do it anymore.
And that's, they actually thanks to Jessica.
She came up with this, it's brilliant.
It really is very simple, but it's quite brilliant
in where we serve in reverse, man.
We serve in reverse.
Of what everybody else does.
Isn't that crazy to think that like that
Oh just a great healthy strategy right out the gate is think about how every restaurant serves you food
Yeah, and serve it the op it well. I guess dessert sometimes it serves less so that except for that well
They'll serve you bread first because it tins and make you hungry
But so what I do what we do now with the kids is we start with vegetables
Then we move to the to the meat the protein start with vegetables, then we move to the meat, the protein, the fat,
and then if there is a starch, then we move to the starch.
And in order for my kids to go to the next level
or whatever the next course, they have to finish the first course.
But here's the brilliant part,
and this again, I have to thank Jessica for,
we don't make a big deal about it.
So if I put six pieces of broccoli on my daughter's plate,
and she says, I don't want broccoli,
the response is, oh, you don't have to eat it, that's fine.
And that's it, we don't talk about it.
And then we'll move on to the,
and she'll be like, what I want that meat,
or I want that pasta.
And I'll say, well, you can't have that
unless you've finished the first course,
because this is the right, this is the right way to eat.
But if you don't want to eat it, you don't have to.
Leave it up to her.
It's her decision.
And the reason why you do that is you want your kids,
you want them, you want it to be their idea,
because it makes them feel more empowered.
And my regret in the past was that I would force my kids.
I would literally say to them,
if you don't eat that, you're grounded,
or if you eat that, then I'd reward them with dessert. Like, okay, listen, if you finish't eat that, you're grounded, or, you know, if you eat that, then I'd reward them with dessert.
Like, okay, listen, if you finish all of that, then you get to have the pie that we made for after dinner.
That's a big regret.
It's using food as a punishment or as a reward.
When that alone will create, you know, bad relationships.
And then the more consistent you are with that process, it becomes less of a battle because they just expect it.
Like, okay, well, I know that like not going past this
is gonna limit me from meeting the other items.
Were you thinking of other regrets or not?
Cause I just thought that was a great follow up
because of what you were talking about.
And I thought, but you bet you both as parents have
some regrets on the food piece
cause I doubt you were perfect 10 years ago
with your kids.
And you probably see how it's now unfolded
and you go, fuck, I wish I had it.
Bro, do you know how hard it is to erase
some of those ingrained things?
Like, if my kids, like my daughter eating all of your plate.
Oh, like my daughter's the hard one when it comes to food.
And like in the, she doesn't want to eat in the morning.
Do you know how hard it was for me to let her to go to school
without eating breakfast?
It was so hard where I actually would go to the store
and buy different things that I think would taste good.
And I actually, no joke actually,
it was actually bought a sugary cereal,
so she would eat breakfast and Jessica pointed it out.
She was like, are you really giving her that?
She's just so she'll eat.
She's like, what's wrong if she doesn't eat breakfast?
And I'm like, you know, I hear those words.
I'm like, well, fuck.
Yeah, you're right.
It's so weird because it's so ingrained
that you don't realize it.
So those are the big food regrets that I have.
As far as regrets, and the other regrets I have
with my kids, you know what?
Every single, almost every time I ever lose my temper with my kids, you know what, every single, almost every time
I ever lose my temper with my kids,
every regret that I showed them that I lost my temper.
Almost every single time.
It doesn't do anything but scare them.
And I don't want my kids to do the right thing
because they're scared.
I want them to do the right thing
because it's the right thing to do.
Yeah, because they want to.
Because they want to.
And so I've done that where I've scared them
because I lost my temper.
And then afterwards I'm like,
oh man, I don't have a lot of regrets
because I really feel like I have the ability
to see the kind of silver lining and everything
and I don't repeat a lot of mistakes.
Like I make a lot of mistakes, 100%.
Like I'm definitely far from perfect
and I do make a lot of mistakes.
But we talked about on a podcast recently about this
where I think somebody who continues to make
the same mistakes over and over,
like there's some shit and there's some work
you need to do inside of yourself
because there's a pattern there that you're doing.
But for the most part, the things that I've done
that have been big fuck ups or that have just devastated me
or I learned from them.
And in fact, if they were really devastating or really bad, that have been big fuck ups or that have just devastated me. I learned from them. I learned from them.
And in fact, if they were really devastating or really bad,
it actually ended up being a really good lesson.
That is like forever and grain to me.
And I'll give you one that I think of right into that comes to mind
that is probably a big regret.
I definitely learned from it, so I don't know how much of this is a regret.
Yeah, it's hard to look at it from that standpoint,
because if you didn't do those things,
how the hell would you?
Right, but you're racing that,
right, like forgetting that.
So something that I went through in my,
from about 20 to 25, I would say,
somewhere in that range,
I spent a lot of fucking money,
and I spent a lot of money on not just myself,
but other people and friends, and a lot of money on not just myself, but other people and friends.
And a lot of that was driven by my own insecurities, right? Because I was the kid who didn't have
a lot of things growing up. I reached a level of success. And it wasn't like I was rich.
I was just a kid who was 20 years old, making six figures. But for me, it felt like I was
rich, you know, and I felt this need to feel that
way. So I expressed it through buying people things and flying everybody everywhere and
spending money and Vegas and tables and picking up $600 bar tabs and fancy restaurants
all the time and always picking up the bill and taking care of that. And I really trained
a lot of my friends for a long time to expect that.
It caused a lot of issues with our friendships later on.
Because later on I started to resent them.
It took me a lot to own that it was my fault.
That I was the one that trained them.
They're all good friends of mine.
They love me either way, but because of my insecurities of wanting to feel like the guy who had all the money all the time,
I paid for everything on so sure when we go do things, you know, in my late 20s, we go
somewhere, you know, my friends would kind of look over at me, bill would come flying over
and everybody just like, you know, Adam's got it, he's always got money, you know, saying,
like, he'll pay for it. And I remember at a point where I was like, man, what am I doing?
Like, this is like, this is so wasteful and not fair to me that I'm doing it, we'll pay for it. And I remember at a point where I was like, man, what am I doing? Like this is like, this is so wasteful
and not fair to me that I'm doing it,
but at the same time too, I trained them to do that
because for years, I was feeding this insecurity
by paying for all these people.
And it took me years later to break that and to retrain that.
I first had to accept that it was my fault
and own that and then dig deeper into that insecurity
of wanting to feel rich or look like I had all these things
and then I had to first fix that.
And then I also had to retrain my friends that,
hey, regardless if I got the money to do it or not,
like motherfucker, you gotta pay for your shit every now
and then, you know what I'm saying?
Or we gotta split this every now and then, but I hated doing
that stuff. I don't like that. There's nothing that bothers me more. You want people to ask.
Yeah. Yeah. You want people to be like, no, no, no, no, it feels good. Like, okay, cool.
I appreciate that. Yes. Totally. So that was, you know, and again, back on me, if I had
to try and pick a regret, that's the first thing that comes to mind that I think going back, I would have done things
totally different.
And because of that, I think I would have saved
a lot of turmoil and hard conversations with my friends.
I would have saved a lot of money.
So that's probably the biggest regret
that I could think of.
Yeah, man, I'm really trying to think of something
that like stands out completely,
but because you made a good point about doing all these things that ended up teaching you a life lesson that is even
more valuable because I put myself out there and I risked my comfort level.
And I feel like I am where I am today because of the major risks I took in my life and I can I can trace back to those major risks that have you know some of them have failed miserably and some of them have you know thrived in
either way like to me the failed ones I hold even more valuable just because for me me, it just showed me how resilient I could
be in the face of something not working out completely the way I wanted it to, but also
just reevaluate and I continually reevaluate the process of how sometimes I basically replay it in my mind of how I could improve it.
And so it's like, it's a real experience that now I can keep a learning from it whenever
I see that come up as a pattern.
So for me to repeat the pattern would be, that would be devastating.
Right.
I definitely think there are lessons, however, that you learn from a mistake
that perhaps somebody else also had to pay the price for. And those are the ones that I would be more likely to regret.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, if I fuck up and I make a mistake and I learn from it,
and somebody else, like, I can't, from it.
Yeah, I can't regret it, but if somebody else got hurt from it,
like I said, when I get mad and yell out my kids,
that's a great example.
Yeah, it's like, I learned from that for me,
but fuck, these poor kids or whatever
had to pay the prize for me learning
or making this mistake.
No, I agree.
I think parenting wise, of course.
I could totally figure, find one of those moments
where I felt like a total piece of shit,
because I wasn't in the right state of mind, you know,
and I, I lashed out or I said something
that I wanted to take back.
And, you know, I know that, I know that that's happened
and I know that later on in life,
like your kids will come back and be like,
you know, they'll remember those moments
and bring them up, you know, and that sucks.
That sucks when you face that, but we're human beings, you know, they'll remember those moments and bring them up, you know, and that sucks. That sucks when you face that, but we're human beings, you know, like, is this,
if I'm not, if I'm not checking that process and always thinking about that,
like, and trying to improve upon that process, then, you know, like,
it's a, it's a much more philosophical question than you think.
Yeah, I don't, I don't know why you't know. Because even the point that you bring up right there
with like, because you struck a chord for me right there
with like, oh shit, you know,
what about situations that I've done
where I hurt somebody else?
Or like, for example, I lost a best friend over a situation,
right?
Like we both were my buddy, my best friend at the time
and I was the best man in his wedding.
And I have so much love for the guy. And you know, we, there's a lot of stress that was
surrounding the business that we are currently running. This is when I was doing the cannabis
clubs. I was growing. He was, he was creating wax and stuff like that. And we are doing all this
stuff together. And it was just super stressful time. And we kind of had a blow up. And, you know, we forever went different directions.
And we haven't spoke since then. And I remember I wrote him like every month for a year,
because I was, he was such a close friend of mine. And I think like, fuck, you know, do
I regret that conversation? Do I regret that big blow up in that fight? Or do I regret
even going into that business with them
and because I lost the best friend?
And I think for a long time, I might have regretted it,
but when I really start to think about it now
and think about how we continue to evolve and grow
and sometimes you outgrow relationships,
I have to ask myself that potentially was that relationship heading down an unhealthy path? And I don't know, I have to ask myself that, you know, potentially was that relationship heading down
an unhealthy path and, you know, I don't know,
maybe it was and maybe really what happened was for the best.
You know, and so that's the philosophical side of me
that's going to be.
It's true, because you're always going to think like,
well, it's supposed to be that way.
Right, right.
So it's hard to regret something if you believe
that things are, you know, the way that they're supposed to be.
Well, especially if you see the future getting better and better and better, I think that
if I were to make a decision that brought me and I started spiraling, you know, from that
decision and I wasn't able to pull myself out of it, I would definitely regret that, you
know, that I chose that direction.
Like if it was something where, yes, somebody like obviously got hurt or like I, you know, that I chose that direction. Like if it was something where, yes, somebody like,
obviously got hurt or like, you know,
I had to, I had to pay the price for that
and like, like basically dig myself out of something
that was like, well, that's how I, that's why I asked you guys,
you know, and I know you had to get up for a second,
but that's why I asked you guys that I thought it was a really
cool that we followed this question up after the child thing
because you guys in a sense are seeing that play out right now.
Some of the decisions maybe you made as parents
that you might have thought was the right decision
back then or you didn't even think at all about it.
Parenthood is a constant stream of questioning yourself.
Constantly, and it's a hard game to play.
You do play and it's okay
And I understand why you do it is a parent because you want to make sure you do a good job
But if you get caught up in it you get frozen by it because you will question every goddamn every day and quite thing
You make everything you're adding them explore like for instance like you know my kid like hurt himself falling off out of a tree
You know like should I blame myself for not telling them to come down?
Like, I'd struggle with that.
No, I think that's different and there's lessons in that.
I think more of like, you know,
did you guys put your kids on formula right away?
Or did you allow them to eat ice cream and candy
when they were two?
Again, if you do things like that,
again, if you think that things are the way
they're supposed to be, then you can't regret anything.
But I will say this, one of the worst regrets you could ever possibly have in my opinion
is the regret of not telling someone how you really feel about them before they're out of your life.
That I could see that.
I could see that one being a tough one because now for me, luckily, I've always been okay with expressing myself.
And I've lost a couple very close people to me, very, very close, but I never regretted
not saying how I felt about them because you guys know me.
You know if I love somebody, I'm gonna tell them, man, woman, whatever, I'm gonna tell
the person I much I care about them.
And I'm glad I do because I have lost two people very close to me.
And there was never the, and I did look I have lost two people very close to me. And there was
never the, and I did look, one of them was a close family member. And after she was gone,
you know, there were, I, there were definitely people that were like, God, I wish I told her
how awesome she was to me and how much she really impacted me. And that's a tough one.
That is, that's a tough one. Yeah. So, I mean, I, that's a good piece. That is tough. That's a tough one. Yeah, so let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me,
let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me,
let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me,
let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me,
let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me,
let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, let me, most in overall approach to philosophy, wealth, podcasting, etc?
Cool question.
Is a cool question.
I can think of, so I can make a one book and then I do a lot of my reading online.
So, although I do read books, most of the reading I do is stuff that I look up online or lectures that I'll find on YouTube.
I love watching people speak and I think I learn better
that way, at least I move in that direction.
But one book that really impacted me was,
and I can't remember the author, God is not great.
Maybe you can look that up, Doug, who wrote that book.
But it's the, and I can't believe I can't remember his name
because he's like the, or God is not,
I think it's God is not great.
He's like one of the world's most prolific atheists
if I'm not mistaken.
But I read that book already Richard Dawkins,
is that what it was?
Yeah, how religion poisons everything.
So, that's ironic that you chose that book.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. So, oh, Christopher Hitchens, I'm sorry, Christopher Hitchens. So this was years
ago when I first read this book. Up until this point, I had become very, very skeptical and of religion.
I had become very cynical of religion. My family, of course, being Catholic, I'd go to Catholic church on holidays and stuff like that. I'd look at all the ritual and then
when I visited the Vatican, I saw this opulence and I just thought this is ridiculous, this
is hypocritical, this is terrible, and I blamed everything for on religion. I thought it was
just silly. Why are people believed in this shit because they didn't have science, they
didn't understand how things worked, and so they'd make things up. And then I read this
book and it really solidified
that for me and I became an atheist, hardcore atheist.
But when you become an atheist, when you're a real hardcore
atheist, you actually question,
you actually look at the question of God much deeper
than someone who doesn't think about it at all.
And most people, or a lot of people I know,
don't even think of that question.
They don't think of, is there a God,
like what, like, it's not a question they ponder over.
But if you're an atheist,
you've actually done a lot of thinking about it.
You've actually sat down and thought and read
and come up with this consensus.
And so this book,
sometimes, this book got me to think,
well, you're right, but some people say they are,
yeah, some people are pretty ignorant.
But they may not be, they,
they don't realize they're worshiping different gods. That's right, you're right, but some people say they are. Yeah, some people are pretty ignorant. But they may not be. They don't realize they're worshiping different gods.
That's right.
And so this book brought, I became a hardcore atheist,
and so I started talking about it more with people,
debating people and diving deeper.
And this book pushed me then to, because of this book,
I started learning more and more about science,
and I started reading books on quantum physics.
Quantum physics is fucking weird.
Very, very weird.
Watch a couple documentaries, did my own research, and I started to realize that we don't know
at all much.
We don't know much at all.
In fact, especially if you look at some of the weird, strange occurrences in quantum physics,
kind of sounds like some of the stuff that people in religions and spiritual practices
will preach.
And so it brought me down this path
where I went from atheism to being more agnostic
to really diving into that question.
And so this, that book actually moved me
in not in the direction of atheism as much as it moved me
in the direction of really examining that question and what that meant for me
And so it led me on a more spiritual path, I should say so and I know Christopher Hitchens if you heard this would be like fuck
That wasn't my goal. That's why so I have to counter that with
It if so top three for me is challenging top one is very easy for me
It's not even a close call. The Bible is by far,
the most powerful read I have ever read in my life. And I know there's probably people that
listen and then probably cringe at that. And a lot of that, I challenge you to ask yourself,
why do you cringe at that? A lot of people haven't read it. Exactly. Very few people that...
Because you can read it without... Without going to church.
Without being a religious person, a believer.
You don't have to go to a church and belong to a congregation to read the most powerful
book ever written.
And I'll debate somebody all fucking day long on that.
Because name a topic, a subject that you want to learn about or you want advice in.
And then I bet you money, you can find it multiple times written about inside that book.
The problem with it is that what man has done with just about anything is we've bastardized everything.
We've taken something and we have manipulated it to create these congregations and dogma.
And we've turned it into such an ugly nasty thing that we've divided ourselves as a society
of half the group of these people worship it
and it's everything to them.
And then the other half the people rebuke it
and say it's awful and I would never read it.
It's like, no, you're talking about
one of the best books ever written.
It's definitely the most read.
And that's a statistic that's real.
And the last 50 years, someone did the statistics on
this. The last 50 years have been 3.9 billion copies sold in 50 years. Now obviously the Bible's
thousands of years old. That mean the way I look at it is this and this is coming from someone who
again was atheist. There's no longer atheists but I'm not specifically religious but I'm definitely
open to you know spirituality. there's ancient texts
have a lot of wisdom.
And the fact that the Bible,
and there's other ancient texts that are widespread,
but the Bible in particular, which is the most popular one,
the reason why it's so popular and has spread so far,
and people continue to read it even today,
is because there's a lot of wisdom in it, for sure.
There's a ton.
Yeah, so you don't have to be a religious person,
you don't even have to believe in God
to find some of the religion.
I know, I know.
I know, and I know we're all on the same thought process
right now, so that was one of mine,
but at the same time, it's because I went through,
I mean, my whole childhood was breaking down
like the meaning and the purpose and, you know, within proverbs and,
you know, all the different, um, parables and different ways they explain things and just
the communication that's in there.
But, you know, for me, like, I was very, I've always been a skeptic.
And so even within that setting and that environment, I have felt uncomfortable. Like I've felt like the human element of it
in the way that you just see like different ways
that's gone different interpretations.
So it's so many different directions.
People like humans have taken it, like the message
and then sort of muddied the message.
And so I've always been like very curious to find what the actual message was.
And like what, you know, if we were to get to the root of of the message,
which, you know, people have used for power and people have used to put people under oppression.
And so anyway, I've always had that and asked really hard questions,
you know, to preachers and to people within the faith,
to really analyze, because I just don't,
I always wanted empirical evidence,
that's why I was into science.
I really got into science because I could test things
and I could figure things out tangibly of like,
okay, this equates to this and it's constant, you know,
like math is a constant thing that I can rely on
and so anyway, I brought me to this book,
it was called The Science of God
and that was by Gerald L. Schroder, I believe.
I've heard great things about that book.
I've never read it.
Yeah, so I have that in my house.
I've read it multiple times, but it's just a way
that what this author was trying to do was like,
realize that at one point
science and religion, you know, like, they used to be the great thinkers in the world started within
the church. The church actually funded scientific research for a long time, funded a lot of
the stuff. It divided, I think, because the powers that be within the church viewed it as a threat, especially when you had people saying things like,
oh, the earth actually revolves around something else.
Things don't revolve around us.
Well, yeah, and if things don't fit narratives,
it's like you just dismiss all the actual signs.
Instead of trying to interpret our world based off of a creator
in mind, there was this big division that had to happen
all of a sudden. So anyway, my brain is always like, well, what did it, you know, what the original
message looked like? And why did we like receive benefit from it? The part for the that I find the
wisdom in that in the Judeo-Christian religion that I find so most fascinating is the radical notion because people need to realize just how fucking radical
The following idea is or was when it first came out
It was the notion that there is sanctity in the individual because every individual had a soul
This is the teaching from the Judeo-Christian religion every person person has a soul and every all souls are a piece of God.
We all have God within us.
That was a radical notion because during these periods of time
and way before that, Kings and Queens were,
they were the fucking blessed ones.
Everybody else was a peasant, or if you had power,
if you had money, then these people were less than,
they were less than you.
Well here comes this belief system that says, no, we're all equal.
We're all equal in the eyes of God, we're all made in God's image or whatever.
And that led to the, that led to the freedom, that led to free to countries that valued
the individual.
And of course, it didn't happen overnight, it took time.
But we now see how successful that viewpoint is because if you don't believe that well then why would you?
Why would you treat everybody the same?
Well, it doesn't make any objective sense you would this guy has he can't offer me anything and I'll give a shit about him
And you're a peasant and I'm rich and you're disabled or whatever like might as well kill you
I'm in charge. I'm the that was the belief system before
people believe this underlying
You know this that came from something bigger than that. I said no, no, we're all we all have a god within us
So we all have to
Respect that you know, and that's sanctity right of the individual
So that's some brilliant brilliant wisdom that was completely radical that came from that that I will always
Respect regardless whether or not I believe in the, the, you know, the, the metaphysical part of it.
So we all, we all picked a, you know, God type of book.
Mine was an anti-collegiate.
Yeah, which is great though.
No, I think that's, I think that's great.
I think it's hands down.
I think that when we get to books two and three is where there's going to be a lot of diversity
amongst each of us.
And even myself going through
like my library of books and go like, man, which ones have been the most impactful? And I think that
this is going to be so different for everybody. So I'm going to name books that maybe
may not be that impactful for you, but I think they represent a time in my life that when they
came that was so important for me to probably read that. And a book that I tend to recommend a lot to people. And again, it's selfishly for me because
how it impacted me was developing the leader within by John C. Maxwell. And that sent me down a
rabbit hole. I read almost all his books. I read a ton of his books and he's got a bajillion of them
because I had fallen in love with the style of his writing and he's got a bajillion of them because I had fallen in love with the style
of his writing and the message behind it.
And he does like the way he writes, he writes in these short stories and for a guy like me
who had a hard time reading books and staying focused in the book and I would trail off a
lot of my thoughts.
He really started, his way of writing is what really gave me that thirst to read and
grow more. So it was very impactful. And then of course to read a book like developing the leader
within, much of those principles are within that book. And the way he writes, he writes in these
short stories. So a chapter is only five to ten pages sometimes. And so I can be engulfed in a
short story really, really quick and easily and not be distracted.
And I would digest a lot of that.
So that was an extremely impactful book for me.
Yeah, for me, the next ones are weren't books.
Now, I did read books by these individuals,
but it wasn't the books that impacted me the strongest.
So the next thing for me was,
I deal a lot of learning through watching lectures
and there was a talk,
this was years ago that Ron Paul gave to Congress,
and it was a talk about,
I almost forgot his fed up book, that was a good book.
Yeah, he did a talk on terrorism
and how would we feel if we were being bombed
and would we become terrorists and you know,
and he did this whole talk on it.
And it blew me the fuck away.
Like I listen to this man, I'm like,
oh, I never thought of things in that way.
And I went down the rabbit hole of Ron Paul
and watching his talks and what he says about freedom,
what he says about, you know,
our foreign policy of, you know,
invading other nations and all this other stuff.
And it led me down a path that really, you know,
shaped me to kind of who I am.
Because of Ron Paul, I started reading about economics,
I started reading, you know, about Austrian economics
versus Kenisian economics.
I read me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, Sissing, you know, Hayek,
which then led me to the,
I'll give my third person real quick,
which was Milton Friedman.
And Milton Friedman has a series on YouTube
called Free to Choose.
It's an old series, it was filmed in,
I think 1979 or 1980.
Absolutely brilliant.
And I like that it's old
because all of the predictions he made
in some of these videos about what's gonna happen if we don't change course totally true
So watching that was like watching a pro like a dude prophesize what's about to happen right and then a lot of it happening going oh shit
And Milton Friedman has been a huge impact on me
You know just in terms of understanding how you know human behavior and markets or at least how economics is kind of what drives
peace and prosperity in the world.
So that's always my third one.
Yeah, I just, I think for me,
less on books and just more on
just initial storylines that I helped me to think deeper.
And I've gone, I think for me, like what really changed was just like kind of getting
diving deep into like philosophy and philosophers.
And I took a couple courses in college that really challenged my way of thinking, like really
diving into Socrates and Plato-Doh and St. Augustine and just understanding the freedom to explore your own thought process and understand
the world around you without subscribing to somebody else's already laid out thought process.
And so I've used that in everything I've done going forward.
It's just like, it's like question everything.
You know, it's like, is what you believe really what you believe?
And being an individual, what does that look like?
For me, it was leaving my comfort zone and going
to Chicago and understanding who I was as a person. I've been hammered growing up my whole
life to live a certain way, be a certain type of person, subscribe to a certain thought
process, follow these rules. And just knowing that there
was brilliant minds in the past that collectively would challenge each other and would think
about the bigger things. Like why do we even exist? You know, like what, what is our purpose?
What, like, I just can't, I can't pull away from that.
That's always something that I come back to.
Well, I think all the stokes are awesome.
I think that's a, and it's hard for me to pinpoint
just one book.
Right.
Because I could say something about Aristotle,
you know, like I've read books on him in Socrates
and I always get something out of that.
Just because I just love love I love hearing people challenge
common thought
I so I'm gonna give you guys one that I think is kind of cool to or pertains to
maybe
My philosophy now and how that's changed so just recently and like you'd since my pump has started
Because I could go all day long about all these different books that I think have impacted me in different ways
and that I think they all have in a sense, right?
But I think it'll be cool to tell you guys something
that I think is really,
and I think the guys are gonna really piggyback off of this
or agree with me.
Rise of Superran and Stealing Fire
were very enjoyable books for me
and they also really changed how we do certain things as
a group and then how I do things as an individual now because before that I was just not familiar
with flow state. I just had never really used anyone heard anyone use that term and even
if I did I didn't register on what that was it was it a real thing was it just a term
that people are making up?
Can you actually train to be in flow state?
Can you actually do things to promote this state
that people talk about?
And the book does a really good job of introducing that
to somebody like me who is just not familiar
with what flow state is.
And I took so many things from those books
that we now apply within MindPum.
There's these little rituals that we all kind of do.
And when you really unpack these things like what we're doing is we have found things
that promote this group flow and that provides either one a better show or two a better
product or three, you know,
a better program.
Like, so, and I've been able to apply it to many things that I do, even like something
as simple as walking into a conversation with my partner and making sure that I do the
work to mentally prep myself to go into those conversations, make a huge difference,
or before I go into an interview or someone's interviewing
or a big conversation that I have to have
with another, maybe a sponsorship
or another person that we're trying to do business with
or negotiating something,
like I've learned, I took some of the principles
from that book and I've now applied it to my life and man
It's it's really paid dividends. So you know as many books that I could list off that I think have been impactful
That one is something currently that I think has personally impacted me and probably impacted the boys
And it's something that I think that we continue our developing and really the roots of that information and knowledge
Came from those two books that you you know, may be, right?
When she said, when she say so.
Absolutely.
I think it's something that we all really appreciate and try.
I think we all, we all engaged in figuring out how to go into flow without even realizing
that's the right way.
Yeah, we kind of, we kind of, but it's nice because it makes you realize, okay, that's
why we end up going off on a trip.
That's why we end up doing that ritual of the process
because it puts us in that state.
Now we have a name for it, we can identify it,
and we can value it so we can respect it differently.
Yeah, that's what I think so.
So check this out, we have a bunch of free guides.
We have a guide that teaches you how to train your arms,
your core, we have a guide on leg training, chest training,
a guide on how to do hit training properly.
And more, they're absolutely free.
They cost nothing.
Just go to mindpumpfree.com and get one of them for yourself.
We had to cut that short because Justin's only read two books.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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