Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 832: How to Prevent & Eliminate Pain
Episode Date: August 9, 2018After about 45 minutes of banter, Sal, Adam & Justin discuss pain, how to prevent and how to correct the imbalances that contribute to it. How many “snowflakes” listen to Mind Pump? The true mess...age behind the podcast and why they sometimes “ruffle” people feathers. (3:35) Why people continue to play the victim role and how to snap out of it. (8:30) Is being privileged an advantage? The privileged hierarchy chart and putting people in boxes. (19:20) How many hours are you actually doing “productive” work while on the job? Why people aren’t fulfilled nor have a purpose and ways companies are trying to make their employees more productive. (26:40) What happened to free speech? The inconsistencies of social media platforms and what people can or cannot say. (31:00) The diversity of America and why we should continue to encourage innovation and progress. (40:00) Would you want to hear a vegan bodybuilder on Mind Pump? When nutrition becomes a belief system. (44:00) Why we need to do the due diligence after our workouts to alleviate pain. Adam shares his recent shoulder injury and why we need to listen to our bodies signals. (50:25) How to Prevent & Eliminate Pain. (56:25) Mind Pump’s go-to moves to eliminate pain. (1:22:13) People Mentioned: Candace Owens (@realcandaceowens) Instagram Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) Twitter Vegan IFBB Pro Nimai Delgado (@nimai_delgado) Instagram Dr. Justin Brink (@premiere_spine_sport) Instagram Related Links/Products Mentioned: Harvard Study: Trigger Warnings Might Coddle the Mind How privileged are you chart In an 8-Hour Day, the Average Worker Is Productive for This Many Hours YouTube, Facebook, and Apple’s ban on Alex Jones, explained Complex News – YouTube What the Health | Netflix ShoulderHorn, Size 2, Medium/Large, Rotator Cuff Training Device In Search Of Full Episodes, Video & More | HISTORY Maps Prime Pro Bundle - Mind Pump 3 Common Reasons Why People Have Chronic Back Pain - Mind Pump Mind Pump TV – YouTube Mind Pump FREE Resources – Everything You Need to Know to Reach Your Fitness Goals 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 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. Make EVERY workout better with MAPS Prime, the only pre-workout you need… it is now available at mindpumpmedia.com Also check out Thrive Market thrivemarket.com/mindpump! 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 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 Have Sal, Adam & Justin personally train you via video instruction on our YouTube channel, Mind Pump TV. Be sure to Subscribe for updates. Get Organifi, certified organic greens, protein, probiotics, etc at www.organifi.com/mindpump/ 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 Oh, a little aggressive. I think there was like a rant that we all just felt we had to do there for a little bit.
Well, really, I didn't think that.
We talked about victimhood, toughness,
resiliency and growth.
We talked about like, what is it?
One of those things called trigger warning.
Study came out showing that trigger warning.
Actually make things worse.
Duh.
Adam was calling everybody snowflakes.
Yeah.
Did you know snowflakes are like a disparaging term
now they use for just the liberals? No. Yeah. No, it just means. I know what you mean by it. Yeah, it just means snowflakes are like a disparaging term now they use for just the liberals?
No, yeah.
No, it just means.
I know what you mean by it.
Yeah, it just means somebody who's delicate.
It's like too delicate.
Yeah, it's so delicate that you melt away
or get destroyed.
No, now it means like so, but I know exactly what you mean.
So for people listening, that's what he means.
Really?
It means liberals, he means delicate people.
Yeah.
They can't, they can't, they can't,
they can't just take an adjective and just define what it is.
Is that funny?
Yeah, every time.
Yeah, people do that.
Pretty funny.
We talk about a bigger, better argument for veganism,
so we touch a lot of third rails in that first 48 minutes.
And then we get into fitness.
We talk about stay with us.
We talk about Adam's shoulder pain.
He heard himself again.
It's trying to keep up with you.
He's easy, I didn't hurt myself. Try to just some nagging shit going on. He's trying to keep up with you. Easy, I didn't hurt myself.
Try to just some nagging shit going on.
He's trying to keep up with Justin
and he's having a tough time keeping up with Justin.
It's a tough deal.
Fighting for a second.
Yeah.
We talked about pain, mobility, a person's strength,
capacity, that was a fascinating part of this episode.
Then we talked about our new back pain guide
at mindpumpfree.com.
If you have back pain, go check out that free guide.
I give you some tips on how you may be able to alleviate
that back pain.
Then we talk about techniques for improving performance,
mobility, and for treating, and preventing pain.
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Dude, I'm pissing people off left and right lately.
Dude, I did a, I did an Insta story post
with this I gotta read this for the podcast
because it's pretty, it's actually hilarious,
but it's, it's, you pissing off students, it's not.
Well, you know what it is, dude, it's,
when you make a joke, that's got a little bit of truth in it.
That's when it stinks.
Yeah, that's when you piss your ass.
It's moments like this where I feel like
we're all the same person.
What?
Why?
Because it's weird, it's like.
I feel an angst right now.
Maybe that's what it is.
Like we're all, like you just wanting to remind people
that we're an entertainment comedy first and
then second, we're fitness and education and information.
And the other day, and I know it when I do it too, so it's so active.
It's like, I think there's part of me that likes to test that every once in a while just
to see how many snowflakes we have listening to us. So I, so I'll say, I know I used the R word the other day and I can count on one
hand and fucking 850 episodes how many times I've used it.
And I thought the use of it was, I think I called myself it or just, and I don't even
remember how the fuck.
Someone got mad.
Probably me.
Just one.
Which makes me feel good the size that we're at now and to only get one person who says that.
And it was somebody who was new coming on, listening up.
But I take the time to explain, I said,
hey, I apologize.
Our crude language sometimes can be offensive.
I said, it's not meant that I have people in my family
that have that.
I also have people close to me that have Down syndrome.
So I have a disrespectful thing. I also have people close to me that have Down syndrome. So I have a, it's not a disrespectful thing.
I said, it's entertainment.
And you know, some people can't handle language like that.
I totally respect that, understand that.
There's tons of health and fitness podcasts out there
that sound like Mr. Rogers when you fucking listen to him.
I said, you know, you can buy any means you could go to that.
But we're entertainment.
For that was our, our angle when we came into this
was we were going to entertain and first educate second.
Well, I think if you're coming from a place of integrity
and you're being, you know, and you have good intentions,
here's the way I look at it.
If I have good intentions and I'm coming
from a place of integrity and I genuinely am meaning
to entertain or I'm genuinely trying to entertain
and give you my opinion, which is what I do often. and I genuinely am meaning to entertain or I'm genuinely trying to entertain and
Give you my opinion, which is what I do often. So sometimes I'll entertain but also give you a serious opinion and people get angry
I'm comfortable with that because it's it's me what what I would be uncomfortable with is being misrepresented
Right like if people get angry with me and say you're you know this or that. I'm like, no, that's not me
That's not a problem, but if someone comes to me, like what I just did, right?
I just, I posted, there's this girl holding this,
like poster boredom for her face.
And it's one of those, I am the 99%
you know, things that they do, right?
And her thing says, I'm 25 years old
with a fine arts degree, no job, no insurance on food stamps,
and $20,000 in college debt. I am the 99%.
And so then I wrote above it the steps that she went through.
Go to college, accumulate debt, pick a stupid major, graduate with a useless degree, play victim and blame society.
And it's funny.
It's funny.
But of course you've acted everybody who has that degree.
Well, it's a funny, it's funny, right?
It's entertaining, it's hilarious.
It's also some truth there.
You know, I hate to break it to you.
And so somebody got angry and they're like,
whoa, you know, so this lady texted me.
It's not really hard.
No, she's like, that's not a useless degree.
I have a fine-nudge degree and I own a successful business.
And I was like, you don't see the irony
in what you just said.
You're a business owner.
You're an entrepreneur.
That's very different.
You can do anything.
And you're also not taking the victim role.
And you're not taking the victim role.
I'm sure it's completely unrelated.
I'm sure it's the real message
that it's the, I feel sorry for me
because I'm in that situation.
And I tried to make the point like, look,
you gotta do, there's a bit of a cost analysis,
there's a cost, how much it costs to get your education
versus what the potential benefits are gonna come from, right?
And so the problem is, and I know what the problem is,
for a long time now we've been fed the line that,
all education and all degrees are worth whatever they cost.
That's been the message, like it's,
no, no, it's totally worth it, Go get a loan for $100,000.
You have to have a degree.
A-ah, wrong.
You know, $100,000, liberal arts degree,
or fine arts degree, or, you know,
degree in, you know, poetry or whatever.
As passion is, you may be about those subjects,
spending tens of thousands or $100,000
on an education for that,
it's not a good, not a smart decision.
It's just the return is terrible.
If you do the math,
you look at all the people with those degrees,
you look at how many of them actually stayed
in the field that they studied,
because don't look at the ones
that have that degree and then do something else.
Look at the ones actually use that degree,
look at their return,
how many even got jobs and how many made money,
and you'll see, well, that's a shitty, that's a shitty.
Even aside from all those details, I feel like everybody has challenges.
It's the victim role that bothers me the most out of all that.
It's like fuck the degree part of it, fuck the debt part of it.
It's the, you know, feel sorry, like feeling to get ourselves out of this.
You did you see the, I just did a crap to put this on.
I just said a quote was it a day or two ago
that life is not a matter of holding good cards
but of playing a poor hand well.
To me, that's what life really is
because everybody is at a disadvantage.
Everybody has something that makes it challenging
or hard, it doesn't matter.
Even the most people that start off
with the most amount of money, there's challenges to that.
You know why?
Because your whole life, if you grow up,
I've watched this happen.
Like, that's why I'm grateful for all the shit
that I went through because it forced me to evolve,
grow up, and learn the hard way maybe early on.
But it's definitely been a bit of fit of me
as I've gotten older,
because then I see some of my peers who had everything.
They had all the opportunity.
They would be called what we would say,
quote unquote, white privilege people
But then I see how much they struggle in life you know why because everything was handed to them growing up
So when they hit the real fucking world they don't know it to do they had the right training
I had fucking boot camp training since I was a kid that turned me into tough as nails when I hit the real world
That doesn't scare me. I think the problem the part of the problem is people view
When you when you say stuff like that, which is 100% accurate,
100% accurate, here's the bottom line,
you do not know an individual in their life
and their challenges.
They could look on the outside
like they have everything going for them,
but they could have mental issues, health issues,
they could have bad parents, they could have whatever,
you just don't know.
But I think what the problem is people misconstrued that is a lack of empathy.
It's not a lack of empathy.
It's actually, you can be very empathetic.
Look, it's like my kids, okay?
It's, you know, let's say one of my children had a major accident or something terrible
happened or a huge challenge.
I'm going to be very empath a huge challenge. I'm going
to be very empathetic towards them. I'm going to love them and I'm going to feel bad
and I don't want them to hurt and I don't want them to be in this situation. But if I
really want them to do well, I'm going to sit down with them and say, look, you know,
son or daughter, this terrible thing's happened to you and it's horrible and I feel for you.
However, what you choose to do with this is gonna dictate how the rest of your life goes.
You can choose to use this or you can choose to have this
just dominate you and destroy you.
And that's the key.
And so that's kind of what we're saying.
And so I have empathy towards people
with lots of real challenges that they can't control.
Things that happen.
What I don't have empathy for is when people
use the victim role in order to dominate others,
to use tyranny against others,
or it's the new bully.
It's a way to bully people,
or just to be able to sit back and be like,
yeah, it's my excuse.
You know, this is my excuse for not,
here's the bottom,
this is a wonderful thing about free societies.
If you are, if you don't have any value to the market,
if you're not working, if you're not contributing,
you are literally not contributing to society.
That's what it really what it is.
Everybody wants everybody to work together.
Everybody says we all need to work together
and I agree we do, but if you're sitting at home
and you're not doing shit and you're not contributing,
you are a drag.
And so you need to figure out a way to contribute
to help to work and to build your self-confidence
and to do all these things.
And again, I have empathy for people
in challenging situations.
But I've seen firsthand people in some
of the most challenging situations
you could ever imagine use those situations
and become, I mean, just become, you know, what's the word, role models
for the rest of us, some of the most successful people
you could ever think about.
And, you know, Adam uses himself as an example.
For all intents and purposes, boy, you had about a million
and one reasons that you could have sat back and be like,
you know, poor me, I deserve better.
Well, everybody, you know, gets handed a deck of cards that, you know, they just don't
have any control over that, you know, whatever that looks like for every individual.
And, you know, of course, like, we all have this, this empathy towards people that are
in this tough situation.
I mean, that's just a natural human instinct is to, is to want to be able to help, you
know, your neighbor or help somebody out of trouble. just a natural human instinct is to wanna be able to help
your neighbor or help somebody out of trouble.
But inevitably, it amounts to how that person
is able to internalize this and really try to improve
themselves.
If they're not gonna take ownership of that process
and try and help themselves, you can only do so much
as an outside person trying to lift somebody up.
It's dead, it's dead weight, like it's not gonna go anywhere.
It doesn't life without fucking obstacles would be boring as shit.
Well, there would be no growth.
There would be no growth, okay?
And it would be boring as shit.
Think about that.
Think about it, if everything you did, just it happened easy for you and it went your way,
and it was never challenging, How lame would life be?
We would all stay the same.
And here's the other thing too.
If it was just a matter of giving people more of basic necessities, giving people more
money, more prosperity, we would not see the explosion of depression, anxiety, and suicides
that we're currently seeing.
I mean, it's a fact that today we live in the most prosperous times in all of human history,
all of human history, right?
The 20th and 21st century, 20th century saw just this
explosion of prosperity.
Because we're not worried about getting attacked by lions.
We can stress about bullshit,
about not getting paid more money or the stuff like that.
I think people just, I think we get what we want
and then we realize it's not what's gonna get gonna get we react before we really like think about it
You know like it's a lot of times as this knee jerk reaction of like here's what I'm suppose
Here's how I'm supposed to feel and it's like really do you really feel that way or is this just like a quick reaction?
I'll take it all the way back to something simple because I think when we talk about life
It's complicated and then people will debate all these different scenarios and we get lost in the weeds. I like to use fitness as an example because fitness
is quite black and white. Okay, so let's say you're a trainer or you're a gym owner or you're just
a fitness enthusiast and if you're listening to this podcast the odds are you're probably one of
those things, right? And somebody comes to you and goes, oh, you know, I grew up, all we ever ate was boxed packaged food.
All I had was potato chips for dinner.
You know, this is just the way I grew up.
It was terrible.
That's all I know how to eat.
I don't have access to a gym and I'm a hundred pounds overweight.
And there's nothing that can be done.
Now a fitness enthusiast is like, no, there's a lot you can do.
There's a lot, start walking.
Let's start walking.
Let's start watching what you're eating. And the person just says, no, man're like, no, there's a lot you can do. There's a lot, start walking. Let's start walking. Let's start watching what you're eating.
And the person just says, no man,
like everybody's against me, society's against me.
Process food is everywhere.
It tastes really good.
You know, engineers make the food to taste good.
And my job is to fail.
My job is sedative, like no, you know,
everything's designed for me to be overweight.
And that's just the world we live in.
And you're saying, no, there's things you can do
and they don't want to do it because they want to be sad and play the victim role. Now that's quite easy for us to be overweight and that's just the world we live in. And you're saying, no, there's things you can do and they don't want to do it because they want to be sad
and play the victim role.
Now, that's quite easy for us to see the,
the folly in that.
It's really easy for us to look at them and be like,
well, expand that.
There's some other reasons why I love fitness so much
is I would take people, especially kids,
I used to love training kids,
because I would take kids and they would learn this lesson
through fitness.
I wouldn't even have to say anything.
They'd come in, they'd work hard, they'd get stronger.
Next thing you know, their school work is getting better.
Next thing you know, they wanna get a job.
Next thing you know, they're more responsible around the house.
Why?
Because they've learned this lesson that,
oh, if I work and I have this things that I can control
and things I can't, I'm gonna focus on things I can.
Here's what I can do.
And I've trained, listen to what's the most important
kind of work, because you're working on yourself. And I've trained, listen. Most important kind of work,
because you're working on yourself.
And I think that we totally get away from that,
but just by showing up to school,
by showing up to your job,
by doing all these things outside of yourself,
where you're not really paying attention
to how you interact, how you think,
and how you build yourself up and improve every day.
Yeah, I've, do you think we're getting worse or do you think we're getting better?
Do you think like, I think the victim, the victimhood mentality is growing because it's hitting
its peak right now.
Because we're more prosperous, so because we, just you can, you can sit back and do that.
I love it when people use their, for example, you know, it's not a
It's not a secret that I'm you know pro freedom and pro free markets, right? And I'll have people will will message me on their technology on their iPhones from their mom's house and say things like
Oh, if we just had socialism
It's like you don't realize the irony of what you the device that you're using right?
I think we're living in a time where it allows
For a lot of that.
I also think it doesn't help that politician.
And here's the thing about,
that's why I love and hate politics so much.
I love it because it's fascinating.
I hate it because of the way they manipulate people so much.
Politicians are experts at manipulating the masses.
That's what they do.
And they spend a lot of money doing it.
The last presidential election was over a billion dollars.
The next one will be more expensive and that always goes up in cost. And the money that they spend
is about manipulating us to get us to vote a particular way. And telling us that we're victims,
and telling us that they have the answers is a very, very safe and successful formula. It's worked
for a long time. It's easy for them to say the reason why you don't have a job is because of
you know Mexicans the reason why you don't have
You know this is because of a trade, you know globalism and trade the reason why you don't have this is because minimum wage laws
Or not that way they should be or because big bins or whatever and they'll and they'll say but we have the solution
right and so now you feel like you're a victim
and you vote for these people.
And meanwhile, they're stirring up
this crazy victimhood mentality where it's absolutely,
to the point now where it's hilarious.
I'm watching movements destroy themselves
because of this victimhood mentality.
Right.
It's really, I actually, because there's no line.
Dude, there's no line.
It's like you go all the way to the extreme, but now it's like it, like cannibalizes itself.
Like once it gets to that extreme, it's crazy, because they start creating even more standards,
and more people that are, you know, excluded that they have to like highlight. That's just
interesting. Wasn't there something like recently, I don't know if I'm ever bringing this up.
It was something about another thing about pedophilia and like trying to like put that to
light as being like more of a mental issue that we should really support and not like,
you know, condemn.
Yeah, that's weird.
Yeah, it was something we worked up thing that I saw and I was just like, I can't accept
this.
Like, I can't.
Like, you can't put that kind of thing out there and like me just be like, oh yeah, okay, you know, let's figure this out.
Yeah, I don't mind.
No, you're a piece of shit.
Yeah, and be honest.
That's it.
Yeah, and be open and honest about it and have this discourse.
There was actually saw a chart.
It was a privilege hierarchy.
Okay.
So like, yeah, so like a gay white man has more privilege than a gay white woman,
has more privilege than a gay black woman.
And then it went to this whole thing where they were like ranking who's more privileged
than who and they were just literally putting people in boxes and I'm like based off of
You know like your skin color
It brings me back to my first point those like you know, it's funny as we we get in these big debates about privilege
And it's like is being privileged in advantage
Hmm, I could debate the other side. I don't I don't believe I mean a lot of dysfunction in that you know with the kids
What when when when when a money is all that, we all look at, like you talked about
through the day, Sal, like if you're not, if you don't worship God
or believe in God, then there's something else that we worship.
And if you worship money and you think money and success
and getting to a certain place and a company is your end all be all,
then maybe privilege does matter.
But what we come to find out when people get to these levels,
how many of them are unhappy?
How many actresses and athletes that had millions of dollars
and are up in this living in this amongst the most privileged
are the most unhappy and unfulfilled.
So is it really a privilege to be privileged?
Maybe it's not, maybe being disadvantaged
is actually more an advantage. Like, hold, think on that for a fucking minute. Like I think it's not, maybe being disadvantaged is actually more an advantage.
Like, hold, think on that for a fucking minute.
Like I think it's so hilarious that we sit here
and we talk about all that.
They just did a study on trigger warnings.
You guys know what trigger warnings are.
They're doing callers.
Like trigger warning, we're about to talk about
an old book that whatever, they did a study.
I think it was a Harvard that did the study
and found that it actually is harming students.
Duh, right? It's is harming students. Duh.
Right?
It's actually harming students to do this because it's causing them to become less or more
or more sensitive and afraid of, well, basically the real world.
It's a fear, man.
Like, don't we realize that fear is the thing that always will allow somebody
to govern over us and keep us down.
Like fear is the tactic they've always used to oppress us.
Yeah, it says that trigger warnings make coddle the mind
and actually increase the risk of some of these kids getting
bad effects from seeing things that they don't like.
You know what I'm saying?
Which makes sense. That mean, it makes sense.
Right.
That's totally what makes sense.
So.
Well, I was surprised when we, the first time
that we talked about the cry closets,
I was actually surprised of the forum.
We definitely had a handful of people.
People supporting it for sure.
That came back and supported it.
And I thought, wow, that's pretty crazy to me.
I thought that would be like one of those things
if you were a mind-pumplisser,
you would think how ridiculous that really is,
but there was a lot of people that came to the world.
Well, I guess I said, I understand the empathetic aspect.
I'm a very empathetic person, but here's a deal.
If you're an adult and you're in a challenging situation,
you're at work and your boss is like,
I need this report, listen, we got a new deadline, needs to be done tonight,
that means you got to work until it's finished.
And the adults looking at them and the adult knows,
like, oh man, I had a dinner planned tonight
with my wife.
And so the employee looks at the boss
and just starts crying, right?
Imagine that situation, just breaks down
and starts crying, okay?
Yeah, I get that you're sad, I get that, you know, I should feel empathetic,
but at the same time, you are an ineffective human being
at that moment.
If you wanna go to dinner with your wife,
you sit down and you have a conversation with your boss.
If you don't, then you stay at work and you bust your ass.
Sitting there crying makes you an ineffective human being
in that situation.
I have empathy for you, but there's definitely times
when you gotta, you know, what's definitely times when you got to,
you know, what do they say, put your big, you know, big boy or big girl pants on.
Well, they say man up, but I'm sure you can't see that.
Yeah, whatever. We know what that means. Sometimes you just got to say,
a fuck, all right, let's get this shit done, because that's how you're effective.
It doesn't mean you're not empathetic. It just means that's how life kind of works
and what makes you effective.
I can't imagine world leaders acting like that.
You imagine a world leader
and like, you know, crying to another person
because you're negotiating a trade agreement
or something like that and it's not fair.
Yeah, I just, I guess for me, I just see society.
Like, like being tough is a lost trait.
Like just the idea of being resilient
and, you know, having this kind of character where you're just like,
I mean, you're fucking tough.
It's really hard to get at you.
That is just not something I see people really lifting out there and putting out there
as something to be in stoic.
It's something that people, everybody has to be so fucking sensitive and cry all the time and like share every shit thing
that happened to them.
I don't know, it's just different.
It's a different thing now.
Some things you need to be able to say to yourself,
like, okay, that's ridiculous.
I don't need to be upset over that.
It's tough your way out of it.
The definition of faith that resonates for me
along those lines is like, you do everything you can to get what you think you want,
but then you have faith that whatever happens
is supposed to happen that way.
That's my understanding of it.
And so I think when you're in a tough situation,
being tough basically means having faith,
and I don't care if this means you believe in God
or whatever, or maybe have faith in your own abilities
or faith that you can handle whatever comes your way, at the end of it, didn't work out the way I
wanted. I'm crushed. I'm devastated. I'm sad. But I have faith.
And so I'm going to be tough. Does that make sense? Right.
Rather than be defeated or understanding that there's a silver
lining in that. Yeah. Right. There's a lesson to be learned in
that. That maybe I needed to learn. And that's, boy, is that hard
for people to understand. Like it's just so hard when you're in
the middle of this, this hurts, it's painful, this
wide, this happened to me, like being able to pull yourself away and be like, okay, well,
where is the message for me in this or where is the silver lining for me to be able to
grow and level up from this?
It's an attitude that if you're trying to get to a point in your life where you're healthy and fit and content and fulfilled,
that attitude will take you very far.
Even, like I said, if we bring it all the way back down
to the very basic Get Lean build muscle be fit.
Let's just look at that for a second.
Having that attitude of, okay, my life is busy.
You know, maybe you're a single parent, maybe you have two jobs,
you don't have a lot of money to spend on gym, you know, access, maybe it's hard to eat
right because you're schedule, but you still say, okay, here's the cards have been dealt,
here's what I'm going to do, and I'm going to go for it, and I'm going to organize things,
I'm going to work towards, you would be surprised at how capable we are
when we have that attitude.
I mean, humans have done incredible things
and it's all come from that attitude.
Basically what I'm trying to communicate is
that is a very useful attitude to have.
It's gonna serve you well.
It doesn't mean you don't have empathy,
doesn't mean you don't feel bad when something bad happens.
It doesn't mean you don't wanna help other people
because I definitely believe very strongly in charity.
I believe very, very strongly
in helping your fellow man
I feel very strongly in my empathy.
But at the same time, you have to have that attitude
for yourself because that's what's gonna help you.
The other attitude doesn't.
You know what I've been thinking about?
And I kind of attribute it to the work force
that's out there now.
What are people doing in their jobs?
People really don't have anything to do.
Even when they're at the job, they're on the clock,
they're looking at Facebook, they're looking at Twitter.
There's a sense of we're just not fulfilling
some kind of purpose or like,
you know, in my job or I'm not finding this,
I'm not driven enough and so it's like,
there's, people just aren't busy enough, you know,
like you're not like waking up every day
to accomplish things, it's like, you know, like so.
Because you don't have to anymore.
It's different.
You don't have to anymore.
I think we're super busy, but not busy with,
not like the purposeful things. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I think we're super busy, but not busy with, not like the purposeful things.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I think we're super, super busy.
I saw a study on this one time.
I wish I knew what it was.
Doug, maybe you can search for something like that.
It had something to do with the amount of hours
of productivity that an average employee actually has.
Yeah, and it was embarrassing.
Yeah, it's like out of an eight hour day.
Like, just like two hours is like actual work time.
The rest is like,
which is great.
I love it because I imagine a lot of you guys
listen to us as you're working right now.
Yeah, thank you for that.
But it's like, there's a lot of jobs out there
where you really could just skate and then look like
you're working and make sure you look busy.
But really, this is all to do.
This is also too though, this goes back to the beginning of topic of like the, you know,
entertain, but yet educated at the same time too, was a main mission, I think, of mind-pump.
It wasn't just about, you know, us purely entertaining.
It's not, I hope it's not just that, but I mean, at least the feedback that I've gotten
since we've started this show is that it's rare that you listen to an episode and there's
not a takeaway in there for you as an individual.
Whether it be personal, growth wise,
or it has something to do with business,
or it has something to do with health and fitness,
which is what we're surrounded around, right?
Yeah, that was just an effect.
Oh, it was.
It was two hours and 53 minutes of productivity.
It was eight hour day.
The whole day, two hours.
That's how it is.
You know, that is crazy, amen?
The sense though.
Yeah, what a...
Well, this is where...
Now, now it's in...
You see companies like the Facebooks and the Googles and like some of these other companies
that are starting to do this now where they have, you know, these short spurts of work
and then they break it up with fun and events and playing and doing things like that.
That's smart.
It's very smart if...
I mean, because if you're an employer
and you look and you go like,
oh shit, on average, the average employee
is going giving me two hours and 53 minutes,
I'm paying them from nine to five.
I may as well enhance that experience
and maybe I can squeeze out an extra 10 or 15 minute.
They're already fucking playing on the clock
and not doing shit.
I may as well organize it.
So hopefully I can get more productivity out of them. So that's really interesting.
Yeah, that's an interesting strategy.
I like that.
I like that.
And tech companies are the ones to do it
because it's such a competitive field,
because they're actually,
they're literally fighting for employees
it's such a competitive field.
And they're trying to figure out ways
of making it more productive,
but also making it a,
you know, lucrative to people in many different areas.
This is why you go to, again, you brought up Google.
I mean, you guys know all the free shit people get at Google.
Like free massages and food and-
Well, they want to keep everybody on campus, which is smart.
You know, because it's like, the longer you stay there, the more likely you're going to
squeeze a couple of things out of work.
And you'll network with people that are working on projects and things they'll kind of spark.
It's extremely competitive, which is a...
That too.
Yeah, that's what it is.
Google's competing with YouTube and Apple and all these companies are fighting for similar talent.
So they're trying to track this.
Many people's a can, so.
You know, you bought stock the other day, is it still...
Facebook went back up.
Did he go back up?
Yeah, I did. people's a cancer. You know, you bought stock the other day, is it still? Facebook went back up. Did he go back up?
Yeah, I did.
I think it's a long buy, because I think Facebook,
what makes me like Facebook is just the sheer number of people
and the sheer number of a amount of information.
Oh, it's not going away.
No, no, no.
They already have two months.
And then they own Instagram on top of it, so.
Which I see them moving, and I mean,
that if it wasn't for Instagram,
I mean, they've really, really picked up on that. I think I forgot the number. I saw
what he bought it at and what it's worth now. It's like yeah, they also own WhatsApp, which that
was a big oh, I didn't know that. Yeah, that was a big purchase a while back like a couple years ago.
Dude, here's the thing that's kind of crazy though about the social media platforms right now. So
you guys do you guys know who Alex Jones is? Yeah.
Do you know who he is?
The info wars guy, the conspiracy theorist, whatever.
So he got kicked off all platforms, all of them.
Social, he's not on Twitter, not on Facebook,
and now YouTube kicked them off.
And they said it's because-
It's the globalists.
Well, and what they said, it's because he has hate speech
and they want to remove hate speech.
Now, here's a deal. Those are private companies. So it's 100% within the rights to kick off whoever the hell they want
off their platform. So I'm not saying, you know, we should force them to change anything. But I do find it weird
that Alex Jones gets kicked off, but you have Antifa who's the who you the, these guys are basically domestic terrorists.
You had that one journalist that just got a job at the New York,
I think it's at New York Times, I believe,
maybe New York Post, maybe you can find it for me, Doug.
She's an Asian journalist,
and she has a string of tweets that she wrote a while ago,
saying horrible things about white people,
like horrible things about white people, very, very racist.
Her stuff never got pulled off, she's still there.
And so the inconsistency with what they consider hate speech and whatever, is a little bit alarming.
You know what I'm saying? Mainly because they're so powerful, the such powerful platforms.
That, I don't know, it's fascinating. What do you guys think about this?
Well, you can see how it completely just has to be within their definition, their narrative of what that is, right?
There's no like democracy in that.
Like you're either on our platform or abiding by, you know,
our stands are not so.
Well, Candace Reality.
Do you guys know what Candace Owens is?
No.
She's this like conservative, you know, black woman, right?
Very, very, very intelligent, very good on, oh yeah, I know, I follow her.
Very, very intelligent on media.
And she's just, she's on the other side,
and I like watching both sides,
so I'll see extreme, extreme, conservative,
and I tend to agree half the time with each of them.
But anyway, what Candace Owens is,
is what I thought was brilliant.
And she took the exact tweets
that this woman made, this writer, about white people,
and she changed the word white with
black or Jewish just as an experiment.
So same statement.
Just changed the word white to black or Jewish and she got suspended on Twitter for saying
the exact same thing but just saying it about black people or Jewish people.
Oh wow.
How crazy is that?
Oh yeah, I mean, there's a it's kind of can shit all over white people.
It's that's free range.
It's like open season to that's free range.
I know, I don't like that.
I hate the consistency.
I think it's all shitty.
Well, I think I also think it's because 50 years ago,
it wasn't like that.
And so we were, we're seeing it swing this way.
And in order to get it to swing this way,
it's not a pent-up energy in the direction, yeah.
Right, and just like a pendulum.
Like, it was meant to swing back into the center
and it's got momentum now and it's swinging way hard.
It's just the other direction.
I just have slamming hard.
Yeah, it's soon, it's soon everybody that's,
and I feel like that's, this is why Trump got,
where he's at, this is because,
and as much as there's people that hate him
and whatever like that is that he's the extreme
the other direction, he's the one trying to push the pindle on the other way. And
I you know, it's always that way with presidents, right? We go one side to the other side back
and forth, back and forth. In Congress flips also. You'll get right. Yeah. I just hate, uh, I hate
inconsistencies and like lack of logic. I really, really, it just irks me. It's like let's just be consistent.
Like don't say shit, don't say race is shit,
about anybody, don't say it's okay about this one race
and it's not okay about this race,
and let's not say shit about man and women,
instead of, oh it's okay to say it about just man
or it's just okay to say it about these religions
and not that one.
It's still divisive.
It's so illogical.
You want to be inclusive, let's conclude everybody.
Well, I mean, what happened to free speech?
I mean, say what I don't give a fuck.
Say whatever you want to say.
And if you're...
Oh, it's still free.
And if there's a bunch of people that follow you,
then they're a bunch of bigots too.
And then we can keep them all in the category.
Like, there's all the biggest...
Oh, I see.
Yeah, I'll see you later.
Yeah, you see.
And if you don't like what they have to say,
then don't consume their content.
You know, it's like, if it's not for you,
then don't do it.
It's just like how I offended the girl the other day.
I'm like, I'm sorry, man.
I'm sorry that a single adjective is enough for you
to decide who I am as a person that's unfortunate.
And okay, but I respect it that you have the,
you have an opinion, you have every right to say what you said to me
And you have every right to not listen to the show because that I hope that I attract people that have a little bit thicker
Send on a bunch of fucking snowflakes. That's how I hope that's who I get that's who that's the people and I know
Damn well. There's people that listen to show that don't care for me that much, but love the way
Sal presents himself and loves the way that's fine.
I'm okay with that.
So I...
Nobody hates just them.
It does it, yeah.
Yeah, right.
I think I just think that...
Literally nobody.
I don't think that it needs to be policed.
Like, we don't need to police it.
No, and it is free speech.
It's just, it's a private organizations.
And they, you know, like Twitter and YouTube
and Facebook and, you know, Instagram, they're private.
And so they can kick you off.
If they wanted to, they could kick every Republican off
their platforms or every Democrat.
And it's totally up to them.
And it's not a problem.
I mean, I have a problem.
I have something I follow a lot.
And I'm a little annoyed by it.
And I don't bitch about it.
I don't complain.
It's just, I'll just stop reading their material. I love complex news
But complex in the last year, especially since Trump has been in office is as shown
They are there's like super hardcore left and there they they were really cool on pop culture
I love that their little news on even sports. They cover a lot of topics that I enjoy to read and
love their little news on even sports. They cover a lot of topics that I enjoy to read.
And I just don't care so much that the slant
that they have right now on all their political stuff
that they keep doing.
It's like, I feel like a lot of it is really naive,
the shit that they put out there.
But I'm not somebody who gets on there
and makes in fucking waste my time arguing it and debating.
And I was just like, okay, I'll just tune it out.
Like there's, I'm not there for that now.
I'll take their sneaker advice.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, I'm not gonna read their fucking political views
because I think they're stupid.
It's getting, it feels like it's getting a little polarized.
It's funny when Americans are pulled across the board.
Most Americans are in the middle.
Most Americans are not, it feels like they're,
they were being super polarized.
But really, most people are in the middle.
Most Americans are pro free market
and pro, like pro freedom socially.
So it's like most Americans support things
that get marriage, you know, loosening drug laws
or ending the war on drugs.
Most Americans are pro, you know,
allowing more immigrants to come into the country.
Most Americans are also pro free market,
anti super high taxes, high regulation.
Or stock for this two-party system bullshit.
Yeah, so most people are kind of in the middle,
and that's kind of tend to why I sit, right?
Which is why I can, I piss off everybody.
It's funny when Bush was the president,
if you heard me, you think I was like this hardcore liberal.
It's just I hated.
Bush would just represented all the shitty sides
of the right.
When Obama was in, everybody thought I was super right.
Now, Trump's in and I'm, you know,
there's a lot of things I don't like about him either.
But most people are somewhere in the middle.
They don't really have a voice, unfortunately.
The voices that tend to get hurt the most with rational people. Yeah, they don't wanna hear that. Actually, we had this debate in the middle, they don't really have a voice, unfortunately. The voices that tend to get hurt the most
with the rational people.
Yeah, they don't wanna hear that.
Actually, we had this debate in the forum
and someone was saying how polarized it seems.
And I thought about it for a second.
And then I tried to view it in the context of,
you know, relatively recent American history.
Man, the 60s and 70s were way worse.
I don't think where anywhere near is bad is the 60s and 70s were way worse. I don't think where anywhere near is bad
is the 60s and 70s in terms of polarization.
That was a very, very volatile time.
You had civil rights leaders getting assassinated,
left and right.
You had presidents getting assassinated.
You had a war that was extremely unpopular.
You had a counter culture that the CIA actually
viewed as a threat to national security.
I don't know where near as bad as that.
And that's the other thing too.
I think social media just takes the good and the bad of media and amplifies it.
And one of the bad things that amplifies is the spreading of bad news.
And I think people think things are a lot worse than they are.
Or car wreck chasers.
Yeah, and it's not as bad.
It's not nearly as bad as we think it is.
It really isn't.
It's good to be have these conversations,
but most people put it here.
Well, you talked about that already.
We live in a safer, more prosperous time in our lives,
than ever, you know what I'm saying?
So it's, but yet I feel like we see more complaints,
more highlights.
It feels like that way.
Right.
And I feel like now too,
we're really actively trying
to consider everybody's point of view.
You know, it's tough.
It's like, there's so many different types of people
that all coexist here in the same place,
and they all have different agendas.
And so how do you manage all of that?
It's really tough.
That's the thing about America that's,
I love more than anything.
It's one of the most arguably maybe the most diverse country in the world.
It's a new country, if you compare it to Europe and Asia and Eastern Europe.
It's a very new country in comparison, but it's extremely diverse.
It's made up of so many different people, so many different religions, so many
different belief systems that it encourages things like innovation, it encourages things
like progress, but it also causes, there's also lots of arguing and fighting. So it's like
when you look at like, I love people that use the Scandinavian countries as examples,
like look how happy people are. Everybody there agrees on the same shit. Everybody there.
They're all the same race.
They're all the same, yeah, race, same color.
Like everything.
Most people are saying religion is, you know,
not nearly as diverse.
I mean, it's definitely got some diversity.
It's a free country.
It's a very free country with very free markets.
But it's not nearly as diverse as a country like ours
where we just have all kinds of shit going on all the time.
I mean, we have a Communist Party in America,
socialist Communist Party that still has members, right? You know, in a country that, you know, made
capitalism popular, whatever. So we have all these different views and we fight and we
bicker and we argue, but we innovate and we progress very, very, very quickly. You know,
I'm saying, it wasn't that long ago, all. It was like decades ago that we had segregation.
And now decades later,
we're not talking about hundreds of years,
we're talking about decades later,
we had a black president.
That's incredible progress.
Not where we need to be,
but incredible progress from where we were.
So I think when we look at things through that lens,
it's like, okay, we can argue, we can fight, you know, we can beat each other's throats, but at the
end of the day, we end up finding a way of, of, of, you know, innovating, working together and progressing.
It's kind of crazy that fitness is kind of like a microchasm of all of this, right? Sure.
When you think about it, and I really feel like that's a lot of what we represent is to,
to break down all those walls and barriers
and all these different camps.
It's like there's so much great in all of it.
It's not they're wrong and you're right
or I'm right, they're wrong.
It's not like that at all.
It's like yeah, there's a good message within all that.
There's something that somebody can take away
from all of these different camps.
And we should be one big camp
that everybody has the ability to pull from instead of trying to divide all of these different camps. And we should be one big camp that everybody has the ability
to pull from instead of trying to divide all of us
and debate semantics.
That's why it drives me crazy when people hang on one
or two little things that's something that you might have said
or a view that you have with how to get in shape
or a way to do nutrition.
And it's just like, oh no, that's not right.
The science supports this and says it's supposed to be that.
Like get the fuck outta here.
There's so many, there's such an individual variance
to so many people that you might be right
in this one scenario.
I might be right in another scenario.
At the end of the day, both people could be right.
It's not a matter of.
That was the biggest learning lesson I had as a trainer.
It was like realizing that,
because I can't tell you, sure, a majority of my clients
would respond and react to nutrition and exercise
like the studies showed they would.
But there was a sizeable minority.
It wasn't like two people.
It was a sizeable minority that would break all the rules.
You know, we do shit and I'd be dumbfounded.
Like, why is this person not responding to what we're doing?
Or why is this person says they're only eating
1300 calories, but they're still overweight. I used to think people were lying to me, you know or you know I had clients where I was like no, no, you need to eat meat because if you don't eat meat
You're probably acting nutrients and they're just thriving on a vegan diet
And so I had to like step take a step back and be like okay
Like there's a there's there's more to this than what the studies will show. And that's when I became a really good trainer,
is when I started looking at people more as individuals
rather than, you know, I have this general framework
that I enter in with, but I'm okay with breaking the rules
and that was a huge learning lesson for me at least.
Huge, huge learning lesson.
So, did you see the post that,
I think I shared on the forum for everyone
to try and get on there was the vegan guy, the vegan bodybuilder that was put out there on the podcast who he
should have on the podcast and I told the forum to go there if they kept
chance to drop by and we must have had I don't know 50 to 60 people get over
there and not one. Yeah, did he ever respond? He responded. Look, he responded to
everybody else. Except for all the mind, pummel.
Maybe it's because I'm doing the carnivore diet.
It's too bad.
I don't know if either one of you looked at his page
and everything, and he's just...
I've seen him before.
He's just so hardcore.
I mean, his girls got vegan tattooed on her butt.
And they push the vegan message so hard.
I don't know. I feel like it becomes so religious when people treat it that way. and they push the vegan message so hard and just,
I don't know, I feel like it becomes so religious
when people treat it that way.
It's like, I'm not.
Well, it is a belief system for them.
Yeah, it is.
When you're, and here's the thing about nutrition, by the way,
when nutrition becomes a belief system,
you are very consistent, but you also become very fanatical
about it.
And for a vegan, for the most consistent vegan, the most consistent vegans are the people
that truly believe in their heart.
It is immoral and wrong to kill animals for pretty much for any reason, okay.
To kill you.
It's just immoral.
And so they, they, they, you know, like the value hierarchy system, their values, that's
one of their top values.
And so for them, they're evangelizing when they're talking about veganism.
It's not just about health and it's healthier, and they're not just making arguments that
it's better for you.
They're driven by the fact that they're trying to save animals.
And so through that lens of trying to save animals because it's immoral, that's what drives
all their arguments.
And that's why it can come across, and it is,
in many cases, well, that's an ethical and dark man.
They're trying to end cruelty, and I get that.
And it is a very strong belief system.
I mean, it's the same.
I don't know if I should bring up abortion,
but it's like, you know, you start getting into
that third rail to the...
Yeah, right?
We're just, might as well go there, right?
But that's why people get so passionate about it
because it's a belief system.
It's like, no, this is a life.
So you go to those levels where it's like,
you're not gonna convince them otherwise.
So it's like, okay, well, you know,
I don't know where to go with that.
No, you're absolutely right.
You're absolutely right.
It's what they truly believe.
And so trying to convince them otherwise is impossible.
But yeah, again, like vegans are trying to,
vegans in this category are trying to make the case
because they want to save animals
not because veganism is healthier.
Which we've all said we're okay with that, right?
Totally.
Yeah, that's in your belief system.
I respect you.
Totally, totally.
I just don't like it when they use that then to make the case
that it's better for you. That it's healthier for most people or that or that we were intended
to be that way. Or that you're bad. You're manipulating data and information just to
serve your narrative. Yeah, because that's not that's just that's just not true. Which is just
as bad as somebody some of these religious dogmatic people that's do the same thing too.
Yeah.
They start manipulating information
just to serve you and serve your message, right?
That's right, that's right.
And you know, so yeah,
I would love to get on his podcast and talk to him
because I have met a couple vegan bodybuilders
that were quite shocking at how well they felt
and the muscle they built and how awesome they felt.
And so it'd be interesting to have that conversation about that.
But you know, and then we can of course debate, you know,
the health, like what's actually healthier.
Forget the individual variance, but for most people,
what's actually healthier, what actually works better
for most people.
It's unfortunate someone like that won't tell, you know.
It's like, they might, you never know.
You don't know.
I don't know.
I don't say it.
It's a Belicis. I don't say it's a Belisis.
I don't think that it's weird at all that he responded to everybody else, but anybody
that tagged MindPump, I think that's pretty obvious that he wouldn't want to have a conversation
on that, which that's the other thing too.
And I actually saw some other people on other, you know, I went through his page first because
I thought, okay, would this be even worth a conversation?
Yeah, a nice looking page.
No, he does.
And I thought that it would be a great conversation. I said, and he's got a lot of
influence. I think he's got like a quarter million people that
are following him. And, you know, the message that he's giving, I
would just like to, I would like to have him expand on some of
his thoughts. And, and then us, maybe challenge some of the way
he's thinking on different things and have a great discussion. And
I think that we have the right plot. I would, I just wish, I
would love a vegan to make a different argument.
Like if I was a vegan, I think I could make a much better argument
than the vegan arguments that I've heard.
Because I hate it when vegans present the argument and say,
no, this is just a healthier way to eat,
and this is how we're supposed to eat.
No, no, no, that's not true.
If we were hunter-gatherers,
and you just tried to survive off of the plants
and stuff that grow around you.
Yeah, you'd be in trouble.
The reason why you, so the way I would position
the argument is like, look, we live in modern times.
We can get creative with plant-based foods.
So I can get all the nutrients I need.
I can combine foods. And because of the fact that now
I can get food from Mexico, food from other
seasonal foods that normally you'd have to wait.
Yes, and here's why I think it's better
because, and then I'd make those points,
and I'd make the real points that you can start to argue.
That would be a better argument.
I don't like it when they try and use the false arguments
because then it's like, okay, well, you got to just miss information.
Yeah, like what the health, like the cows are killing the ozone.
Yeah, the methane gas.
Turns people off, because it's just misinformation.
That's like a tenth of what oil and gas are really doing.
You know what the irony is, is fossil fuels.
The irony of that is, too, is, you know, with cows and chickens and pigs and all
that stuff.
And the irony is, if they weren't domesticated animals for food, they probably would not
exist near the, not even close to population they do now.
Like, one of the ways you want to guarantee an animal, if you want to guarantee that an animal
doesn't go extinct, then have people own them and eat them.
You'll for sure they'll never go.
They'll all have plenty of cows because we eat beef, right?
If we didn't have milk and beef,
how many wild cows, or it wouldn't be that much.
And then of course the flip argument could be,
well that's not really a life,
and why would they grow up in captivity and all that stuff?
So, but it would be an interesting conversation.
No, it would be.
I see you moving your shoulder, funny.
What's going on? Oh, dude, I, it would be. I see you moving your shoulder, funny, what's going on?
Dude, I, you know, we're getting old, bro.
Dude.
You know, like, is that natural?
The worst.
It's harder, bro.
It's harder when you're not going to let the steroids actually
actually actually to be honest, that's actually not true.
The anabolic would make a situation like this,
even worse, in fact, this used to happen a lot to me
because of that, because you build muscles so fast
and so about.
Push it too hard.
Yeah, push it too hard, and then you get out of balance,
for sure.
So I would actually deal with more of this stuff
when I was on than when I'm off.
But when a real note, I know exactly,
I mean, I stretched myself right now.
Of course, I'm slowly increasing volume.
We cover week, and I knew that this last back session that I did. I knew I was stretching myself and pushing it and so I knew I was gonna
Be more sore than usual and so my back is definitely tight and
Yesterday I just so happened to make that the day too that I sat down in front of my computer for like five hours straight and you know
Shoulders rolled forward and I'm sitting there,
looking at little tiny numbers all day,
someone this rounded posture, I know that.
And then as soon as I moved from that,
after I've been stuck there for a frozen frame,
just instantly I could feel the pain in my shoulder
and it just was driving me crazy.
And then last night, Katrina opens me up
and works on me a little bit when that stuff like that
happens and I didn't have her last night to do that.
And fuck, dude, I'm just, it's just annoying right now
because I know it needs to be worked out.
And I got on the ball or the,
in the shoulder blade or in the shoulder itself.
Well, the pain feels like it's in the shoulder,
but I know it's related to my back, my shoulder blade,
it's related to me being tight,
and then rolling my shoulder forward
and typing on the computer all day.
And so I'm just out of alignment right there,
and I know if I realign it, I open up,
and I start to relax.
What were the exercises and stuff
that you were just going too heavy for too hard?
I did some heavy deadlift, It's just the total volume too.
Just a lot of work on my back.
So I did heavy deadlifting.
I did pull ups.
I did rows and what I think I did lap pull down.
All kinds of pulling.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It was a full back workout.
It was just back.
That's all I did.
Like I hadn't done just a single muscle like that and really got after it.
And so I kind of knew I was going to stretch myself.
And then like I said, that would have been okay. I really think it was the poor posture afterwards. That's when I felt it.
Like so my back was feeling normal sore.
So you feel nothing until after the computer? Yes. I've done the same and then like heavy squatting, deadlifting, all that, and then sitting
in my car in traffic for a couple hours and then getting out, exaggerated what normally would be
just kind of like a small knot that was like okay, like my whole leg would be affected in my
up into my hip and just like oh super painful. So totally. Yeah, I do.
I do, real, like I see that happening after I do
like a real good session, but then you're just locked
in a shitty position.
Yeah, I'm trying to think of why that happens.
Probably because you're, well, you're causing muscle damage
right when you're working out hard.
So you've got that damage going on.
So you're a little bit of inflammation,
a little bit of soreness is gonna start to maybe set in
later, the body sending inflammatory markers and things to start to repair.
But then you're sitting in this or stand or whatever in this fixed position.
Muscles are stuck in this shortened position.
Because you just trained it as hard as you did, the CNS is now protecting that damaged muscle
by keeping it shortened.
When you try to come out of that position,
now you probably probably come out with more pain,
which is like when we do maps prime,
how we have the, we talk all about what you do
before you work out, but in prime,
we have post-priming sessions and part of it's to prevent this.
And the other part of it is to send to better.
Oh, no, 100%.
I know for a fact that if I chose to do handcuff
with rotations
and did some like shoulder mobility type of work and actually stretched or had a massage on my back
opposed to sitting in a computer for five hours
after all that I wouldn't be feeling it.
Isn't that weird?
Cause we used to get taught, like just sit there and rest
and go, yeah, yeah.
You know how, you know, it's funny.
That's what rest was, it was just like laying down or something.
Don't do anything.
I had, God, over the last, maybe the last 15 years
or 12 or 13 years of my personal training career,
I never, I did not have a single client
tweak or hurt themselves during a workout.
Now, what would happen, what would happen
a couple of times is where I'd be training a client
and they'd feel something and they'd be like,
ooh, my back feels a little bit,
or my shoulder's bothering me a little bit.
And I was always encouraged my clients
to communicate that to me.
Then the rest of the session would turn into
mobility and correctional work.
So like the last, so if, oh, we're doing,
let's say we're doing chest and shoulder or whatever
and then I'd see my client move in the arm a little
Fun, it's like what's the matter of shoulder? But oh, it's a little tight. That's it. The rest of the workout on that we're working on that and they would always and they would always have no problem the next day
This was even with with back pain. I think even once I trained Doug and his back did something funny during a workout and the rest of the workout
We just stretched it and did mobility and he was just a little sore the next day it wasn't.
Yeah, nothing's worse for me than knowing what I did
and then knowing I could have prevented it
had I put the work in.
Like I knew that I was overstretched,
the meaning overstretched myself capacity-wise,
not overstretched like stretching.
I knew I overreached, I should say.
I overreached when I was training back.
So that being said, I should have put in
the due diligence post workout
and for certain, for sure,
sitting down in a locked position like that
after I just lit up my post-ear chain
would not be an ideal thing whatsoever.
Yeah, because what happens when your body senses injury
or in a thing you're gonna get injured,
it'll freeze up. it's gonna governing it.
We've all felt that, right?
We've all felt, we know the term locked up.
Like, my back just locked up or just seized up.
What your CNS is doing is it's telling a muscle
or a group of muscles to cinch down, tighten up,
and not move.
That by itself causes pain,
but then that also goes up and down the kinetic chain in the sense
of now the rest of your body is moving and operating differently because of that.
And so one of the best things you could do is tell your sunshine nervous system, hey
man, it's okay.
Like, let's stretch, let's move.
I just came, so I had an, I like to use analogies because they tend to communicate things
better.
And this morning I came up with a really good one.
So I was at the front of my house,
about to leave with my kids.
We came here this morning, I did some filming
and I wanted the kids to,
they wanted to watch me do filming.
So I brought them to work.
And we don't wear shoes in the house.
When we come inside the house, we take our shoes off.
So I'm at the front, I put one shoe on,
and then I realized, oh fuck, I forgot my wallet,
which is on the other side of the house.
So rather than taking my shoe off,
because we were kind of in a rush,
I just walked through the house with one shoe on
and one shoe off.
Now I'm wearing converse, okay?
And the rise off the floor with the converse is very small.
It's a very flat shoe.
So we're probably looking at what would you guys say,
half an inch, maybe, quarter of an inch off the floor?
Maybe, right?
If that, yeah.
So I'm walking through the house where one foot is maybe
a quarter inch higher than the other foot,
and it dawned on me.
Like this would be a great analogy that I could use.
So let's say we did an experiment and we took,
just to illustrate what I'm trying to explain.
And we took a bunch of people, and you could experiment
on yourself.
You could actually do this, but I warned you, if you do, you're going to create some problems'm trying to explain. And we took a bunch of people, and you could experiment on yourself. You could actually do this,
but I warned you if you do,
you're gonna create some problems.
So beware.
But let's say we took a bunch of people,
and I put in one of their shoes,
a one-tenth of an inch riser,
like a doctor's soul in one side, but not the other.
Just a small, like a one-tenth of an inch riser in one foot.
Just enough to knock you off, kill yourself.
Just, you won't even, you barely will be able to feel it.
And in fact, if you walk around in it after about 30 minutes,
you probably won't even notice.
Put this on and walk around in this all day long.
And here's what will happen.
Here's what will notice.
If it's on your left foot, this is what will happen.
Before you know it, you might not even
realize one foot's higher than the other,
but before you know it, your knees
starts to kind of
bother you a little bit, feel a little tweaky.
You keep going, keep going.
Now your hip on the left side starts to bother you.
Then the hip on the right side starts to bother you.
Then it goes up to your back.
Eventually it goes up to the shoulder, to the neck.
You might even start to feel things,
like headaches and stuff like this, as a result of it.
Now why, right?
If I say to somebody, oh, you have neck and shoulder pain
and has to do with your foot, people think I'm crazy.
Not true, it's all connected.
It's all connected.
So when we're talking about what we're talking about
with injuries or pain and muscles sees up,
if you don't address those issues,
you're not just gonna hurt in the area where that muscle
is, it's gonna affect the entire
kinetic chain and that's why it's so important
to address those issues.
That's why I think what you do after you work out
is almost as important as what you do before.
You know?
And I think a lot of times,
I mean those signs and signals are there for a reason.
I think a lot of like when injuries occur,
especially with athletes, like those little things
that seem like, oh, I'm just tight,
and I gotta, like, barrel through this workout,
or I gotta get through this.
You know, that signal might have been an indicator,
like, hey, if you keep stressing, like,
like, we're gonna give way, like,
this is not gonna work well for you,
like, you're gonna end up with, like, damaged tissue,
like, all these things like that,
your body was already innately warning you about,
can't occur and it's tough because,
there is a balance to that of like pressing forward
and being able to kind of work through certain discomfort,
but when your body's seizing up
and really kind of in protection mode,
you really have to understand the proper way to work out of that.
A lot of times people, I used to have issues with this.
Sometimes I still do have issues with addressing certain problems
because I feel like it's taking away from my ability to progress in my workouts.
Man, I gotta spend a workout now doing correctional exercises.
Oh, that's massive anxiety with that.
You feel like you're like stepping backwards, right?
You feel like you are, but the reality is,
it's like people who say, oh, I can't eat healthy
because it's expensive.
It's actually a lot cheaper than a heart attack, right?
It's a lot, it's way more time is wasted
when you have these problems in terms of progress
than if you address them and fix them.
So like, I'm using using an example,
not that this is what you saw at them,
but let's just say in your workout,
you felt like your shoulder was a little off.
It had you addressed it,
or let's say after your workout,
how do you spend 30, 40 minutes doing shoulder mobility work?
You wouldn't have to skip the next couple workouts
or go see a chiropractor or spend money on that kind of stuff.
So it really is, it's at the top of the list, a couple workouts or go see a chiropractor or spend money on that kind of stuff.
So it really is, it's at the top of the list, I think, in terms of things you should prioritize,
is just the quality of your movement.
And not to mention, when you move better, you're able to lift heavier.
I've had clients who, I've added 15 pounds to their lift just because we increased their mobility.
They think you need more muscle, you know what I mean?
It was just they got better mobility and now they can lift 15 pounds.
It's crazy to me.
It's like your abilities increase.
Like you're like being able to, you know, like whatever it is, whatever you pursue now,
like it opens up so many more doors when you do the kind of work that's necessary to be able to free up certain
joints to perform at their best. Whereas, you know, a lot of people just think within like,
you know, a couple different variables in there. Like, well, I have to get a stronger bench. And so,
you know, this is what I have to do versus, you know, just doing mobility would have, you know,
really put you in a better position to then perform better.
Dude, when I first learned about rotator cuff exercises,
I was 16 or 17.
They used to sell in the back of the body building magazines.
It was called, I think it was called the shoulder horn.
Do you guys remember this?
It was like a blue tube that would go around your neck
and then you'd hang your arms over it
and then you'd do rotator cuff exercises. You remember that could be I do remember that no, I don't
Put it over your neck like this and then it goes under your arms
So you rest your arms on it and then you pick up that at this gym I used to go to and you do rotator cuff
Exercise for external rotation and it was a I mean a brilliant, you know, piece of equipment for the average gym rat
It's good feedback
You know, so you don't know how to just locks you in.
Get yourself there.
So when I was like, actually really cool.
God, from the age of 14 till probably 20 something like bench press was like, I have
to bench more.
Everybody thought that was the, that was the, that was the lift.
The golden standard.
Yeah, which now I look back with silly, but as a kid, like that's what, that was the
exercise.
So I was always trying to get bigger bench.
And then I saw the ad for that shoulder
horn, there it is, there it is right there. It is called the shoulder horn. Check out the
bulletin stash. That's the same exact, by the way, it's the same exact ad. I got as a boss.
They haven't changed the model in the picture. He's got a mustache in a moment. Look at that.
Those are kind of cool, dude. So I can't have never seen one. Yeah, yeah. So I read, I read in the magazine, the ad,
and it says, get your bench press to go higher
by using the shoulder horn.
Now, I was a 16 year old,
fanatical fitness enthusiast,
and I'd read a lot,
and so I started reading the muscles that were affected,
and you know,
because I also didn't want to spend $75 on this piece of tubing.
So all I did was I'd prop my elbow up on a bench like this, and I just mimicked the
exercise. And I sh- shit you not, I shocked myself. The next week my bench press went up
like 10 or 15 pounds. And I was stuck. I don't remember what weight I was lifting at this
age, but it was stuck at this weight. And it went up, I think it was like 10 or 15 pounds, it was significant.
Just from doing the silly exercise, and that's when I started to put the light bulb click.
I was like, oh shit.
I was the same thing with the Indian clubs for me.
I was just adding rotation and like building that in is like something that actually worked
on.
And now I was sudden like my shoulder joint just felt more stabilized just doing a bench press.
It was it was trip me out. Well, I know that from our zone one test in prime. That's like that's why you'll
always catch me if I'm in here. If I'm lifting chest, you'll see me go over to our wall right here and do it
in between sets. Yeah. And between sets before because I can feel it getting me in the in just in the
proper position before I go in there and having to do it intrinsically is so important
versus you just doing like,
I mean, it's nice to do rows and do things like that
but to be able to connect and do it intrinsically
and then go over and then do a bench,
I always can feel it.
That's the next level for that.
Yeah, I can feel huge difference.
Now the thing about the shoulder horn,
the while one.
Now, are you doing it?
Now, are you doing it back then when you were a kid?
Were you doing it like priming before your,
your, your, your, your,
the way I did.
Where did you train it?
No, the way I did it was I first I trained it
because I recognized that it made my bench stronger
and it also made my shoulder feel better.
And then I used it as a band aid.
So anytime my shoulder were hurt,
I throw those exercises.
It didn't click that it was something
that I needed to do regularly.
Now, it was much later, and I wanna say in my mid-20s,
I started to, in particular, do external,
you know, humeral rotation, which is for this,
for what is it, the super spinatus or infraspinac?
I can't remember, one of the spinatus muscles.
Super, yeah, I think it was,
what are the spinatus muscles? Yeah, I think it was, what are the spinatus muscles?
But then I started doing it at least once a week
to this day, I do exercises like this once a week.
Now the only thing I don't like about that angle
of the shoulder horn is if when you lift the arm up
like that and work external rotation,
if you have any shoulder problems at all,
that is not a safe place to put you,
that's it could be pretty bad.
So I, I tend to take clients and I would take them and put their arm at their side and
do external rotation, which is a, a little bit safer.
Like rubber bands.
Yeah.
Because you have all these, you have all these small stabilizer muscles in your body.
And you know, again, the way your body is quite intelligent in the way that it works and
what it does is it will, your strength is limited by what your body thinks quite intelligent in the way that it works. And what it does is it will,
your strength is limited by what your body thinks
you could do without hurting yourself.
That's the limit.
So if my max, the big point on itself,
I think that people don't,
like they underestimate that fact alone,
that if like your body feels like any direction,
like it's gonna cause,
it's a little bit uncertain that you're not gonna be stable stable enough. It's not going to allow, you know, you full access to like what your
central nervous system could produce.
No, so if you're, if you have a maximal output of a hundred, let's say a hundred pounds
of squatting strength, let's say that's the full capacity if your body, but your, you
know, your ankles or some of your ligaments
or your back, your body doesn't think,
ah, we can only do 70.
Like, it's like having a car with a thousand horsepower,
but realizing that the car, oh no, we can't floor this
because if we hit a thousand horsepower,
we're gonna blow shit up.
So all we're gonna, we're gonna set the limiter at 500, right?
So that's what your body does,
and that is, that's present in most people.
Most people listening, the only people I know
who've really been able to push their body to the max
and they've tested this, are very, very high performing
strength athletes.
Olympic lifters are some of the best in the world.
I was just watching a video the other day
of this Chinese Olympic lifter, the guy must have weighed,
I swore to God 160 pounds. I mean, he was a small Chinese dude and he did a fucking clean and he was doing a clean with 400 pounds
And that that always just proves to me that like we're capable of so much more strength
You know everybody is it's a matter of unlocking that because you have to put your body in the right
Position you have to be able to have that
Feedback that like you know, oh my joints are fully supported with this amount of load because you have to put your body in the right position, you have to be able to have that feedback
that like, you know, all my joints
are fully supported with this amount of load.
Well, I think it's the same study that Sal is talking about
right now, isn't the one that talks about like,
they're the ones that have been proven or shown
to get like 90 something percent of their capacity
where the average person's more like in the 60s
and the 70s.
Yeah, yeah.
It's also why I've said this before on the show,
why you hear the stories of the person under extreme
duress who's been able to lift something like the mom
who lifted the car off her child and the accident
or whatever, it's because if you can, your body,
you can override that rev limiter
in an extremely stressful situation.
There's a series, I don't know if it's on Netflix or not,
but it's with the guy that the actor that played Spock
and he was also in that show Heroes Leonard Nimoy.
I think he was the original Spock.
No, the new Spock.
Oh, no, my no, okay.
The new Spock, right?
So he does a thing like that where he was kind of,
he was interviewing this guy who basically was was a witness to a car crash.
He saw this car, it didn't explode, but it went up in flames.
There was somebody trapped in it and it just, he went up and just acted.
He acted and he was trying to break the window, couldn't break the window.
He actually wedged his fingers into where the door
like actually attaches to the car,
you know where it like wedges.
It was able to shove his fingers all the way in
and then he pulled that steel down, folded it down
to then finally break the glass
and then he was able to get out.
Well, so he actually was able to bend steel
and they showed it was like,
I don't know how seven, 700 hundred something, basically impossible, thousand pounds.
Yeah.
That was just ridiculous.
Holy shit.
But it was like pure, like, you know, he had pure access at that moment because it
was like extreme danger.
But like, then they did all these experiments with it was very interesting when they had
him go back to do do this force output.
Like it was measuring how much he could pull off the ground.
And so just out of his own will,
like what he could summon,
like he didn't even get like a fraction of that, right?
Like a 700 something.
And then he would add in these inclusions of like,
okay, now, you know,
he would prep him ahead of time with meditation
and then it would increase substantially.
And then after that, he added like an element
that was like super, super dangerous
and like got him thinking like he was in danger
and then boom, it got like even more output.
So it was very fascinating.
It's so fascinating.
So I don't know if I ever told you guys this.
So when I go visit my dad's side of the family in Sicily,
the neighbors and whatever in my cousins,
and that my older cousins always love to tell me
this same story about when my dad was a kid.
So my dad did something similar to that when he was a kid.
He was 17 years old.
He was home from work because he was sick.
He was in his room.
He had a fever, I think it was.
He, you know, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and. Okay, like, like, screaming, he tells a story and the people tell the story
that my grandmother, like the whole neighborhood heard
her screaming.
And what had happened was a man in his,
it was the, what car was it?
It was a small car,
it was really all the cars were small back then.
It was the 500, Fiat 500.
So it looks like a mini, okay,
so it's a really small car, just to paint the picture.
And the guy's handbrake, I guess, wasn't set and it rolled over my dad's baby sister.
It was a lot younger than him. So she was only like two or three years, something like that.
So my grandma sees this and she starts screaming because it literally rolled over her.
The guy gets in the car to try and but he's all panicked. Everybody's panicked.
My grandma's reaching underneath.
His baby's sister's shirt was tight,
was caught by the, you know, something underneath the car.
My dad, here's this upstairs, jumps from the balcony down,
so keep it in the mind, he's in his underwear,
jumps from the second story down the floor,
and lifts the car and turns it over on its side to get a sister out. Now my dad tells me I told my dad I was like how did
you now my dad's a strong dude okay but that's a car right. Yeah that's super
human. He didn't lift way through like that and I said how what do you what how
did that happen he goes all I know is as I heard my mom screaming that my sister
got run over. So he thought his sister was dead.
He jumps down and he said he lifted it
and screamed so loud that he lost his voice.
He lost his voice, that's how hard he screamed.
And he couldn't move, he said for a week
because he basically injured every muscle back.
I'm sure.
But he was able to flip the car over
because he was able to summon, you know,
his full capacity.
But everything.
Yeah, so really fascinating.
But I mean, I guess the lesson in this isn't that you need to you know save a life every time
You're well governings are important. Yeah, so we don't hurt ourselves
But I've just it's just interesting to me to see like what we're capable of human beings like what we could tap in
But we are super limited by these by imbalances and immobilities and these weeks stabilizer muscles. And that's why it's, you know, unfortunately,
and even look, I'm guilty of this,
I tend to treat mobility and correctional exercise
as a way to help alleviate pain and to prevent injury.
I still haven't fully utilized it in its fullest sense,
which is to improve and increase some performance.
You know what I mean?
Instead of like waiting for the pain signal or, oh, you know, I need to do this before I
work out otherwise I can't squat all the way down.
You know, make it something that's like as important as the workout itself, as a performance
boosting thing, you know what I mean?
I think that's really where the key is when you're using this kind of stuff is to train
that particular way. You guys know that this is our number one downloaded using this kind of stuff is the train in that particular way.
You guys know that this is our number one downloaded free guide right now is the one
that you just currently wrote on the back pain already.
Yeah, yeah.
No, I was diving in all of our analytics last night and that's one of the most downloaded
guides.
I don't know how many people know this.
I know you mentioned it at the end of the show.
Sometimes I don't know how many people know this. I know you mentioned it at the end of the show. Sometimes I don't know how people tune out right away,
but we've created this library of what, probably 12.
I think there's 10 now, maybe?
12 or 10.
Yeah, there's more that have to get finished.
Right, and there's a lot that we hope to fill
that whole thing up of these free guides that are on there.
And the latest one that's gone live is the back pain one.
It's a really, really good read for you guys
and it's totally free.
It's at mindpumpfree.com that you guys can download that out.
Well, back pain is such a comment.
When I wrote that guy, it looked up statistics.
Did you guys know that about right at this moment,
like at any given moment, about 30% of Americans
are suffering from chronic back pain.
Yeah. Oh, I believe it. And the thing about back pain, like people get like hopeless with it.
Like it's really debilitating, you know? Like you wake up every day and you got this pain,
this sharp pain, and you think that your only option is surgery and you're trying to avoid it,
but you're still trying to be active and it's like painful, everything you do, it's tough.
That's why I think it's probably one, everything you do, it's tough.
That's why I think it's probably one of the most
downloader, right?
Most back pain is not because somebody hurt themselves.
No, no.
It's just this chronic pain that's coming from
that posture, that positioning.
Yeah, and you wonder why,
because back pain in the, you know, 500 years ago
was because you hurt your back
or because you were breaking rocks or lifting things.
Today, the reason why our back pain hurts is our life is we sit a lot.
And so we sit in these positions that shorten, you know, like our hip flexor muscles.
We disengage our core muscles.
And so we have this weird recruitment pattern that we develop where we become very hip flexor
dominant, which kind of pulls the back in this kind of strange position.
You don't have good core stability on top of it.
We don't have good hip mobility,
like the ankle mobility.
So the average person can't get in a squat.
You know, if you take the average person off the street
until I'm getting down in a squat, they can't do it.
So you just combine that
and it's just a recipe for disaster.
Because the back is, the lower back is incredibly resilient if it's healthy healthy if it's healthy. Yeah, it can do a lot of amazing things
And you know, it's a very mobile joint very stable
So it's not a it's not a hard fix in the sense that well, it's it's a simple fix usually
How many times if you guys had a lower back client, you know, pain client and it's like the same formula
You know, I mean to do these few movements Just putting them in better positions a lot of times
will you have an immediate kind of a result?
And that's always like, you know, that's something that I,
I love to see that.
I love to see when people's pain sort of gets relieved.
But they, they just, you see in their eyes
there's something they can do to kind of address this,
which I think is, is kind of the hopelessness, right?
They think they don't have something that they could do to help us.
A good way to show people, too, it's not that I used to, I used to lay a client and say,
oh, I have a bad back.
Oh, my back is always bothered.
It bothers me right now.
Like, I would lay them on their back and then have them just hug their knees to show them
how much release that would give them like how much better they feel in that position.
It's like, this is how you know it's not like you have a bad back.
It's like, you have poor posture that's putting stress on your low back. That's where the problem
really is. Because when you roll that, when you open up the spine like this, when I make
you hug your knees, like all of a sudden it gives you this instant relief. And that's
just because you're in this poor position all day long that it's constantly bugging you
and driving crazy. It's not you don't have a bad back. We have bad posture.
Most valuable, by far, from a business perspective,
the most valuable thing that I offered as a trainer,
the tool that I had in my tool belt,
that was the most valuable.
Easily was my ability to help people for practice.
I agree.
Correctional exercise.
By far, I always tell trainers always ask me,
like what I think the best clients.
Like the most valuable certifications that I've had.
And for sure, having a good foundation,
I know we rep Paul Check a lot
because I really like a lot of the stuff
that he puts out there now.
And I know we talk a lot about FRC and stuff like that.
But, you know, the NASM CES was probably one
of the most impactful certifications for me
because it's a corrective exercise specialist.
It's a good one too.
And it's literally, if you're a trainer, if you're an actual trainer, that's literally 60 to 70%
of your clientele that's applicable to. Literally, that's what most people come in, even though they
have to lose weight, most of them are dealing with some sort of a chronic pain. And most of it's related to how they move.
And if you can address that, and so that certification, in my opinion, is one of the best
certifications that a personal trainer can have.
Dude, you want to separate yourself from your peers, and you want to, you want to bring
a lot of value, you become the answer to your client's pain.
So somebody comes in, they want to lose weight, they want to whatever.
If you're also the trainer that, oh my back hurts, I need to call you, or, oh, they know how to,
or I've never gotten injured or I've moved better. Oh my, it's actually, more valuable. I'll tell you
what, the clients that I've trained who I've solved their pain issues, they value me way more
than the clients who've lost 50 pounds with me. Yeah. Oh, for sure. It's, I mean,
100% living with chronic, I mean, it's 100%.
Living with chronic, you know, pain and stuff like that,
people don't realize what a terrible,
that can be a very terrible existence,
and when you can be the answer to that as a trainer,
especially without medication.
I was just going to say, especially because Western medicine
usually doesn't have an answer for that.
Like, how many times have I, have you guys had clients
who've had pain,
and they say, oh, my shoulder hurts,
but I went to the doctor, get an MRI,
had surgery like nobody knows what's going on.
So they basically just, you know,
okay, well, I got to accept the fact that
my shoulder is always gonna hurt.
And then you do correctional exercise with them
and their shoulder pain's gone, client for life.
You know what I'm saying?
The thing, the thing that scares me
is when you get people like my uncle
who have allowed it to go for so long
That they they feel hopeless at this point. It's so they're so far down of you know not addressing it and that it's just like
Fuck it. It's just too much work, right? Yeah, start over and you do things differently. Yeah, it's it's really, it's really tough to be in the position that we are in or I'm
in that situation where you see someone you love and you care about, you know the steps
they need to take, but you also know that there's nothing magical.
I can teach them or tell them a lot of it is they have to do all the prerequisites to
get to a point to where their body will start moving, you know, correctly for them.
And a lot of that work is really tedious and little. That's the stuff that sucks. Like the
move that I'm talking about where I say the zone one test and prime for those they don't own it,
it's like, it's such a silly tedious move, but it's a fucking game changer and it's something,
it's addressing something to do it. I have to do it. Like I have to do it because I spend the other
80% of my day in this rounded position on a computer,
on a cell phone, or sitting in a chair,
talking on a podcast, it's so important
that I do that otherwise.
Well, I had done that, saying.
You know, that's the reason why we had
to kind of build in entertainment every day.
Like I looked at myself as like,
I have to like, I have to like,
distract and, and you know,
make sure that we're having fun
through this process because it is tedious.
It is, there are these things like that
that are super crucial, super important to do
on a very regular basis that we'll see in mundane
and then, you know, a lot of people will just like,
you know, that's it for me.
I'm done with it, but like as a good coach,
like you can still, you know, keep revisiting these things, but have your client
really enjoy the process.
Do you guys have go-to moves that you either do personally yourself or that you normally
teach like this is like for most people, this is game changer?
Well, so one of the things that I would do one of my hallmarks as a trainer was, one of the most common posture issues
that you'll see with clients,
that's easy to show someone is rounded shoulders
and forward head.
Okay, so it's a per cross, right?
So the shoulders are rounded, forward head.
Most people have it, it's getting more popular
than even when I first started becoming a trainer.
Now you see in kids,
because kids are on their electronic devices so often. And it's also an easy one to first started became a trainer. Now you see some kids, because kids are on their electronic device
so often.
And it's also an easy one to point out to a client.
It was also an easy one for me to immediately show somebody how much better they can feel.
And I would always focus on this in my assessment, because it's funny when you get people that
come in that want to try and hire, that are thinking about hiring you and you do an assessment
with them and they talk about losing weight and stuff.
Yeah, you could talk about losing weight and what you can do and all that stuff.
But if you could show them immediate relief in some kind of pain or dysfunction, they're
going to hire you.
Almost nine out of ten times they're going to end up hiring you as a personal trainer.
So they would come in, they, I would do my assessment inevitably that have forward shoulder
and I'd show them, here's forward shoulder, here's forward neck and they'd be like oh yeah I could definitely see that and then I would I'd end up
sounding like a psychic and I'd say you probably have a tight neck and I know that because when you're
forward shoulder I know that the muscles of the you know attached to the neck tend to be tight
because that's the position you're in it'll be like oh my god you're right and these muscles are
firing here then I'd sit them down and I'd have them do a cable row. Really lightweight.
And I'd stand behind them and I'd put my hands on their shoulder.
First I'd say, okay, I want you to row for me on your own because I want to see how you
move.
And of course, they would row and there'd be no scapular retraction.
It would all be in the biceps and forward shoulder.
And I'd say, okay, so I'd say, your mid back isn't firing just like I thought.
I said, now what I want you to do is I want you to grab that bar.
We're going to do a cable row again.
This time, I'm going to sit behind you and I'm gonna place you into
proper position. So then I'd stand behind them, I'd have them sit, I'd have them brace their core,
stick their chest out, they'd pull back and then I'd place my hands on their shoulders. Sometimes I'd
have to put my knee in their mid-back, but usually I wouldn't. And I'd pull their shoulders back.
And all of a sudden they'd have this look on their face like, whoa, my shoulders moving that direction.
And then I'd have them, I'd pull their shoulders back
and I'd tell them to push them down, don't elevate them,
squeeze back, and then all of a sudden,
you'd see them start to connect to those mid-back muscles.
And then I'd say, okay, now hold it here,
and I'd let go, and I'd train them to be able to do that.
Then I'd have them put the bar back,
and have them stand up, and I'd say,
how do you feel?
And every single one would be like, holy shit, my shoulders feel good, my back feels good,
my neck feels good, boom, client, every single time because I'd show them right then and
there, here's what I can do for you.
That was my go-to.
Yeah.
No, I think that's what my go-to move is.
Same thing?
Yeah, I think that's a pretty standard move for a trainer because of our cost into them.
It's so common.
But I think the biggest one that I have incorporated now, and this really didn't happen until
Brink.
Brink was the one who really opened my eyes up on two big moves that have been game
changers for me, which is the 90, 90, and then the combat stretch.
And I don't know if that's just because I'm a tall, lanky guy.
And so it's made such, it's made so much more of an impact on me
or what, because I deal with, I had always IT issues,
I always had low back stuff going on.
Like I always had this low, especially when I started
training, because once I started training,
lifting heavy, all that stuff would lock up
and get tied on me and it would be really frustrating.
And the 90, 90 has been, you know,
it's been constant work too.
I'm still nowhere where I'd like to be,
but I've made leaps and bounds from where I was.
I mean, I had no internal hip rotation at all.
I was not able to control that when I first started.
I remember the first time,
when he lifts your foot.
Yeah, the first time he put me in the night.
It's like it's not even your foot, right?
Yeah, the first time he did that,
and I was just like, I remember the first time
he just asked me to lift it, I'm like,
it doesn't lift, you can't lift it.
You know what I'm saying?
And I'm like, yes, you can, and then he'd lift it.
I'm like, oh shit, like holy cow, I'm so disconnected.
But now I can really control that,
and I've made a lot of progress.
And because of it, I can feel the difference
and the relief that I have.
So it's now become a staple position
that I teach almost every single person
that I come across that ever talks about
any low backages, which I think that that's the thing
that I think is unique is you think low back.
And so people write away think,
oh, what do I need to do to my,
I need to stretch my back.
What are some of my back?
Yeah, what are my back stretches that I need to do?
And but the whole hip complex is such a complex area.
And there's so many muscles that are inserting
and connecting in that, that if your hips are really tight,
that it ends up pulling on the low back.
And nine times that at 10, it's related to those things.
It's related to what you have going on.
And the inability for you to internally or externally rotate the hips.
And that same thing kind of goes for the shoulder when you talk about upper cross-engineering.
These are multifaceted joints that what makes them so special and unique is they don't move
in these same direct planes like a lot of our other joints, right?
No, it's a, what's the shoulder is like the hip of the upper body.
Right.
Yeah, arguably their mobility, their dynamic mobility is also
why they're so susceptible to problems.
I mean, one of the most common upper body issues to her
is the shoulder.
Right.
And the mid back, it's all related
because the scapulae,
the shoulder moves in all these different directions
or whatever.
It's not like, how often do people's elbows hurt?
You know what I mean?
You don't see a lot of chronic elbow pain.
You get some tennis elbow,
but that's not elbow related.
That's related to the wrist.
Over pattern.
Yeah, that's related to the wrist.
Injury.
Yeah.
And what's interesting to think back about like some go-to's, like it really was built
and developed into prime, like no, that I think about, like I used a stick when I would
even evaluate and do squat assessments and hip hinging and very basic, basic things that
you think
everybody just knows how to do, you know, like innately,
they know how to squat, they know how to like hinge
in the difference between those two, but it was very,
very much of a learning curve for me to be able to learn
how to teach that to people that they just didn't connect
to their body like that, or they didn't realize
how much their body disengaged through this movement.
You become, you know, you're walking around in this shell, this body, and you become
a prisoner of it if you don't, you know, take care of these things.
Your body, it will learn or it will unlearn things depending on if you do them or if you
don't.
And if you unlearn them, they're gone.
The only way you can get them back is if you consciously
try to reach the body, and you know,
it's a tough place to be.
And you don't wanna be stuck in prisoner in this shell
that now can't twist or bend over
or reach above their head or whatever.
And it doesn't, that's not where it starts, by the way.
That's typically after years and years of ignoring other issues or even fitness fanatics.
I mean, we have friends in the industry that keep having the same fucking injuries.
Yeah.
Like, the same back injuries, the same hip injuries, it's like, yo man, like, you're not
listening.
And at some point, you're going to get an injury so bad that now you're going to be screwed.
You're not going to be able to rehab it.
It's especially true of people in our space
who tend to do this over and over type of thing.
And it's like, you think you're saving time
by not spending any energy doing these things,
but the reality is you're costing yourself a lot of time.
And not only that, but you're also costing yourself
a lot of performance along the way.
So we mentioned our free guides. If you go to mindpumpfree.com, And not only that, but you're also costing yourself a lot of performance along the way.
So we mentioned our free guides.
If you go to MindPumpFree.com, you can see all of them.
And you can download all of them.
They all cost nothing.
And there's no limit to how many of you can get.
So go to MindPumpFree.com and check those out.
Thank you for listening to MindPump.
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