Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 865: Stan Efferding- The World's Strongest Bodybuilder
Episode Date: September 24, 2018In this episode, Sal, Adam & Justin speak with the world's strongest bodybuilder and very successful fitness entrepreneur, Stan Efferding. Stan has appeared on Shark Tank and is the creator of the Ver...tical Diet. He now offers meals that support the Vertical Diet that are delivered to your door. To order Stan's meals go to mindpumpmedia.com/vertical The importance of a checklist and repetitive behavior to succeed. (6:03) When did he realize he had the potential for the strength for bodybuilding? (11:42) What were the paradigm shattering moments he had in the gym? (13:07) How big of a role do genetics play in getting JACKED?! (14:40) When did bodybuilding become a moneymaker for him? (17:01) Has his training methodology and attitude changed since first getting in the game? (19:04) The ingredients/methods behind the infamous Monster Mash. (30:00) The significance of the gut (microbiome) and treating it with respect. (33:24) The science behind sodium/water intake when it comes to contest prep. (39:50) His thoughts/reactions to Phil Heath’s showing at the recent Mr. Olympia. (44:37) Wisdom vs. experience. What are the most common mistakes he sees competitors make? (46:35) Making health priority #1. How rare is he in his space? (1:00:03) Why you cannot compensate sleep, diet, nutrients for a pill. (1:10:50) What does he have to take now to manage his hormone levels? (1:16:29) Have the trends changed in programming then vs. now? The importance of tackling the big rocks first (EAT, SLEEP and TRAIN). (1:17:40) What has he learned about himself and business through his experience? (1:23:56) Why meal prepping and planning is the #1 predictor of success. (1:29:50) Financially what product is the most successful and which pose the biggest challenge? (1:33:20) His take on the evolution of social media and how it has affected his business. (1:36:03) Why all diets work when they are inherently followed. (1:42:07) Why did he wait to become a father? (1:47:00) “The power of broke” mindset and always giving more than he gets. (1:49:19) How anything you give for free has no perceived value. (1:51:57) What does he do to break his “checklist” style of living? (1:54:00) What is the proudest moment he has had in his career? (1:57:15) How has his relationship with his mom impacted him as an adult? (2:02:54) When you change the “why” you look at things, and the things you look at change. (2:07:48) Stan’s Tip of the Day. (2:11:40) Featured Guest/People Mentioned: Stan "Rhino" Efferding (@stanefferding) Instagram YouTube Dave Palumbo (@huge285) Instagram Flex Wheeler ® | Official (@officialflexwheeler) Instagram Dorian Yates (@thedorianyates) Instagram John Meadows (@mountaindog1) Instagram Charles R Poliquin (@StrengthSensei) Twitter Ben Smith (@bsmit13) Instagram George Lockhart (@lockloadedmma) Instagram Phil Heath (@philheath) Instagram Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson (@thorbjornsson) Instagram Layne Norton, PhD (@biolayne) Instagram Mark Bell (@marksmellybell) Instagram Greg Nuckols (@gregnuckols) Instagram Links/Products Mentioned: Mind Pump Meals VERTICAL DIET EXPLAINED! Live With Stan Efferding – YouTube Sodium Intake and All-Cause Mortality over 20 Years in the Trials of Hypertension Prevention Rhinos Rhants #10 - Creatine sucks but THIS works – YouTube RHINO's RHANT #23 - "If you want to be healthy, don't compete" Rhinos Rhants #20 Stress For Success HumanProgress.org 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 Strong, an expertly programmed and phased strongman inspired training program designed in collaboration with World’s Strongest Man competitor Robert Oberst to trigger new muscle building adaptations and get you STRONG. Get it at www.mapsstrong.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 Marketwww.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. 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Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mite, op, mite, op with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
Did you guys enjoy that withstand, stand coming by?
What a great guy, huh?
He's a great guy.
He's a very cool guy, very smart.
He's a smart dude and one of the better business people in the muscle building world. Just a great, we had a great conversation with great podcasts.
I think went for two hours.
Another like smart meathead looking guy, you know, it's great to hang out with guys that
are also like big guys that are just like, you know, giving us a better name.
I think we found almost all of them.
Yeah, I think we found all of them.
He was like the last one. You know,
unicorns of combined here. Now we hit it off with the guy right out the gates and had
a great podcast with him. We talked about his past, his training, how he coaches people,
his his philosophy towards nutrition. He talked a little bit about the vertical diet, which
is a kind of his nutrition protocol that we've had a lot of people asking about this.
That was part of the motivation because we had been in
communication back and forth a while ago.
And we had been getting hit up so much on like us wanting,
people wanting us to address this diet.
And I would just be honest, been too lazy to dive into it
to you know, talk about it and stuff.
And so the fuck, we'll just bring them on the show.
I'm not gonna lie, I was dismissive before I ever looked into it, you know,
I kind of judged it at first.
And not because of Stan, I like Stan, he's a smart dude.
But because of so many diets, we'll just the name diet.
Yeah, immediately turns me off.
But in this episode, you'll hear Stan talk
about his philosophy towards nutrition.
And here you have a, you know, right now,
he's, how much is he weighing out, 250 pounds?
He's a big dude, 50 year old guy. Used to get, used to weigh 270 pounds.
Super strong guy.
You're this guy talking about gut health,
the microbiome, micro nutrients,
and a lot of the stuff that we talk about on the show.
So it's really refreshing to hear someone like him,
talk about those things in the context of building
maximum muscle and strength.
Well, it's kind of like what you always say.
It's at one point we all kind of end up in the same place.
It's true.
So there's some people out there in the space right now
and some really intelligent people
that are denying some of this stuff
because maybe we don't have quite enough evidence
to be 100% certain that this is a cause of this
or this react this way.
But those of us that have been doing this for long enough
and you've coached and trained enough people, you've seen enough case studies and examples
of that just through your own experience with clients.
And, you know, we all kind of end up in the same place like, oh shit, what do you know?
When I eat these processed garbage foods and stuff like that, sure, I can get in shape
and sure I look okay and, you know, I can manage that when I'm in my 20s but
good to 10 20 30 years of that and you know and he kind of shares that his story too because he
doesn't he doesn't admit being this guy who's was presenting this information his entire career
I mean he kind of found that out through a lot of trial and do things the wrong way like ourselves.
He coaches some of the you know he doesn, he helps the nutrition with the, what's
his name with the big or be argonsen.
Yes.
Some of the top crossfit athletes and has helped improve their performance tremendously.
He also has, so with his vertical diet, he's come out now with vertical diet meals.
And these are, we must get probably on a weekly basis, a dozen messages from people who ask us for good
recommendations for meal prep companies.
Yeah.
This is where they deliver, you know, meal prep companies will deliver like a meal already
ready to your door many times frozen, sometimes fresh or whatever.
You get the meal and it's got your, you know, it's all counted out for your macros and
everything's set up, right?
It makes it easy.
And I've just never found any that I really like.
Well after talking with Stan on the episode and hearing his philosophies around nutrition,
you know, we're going to give his meals a try.
You're definitely going to give him a try.
And yeah, well, we created, we had him create a link for all of you guys.
Then those that have been asking and that we're looking for something, we've created a link
so you guys can go directly to that and order the meals and man I'm excited
I'm excited to try I for sure I tell you right now when I was competing this would have
been a thing I would have loved to have had I mean if you had this already going convenience
factors easily digestible food that's what he focuses on easily digestible food because
he realized if you can digest something you minimize gut inflammation you can maximize the
simulation build more muscle, burn more body fat and optimize your hormones and so the meals are all based on that right and so we did get ourselves an
affiliate link if you go to mind pump media dot com forward slash vertical then you can take a look at all these meals and there'll be a direct link in the show now, too, because I know that's probably going to be tough.
It may just be Sal's face only. Watch out.
Yeah, we had changed the picture. It's not optimized for the phone.
It's just me in the middle there.
It's just looking tough.
His ambercrombies.
Yeah, I know how small.
Oh, they're all post-hol.
Yeah, I had a pump.
I had a pump that's why.
That was Doug's shirt.
But anyway, also, you know, I do want to mention September, we have launched our newest
maps program, Maps Strong.
It's our Strongman inspired fitness program.
Fantastic for building strength, stamina, and boosting your metabolism.
It's a great metabolism boosting program.
It is relatively advanced, but it is awesome.
You can find it at mapsstrong.com.
Now for those of you who have different goals or maybe you're not quite as advanced, we
have other maps programs you can take a look at, or bundles, for example, are Super Bundle,
which combines multiple maps programs and puts them in an order where you follow them
one at a time for a full year.
So it's literally one year of exercise programming.
It's called the Super Bundle, but we have others as well.
You can find all of those at maps, fitnessproducts.com, and without any further ado,
here we are talking to Stan Efferdin, the Rhino.
So Stan, pleasure having you on the show.
Thank you.
Huge fan yours.
Your known as one of the more business savvy bodybuilders,
obviously known as being one of the strongest bodybuilders
in the history of bodybuilding.
Not one of the, right?
Yeah.
You're very outspoken, very honest,
tend to not to shy away from things.
Very interesting individual.
I wanna know, I wanna go back.
I wanna know what got you here,
like what got you started with all this?
And I know you had a sports background growing up,
like what got you into bodybuilding
and then the business of it?
Were you insecure like the rest of us?
Yep, I'm curious.
I already caught 100 pounds in high school.
So 100?
Yes, I wrestled 108 as a freshman in sophomore,
one of five in the junior.
You might win on the smallest guy.
Originally, because I was like 150,
Sal, you were like 130, right?
No, no, I graduated at 190,
but I had started lifting at 14, so.
Yeah, well, it didn't work for me.
And when I got to college, I was 135,
and I couldn't bench 135.
I had to take the 45 pound plates off.
And I know how embarrassing that was, because there was about 15 fat boys. I couldn't bench 135. I had to take the 45 pound plates off. And I know how embarrassing that was
because there was about 15 fat boys.
I remember being this kid.
I was 20 years old and benching the 25s,
I'd be saying all I wanted was the big wheels.
Like let me get to the big wheels.
That was an accomplishment with time.
Who to thought?
It was just a matter of,
just so I could get like the water to move
when it went down my body instead of straight.
It actually moved a little bit, no chest, sunken chest.
But it was really, it was just a matter of,
I used to call it insecurity or whatever,
I just wanted to be jacked.
And that's kind of how the whole thing started.
And I always had this, I've talked before,
I've had this OCD personality growing up.
I counted all my steps and I was subject to these repetitive behaviors,
ticks and the like.
And I did an interview recently with Dave Palumbo and people were calling me out on my ticks,
thinking I was on crack or something.
Oh, really?
Yeah, every now and then they emerge.
I was a sniffer, chronic, all my friends used to think I was on coke or something. Oh really? Yeah, every now and then they emerge. I was a sniffer, chronic, all my friends used to think I was a cook or something.
I had these repetitive behaviors.
People who know me recognize it and they're nice enough not to bring it up, but as a kid,
of course, you're always trying to hide these weirdness.
But the benefit of that was, is those repetitive behaviors made me a great bodybuilder and
powerlifter, because that's all that's about. Yeah.
Is really just every single day counting things, you know, sets, reps, meals, sleep, everything.
So I wrote everything down and I just started cranking away and it took a long, long time,
obviously, but and the same thing in business.
Repetitive behaviors.
People think it's about home runs, it's about singles, it's fingers.
Every single day wake up and you do your little checklist.
And that's the way I've been able to be successful both in bodybuilding and powerlifting from
someone who probably wouldn't be considered necessarily genetically inclined at my size.
My pops is $5, $10, $60.
But you overcome that with just consistency and determination repetitive behaviors
So that's kind of really sums it up is that I was just
OCD and just chronically
Repeated the same things that I thought would gonna we're gonna work so true consistency is the most absolute most important thing
And now when when people tend to develop
patterns
Like you said at OCD-type patterns, many times they'll
say it's because it gives them a feeling of control, because maybe their lives feel chaotic.
Was that true for you?
Did you have a chaotic life?
Did you feel like that maybe was a way for you to gain control or was it not that?
Yeah, I don't know that it was chaotic necessarily, but I didn't like the uncertainty.
And I still don't.
I have to do my budget and I have to have my checklist.
I haven't competed in five or six years.
I say, I still have a checklist.
I check my weight every single morning and I've got all these little things that I do on
a daily basis, whether it's my 10 minute walks or my vitamin D or my meal, frequency, and
timing.
I run around now telling everybody to get thermos so they can pack their monster mash and
thermos so they can have their meal every three to four hours or whatever their schedule
is.
And so now that I've been traveling so much over the last year, I've been in 10 or 11
countries and 20 states and probably the last nine months.
And the biggest benefit to me is that I have these patterns,
these behaviors where I'm always scheduling my meals, prepping them, taking them with me.
I've got four or five thermos if I'm going to be gone for 12 hours and I've got frozen meals
in my checked luggage if I'm flying to Canada or to the UK or wherever. And so that's all taken
care of. And now I can relax, now I can focus.
It was one of the reasons I hired and trained with Flex
was I could turn my brain off.
And he would manage all of that for me.
And all I had to do was go in and focus on training
and just set up my schedule of nutrition and meals, et cetera.
That's very common with successful individuals
that they have, the routines that they're very consistent about.
It's a super, super common trait that you see
with successful athletes and entrepreneurs
and business people.
Wearing the same clothes every day.
Yeah, something like that.
See, there you go, guys.
Make a fun of my clothes.
That I'm almost there.
I'm this close to wearing the same shoes.
No, I'm not mad.
I have to have the color coordinated t-shirts
and I wear the same damn thing every day. Now it's my get vertical shirt. If you look at any picture of
me in the last five months, it's I'm wearing the same damn shirt and I've got like six of them and
that's how my brain works. If there's a different one in there than I'm confused for
it, it takes me a while. You're making me feel so much better right now. But when you first,
when you started working out, did your body respond quickly? When did you realize that you had potential for the sports of strength or bodybuilding?
Not at all.
Here's the reason why is because back then we didn't have the information we have now.
Everything was the guy behind the counter.
He was dieting for bodybuilding shows.
That was your bodybuilder.
He was dieting on boneless, skinless chicken breast and broccoli and egg whites and white
fish. a boneless skinless chicken breast and broccoli and egg whites and whitefish.
And so you started eating like that or I did, and rice cakes.
And it's no wonder I wasn't able to gain any mass.
Plus you went down and you got Arnold Schwarzenegger's and Psychopheed Body Building
and started hammering away six days a week, two plus hours a day.
I did the same shit.
Yeah, so you didn't realize all I was doing was breaking down muscle tissue and not rebuilding it.
And it wasn't for, wait all I was doing was breaking down muscle tissue and not rebuilding it and it wasn't for
It was a couple three years my first competition. I weighed one
58 it was the 160 and under competition
And was this bodybuilding like bodybuilding. Yeah, I took me 10 years to get strong enough to power lift
I was just I presumed that the stronger I got the bigger I would get now
I've since learned that's not the case, but back then that's what I thought And so I was doing singles and I wonder I wasn't growing. I wasn't eating enough and I was training too much
So the same problem if I knew then what I know now obviously we had done that very different and after a few years
I did come across someone who reversed those things for me trained less often we ate more
And then I started to be able to gain weight as a result
What was one of the big it like the first paradigm? and we ate more. And then I started to be able to gain weight as a result.
What was one of the big, like the first paradigm,
I guess, changing moments with your training?
Was it just a less workouts or the,
like you said, the more food?
What was, did you have any of those moments?
We were like, oh shit.
It was a combination of the two.
I started noticing that I was actually getting stronger
because I was training a little less often.
I had more recovery time.
You don't grow in the gym as the article I wrote many years ago,
which I learned 27 years ago from a friend of mine,
so told me that you don't grow in the gym.
And I was like, really?
I thought lifting weights made you bigger.
And he had to educate me that, no, that's not the case.
That's the stimulus that said, so you break down muscle tissue.
And it was a combination,
none of this stuff happens in a vacuum.
It's a symphony and orchestra.
And that's why in my vertical diet, I've got sleep hydration, training, nutrition.
You can't do any one by itself.
And the absence of optimizing any of those that's going to make all the rest suffer.
So I started improving my sleep, I started improving my nutrition,
and again, that was packing food in my backpack so I could go to class.
I'm loading in peanut butter and jelly sandwiches and hard boiled eggs.
Imagine what those smell like when you open and puff in a Tupperware for hours.
You were popping up with the head of the shirt.
Everybody 10 rows up in class is looking around.
I've got my hard boiled eggs up there and I'm like, sorry.
But eating more food was a big deal.
And now, of course, I'm pretty particular about the kinds of food I eat,
but of primary importance was calories at that point.
That's when I started to release the results.
Let's talk about genetics for a second,
because we know how important genetics are for body building or strength or performance,
or a lot of things.
A lot of things that you can perform well at genetics play a significant role.
There's this belief that bodybuilders and strength athletes have these insane genetics
where they just were automatically built and strong.
Obviously, what you're saying counters that.
You go into college, graduating in high school at a hundred pounds that doesn't sound like great jeans
But there are genetics in terms of how you respond to exercise or food or even how you respond to anabolic and stuff like that
Like maybe touch on that a little bit how how big of a role did you that do genetics play and how big of a role
Do you think that played with you or or not a role with you? Yeah, well, it's huge. I always say genetics reign supreme
You know your mom and dad matter in this deal.
And what I found is that lots of times I would come across training partners.
I trained with Aaron Madron way back in the late 80s.
And he was an IFB pro, a fantastic pro.
And you know, he would go out with his buddies drink until four o'clock in the morning.
And then he would show up at seven to train with me
Missing meals miss and sleep breathing or sweating vodka while I'm trying to bench and I'm breathing that in
But he was massive. I mean this guy had 20 plus inch arms and 20 plus inch calves and
32 inch quads and he was just
Massive and I realized
somewhere along the way
that I wasn't that guy, and I was gonna have to do everything
100%.
And that meant every night of sleep,
I never went out drinking, and I never stayed up late.
I always wasn't bed on time, even all through college
and thereafter when I was working in bodybuilding.
But I also kept my day job because I never thought
I would make money at bodybuilding.
A lot of people will reach out to me
and talk about their bodybuilding career.
And I'm like, well, hold up.
Bodybuilding is not a career.
You know, it's a hobby.
And even if you become a great bodybuilder,
you're still gonna have to be a pretty good businessman
in today's environment to create your own financial opportunities.
You can't, nobody's gonna knock on your door
and say here you go, pal, just lift, eat, and train.
Yeah, so many easily been trained,
and I'm gonna pay you for it.
Yeah, so many bodybuilders don't know that.
They don't understand that,
but you understand it early on, obviously,
what were you, when did bodybuilding become,
a money maker for you?
What were you doing before that?
What was your career in your business?
You know, I never made money in bodybuilding
until after I was retired.
This seems odd, years after I was retired from bodybuilding.
Because I never monetized it that way.
Because again, I kept my day job
and I pursued other career avenues.
It was a hobby for me.
It was a passion.
I wanted to be a pro bodybuilder, obviously. And of course, when you're doing that in the early 90s, when
they're only giving out one pro card at the USA's and one per weight class at the nationals,
and the weight class is everybody over 198. And you've got, you know, the top 10 guys at
the nationals, you're talking flex weather, Chris Cormier, Mike Francois, the list goes on
and on. They're all in the front cover magazines. They're still amateurs. And we hear a lot
about that today, the quality and the depth of the competitors just aren't what they were in the early 90s.
Because ProCards are much more available, so there's a smaller talent pool.
Do you agree with that? Do you think it's 100% yeah? Those guys in the early 90s were ridiculous.
And they were fighting for one card or two cards a year.
Not a hundred. Yeah, there was great bodybuilders that would have been pros
for trying to become a pro for 10 years.
Yeah.
We're gonna smoke right into it now, for sure, back then.
For sure, and that's not to say anything except
from the fact that it was much, much harder to get that card.
Now there's so many cards that you've got a smaller tablet.
Well, plus way less shows too, right?
The amount of shows they were doing is now you have shows
going on almost every two weeks
There's like a show somewhere where there was one class was bodybuilding, right now you got figure physique
bikini classic classic. Yeah, you've got a whole host of different avenues
Which I think is fantastic that people can pursue their dreams and their talents when I was 135 pound guy
The only way to turn pro is to be 250 shredded at six foot.
And so that was the goal.
There was no 185.
There was no 210.
None of those opportunities existed.
So that was the one goal.
That meant you had to get huge.
You had to get up to 300 pounds and die down to 250.
And that became my obsession.
Now having trained at such a high level for as long as you have, I mean, you've got to be,
well, you're one of the strongest, if not the strongest bodybuilders now, and you're
not a super young guy, you've been doing this for a long time.
Means you've been training your ass off for a very, very long time, has the training
methodologies and the attitudes towards training? Have you seen changes in trends?
Because you've worked out, you know, since the early 90s at a very, very high level,
you know, 90s, early 2000s, and today, and you've been in the world of bodybuilding and strength,
are you seeing these different trends and stuff happen?
You know, what I saw working in the early 90s still works today.
And the science is now supporting it. I
think I was at a symposium recently in one of the PhDs that was there said the
bros were right. And that's what I discovered when I used to get in my car and
take my trek down to Venice to watch those guys train back in the early 90s. Every
single one of them trained twice a day, eight, seven plus meals a day, slept
eight, nine hours a night and took a nap every afternoon.
Got a bunch of suns.
Every single one of them. Got a bunch of sun. I think they've got the
Bob Bowl down at Firehouse Restaurant down there at Stake and Rice. I didn't invent this
thing. This whole vertical diet, Stake and Rice thing. I don't claim to invent it. I watched it happening 25 years ago right in front of my eyes. These guys
were putting down mounds and mounds of steak. I tried the chicken, I tried the white fish,
I tried the egg whites, I tried the rice cakes, and it didn't work, and it still doesn't
work today. But I watched it, but these guys did. And every single one of them, and the
same way Flex trained me in 2008,
it was two a day hypertrophy sessions,
lots of volume, lots of frequency.
I did notice that their intensity was less than what I was doing.
When I say intensity, the heavy, heavy weights,
all the muscle damage.
These guys, they prioritized recuperation.
It's the law of repeating bouts, frequency and volume was prioritized recuperation. It's the law of repeated bouts.
Frequency and volume was prioritized over damage.
That's absolutely.
The delayed onset muscle soreness
from 500 pounds stiff-legged deadlifts
didn't bode well for the law of repeated bouts.
I definitely think there's value in training like that,
throwing it into your routine,
but if that's all you ever do, every single workout, every single set to failure with heavy weights, your accumulated fatigue is,
you're not going to recover. And you know, was a wrench in all that was, because some people,
there are, there's always individual variances, right? There's always those people,
there was Bulgarians, because they weeded out all the people with weak central nervous system.
But like Dorian, like Dorian Yates hits the scene,
he has a very different style of training, right?
Going to failure, one set per exercise.
I'm not too, yeah.
You know, Mike Menser, that whole,
you know, Arthur Jones mentality.
And so then I feel like bodybuilding kind of started going
in that direction a little bit with, you know,
one workout, each body part,
you know, one body part,
each body part once a week type of deal.
But I, look, I've been training people for 20 years, I train every, I train average people. So I don't work with body body part, you know, one body part, each body part once a week type of deal. But I've been training people for 20 years,
I train average people.
So I don't work with bodybuilders or whatever,
but I see what works with average people.
And frequency and volume and monitoring intensity
works great for most people.
The whole like hammer the shit at us,
someone real hard and let them, you know,
wait a whole week,
didn't, doesn't work for a whole lot of people.
Is that frequency?
Are you starting to see that come back now
with the new bodybuilders?
I'm starting to see that come back.
I'm forced into that now.
I can't do what I used to do when I was powerlifting.
There's just no way I can get under and grind
under those big heavy 600, 700 pound squat sets
thinking, plus I learned, finally,
when I trained with Flex, just how important it was,
just how much bodybuilding helped powerlifting
and how much powerlifting hurt bodybuilding.
I started to learn the difference and I started to not power build anymore.
I started to actually specialize.
When I trained with Flex, he wouldn't let me squat or deadlift, not one repetition of
those things over the 10 week period that he worked with me for getting my pro card back
in 2009.
That was the purpose of that,
is it would have impaired or impeded
or reduced the amount of volume and frequency
that we could have done.
And I was significantly more full in volume
as my legs were larger,
and I've told this story before, am I?
Your legs changed a lot.
It changed a lot.
In 2009 with Flex, they were 30 inches on stage,
just 254 pounds.
And your reps changed, you were doing 20 plus reps, right?
Many plus reps, the legs in particular,
like to the extra reps.
And we weren't going to failure necessarily.
It was mostly oxygen, debt, lactic acid build-ups.
So it was hard, hard work, but it wasn't mechanical failure
in the sense that those heavy squats would be.
And you find that a lot of...
I like Dorian didn't squat.
He would leg press and hack squat.
And one of the reasons is that once you hit the lumbar spine, dead lifting or squatting,
you completely change the fatigue level and the amount of delayed on-site muscle soreness
in the recovery.
And whether or not you call that central nervous system or what have you, we use that word,
we throw it around, we know what it means, but we don't.
But you can feel the fatigue, you know you're not recovering.
And so, you know, we made sure to do lots of volume
and my body responded to that.
And what was interesting is, is recently I attended a seminar
with John Meadows.
He and I were both presenting with Charles Poliquin
recently down in Denver.
Yeah, it was a good group.
And he talked through his
program and it was very, very similar to what Flex9 did. He started with a mind muscle connection
exercise. We did one leg-ed leg extensions. Then he moved on to what he called his blast exercise.
That was his leg press, where we would get a significant amount of weight. And he'd do four sets
there. But the first three sets were, you know, a few reps from failure or less. And only the last set that he'd go to failure or do a drop set or just pretty much push
himself to the limit.
Failure is abused a lot now.
I mean, it's been abused a long time.
A lot.
And particularly for the lower body is where upper body, you can do a lot of damage to your
back doing rows and chins and probably still recover within 72 hours.
But the legs completely different animal and probably a lot of that has to do with the spinal cord.
It is important to note too though,
in defense of dead lifts and squats,
and when I work with most everyday average people,
the functionality and the muscle bullying
that comes from learning how to do those
very foundational human movements,
very important, someone like you
who mastered squatting and deadlifting
because you powered, lifted for so long,
you're gonna go into less of a priority. It was less of a priority. It's it's not a new stimulus for you
It's an old stimulus for you changing to a leg press or you know hack squat or other movements
You're gonna get some change in your body. You've been doing the other ones for so long
Well, and you're also starting to utilize just the quad. Yeah, when I throw a bar really good at it
Yeah, yeah, when I throw a bar on my back. It's all about leverage. Now I'm incorporating the hips, the loops, the spinal erectors,
the entire body. I'm not interested in using one muscle group. I'm trying to get the entire
body involved in the movement. So flex made me use one muscle group. We brought our feet in and
down on the leg press and, and, uh, how did that feel at first? Well, you're like, oh, shit.
My legs are shaking. I was pressing 14 plates aside for 20 reps,
and then I come in and train with Flex,
I'm down to six plates aside.
Because he adjusted the rest periods,
he had moved my feet down to it,
it was all quads,
and you could just feel the quad tearing off the bone.
Let me do the two more steps on John Meadows program
that I thought was very simple.
Flex and I did.
We said we had the mind muscle connection,
leg extension, single leg extension.
Then we moved to a blast exercise,
which was the leg press for us.
We worked up, got some decent weight on us, 20 reps sets, maybe two-minute rest.
Then we'd move on to a pumping exercise.
Flex had us do, say, one-legged step-ups with a band on a box.
It was just rep after rep after rep and the amount of blood and volume that put into the
muscle.
That was a pumping exercise.
Or throw up just listening to that one. Yeah.
And then we would finish, John finishes with what he calls
stretching and Flex would have us kneel down in between sets
or finish with a walking lunge, which would put
an incredible amount of stretch on the quadricep.
Especially after it's pumped.
Especially after it's pumped.
And you just feel the muscle almost like it's tearing off the bone
when you squat down in between sets of leg presses
or you do the walking lunges to finish just that tearing and tearing and
stretching.
I don't mean that in the literal sense, the tearing is, but it's that full range of motion.
And for hypertrophy, that's optimal.
So important.
Yep, to get that full range of motion, anything that you need to do, I always had tight
ankles, calves, and lack of mobility in my ankles.
So we would have to stretch those first on a calf machine, or we would have to use an
ankle plate, or I would be pushing off my toes, just so I could get my quads into a stretch
position without transferring a load onto my glutes, because my ankles were the limiting
factor for flexibility.
So that was really interesting to hear that.
Because flex isn't a scientific guy, and people dogging all the time because he's not
book red and he doesn't quote studies.
But I don't know anybody.
They say that blind men hear better and deaf people see better.
Flex is one of those kind of guys.
He's the kind of guy who is street smart. And his eye is incredible.
And we would pose after every workout and weigh in every single day and he would watch me train.
And he was consciously measuring all of that and observing that. And I told the story one time when
my teeth were hurting from all the steak that he had me eat. I was eating popps or loin steak on a foreman grill.
We cooking it or what?
Yeah, I was cooking it on a foreman grill and so it was always tough.
But he had me eating steak like seven times a day.
Holy shit.
We had, that's almost all we ate.
And for protein source.
And which was hugely beneficial as it turns out for me because the...
My cholesterol, creatine.
Everything.
Yeah, the iron the B12
the zinc everything was great about that but
My teeth started hurting and so I switched to white fish and chicken breast for a couple of days
And I went into the gym and I'd lost three pounds and I was posing with flex and he's like what's going on?
He's like your weights down. You look flat. You're you were lethargic today during your workout
And I'm you know, I'm looking around.
I can't even look him in the eye. Now we're the macros the same, same grams of protein, everything.
Yeah. I kept everything the same. I'll bet the calories did go down a little bit because the white fish
and chicken is leaner than the steak, but I don't think it was significant enough to lose three pounds in two days.
But nonetheless, so he looks over. I was training with Keith Williams at the time,
and Keith's looking up at the ceiling
is neither one of us could look flex in the eye and lie to him.
And so finally I told him, I said,
I'm my teeth hurt and he's like, suck it up.
And he said, get a meat grinder.
And I'm like, wow, what a novel idea.
So that's in my vertical diet today.
I did that for Thor and Shaw.
They use a meat grinder to grind their meat.
That's why the Monster Mash,
the all of this stuff came from my experience
with, you know, I think some of the greatest coaches
and trainers in the world.
Explain this Monster Mash.
I've heard you reference it a couple of times.
I've heard it in your videos.
What is it?
Yeah, well, it's red meat.
And it's, you know, we, it's either ground bison or ground beef mixed with white rice, which was our staple
with flecks because it's easy to digest.
It was easy in my stomach.
I could get in a ton of calories.
He had me on 600 plus grams of carbs dieting for a show.
I was losing body fat because our workload was so high.
I needed to fuel it with something.
And I can't fuel it with bread, pizza, pasta, pancakes,
because it'll blow out your stomach or even oatmeal.
It's what I found from personal experience
with the athletes that I work with.
When they start stuffing oatmeal in themselves,
it has kind of a cumulative effect
of creating bloating and gas and indigestion.
Food intolerances, and I think a lot of people
learn this as they get older.
I don't get, you can't get away with that shit as you.
No, no, and that's one of the first things I found with Thorne Shaw.
Two guys who have to consume damn near 10,000 calories a day.
I've got them over 1100 grams of carbs a day.
And I can't feed them foods that are going to cause
distress to their gut.
So I found the foods that were the easiest to digest,
the low gas vegetables, the bone broth,
to get back to the monster mash.
In order for them to be able to eat that much food, I had to make it easier for them to
eat.
More palatable, the amylase production, just being able to pallet the food, to chew
it and swallow it, was the first challenge.
So when you add some bone broth into the white rice, a moist white rice, into a ground bison, which
is a really easy, even better than ground beef in terms of its digestibility, because
it's so soft.
So that was kind of the base meal, was the monster mash, and they were able to accumulate a ton
of calories with a very high biological value nutrient term. We talked about the
B vitamins and the iron and the zinc, and they could get the bulk of their calories from that and
have no indigestion. They became regular, which is one of the big things I focused on, because usually
as powerlifter, working with big guys who have to eat lots of food, most of us are run into the
bathroom all the time. From an all the sortment of thing, whether it be protein powders or bars full of sugar
alcohols or casing allergies or breads, pasta, pizza, pancakes, all those things that cause
indigestion and gas and bloating.
So I tried to eliminate that and make them more efficiently able to use those calories.
I found they could eat a little bit fewer calories
and still maintain their weight.
They're assimilating.
I'd say their body's using you.
It's funny, you say this because, well, two things,
and it's a reference to flex and his knowledge.
I'll take wisdom over knowledge any day.
100%.
And wisdom really is just knowledge plus experience,
is really what it is.
And it's more valuable.
The other thing, too, is a lot of the stuff you're saying, you know, strength athletes have been
Vince Garanda, who was the scientist of bodybuilders
way back in the day, advocated for these very high
cholesterol, you know, protein red meat and full fat dairy,
agio type of diets.
And this is the way bodybuilders ate back then,
and this is how they built a lot of muscle.
And then we got a lot of misinformation about,
oh, eating cholesterol is this,
that, and the other, watch your sodium,
that's another big one.
I know you talk about it as this whole,
eat low sodium, which sodium is,
especially if you train and sweat,
you should probably eat a lot of sodium.
It'll give you more strength in,
and make you, you know, much healthier as a result.
But it's funny you talk about gut health,
you know, when we first started our podcast
about four years ago,
we were talking about the benefits of monitoring or making sure
that you have good gut health for people
who want to build muscle and burn body fat.
Not just for people who just want to be healthy.
And a lot of people thought that laughed at us
and thought that was silly.
And I'm like, look, look.
Yeah, it's just for hippies.
That's the membrane between, I mean, when you eat something,
it's not in your body.
That's a hole that goes from your mouth to your anus.
When it gets absorbed through the gut, that's when it becomes a part of your body.
If you take care you got, you assimilate more food, and you can build more muscle and
burn more body fat.
And now we're starting to see people like you, very influential people, start to promote
that message, which I think, I'll tell you what, some of the worst gut health issues I've
ever seen in my life are people in the strength building,
muscle building world.
It's like an epidemic.
Well, and also your immune system improves.
I remember what it was like.
You know, I put my body through torture.
And with the performance-sanching drugs on top of the horrible diet,
just the eating, everything you can kind of diet,
you're sick all the time.
You know, every three or four months,
your liver is always taxed.
I get blood tests every month for the last 12 years.
I know exactly what happens depending on how I eat
and what I use and it could be in the sport.
And now I'm able to use those lessons with my athletes
and I'm able to actually watch their liver enzymes come down,
their appetite improve, their immune system.
Just from the food.
Just from the food.
A few of the things in my diet contribute to that.
You mentioned the salt. So you can chloride, hydrochloric acid, digestion is big. Do you have them take
HCL pills when they're eating some of my due? Yeah, I recommend it to a lot of folks. It's
in the diet program I talk about. I just did a rant recently on stomach acid, on low stomach
acid, how that affects digestion. And creates autoimmune disorders. I've had people on
an acid prescription medication for years who could come off within a week. I've had people on an acid prescription medication
for years who could come off within a week.
I went through that process myself.
Yeah, and started introducing HCL pills
was a game changer for me.
Game changer.
Yeah, and I think the performance benefits
are just a side effect of good digestion.
God, it's so refreshing to hear that coming from someone like you.
You never hear people, you know, big, strong,
you know, bodybuilder types or people in that space talk about it
in that way.
It's always the wellness people that nobody wants to look like.
That's the kind of stuff.
And I've been able to, you know, I've lived through it
and then I've been able to utilize it.
Most power lifters, they'll come the way in
and they'll head straight to IHOP.
And that puts them in a really bad situation, particularly if they lost a significant amount
of water, and then they end up in a position where they're cramping, their bodies not
digesting the food.
So I'm very particular about what people refeed on, what Hofthorne, Brian, eat, preparing,
going into the world's strongest man in Manila, and actually the hydration protocol that they used.
I worked with Camille LeBlanc this year, CrossFit National Champion, and Ben Smith, another
CrossFit, and Becca Voit.
And all of them, Ben Smith in particular, about a month before Regionals, he suffered heat
stroke.
And he reached out to me and he said, I'm down.
He says, I feel like I've got rabdo, I've got heat stroke, I can't go outside, I'm tired,
I'm sick, my gut hurts.
So I reached out to Dr. Sandergrodick's group in the heat institute and their thermal regulation
experts, he's a PhD in hydration.
And they helped me with the hydration protocol, which is a huge component of recovery and fueling yourself during
training.
So that's when I started promoting what we call like a cyclic dextrin.
I do the fructose and dextrose.
They do dextrose and maltodextrin, but a blend of two carbs doubles the rate at which
you can absorb the carbohydrates.
Then if it's just one, versus if it's just one? Versus if it's just one. And then, it adds sodium.
It goes to three.
Rather than one gram per minute of glucose absorbed,
you can go to two grams with two carbohydrate sources.
You can go to three grams with a sauce.
Oh, it's interesting.
And you can go to four grams as much as four grams
when you add a little bit of caffeine to that.
And I'm not a huge coffee fan because of its impact on digestion
and how people become dependent on it,
and a lacking sleep and hydration.
But when used strategically, it can be a performance enhancer.
And I got a lot of this from George Lockhart, who trains a Conor McGregor and John Jones.
I mean, George has trained everybody.
It helped them do water cuts, and he's the nutritionist for these people. And years ago, I thought he was one of the best in the business and so I hired him.
I called him up and I flew him out to Las Vegas and I had him help me work with a pro fighter
that I was training for a fight.
And I had probably done water cuts for just about every world record holder and every weight
class and power lifting up to that point.
But I know what my strengths and weaknesses are, and I had never trained an athlete who had to recover from a water deficit weigh-in and perform an acardiovascular
performance. Yeah, different. Very different. One rep is compared to putting in 20 minutes
in the ring. And so I brought him out and we carefully put together a rehydration program,
which was very similar to what Dr. Gaudik's group recommended to me on behalf of Ben Smith and that I utilize with Camille and Hofthorne Shaw.
And it was that the blend of carbohydrates, the sodium, and then the timing and then understanding
the absorption rates.
You can't just plug that thing down.
That was going to ask that.
Do they measure how it's getting absorbed?
Do they?
They do.
They look at the rated absorption and then they have you sip that drink over a period of
time and then offer yourself a little bit of a delay.
They'll even, this is kind of where the 10 minute walk came from, to be honest with you.
George Lockhart would have his athletes after they would rehydrate, he wouldn't let them lay down in a bed.
He would make them move around, he would have them take a brisk walk. The legs were driving those m-tore pathways, right, to bring the glycage of the glucose into the muscle without the necessity of the insulin key.
And so he would use that and then they would rest for a while and then they would have another drink
and then they'd walk around. And before they would start having a meal. And when I was
implementing that with athletes,
they were recovering much, much better,
having more energy, maintaining their weight,
gaining their weight back,
Camille over the course of five days
with three competitions a day
and CrossFit in the finals, she gained a pound.
When does that happen?
Never.
Yeah.
And that's because of the hydration.
And she was eating Monster Mashed too,
which I was excited about.
So I got this is really fun to get into this because I used to talk a lot about sodium and
water.
When I got into competing, so I was men's physique pro, right?
And I got into competing and I found the sodium and water game was everything.
And I don't even think that I mastered that at all. So if you were to walk me
through a protocol, if you were getting me ready to peak on stage, you know, and then the,
so what would my sodium intake? And I know there's going to be an individual variance as far as how
much, but, you know, like how much are you pushing me and getting ready for the show and then peak week,
what does that kind of look like? The water and sodium? What would you do to do with that?
Yeah, well, now we're talking a very different thing.
Right, right, no, I know.
I was waiting, I wanted you to finish that,
but I had an appearance.
And appearance is two completely different things.
Right, so I'm not gonna...
I'm not gonna...
Yeah, I do wanna get a hydration,
I do wanna get an athlete, get some carbs and salt
back in their system after they've dehydrated
for a bodybuilding show,
but I gotta be careful how much water I put in them now.
And make sure that they don't start to, like you say, smooth out or get too much water
inside of them.
So, I'm not a huge fan of, I think that most of what people do for dropping water or trying
to get lean for a bodybuilding show is to compensate for not being in shape.
Now a days the preps are 16 plus weeks. It used to be that people would think 8 to 10 weeks they could get preps for a show.
Especially with the men's classic bodybuilding now. I mean they just want you so shredded and dry that you just have to prep longer.
That's the first thing I caution competitors about is like like Dorian said, he was ready a month out.
And when Flex had me training, I was ready a month out.
And we were actually fighting not to lose weight.
We were increasing calories, but we kept our workload high.
Just the metabolism takes off.
And in that way, you can avoid having to do, in either the quote-unquote
tricks, the carb depletion, carb loading, sodium depletes, sodium load. And so I really
don't play that game. I get them in shape on time, and then I may put just a few carbs
in them based on how they look and how they feel. But, you know, Flex and I even made that
mistake, kept all these many years. Four or five days before the Olympia,
he did a photo shoot with a pair of Bernal,
and I posted the pictures just from my iPhone
and a video, I think, on social media,
and he looked incredible.
I mean, just veins dry, cross-striated,
I mean, he just looked amazing.
And he was 214, he had to weigh 210, I think,
at the weigh-ins. So Friday morning, we wake up, he had to wait 2.10. I think at the weigh-ins.
So Friday morning, we wake up, he's still 2.14.
He has to wait 2.10, the weigh-ins at 3 in the afternoon.
We could have done a lot of things different,
but instead, we popped a mild diuretic.
Well, on flecks, that pulled very, very hard
because of his kidneys.
And he ended up weighing in at 2.03.
Wow.
That afternoon.
Wow. The next day, he weighed in at at 203. Wow. That afternoon. Wow.
The next day, he weighed in at 203.
Wow.
He couldn't recover from it.
And so, he's backstage had no pump.
It was completely flat.
And of course, as you know, the muscles pull away from the skin and give that appearance
of flatness.
You don't see any dryness, any definition.
And this is generally what happens to a lot of people who end up getting deflated when
they're up there trying to manipulate water and sodium. You want to be full. And
women do this in particular, and then they end up shaking. You know, they should be tight
and full. The muscle should be pushing against the skin. So that was a real disappointment
for him. You know, it's not like he was up there necessarily with the expectation he
was going to win, but he certainly four days prior looks just
ridiculous, dry and grainy and shredded. And so we make the same mistakes after both of us,
30 years of experience that amateurs make. Well, there's a real, there's a real arc to that when
you think about it. When you, when you are that lean, I mean, the most like that, the most subtle
difference can make a huge difference on how you look because there's not as much room for air
on a guy who's 3% body fat.
And we know that when you try and get,
you know, 2% better, you end up 10% worse.
The vast majority of time, that's what happens.
I've been backstage and guys are like a,
you know, I went and had a cheeseburger
and fries last night with a soda
and look at my veins and they're showing me their forearm when they pop
their shirt off and they look like they're seven months pregnant. I'm like, well there you have
I don't think I ever I really never felt like I presented the best version
I mean I did enough to make it up to the IFB level but I'd never felt like I
Presented the best version of me it was always the night before or the night after.
I was like, God damn it, what a day.
Even the most experienced people,
seven time Mr. Olympia Phil Heath,
look what happened to him at the finals,
the car water he went.
What do you, let's talk about that.
Did you watch the show?
I watched the show and you know,
and he's with one of the most experienced coaches
in the business, honey,
who's been through this many, many, many times.
I'm saying it's really hard to trick the body as part of what everything that I work on in my
program is that there's no games or gimmicks or tricks or magic and it's really the fundamentals.
I think that, you know, I had heard he had had some problems going into the show and so maybe they
did some things that trying compensate for that. But obviously he was sweating a lot. That's not optimal. And he had lost the definition in his
lower abdominal area from the bloating. So that's difficult. And I can't speculate on that. I
don't know behind the scenes what he did or didn't do. I can tell you that even the best are up there
trying to fine-tune things and end up going backwards. And so I tend to be conservative in that fashion.
It didn't answer your question about what I do for water and soda.
Yeah, right.
The last 24 to 40 hours of forest show because you can't really paint with a broad brush on that
thing. You got to look at your individual athletes conditioning and that's the big thing about training people is yet. Anybody can copy and paste a program, but you need
to check in, get feedback. Even with Brian Shaw, he started the program, the vertical diet.
He lost like 16 pounds of fat. Everybody saw him post a selfie with his shirt off and
they were like, whoa, what's going on? First time they've ever seen Brian with his shirt
off and he's jacked and he know, he's starting to get massive.
Well, he reached out to me and said, look Stan,
he's some losing my fifth gear.
He said, you know, under these 1200 pound yolks,
he said, I don't feel as stable.
And so immediately we switched gears.
I took him off the top serlone, put him on the ribeye
and put some bacon in his breakfast.
And within less than a week, he was like, okay, it's back.
I mean, you have to be, as a coach, like you say,
with wisdom, with experience, able to make these kind of changes.
I didn't have to do that with Thor.
Do you see common mistakes?
So I think that's what I was searching for from you
was that because you're right,
there's such an individual variance for everybody.
And I know there's not a cookie cutter answer for that.
But there was some things when I got into the space
that, because I was unfamiliar, I didn't follow bodybuilding as closely as Sal did some things when I got into the space that, because I was unfamiliar,
I didn't follow bodybuilding as closely as salient, but as I got into it, I saw a lot of people making
what I thought were huge mistakes. And one of those, and you talk about this, which I think
is fascinating, is the sodium is they get on these preps, whether it be eight weeks to 12 week long,
and also they start reducing sodium already in their diet, and you're already in a, you're making
your meal. So most people don't understand that if you eat out, you're already quadrupling your
sodium intake.
Then you go from somebody who occasionally, or maybe a lot, eats out to also making all
your meals.
So the reduction in your sodium already is significant.
Oh, yeah.
And then you get into a prep and then you start tapering off.
And I was just like, this is just talked about this in a rant regarding sodium that when people go to clean eating, they end up in assault
depleted and don't add salt to their diets.
They're actually depleting sodium because that's connected to mortality.
Two low sodium is not good for you.
100%.
There's a dramatic increase in all caused mortality when you get into three grams of sodium
a day, yet the American Heart Association recommends 2.5, and it was at 1.5 for a while.
And not to say anything of the quality of life for those poor individuals that think that
that's the biggest factor. It's multifactorial, but what we've found from the research,
and I just posted a post the other day, is that when you get adequate calcium, vitamin D's,
a big driver of that, because it dramatically improves calcium absorption. And when you get
adequate potassium, then your blood pressure stabilizes, normalizes. Those are two biggies, of course, sleep and a CPAP
was another giant one.
I've got 400 pound guys with normal blood pressure
because I have 4700 milligrams of potassium in the diet,
because I have adequate vitamin D in the diet,
which wasn't there previously.
I did blood tests for Thor, I did blood tests for Shaw,
I did blood tests for Dan Green.
All of these guys were at 25 or 30 in their vitamin D and the range is 30 to 100.
They need to be 60 to 80.
And so it tells you how deficient they were in vitamin D and a lot of iodine because they
sweat a lot.
And that's really important both as part of the pathway for hydrochloric acid production
and for immune system support and for their thyroid.
So all of these things were huge.
It's why I include them in my diet program
because they have so many different benefits.
So it's a lot of stuff.
Well, how common is exactly what you're talking about
when you, because you trained a lot of people,
what are some of the most common things
that you have to adjust like right out the gates?
Yeah, there you go, Vitamin D is always a biggie.
Obviously sodium. What's really. Yeah, there you go. Vitamin D is always a biggie. Obviously sodium.
What's really interesting is, you mentioned something.
People have been making these mistakes.
And mostly women, they're the ones that start overrestricting
and create these conditions where they have deficiencies.
They won't eat red meat.
They won't eat dairy.
They won't take in sodium. They won't eat red meat. They won't eat dairy. They won't take in sodium.
They won't take in fruit.
And basically, they're on a white fish and broccoli diet.
The four things I just mentioned, dairy for calcium, which is hugely beneficial for metabolism,
people don't realize that.
Red meat, iron and B12, particularly with women.
What do they go into an HRT clinic and get shots for every week?
Right, yeah.
Iron and B12 and D3 usually.
So they create these deficiencies for themselves
and then salt.
And they're training, you know,
240 hour sessions of cardio a day,
which is another thing that dramatically suppresses
their, their,
metabolism, their metabolism.
Which we should talk about this
because that was another thing that blew my mind,
was looking at my peers hammering away
on the cardio machine and I'm thinking to myself,
we want as much muscle on our bodies
when we get on stage to present.
And here you are eight weeks out,
doing hours of cardio, you're sending a signal
to your body that is not advantageous
to have a bunch of muscle on it.
What the fuck are you doing?
You're absolutely 100%.
The body responds to the stimulus provided.
And if you're gonna ask your body to do an hour of cardio,
then it's gonna get rid of that muscle.
It's heavy, it has an oxygen demand,
high water demand, it's not efficient.
Yes.
Also, what you find is that they wake up
at four o'clock in the morning after five hours
of sleep to do this.
Not again.
So now they've suppressed their thyroid
and all of this works contrary for them.
The more they sleep, the more fat they'll burn, the lean muscle mass, they'll retain the
less ghrelin they'll release, so they're not going to be as hungry.
I prioritize sleep over cardio all the time.
I don't have any steady state cardio in my program.
It's not for anybody.
I do the 10 minute walks, it's not necessarily cardio.
The 10 minute walks post-meal is to improve insulin sensitivity and digestion and decrease
bloating and gas.
Again, I'm trying to drive those quads to start using a different pathway because a lot
of the big guys I train have insulin problems and a lot of the little people I train that
are dieting, they have metabolic adaptation issues and I want to be able to feed them more food.
So I got to get them absorbing those nutrients better,
the nutrient partitioning.
Well, not to, and most, by the way,
there's a lot of wisdom in looking at old cultures
and the customs that they have.
And most old cultures have a custom of walking after a meal.
It's a very common occurrence in many of these old cultures.
There are muscles that travel from the hip,
you know, the hip flexor complex and that
travel over and through your gut or around your gut.
Just flexing those stimulates movement through your intestines, not to mention gravity.
If you're standing, it helps.
That's why your anus is at the bottom of your body, not at the top.
And so eating and then sitting or laying down, terrible, absolutely terrible for digestion.
100%.
So it happens on both ends. and then sitting or laying down, terrible, absolutely terrible for digestion. 100%.
So what happens on both ends?
When we're talking about big athletes that need to eat a lot of food, we're worried
about insulin resistance, right?
Fatty liver and all the cascades of events that occurs as a result.
They stop putting on muscle and they start gaining more fat and they get more tired
and everything else.
When we're dieting, we're worried about metabolic adaptation.
And so these methods of getting adequate sodium,
getting adequate iodine, getting fruit,
which stimulates the liver, increases body temperature.
Now, there's one to combat metabolic adaptation,
increasing body temperature.
And we see this, I put the research in my diet
about how anesthesiologists when
they measure the body temperature, when they bring somebody back from an operation, they
measure the body temperature. If it's too low, they'll infuse fructose into their IV to
bring their body temperature up before they bring them back.
Yeah, the way through the process of how the liver converts it.
Yes, absolutely. And, you know, obviously too much fructose is a problem.
Yeah, you don't want to drink a bunch of sodas.
Exactly.
But I talk in my night about, you know, an optimal dose.
And so I use just a few ounces of fructose.
We're talking 10, 12 grams.
Three or four times a day.
And we know the liver can handle about 7,500 grams a day of fructose, pretty consistently.
So three or four times a day, I get 10, 12 grams of fructose.
Three or four ounces of fruct, whether it's a half an orange or it's three ounces of orange juice.
I use the oranges for people who are dieting, who have problems with hunger and cravings, and I use the orange juice for people who are trying to gain weight because it improves appetite or increases appetite.
But it doesn't, it's not so much, it's just in a 12 ounce glass three times a day. It's not so much fruit toast that it's going to start to cause fatty liver problems and
insulin resistance.
Although fruit toast has less insulin release, requires less insulin release than glucose.
And it ameliorates the effect of something like glucose, like a bread or something like
that or pasta.
It actually reduces the amount of insulin released and the length of time at which it stays
elevated.
So there are some significant benefits when used properly.
And so these are some of the methods that I use in the diet and for those reasons.
And with the research I've provided in my personal experience, and I mentioned that
that titrating that fructose throughout the day was one of the things that I watched
bring my ASTALT down, my liver enzymes.
Oh wow.
And when my liver enzymes were elevated,
I would lose my appetite.
And how would I discover this?
Well, every time I took debol before a powerlifting competition.
So this is, this is wisdom.
This is practical experience talking to you
without any regrets.
How did I manage that situation?
I managed it with proper nutrition.
So I had to compensate for the things
that I was doing to myself.
And I talked about this in my video on,
if you wanna be healthy, don't compete.
Because that's not extreme sports.
I'm so glad I said that.
Anything is many times.
Right, anything is extreme is not.
Anything is extreme.
I'm talking about nine year old-old kids in badminton
blowing out anterior cruciate ligaments.
So there is no sport.
If you're gonna compete competitively at a high level
that doesn't have some compromise.
And so my goal is to try and manage that as best I can
with better sleep, better nutrition, better hydration,
all of those things.
I'm not saying that competing in any sport
is gonna be healthier optimal even
You know long distance runners long consider anything the bastion of shit. That's probably the worst
That's one of the worst. They end up with the oxidative damage to the heart. Yes
Yeah, I know the joint issues dude for pounding for so many hours
I'm 100% and so you have to you know in my joint issues and I talked about that in my rant on how I fixed my knees because I was in there
And you know, in my joint issues, and I talked about that in my rant on how I fixed my knees because I was in there training so heavy, so often that I had to get more movements.
And I started using the banded presses and getting the 20 rep sets set after set to try and
help with chronic tendonitis.
And so I'm big on restorative movements, even when I'm working with power lifters who
historically, you know, don't run if you can walk, don't stand if you can sit, and don't stay awake if you can sleep,
that's the mentality,
and the need is many calories as you can.
And then you end up in one of those situations
with high insulin resistance and fatty liver,
and just eventually, you kind of top out
at what your potential is,
is because your body isn't,
the nutrient partitioning isn't right,
and you're not building muscle tissue.
And so even with those guys,
I have to be really careful that they're doing some movement
that doesn't necessarily,
isn't counterproductive to strength.
And so, I might do some prowler,
some concentric movement,
whether it be a recumbent bike under a little bit of tension,
30 second sprint, 30 second rest.
You're eliminating the negative
to minimize the muscle damage.
Exactly, but I'm pushing all the blood in there that's necessary and activating the lymphatic
system, which is something that you have to move to get all the, you know, the trash out
of the system.
So, and I do that like three times a day for 10 minutes.
This isn't a 40-minute session.
So great.
Because the frequency is optimal.
Absolutely.
That's why the three-ten-minute walks a day.
That's why you, you know, I have the fructose three or four times a day.
It's almost like a doctor would dose medication to you.
It has a half-life.
You know, fructose has a half-life.
Your digestion isn't all day.
I can't eat all my fiber for breakfast
and expect it to do me much good at dinner.
And so I throw four carrots into a meal
and people are like, four carrots, what's that gonna do for you?
Well, four carrots four times a day is my carrot a day,
but it optimizes the digestion.
Well, especially when you're eating
a large amount of food in your large athlete.
Yes, it's very difficult.
I mean, you're eating 6,000 college a day.
It's hard to do that with two or three meals.
It really is.
It is.
And meal frequency is important too.
I mean, this is a whole nother avenue with the intermittent fasting thing that's coming
on.
If I've got an athlete that's lifting weights and breaking down muscle tissue, I don't
want them going 16 hours without food.
There's no mechanism in the body to store protein.
And no, they're not going to lose 10 pounds of muscle, but it's not optimal for the body
to need repair, to reach for the amino acids, and they're not there.
And it has to wait.
Now, have you ever utilized,
because I've seen this both with myself
and with people that I've worked with,
because of the indirect health benefits
of fasting occasionally, I've noticed people respond better
when they do throw in the food
and they throw in that more frequency.
I wouldn't incorporate it during a heavy training session,
but more of an offseason like.
You hit the nail on the head, you said occasionally.
And this isn't something I
Intermittent like it's supposed to be yeah, it's wheel stuff
And it also depends on the athlete do they are they experiencing
Insular resistance. I run a blood test. I look at the HA1c
I look at their fasting blood sugars, and I see oh we got a problem here when you address it
That's a good time to throw an intermittent fasting while you reduce the massive loads and maybe have them do a little less volume
and frequency.
Sure.
And do more of the pumping exercises that I mentioned, get those legs moving more often so
I can use the M-Tore pathways.
I can start to get their insulin resistance down.
The first thing we do with Thor was take him down from 425 pounds to 395.
When I first started working with him, I said, we're going to have to take 30 pounds
off of you. And he was like, what? Take 30 pounds off. I mean, I need to be 4.40. And I said, well, I can't get
you to 4.40 lean in strong and hard until I get you down to $3.95 and get your insulin sensitivity,
right? Very good point. And then get you back up there using the kinds of foods that won't
repeat the same problem, beats a pasta pancake, so you know, that kind of stuff. So we took all of
that out. And then when he went back up, I think some of you may have
seen, he squatted like nine, six, six pack, takes his shirt off, he's just yoke.
That's fucked up.
Yeah.
Yeah.
At some point, when you compete, like I said, if you want to be healthy, don't compete,
at some point, he's going to have to add that extra weight to endure the load from his
training as did Shaw.
And at some point, you're a bikini girl that's getting ready for a show the last 30 days is
going to have to suck it up, you know, but you certainly don't want to strip muscle off
of her, but she's going to have to be at a deficit.
She's going to be hungry.
She's going to lose, you know, a little more weight than what would be healthy necessarily
to show on stage.
But when you do it correctly and you keep sodium in and you keep calcium in and you keep
fructose in and you get adequate potassium and
you know all of those things are and you get iron and B12 and she keeps her red meat in the diet
then there's no rebound or very little she can easily
you know refeed
reverse diet after that and not have the edema and the massive fat gain because of the suppressed
the metabolic adaptation and the lowered metabolism.
I love what you're saying, Stan, because for a long time in that space, in that world,
it was, you have to make your health go bad in order for you to do, which is different
than your message was just saying, competing itself, not healthy.
However, if we approach it as healthy as possible,
you'll do better, you'll perform better.
You minimize your damage.
Right, and that's a very different message
from what in the past was kind of kamikaze,
like throw everything at it, go for it,
and poor health is supposed to happen,
so let's just go for it.
Very, very different, how rare is someone like you
in your space?
You take a very meticulous, smart approach to everything.
Holistic approach to everything.
And again, you make health one of the priorities
because you know it improves performance and appearance.
How rare are you in your space?
I don't know.
When I came in, we talked about the fact
that we're fortunate that there is
are so many really bright, really experienced people now that athletes have access to.
So I think very quickly, people are starting to see that there's some good information
out there, and it's starting to point to the top.
So I think it's more and more common.
I think that, you know, the Lane Norton's of the world and certainly the
Greg Knuckles of the world that are out there,
they put out some really good information.
And we might not all just agree on everything.
Lane's got the sugar.
Yeah, sugar.
And that's where we jab them all time about that.
We're good friends of this.
And I don't think he's driving.
He's just saying, look, that's not gonna kill you.
The calories is the first most important thing
and then the quality of the food and then the meal timing
and then all that.
So at least he puts it into a hierarchy,
but to me again, it's a symphony.
And if I'm doing an 80-20 or if it fits your macros
and one of the instruments isn't in tune,
meaning as part of your 80-20,
as part of your 20% or if it fits your macros
kind of deal, you're taking in something that's causing inflammation, vegetable oils, sugar
alcohol, maybe bread.
Popdarts, it depends on how you respond to them.
It's been my experience that the vast maturity athletes I deal with do have digestion problems.
And if I can remedy those first, and so I'm a little more particular.
I don't let people have the 80-20 and I I don't let them do a Fitcher Macros.
I specify in my diet, I list exactly the foods I want them to eat.
I'm very specific.
That's because you're fucking old, and you've done a lot, you've coached a lot of fucking
people, bro.
That's why.
That's where we come from all the time we argue with a lot of these people.
It's just like, yeah, wait till you've coached thousands of people, and you see what the
majority, and it's like, yes, your message is okay that you're
right. There is a high-arkey and these certain things are not necessarily bad or evil food.
It's just most people have got a lot of issues.
And my program is intended to be simple, sensible, and the last part is the most important
part, sustainable.
And here's where there's a bit of a disagreement with what I propose, which is I list exactly
the food you need to eat.
And what people are concerned about in terms of sustainability, having flexibility.
If you're a dieter and you're forced, forced, but I'm recommending that you eat these foods
and then you end up at a restaurant somewhere or if your appetite
Is different one day and you want to make a change up
You know I offer up substitutions, but I'm cautious about what substitutions
You know, that's not a pizza and it's not a cheeseburger
You know, it's another low-fod-map food or it's a variant of the red meat type or style or another room in its animal that would provide you again,
you know, the better fatty acid profile. So I do provide some variation in there,
but I found a couple of things, particularly with the everyday person. They kind of want to be told
what to do. Sure. Because they've been left to flounder and given their own choices,
that they're not very good at calorie control. We know that. Probably it was as much as 50% and even clinicians
are off by as much as 15 or 20% in terms of calorie.
You cannot rip, you cannot, you cannot depend on
self-reporting at all.
Because someone's self-report, oh, I don't eat that.
It's always off.
Yeah.
Well, I hate to get in front of myself,
but I'm developing an app currently.
I've been saying this for six months,
but these things take forever,
which is still probably 90 days away.
And in my app, my clients will be able to just take
a picture of their meal.
And it'll be time and date stamps.
So me as a coach, I can go back to any day of the week
and I can just scroll down and see everything
and they ate and when they ate it.
And so I'm able to quickly, at a glance,
look at that and see the types of foods and the quantity
and then make an assessment,
to what changes they need to make based on, you know, how they're responding to the week.
So, no, I think if someone wants to get to a point
where they're making better choices for themselves
as an individual, they have to start with a structure.
You have to kind of, that's how you learn what's good
and what isn't good and what works for you
and what doesn't work for you.
Then you can get to the point where I think you could do
that if it fits your macros after.
But I think if you jump into that and just focus on proteins, fats and carbs, you're missing
a lot.
You're missing a lot.
It doesn't address your immune system.
It doesn't address your gut health.
Those are two huge things.
It doesn't address micronutrients.
How many people are getting 4,700 milligrams of potassium a day?
Next to none.
I actually, you have to be deliberate about that.
And I, and I send my athletes exactly what they need
to eat in order to get that in the day.
For me, it's one baked potato a day,
around 1,000 milligrams, 10 ounces of spinach a day.
It's another 1,500 milligrams.
And I do that by mixing about five ounces
or two cups of spinach with four ounces of orange juice
and maybe a little bit of ice water.
And I blend it in a, in a bullet blender, a ninja, and it's very easy to drink with a meal.
But now you're getting 2,000 milligrams of potassium in that meal because you've got your four
ounces of orange juice and your two cups of spinach. So now I just mentioned the orange juice,
or an orange. That's another 500 milligrams a day of potassium. I add to that at least half a cup
of yogurt today. I can get another three or four hundred milligrams of potassium. I add to that at least half a cup of yogurt today.
I can get another three or 400 milligrams of potassium
from a half cup or a cup of yogurt.
And then throw on top of that a,
maybe a serving of salmon,
another 700 to 900 milligrams of potassium.
I just counted there and I'm probably not quite at 4700.
Everything I just said, you have to eat every day
to get there.
And I'm not a fan of the supplements.
The potassium supplements are usually as a hundred milligrams to begin with. But now what do you take them with?
And are they well digested and absorbed? A lot of people take supplements that don't necessarily take them with a meal.
And if you're hydrochloric acid isn't sufficient, you're not going to absorb matter.
Nutrients don't ever appear in nature by themselves.
No. And your body factors, your abs, that's right.
Yeah, like like vitamin D is a great one.
Vitamin D without fat, you know, you don't consume a little bit of fat with it, even supplement
form.
Not going to get absorbed as well.
Right.
And that's because in nature, how do you find vitamin D?
Usually in fatty fish or fatty foods or of course from the sun.
And you just said the protein is what stimulates the pepsin release, which increases hydrochloric
acid, decreases pH, and makes the acidic environment to the stomach,
such that it can absorb those vitamins and minerals.
Right, right.
All of that comes together.
I always make sure that people,
if they're gonna take a supplement,
that they take it in a high acid environment,
HCL pepsin with a meal, et cetera.
Yeah, I mean, having low sodium, low potassium,
or lacking vitamin D, which is,
those are the three most common ones, I would say, I don't know if you would agree with me.
Or even fiber, calcium, low fiber, a lot of time.
But having those three nutrients in particular be off, they present themselves as hormone problems, immune problems,
emotional and mental problems.
So people are getting treated for anxiety or paranoia or, oh my God, I have hormone imbalances.
When in reality, your vitamin D is too low, for example.
You know, and they're...
You're low acid in your stomach and none of it's getting absorbed.
You're on anti-interpressants all of a sudden.
Exactly.
And I see this as a huge problem when I have clients get come back with blood tests, almost
all of them would come back with low vitamin D and they're like, well, I go out in the
sun sometimes and it's a big problem.
We're not in the sun that much. Even if you work's a big problem. We're not in the sun that much,
even if you work in the sun,
you're still not in the sun that much, though.
I take plenty of abuse from the medical community
because I think I'm giving medical advice,
and I'm not.
I'm giving nutrition advice,
I'm giving lifestyle advice.
If you've got low thyroid and low testosterone,
I'm gonna ask you to increase your sleep first and foremost.
24-year-old firemen have the lowest testosterone blood
tests that I see when they said me there,
because of their lack of sleep, some sun exposure,
some salt, some fructose for the liver,
some iodine for the thyroid.
When you start optimizing all of these things,
that's why I talk about the vertical diet
in terms of hormone optimization.
It's not about supplementing hormones.
Some people may need to do that.
But if you're a trainer, and I say this in my seminars,
to coaches that I work with,
I said, if you're a trainer and someone comes into you
and they want to gain muscle and they're a hypogonatal,
if you take their money, you're ripping them off.
You're going to run them through all of these weight training workouts
and you're just wasting
their time.
They're not gonna gain muscle if they're hypogonadil.
You have to try and address that problem first, and that usually happens with sleep, fatty
liver, sun exposure, vitamin D.
It's a whole host of other things that come as a priority over lifting weights.
What are the tests that you ask that you run for people like that to look at?
Well, I like to get them to get a blood test.
I ask most of all of my athletes to get a blood test.
And there's a whole spectrum.
Five pages, as you know, the HA1C and the D3,
vitamin D25 hydroxy, of course,
the testosterone, the estrogen,
their cholesterol, prolact,
and the list goes on and on.
It's really comprehensive.
And if we can identify deficiencies,
then we can remedy those or at least implement some sort of,
at least help them understand that this is going to be your challenge,
particularly with women who are hypothyroid.
They're not going to lose fat.
How common is it for you not to see a deficiency?
Pretty rare.
Yeah.
Pretty rare, particularly with,
usually when a client comes to you, I'm not even going
to say athlete, a client comes to you, they're already feeling like shit. That's kind of
compelled them to come. Sure, there's a little bit of self-selection there.
It really is. So I'm getting the ones that already have problems generally and just haven't
seen them yet or don't know how to fix them. And with athletes, there's generally some
sort of surplus or deficiency because they've put themselves in that position with all
the hard work they've done
without proper restoration.
How, when you're training some of these athletes
and some of these performance enhanced athletes
with like Annabelle steroids, for example,
do they start to see that they can use less
of these substances when they're diet?
You know, when they follow what you do?
Okay.
And you know, on that same note,
we talked about how a lot of women will restrict calories
and they'll stop eating red meat and they'll stop,
and they'll sleep four hours a night
and do cardio twice a day.
And a lot of these women will get into shape
and they might win shows and then pay later
because they're compensating
for all those deficiencies with drugs,
the vast majority of them.
And I'm like, this is a dead end game.
The lack of iron and the lack of B12
and the lack of red meat and the lack of sleep,
you're taking thyroid and anivar and a clambuteral.
And so it's very short-term fix.
Masking a lot of things.
They're masking a lot of the deficiency.
I would argue right now that there's more of a problem in men's physique and women's
bikini than there is even in pro bodybuilding.
I think a lot of outsiders look in, look at bodybuilders and they go, oh my God, they must
be doing so much drugs to look like that.
But I see more abuse in the lower levels in the men's physique and the women's bikini of just like you said
Just the lack of knowledge time under iron experience has drawn them to you know
Disregard some of the staple things like diet nutrition sleep. They should be doing and they're just reaching for the next drug or pill
Yeah, and I'm not gonna be a hypocrite because I used performance snatch and drugs throughout my career
But I understood what they did to me,
because I was getting blood tests every single month,
and I could see how I could manipulate those things.
I wouldn't take a lot of anti-estrogens,
because my diet was created in such a way
that I wouldn't have high estrogen.
I wasn't eating any vegetable oils,
which increases inflammation and estrogen,
staying away from a lot of foods
that would cause me the indigestion.
Even something like carrots is a naryngen,
and helps decrease estrogen.
So when you're really careful and bred,
those kinds of things, goitrogens from maybe soy, et cetera.
So I'm real careful about that,
but the big thing is the compensation.
I understand behind the scenes that you might look
a certain way, but that doesn't necessarily mean
you feel very good.
And you're going to have huge fluctuations in energy level, body composition, water retention,
all of those things, and potentially, again, exposure to immune system problems.
And I've seen so many women in particular, they tend to crash harder because they restrict
more, men get to eat more food.
And so they're able to, and they tend to cheat a little more.
They'll have the pizza or the burrito,
and end up getting more micronutrients as a result,
just and probably eat more salt and,
you know, any more red meat.
Women are so restrictive,
and then compensating for that
with the performance dancing drugs
that they end up with these huge micronutrient deficiencies.
And that's when the big rebound occurs. So I've said that, and the original question was,
can you use less, and the answer is 100%, yes, when you're eating rights, you need less.
And the reason that that's important is because the more you use the more side effects,
that you incur. And particularly pre-contests for bodybuilding.
You don't need very much in powerlifting or hypertrophy
in the off season, maybe a little extra testosterone
because you're at a calorie surplus can provide you a benefit.
When you're at a calorie deficit,
all you need is a little something to prevent
muscle tissue loss.
And depending on who you are, maybe to increase metabolism to burn a little more fat.
So you can use a lot less.
And to be specific, and Flex was the first person, I've worked with about every guru in
the business over the years, either directly or indirectly.
Chris DeCito, Chad Nichols, Hawny even helped me out one year.
Dave Palumbo hired him one year to help me Charles Glass, Oscar,
Kai's former trainer.
I mean, I work with just about everybody in the business.
And so I know what all the protocols are.
They sent me the entire diet, the entire protocol.
I know what all this are.
And I can tell you without being specific
that Flex, when I went to work with him,
put me on about half or less.
It was 100 milligrams of test probe every other day,
100 milligrams of mastron every other day,
37.5 milligrams of trend every other day.
Kaya's not much at all.
Wait a minute, that's a...
That's for a guy, you're a son.
It's when I turned pro.
This was the best I ever was.
That's insane because the mental,
at least the belief is that these guys are taking grant,
maybe some of
more, taking grams and grams of antibiotics every week.
And I would say, if they intended to do that, that would be an off season, because if
you're not at a calorie surplus, hypertrophies are a very difficult thing.
So all you're trying to do is hold on the muscle tissue and burn fat, and that can be done
very easily at very low doses.
You didn't let me finish.
There's a lot come on, yeah.
Four thousand kilograms of deep bar.
Yeah, he comes to rest in the stack.
50 milligrams of windstrawl day.
Two, I use a GH5 days a week. And that was what the prep was for.
I tried Climbutra but it made my heart race so fast that when I was in doing the 20 rep
sets, I couldn't keep up with the breathing.
I was just gassing out.
And so I jumped off of that real quick.
I didn't need any how I'm pretty lean.
So somebody else may choose to add a thermogenic,
which I would have them cycle two weeks
through time, a caffeine, a computer, or whatever,
if they needed it.
But I'm just saying that that turned me pro
at 254 pounds on stage in,
I mean, just the best condition I've ever been in my life.
What do you have to take right now to manage yourself or you're at right now?
I do HRT.
I like to take 100 milligrams of test prope three days a week.
My new Wednesday Friday.
Wow.
Still not very much at all.
The reason the smaller the short ester and the more frequent injections is because it
keeps my estrogen down.
I found that the longer esters and the larger doses, less frequently, can elevate the estrogen
a little higher.
That's one of the things I want to manage now.
And I stay, depending on when I get tested, somewhere between 7 and 1200.
So you're still within range?
Yeah, I'm already rarely get up to 1,500 if I test like the day after a shot or something
like that.
But I don't need to now.
What I found is it takes half as much to maintain twice
as much to gain, both in terms of the dosage
and the amount of work required.
Oh, that's a great quote.
You don't need as much to maintain anymore to see that.
No, no, very little.
And I almost apologize to people
when I tell them what little I have to do now
to stay 240 pounds pretty lean.
But to get there, it was much harder.
To get there. And it's like somebody says, well, you could still compete.
And I'm like, no, it would take me a year and a half, at least a year, to put on 12 pounds
of solid muscle and get leaner and try and get back to, you know, the mid 240s are so
hard.
Has the trends with performance enhancing drug usage changed from the early 90s to today?
Are people just going
Using more are they getting smarter with their own folks that use a lot more for a while there
We know in the late 90s. We had the the big guts and the insulin was
Yeah, and you know
Just as a side note when I was at the seminar with with John Milos Sarkeb was there and you know Milos is for his insulin protocols
And I think a lot of people abused that and was using R and too much of it and with every
meal.
But Milo has done something that I think is pretty important and one of the things I
promote today.
John Meadows talks about it as well and that's your intra-workout hydration. And that's, again, your dextrin, your glucose,
fructose blend, or dextrose, maltodextrin blend,
or whatever, with sodium, and they like to throw in EAAs.
When you are working out, and all that blood is pumping
and forcing into the muscles, if you can give it this little
IV of glucose and sodium, maybe sensual amino acids,
all throughout the workout, just sipping on it.
From 15 minutes before you arrive, all the way through the entire workout, you can have
a dramatically improved workout.
You can have less delayed onset muscle soreness as a result.
I think that that's one of the biggest things that people could do now in hypertrophy
sessions, particularly if you're going to train two days.
All my MMA athletes, crossfitters, I have a post workout drink, I have them drink, but
I think now in my version 3.0 for the vertical diet, I'm going to be having them sip it all
throughout the workout because from personal experience and all the stuff and visiting
with me, Lois, and talking to John, I usually drink, I'd have a little something before and then after.
And now I'm having them hydrate all throughout the workout while they're doing the hypertrophy
training. And that, again, we talked about the fact that without the need for the insulin
key, your muscles will soak up that glycogen while you're training. And utilize that. And you don't get as sore and you recover faster.
And I know everybody focuses on soreness thinking
that's the primary driver of recovery's pain.
And I guess, you know, now we found out
that frequency and volume is much more important.
Absolutely.
And so if you're not sore the next day,
that's not necessarily a bad thing.
That might mean that your sleep is good,
your hydration's good, your glycogen intake was good, and your muscles were given everything that they needed.
Right.
And they're nightling fast.
You're touching on something that we actually typically don't advocate for, just because
I think it's rare that we have somebody that is at that level where I would consider that
a bigger rock.
Now, we have to talk to people about sleeping, eating properly, you know, training, and then
they walk out of here and all they hear is, oh, I get a drink of Gatorade.
Exactly my workout.
Right.
And you have to turn up on this no question.
And again, I talk about athletes training two days.
Yeah.
You can get adequate carbohydrate frustration following a one a day training session by eating
your meal after training.
Mm-hmm.
You know, you don't need all that glucose right away, but for really hard training, competing
athlete, too high-perturface, and somebody who's got all the big rocks in life.
All the big rocks.
Right.
That's such a huge thing, which you just said right there.
The big things, you know, I talk about eat, sleep, and train, and then the 99%.
And then the 1% is the supplements or the what I call the
What do I call them the rehab therapies people want to go jump in a yeah
You know get a massage or jump in a cryotherapy continue, you know or stuff like that and think that that's a significant You know piece of the puzzle while they're missing sleep or they're yeah, we're not squatting or doing a big movement
Right, right, They focus on the stuff.
I said in my rant once, the things that are done
to you or for you or regularly is rarely as effective
as things you do for yourself.
Absolutely.
I'm trying to get them like you said,
focus on the big rock.
And that's why I had to say that because I know
they would jump all over me later on for not saying something
to you because we do, we kind of tease,
you know, there's this, you know, these guys now.
And I feel like since Minsvizika, I feel like I see it more of, you know, there's this, you know, these guys now. And I feel like, since Minsv is here,
I feel like I see it more of, you know,
walk around with their way it belts on,
they got their introshakes going on,
and then they're going doing all these,
like machine exercises for an hour.
One arm, cable pushed down.
Sideways, chest press.
Yeah, with the selfie thing,
they're doing their self-doing it.
Yes, and so I'm like, you know,
that you could probably save yourself a hundred bucks a month and stop drinking that
and maybe just add some real exercises and movements
in that order.
And you know, I the same token, I've just said,
oh, frequency and volume is the most important.
I did a video where I, a rant where I talked about
the reason why Westside Barbell athletes are so strong.
And I said in there that there's savages,
they train like savages amongst savages,
with great coach, you know, coaches.
And they take their body somewhere
it hasn't been before.
At some point, the frequency and volume
has to be done in such a way that there's a progression
otherwise you'd stop adapting
or you're gonna have to considerably change
the loading mechanism somewhere along the line.
Like we said, you know, copy and pasting a diet,
you're gonna have to make adjustments to it over time
and same thing with the training.
The one arm cable pushed down
regardless of how many T's you cross and eyes you talk.
You know, whether or not it's done
within 15 minutes of taking in this pill
or that powder or this supplement,
that probably not gonna get you to the really top.
Right, right.
That's a very good point to make,
because I used to get confused in that as a kid,
interested in trying to build my body,
and I was more, because that's where I advertised, right?
So I thought, okay, taking supplements
is the most important thing, and being sore
is the most important thing.
You know, I didn't realize that,
take a protein shake was the most important thing.
I had no idea that it was, eat more real food, train consistently, focus on these big lifts
because you're a young kid and you need to build all this muscle.
Get good sleep.
Like, I didn't know that.
I'm like, oh, I'm going to buy the, you know, branching in the last, it's going to take
that five times a day because that's going to spike muscle protein synthesis.
That's why I say shakes are for fake seed steaks. The supplement
industry gets so pissed at me about all that. And I'm like, look, there's there may be a time and
place for that stuff, but the big rocks, like you said, absolutely, which most people are missing.
I want to take you in a little bit of a different direction. We, you are a successful entrepreneur.
You've got the, we've got the water ball going. We got the vertical diet. I hear you talking about
coaching what you're doing a ton of fucking things?
Tell me about that, and you also strike me
as a very growth-minded person.
So I would love to hear, you know,
through all these ventures,
what are you learning about yourself,
what are you learning about business?
You know, I'm learning that I love this business.
Again, I wasn't ever able to monetize this business
throughout my career.
I had to keep my day job and bodybuilding was
I had to set competing on the shelf for 10 years while I built my businesses. I didn't start a company until I was 35 years old
and but I built four very successful businesses over the last 10 years
But all of them one of them was telecommunications when it was an engineering firm that I ran, and one of them was real estate,
bought, built, and sold multi-family, single family,
and commercial properties.
And one of them, currently that I'm still working with,
is medical and recreational marijuana clinics
up in Washington, to the partner of mine.
Well, we like you more now.
Yeah.
I would have offered a joint, dude, I can't believe that.
You know, the craziest things I've never smoked one.
Get out of here. But when an opera, when I was a kid, I was 12 years old, I can't believe that. You know, the craziest things I've never smoked one. Get out of here.
But when an opera, when I was a kid,
I was 12 years old, I worked as a business.
This is crazy though, when I was 12 years old,
I worked at 7-Eleven.
And I recognized at that time, beer and cigarettes,
the two biggest sellers, I was always stocking the shelves,
beer and cigarettes, the drugs sold and coffee.
And so when marijuana came along, much later in life,
when I had the opportunity to invest, I was like,
oh yeah, drugs is good business. And so I jumped came along much later in life when I had the opportunity to invest I was like, oh yeah drugs is good business.
And so I jumped in, you know, and it's been a good business for us.
But none of those things are really my passion.
Never were.
I was making a living.
I chased dollars and money.
My passion is the health and fitness industry.
The cooler is a neat, you know, adjunct who puts away for me to kind of keep my foot in
the door with this business and sell to people in the industry. But the nutrition program, my coaching other people,
I've accepted the fact that I'm, you know, I'm 50 now, it took me a while to accept that.
And I can't compete, I can't do the things I used to do, but I can help others from the lessons
that I learned, you know, from my experience and my advice. And so I really enjoy that. I get
really involved in it.
Like my kids, you know, off to Ronsha,
I talk to them all the time.
And all the athletes that I work with,
I work with Titer Beatty, the San Francisco
Giants picture.
I work with, you know, Olympic silver medalist
and shot put in disc.
I work with athletes from, you know,
all different sports and a lot of ordinary folks.
Moms, soccer moms and dadbods.
And we've done a lot of great things on my site.
I've shown that how many people we've, or testimonials, dozens and dozens,
if not hundreds that I've gotten from all over the world.
I've had over 50,000 downloads now on my diet all over the world.
And I get testimonials every single day.
I can't even post them all because people complain that my site, I'm just pimping out my site for selling my diet.
But I'm excited. I get these and people who are decreasing their blood pressure and
improving their digestive health and improving their blood sugars, you know, diabetics type
one and type two, able to take less medication or come off of medication as a result. People have been on anesthesia for years and all the different success stories losing weight. So I'm passionate
about that. That drives me. So here's what I've done. Obviously, I released the vertical
diet about five months ago on the internet, on as a product that you can purchase. The
vertical diet and peak performance has everything that you need, everything I gave off
through, everything I gave Shaw, Larry Wheels, Dan Green, all of these
great athletes I provide to everyone now.
For a fee, it's $100 for a download for this, everything I think I've learned over the
last 30 years.
And it's really easy to follow.
I guess that I list all the foods exactly what to eat, sample macros, sample diet plans.
And I include sleep protocol, hydration stuff, training programs
for hypertrophy, the ones from Flex and the strength program I got from Eddie Cohn in
all the years I've trained with him.
So it's all in there, and it's easy to follow.
But I'm just one guy selling one diet plan.
So now what I've started to do is I've created, I've recently discussed doing a book deal
with, not just discussed it, but we're moving forward on it,
with Victory Belt, who did the Paleo solution.
They also did, oh, this is book, I'm trying, oh, Supple Leopard.
So it's a really good group that we're working with.
We're going to release the vertical diet.
Kelly starred in Rob Wolf.
Yes, and they're going to work with me and we're coordinating that now and we're putting everything together.
It'll take us six months to get to market, but we've already started down that road.
But the big picture for me is the vertical, the vertical meals. Obviously, I just started the meal prep company.
Just two and a half, three months ago, we started doing vertical meals.
I partnered with a big company who serves four million meals a year.
They've been in business for 20 years, and they have extraordinary kitchen facilities.
They've got millions of dollars invested in German engineer equipment.
So we've got moisture control ovens, we've got these giant modified atmospheric pressure
system for sealing all of the food and taking the oxygen out.
We've got flash freezing units that freeze it really fast.
So when it arrives to you and you cook it in your microwave, it actually tastes fresh and delicious.
We sourced all the grass-fed beef, the line-cought salmon.
I cook everything in beef talo that we render, and bone broth that we boil, that they do
right there on their site.
So everything's, I know there's no vegetable oils in any of it.
We cook everything with no vegetable oils.
The food tastes amazing.
It's healthy, and so the vertical meals is something I just released, and it's all 48
states.
We've done over 50,000 meals
in less than three months already. Wow. Yeah. The taste is extraordinary. Of the three
business, the cooler, the vertical diet and the meals. What has the most challenges for
you right now? Well, there's one more in that. Oh shit. And this is, you know, we've got
the book. It's the vertical coaching. What I want to do is I have an app under development
that I mentioned.
I've already started doing coaching seminars.
And what my goal is is to get an army of people
that can implement the vertical diet with their clients.
Using the app, they can set themselves up on the app
as a coach and then have their clients set themselves up
as a client and select their coach.
And the coach can see all of their clients.
And remember, I said they could see all their daily meals,
and they would have their checklist,
and we could track their sleep and look at their heart rate.
And so coaches can see their clients,
and I, of course, as an admin, can see every coach
and every client and look at the success rates,
and see the clients that are the coaches
that are most successful in helping clients lose weight.
And basically behind the scenes between myself,
and I partnered with Damon McClure,
who's a PhD candidate, registered dietician,
masters and exercise fizz.
He was former director of the nutrition department at UNLV.
We're co-authoring the book together,
and he's gone through this with a fine tooth comb
to make sure that academia
is appreciates the quality of the work that we're doing.
But we're now as a team behind all of these coaches and all of their athletes,
or all of their clients, not just athletes.
And that's my big push now is to get the program utilized by as many coaches and replicate myself,
not just in the U.S. but in other countries we already had visitors from Canada and the
UK that have become coaches.
And that, to me, is the big picture.
That's the giant.
And of course, they can sell the meals and get commissions on meals that they sell to
their clients.
What I found in the research is, the meta-analysis has been done on success rate for clients.
When you study the most likely outcomes,
we talked about sustainability,
simple, sensible, sustainable, a healthy diet
that can be maintained long-term.
What we found is that clinicians are the worst
in terms of success rates.
When you go to a registered dietitian or a doctor
on a weekly basis and check up.
After that is apps, that's the second worst.
If you have an app and you're tracking your progress on your app, those don't seem to have very good long-term success
rates. Beyond that is one of the better results is meals. When you get meals, pre-prepared
meals. As we know, we always want our people to meal prep. When my wife meal preps and
I see plastic containers in the fridge, I know that her progress is going to improve because she's not left to
You know her own brothers and when we can get people to Meal Prep whether it's buying my prepared meals or making their own
That seems to be the one of the most
Sure
The best predictors of success long-term and that's why Weight Watchers and Jenny Craig does better than registered dietitians and clinicians because you just eat what they tell you to
eat. And we know that calories reign supreme. There's a calorie equation first and
foremost. Now beyond that is when you start coupling things together. When you
have a meal prep and a weekly check-in with a coach and an app, that is the most
successful program, long term
for people.
And so that's what we're trying to create with this program for our athletes is success
rates, sustainability long term so people actually realize success.
So from a standpoint of like finances for you, which one is the most financially successful
currently right now at this moment and which one is proposing the most challenges?
You know, the apps proposing the most challenges is the most expensive and it just keeps growing
and I knew that historically when I created computer programs to run, or had programmers
create business programs to run my business, they always, they become, they're like, you're
married to them and they stay with, they're on staff forever.
And I know that's gonna be the case here.
My programmers, when they finish the app,
are gonna, the cont, we're in a constantly filled with this thing.
And so, the hardest part is obviously the computer stuff.
Obviously the app, because it's intellectual property,
there's no cost to goods, or not the app,
but the vertical diet itself, is something that I've created
already.
Anytime you're selling ebooks or information or videos or stuff like that, your cost
to goods is next to nil.
That's been very, very successful.
As long as we're talking about business, we just throw it out there.
Between the vertical diet, which I just launched five months ago, and the vertical meal was
it just launched three months ago, we've grossed over a million dollars already
Wow, so those have been very successful
And I think the meal prep long-term because it's a perpetuity because it's a recurring buy
Like the cooler if you buy a cooler you might want another one in two or three years maybe
It's a one-time thing, you know, it's a widget. It's a t-shirt. It's a you know, whatever
But when you're buying things it's like why, well, I was in the rental business.
I really liked the rental business,
because I was getting rent every single month.
I call it making money while you sleep.
And if I can get recurring revenue from people,
that's another thing with the app.
I eventually I'd like to sign people up with,
I mentioned that one of the most successful things
was meals, and secondarily, it was weekly check-ins.
Well, in order to do a weekly check-in,
you want to become a member.
And you want to pay whatever fee, like $30 a month so that every week you can check in with a coach and have, you know,
that you have a team behind you looking after your progress. So, membership's obviously another
very effective way to make money that you don't have to touch every client. Touching every client,
trading time for money, as we know, there's a limit, you can
go what, 50, 75, maybe if you're a hot shot, $100 an hour for doing personal training a client,
and then sometimes maybe you can bring two clients in at once. But when you're doing things that
have recurring revenue and creating a customer base and selling information with no cost of goods,
customer base and selling information with no cost of goods,
that's obviously the most profitable. Now I spend at least four hours a day answering emails
and DMs from clients and just people who have purchased the diet
who I don't really necessarily have an ongoing relationship with,
but I feel committed to them to help them implement it.
What do you think about that?
Because you're a guy who's been doing business for a long time.
And so you've seen the evolution and this transition
into this social media world that we live in right now.
What do you think about that?
How are you dealing with that right now?
Well, I think it's great because I don't have to pay
all the marketing fees that used to be associated
with getting your name out there.
I don't have to buy magazine advertising or radio
or what have you.
And even like the program that you folks are doing,
one of the reasons that I have realized so much success is because I've been able to sit down with folks like
you or Mark Bell or some others in the industry and talk to thousands of people at once,
even my ramps. 20, 30, 50,000 people will watch a ramp. If I go to an expo and stand at a booth, I might talk to a few hundred. And so the social media, YouTube, Instagram, et cetera, and this is one of the
things I promote with my coaches is building their social media base by providing information.
How are you finding your coaches? Social media, I advertise my seminar, I tell them that
this is where I'm going to be, and here's what I'm going to provide you.
I'm not trying to train the next generation of scientists. They're out there already. I can refer to the work of the knowledgeable people that I just mentioned.
I have over 100 references, it's my vertical diet is 50 pages, I have over 100 references to videos and articles and research studies, and I name some of the
resources that I got this information from, you know, that Dr. Sandra Godick and on sleep
Dr. Sashagamanaak.
I mentioned Lay Norton in there, of course, a lot of his work.
I've watched hundreds of hours of his videos over the years.
Greg Knuckles in his work over strength, stronger by science.
So there's all of these people who I've learned
these things from, I reference their work in there and tell them this is where I got the
information from, the Brad Shonefelds of the world, the Brett Contreras of the world,
the people who have really put forth a lot of good science. And then as we discussed,
the wisdom that comes from people like Flex and Eddie Cohn, Mark Bell and those guys, the bros science people, the academia may look down their noses at, but these guys have
made huge contributions to my success and many others.
So that's the, I think the bulk of what I try and do is give people information.
When I went up to Iceland, I did a seminar and they videotaped it and they put it out
on the internet. And my wife was concerned, she's like, Stanaped it and they put it out on the internet.
And my wife was concerned, she's like, stand, they just put your entire seminar on the internet,
two and a half hours for free.
You went through the entire diet, step by step.
Nobody's going to need to buy the diet.
I sold five or six thousand of them in the first three months.
That's right.
Because people watched it.
Yeah, they wanted to know more about it.
And I'm the same way, if I watch an hour video
and there's a lot of information,
I'm pissed because I have to watch it again
with a notepad and a pen to write everything down
so that I actually can retain it and implement it
if it's that kind of information.
Well, this is how we worked our way into the space
as we saw, when social media first came on
and then the web and
this ability to make money virtually, it became very popular to have these paid walls
that if, you know, I must just prove a little bit that you're smart, but if you want to
know all my information, it's $9 a month or whatever it is there, but you have to get
more by paying this for the membership and all that.
That seems to be the formula.
And so we came out with a total different mentality, which was we're gonna give all of our information
for free and share everything that we know
in our experiences.
And as a byproduct, I think people purchase
a lot of the programs and things we sell,
almost as like a thank you.
It was like listen, you've,
and then we used to get that.
I remember when we first started monetizing the business,
you know, we released the first program.
And people were like, you've already taught us how to program ourselves.
I'm not even gonna open it, I don't need to,
but I wanna support you and so forth.
So I think when you have that attitude of-
Plus, you're good luck trying to fight what's happened,
what's gonna happen anyway.
I mean, everything that can be free will be free anyway
with the information accessible now.
Yeah, so in giving people more information,
it's more valuable than in the past,
we thought we couldn't, we got to hide it,
we got to keep it a secret.
Doesn't work that way.
Here's what's interesting is that I won't have a pay wall
to give information, I'll have a pay wall
to check in with me weekly to hold you accountable.
That's totally different.
That's what I'm talking about.
That's your personal time.
Yeah, it's personal time.
And if they have a question or something like that,
and they're just for me to shake them up,
the app is intended to have some artificial intelligence
ongoing to where it can start to learn.
If somebody doesn't do their morning weigh in
or if they miss a 10 minute walk,
it can at least give them a reminder,
hey, you gotta get on that.
I haven't seen your body weight, you didn't check in with me.
I need a photo.
I only got two pictures of food today.
I need, so it just kind of reminds them to stay on track. When I did my hip rehab, I went to Mark Philippi and there in Las Vegas. Now,
I know how to do play A Squats, but the likelihood that I'm going to do those with a little
kettlebell is pretty slim. So I hired Mark, I paid him and I went down to his facility
and I worked with him two hours a week, twice a week to rehab my hip for me, and I posted
the entire video on YouTube of my exact rehab for my week, twice a week, to rehab my hip for me. And I posted the entire video on YouTube
of my exact rehab for my hip,
which now I forward to people.
People ask me questions,
I always copy and paste articles or videos or something.
I give them a little quick one sentence answer
and then I send them the information.
Maven.
That I, you know, feel like one of the better articles
I read or videos that kind of supports what my contention is.
Part of that is because I want them to have the information.
Most of that is because if you think it works, it works.
Most of that is because people get information
from six different sources and they want to,
I want them to implement mine.
So I need them to have the confidence
that what I'm recommending is supported by,
you know, someone reputable in the industry
or some sort of peer review published research article
because a lot of the placebo effect can take effect.
If I can just get them to buy into it
and do it consistently,
rather than having all these other influences
telling, oh, that's not gonna work.
And well, yeah, it is because Stan said so
and here's the research in addition to that.
Yeah.
I love seeing your, again, it's refreshing
because you're very honest, very open,
you share everything and you understand the connection,
you just mentioned the placebo effect.
That's a very important aspect of improving your health,
or your fitness, or whatever is understanding
and believing in what you're doing.
And a lot of people don't talk about that, so.
Oh, and I'll send a questionnaire,
a pretty lengthy questionnaire to a client.
And when they give me the feedback, there's a lot of things in there.
I'm like, oh, that's a waste of money.
That's a waste of money.
If it's not hurting them and they believe it works, I'll leave that alone.
I'll focus on the big rocks.
And I won't kick them in the teeth about their BCAAs because it's probably not causing them
any problem.
It's not hurting them.
Unless it's a financial decision, I can make those adjustments in the oftentimes.
Well, I used to say one of the things that were,
because I competing, I was doing some supplements
and one of the things that I noticed about myself
is that when I was consistently having to take something,
it made me consistent about other shit, you know,
and it's 100%.
And I justified it as, well, fuck it,
it's a hundred something dollars I spend a month
or whatever on this shit
But because I know that I'm having to time it take it and everything like that
It's making everything else in my life more consistent and I said that in my rant on the Westside barbell people
I plan is better than no plan and what I've found from a practical experience is that when I get a client who tells me that
Oh, most of this is good most of this is good. I just need a little help with this
So I send them the questionnaire and I have an answer, and I just need a little help with this. So I send them the questionnaire, and I have them answer everything.
I just need a little diet help.
My training's fine, this is fine.
And then I get that questionnaire back,
and it's a hot fucking mess.
I'm like, dude, you're not doing anything.
And generally, what you find is they don't have a plan.
And so when you implement that plan,
and oftentimes, I get to work with somebody
like, they'll ask me, how do you help a Brian Shaw?
It's four time world strongest man.
And I wonder myself sometimes, and I get in there
and I'm like, God, what can I do for this guy?
When he reached out to me, I'm like,
I can help Brian Shaw.
He's four time world strongest man.
He knows more than I do.
And then you get in, you dig around behind the scenes
and I talk to his wife and I get a blood test
and I get a questionnaire.
And I'm like, dude, this is, you don't have a CPAP.
You're vitamin D's at 25.
You know, you had diarrhea every day.
And he's the first to acknowledge
and we talked about it on his podcast
that regularity is something that you just,
you know, you don't consider to be all that important.
It's crazy actually how many people
don't even think about their shit.
No, that it's normal to shit yourself.
People just let that's like a sign.
Like that's your body trying to tell you something.
You can't map it back to a source.
And so that's why, again, why I'm so quote, unquote,
restrictive specific about the foods
that I select initially.
And then I asked them, how do you feel?
How's your strength? How's your strength?
How's your energy?
How are your shits?
Because I want to know if these foods are the right foods for them.
And I have to make minor adjustments for different people.
Some people can't handle oranges, the acidity,
and their stomach doesn't agree with them.
Some people can't do any dare at all.
And I got to get their calcium from a powered egg shell or something.
So there are adjustments that can and will be made.
But it's just
always interesting. Like you said, most people don't have a plan. Right. And when they have a plan,
all of a sudden, everything comes together and like, Oh my God, this diet's amazing. I'm like,
no, dude, what you were doing was horrible. Right. Any diet would have worked for you because you
were a hot mess. That's such a great point. We talked about this even with like, I used to get
clients who would switch over to vegan
out of nowhere.
And they'd be like, oh my God, it's everything.
It's a diet I'm like, well,
maybe it's because you weren't eating any fucking vegetables.
It's a vegetable.
It's a vegetable.
Yeah, before.
And you finally gave your body some of these things
that it needed.
I said that in my obesity rant.
I said that all diets work when they're strictly adhered to.
The problem is is that people generally fall off.
And that's when you start nitpicking
about micronutrient density, gut health, immune system,
and sustainability.
Those are the things that start to come into effect.
How do I keep people on this long term?
And same with the exercise program.
Three 10 minute walks is sustainable.
Getting to the gym and doing 40 minutes on a treadmill
is monotonous, and I mean, that's not-
Nobody likes that.
Nobody's gonna do that consistently.
That's why I couldn't work and all that other stuff.
So the 10 minute walks were, I mean they're just life-chains.
This is why I coach the steps.
I use steps as my, get my clients to track where they're at step wise
and then I incrementally increase because when you take someone who on average
takes four to 6,000 steps and you take them to 7,000 steps, it's no big deal.
Yeah, it's so easy, especially when they can break it up in short, 10 minute little walks,
versus having to drive to the gym
and get on a stair master for an hour or whatever.
Does that make any sense?
So, Stan, when you're not eating pounds of meat,
carrying coolers around, running businesses, coaching,
what are you doing?
What's, what's, what's, what's, what's,
what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's,
what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's,
what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's,
what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's,
what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's,
what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what's, what. Oh, yeah, I talk about it on all the podcasts. It's all I
Slobber about your kids, but I started late in life with kids. I'm 50 now. I got a four year on the six year old
so
Unfortunately, I was retired from bodybuilding and powerlifting and I'm in a good position
You know with business. So I
Talk about talk about the decision to do. Okay, I'm 37. I don't have kids
Yeah, and I've been with the I don't have kids. Yeah.
And I've been with the same woman for eight years,
we're not, we're not even married yet,
but we've been together for eight years
and I haven't had kids, everyone gives me shit all the time.
Talk about why you waited and some of the things
that you're maybe happy about or maybe there's any regrets
of not having them earlier.
You know, I don't know that I have any regrets.
Certainly, I would have, it would have been great
to have them earlier, but
I mean, they're fantastic. I guess the big thing for me is that I was so selfish all those years,
so focused in the bodybuilding and powerlifting and work. I was running my businesses and
I didn't have time for anything else and I was just so directly focused on that.
Plus, the risk tolerance.
If I had had my kids 10 years ago,
there's probably a lot of things I wouldn't have tried
because I'm a lot more risk averse now.
I won't double down on things.
I won't mortgage my home,
which I've done in the past against investments and stuff.
So I'm a lot more cautious now,
but I'm also a lot more patient now.
My kids will do things that would probably freak most people out
and I'm like, that's cute,
but probably everybody feels about their kids.
But you start to view like adults,
like you can kind of see the kid in adults.
Now I noticed as I had kids,
I could just see like the same sort of behaviors and things
in the whole set.
Yeah, my son's a pain in the ass.
He's just like me when I was a kid.
I just, I just shake my head.
I'm like, man, if, because my dad just, if I would act like my kid, he would wallop me.
I let him get away with a lot though.
That's for sure.
How much of that has provided personal growth for yourself of seeing yourself in them?
Oh, a lot of it, you know, it. It again, makes me really, really patient.
Cured me by my OCD.
All those years, I talked about those repetitive behaviors
and the OCD and the t-shirts lined up by color
and all that stuff, then you get kids
and they're drawn on your furniture.
You have to get over that too real quick.
Yeah, and inside of your car is just a one spill
after another of food and it's just torn apart.
Every time you turn around there's something ruined in your house or your car, it doesn't
matter what it is.
Nothing in the house is the same.
Yeah.
Now being a guy that was for sure in love with his work and body, billion powerlifting,
were you kind of an asshole to date and be with back then?
I don't think so.
I've always said selfish.
I've always been, yeah, focused on my goals,
but real generous, I've always been very helpful.
And I am now as a coach,
and I always have been as a boyfriend and husband
that, you know, what my wife's goals become my goals too,
I want to help her achieve things.
And so I'm really, really helpful that way.
People, I think when they meet me,
are kind of surprised that I don't have this air of,
air against about me, and I don't think anything's beneath me.
I'm still the fuller brush salesman that I started out.
I took the cooler and I went to the Olympia,
and I didn't have a booth, and I walked from booth to booth
to booth, talking to the people at all max and all max and animal and muscle
farm and I just walked up and said who's in charge and I pitched him the cooler.
You know, just some the power of broke as Damon John calls it.
Did you have an example of this growing up or that made you be this guy who would just
always work?
I started at 7-11 when I was 12 years old.
And I was slaying pizzas when I was 14,
and I was working construction through college,
and I was a maintenance man after I graduated,
worked my way up to management,
and eventually started my own companies.
But I've always just grinded on the blue collar guy at heart,
and on the same way with bodybuilding, powerlifting,
as in business.
And even now, with all the success I've realized, you know, having lived the life I've lived and done the things I've done,
I'm still out beaten the streets in hustling, you know, and trying to provide a good product
and service for people. There's no advantage in taking advantage of anyone. So I'm trying to give
more than I get, even with my new program,
putting people in for commissions with the meals,
or as part of my coaching staff,
now with the vertical diet,
I gave them up a 75, 25 split and 75s in their pocket,
25s in mine.
I just believe in the power of,
getting one percent of a hundred men's labor
instead of one percent of one man's labor.
And in order to do that,
I need to have people that believe in me,
lead by example,
and that's kind of what I'm developing now.
I think people, anybody who's worked with me
over the years knows that I give a lot
in terms of information, like you said,
and I care about the outcome about the results.
That's what people say about you.
Yeah.
That's 100% what people, if I bring up your name to people who know you, that's what they
say about you.
So I think you're doing a good job.
Thank you.
What do you think that?
What are some of the things that you have got from being a blue collar worker and growing
out that way that have now attributed to your success and having multi-million dollar
businesses now?
Like, I just realize it's still work at the end of the day.
Every day I wake up, I got my checklist.
Just like I got a checklist and I just did a seminar two days ago in Vegas at the Olympia
for the coaches and I created checklists for them.
You're going to have to hand out 10 business cards a day.
You're going to have to do one free seminar a week just soliciting people to come and learn
about nutrition and change their life and during which you're going to have to do one free seminar a week, just soliciting people to come and learn about nutrition and change their life,
and during which you're going to ask for the sale,
and it's going to be a win-win.
You're going to give them something that they need
that will help them, and they're going to pay for it.
Because anything you give for free has no perceived value,
and they're not going to think it's worth anything,
and they're not going to have any skin in the game,
and they won't commit to it.
And so these are the same messages that I teach my coaches that I keep every single day
trying to play for myself as these little checklists.
If you ask me to do something for you and I don't pull out my phone and put it in my daily
reminder calendar, it will never happen.
So I live off of lists and of course I've got action items and I prioritize things.
But that's huge for me. The list, the action items, the daily checklist. That's in my
app for my clients and my coaches is a daily checklist of the things that I want them to
do every day. The 10 minute walks, what time they get to bed, what time they wake up, the
meals that they eat, whether they take vitamin D3, all those things are in the daily checklist. If you do these things every day, the dingers, the singles, then focusing on the goal will
never be a long-term success strategy.
Focusing on the process of getting there, the habits, the lifestyle, and starting to
engage and enjoy those things.
I enjoy my 10-minute walks.
I put my daughter's breakfast on the table.
I take a 10-minute walk and come back.
I take her to school. At night before bed, I enjoy that 10 minute walks. I put my daughter's breakfast on the table. I take a 10 minute walk and come back. I take her to school.
At night before bed, I enjoy that 10 minute walk.
How it clears my mind, how it helps me sleep.
When I get home, just, it doesn't matter
what the circumstances is.
I do those things every single day.
Are there things that you do as far as getting away
and disconnecting and maybe breaking the checklist cycle?
I always say on the show, I say that your greatest strength
is normally your greatest weakness also.
And so, if being organized and checklist guys,
your strength, I would also think that maybe your Achilles
heel, that you have a hard time maybe breaking away
from that, is that true?
Or, yeah, one of the videos I did was called
Stress for Success, where I talked about how I didn't
break away, and I was overly invested into one outcome,
and I was sacrificing sleep, and I was sacrificing nutrition,
and I was sacrificing exercise, and how that sacrificing nutrition, and I was sacrificing exercise.
And how that affected me,
and how I experienced anxiety and stress,
and mild depression as a result during those times,
and how my performance started to decline at work.
My business was suffering as well.
And when I re-incorporated just those fundamental principles
of getting better sleep,
paying myself first, I called it,
getting better sleep, exercising regularly regularly going back to the gym
Stop eating at McDonald's and I was actually starting to eat healthier food again
I was eating dollar meals at McDonald's for damn near a year when I was running my business working, you know, 18 plus hours
How old are you right here when you're talking about this? Oh 30s 536
Okay, right in there and I did it previously five years previous someone else. When I was vice president of a telecommunications company, I was getting four hours of sleep a night and pouring,
you know, tons and tons of hours into work to try and help build their business. So I learned my
lessons by repeating the same mistakes. It takes me a while. I'm a slow learner. But now I know,
and it's in the training as well, like with Eddie Cohen's program, he always de-loads.
About every three or four weeks, you know, he de-loads.
So you don't overstress your body, build up too much fatigue and that helps you long-term.
And so I implement that into my daily life too with the de-loads.
And like you say, sometimes you have to disconnect, you have to turn the phone off.
And it's easy for me at any given moment, all the way over here on plane Whenever my kids are playing at the park or whatever or at gymnastics. I'm on the phone answering DMs
You know responding to clients and customers and
emails etc all day long looking at people's blood work and you know sending them articles you name and answering questions
And after a while you realize oh, but I haven't come up to take a breath of air in a while
I've been glued to this thing.
And so I do.
I do have to shut the phone off.
One of the big things I did, and I talked about it, and I think in the stress for success
video, is that I have to turn off the news.
One of the most depressing things is watching Fox News and MSNBC and all those guys, lobbying
bombs at each other.
And you hate not being informed,
but you also hate being misinformed at the same time.
And it's the same reason I don't watch basketball wives
but I don't watch the news because it's the same stuff.
They probably just added issues.
It's just drama.
Yeah, so because I always feel really shitty afterwards.
I feel like everything sucks in the world sucks.
And then when you look around and you start talking to people,
you realize, hey, these people are doing pretty good.
There's a great website for that.
And called humanprogress.org.
It talks about all the advancements we've made
in the last 20 or 30 years.
A lot of people don't know.
In the last 30 years, we've reduced worldwide poverty
like tremendously in the world.
You know, there's stuff like that and it's good to go on there every once in a while to
remind yourself like, okay, the world's not in there.
There's good things.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You got to share with me a story about a success that you've had in one of your businesses
that you're most proud of.
And I don't want some bullshit like because you saved someone's life or helped somebody.
Like I want a selfish one.
I want something that made you feel really proud
because someone has put as much work, consistency,
as you have, and everything that you've done.
I know there's had to been moments of, fuck yes.
I put the hard work in.
You know, at one point when I started my telephone company,
I had sold my home.
I think I had maybe 40 grand from selling my house.
I racked up about, I cashed out my 401k,
which is probably only like five or six grand.
I racked up $125,000 with the credit cards.
I had about 10 or 12 credit cards.
And I was using them to start my business.
And how old are you?
35, it's time 34, 35.
And I was buying telephone service from Quest at the time, Quest
Communications and reselling it to end users. So I was a telecommunications reseller, they call
a CLAC, Competitive Local Exchange Carrier. And I owed them about a quarter million dollars,
and they used to call me, you know, about every other day asking me for payments and I'd tell them, I just put it in the mail.
I answered my teeth because I didn't have any money
and the credit card companies were calling me
and I borrowed money from my dad.
And my dad was a government worker,
didn't have a lot of money.
When his pops passed away, he got $100,000 from his dad
and he bought a home in Florida.
A real modest place, it was probably 110,000 bucks.
My dad had no money when he retired. None. My mom had spent it all.
And so that's all they had was that house in Florida. It was about a hundred and ten hundred
hundred twenty grand. And he was able to mortgage shit for about 75 percent, something like
60 or 70 thousand dollars. God, the burden that much must have felt like the carrier. Hello.
Yeah. That was overwhelming. That was the burden that must have felt like the carry that. Hello. Yeah.
That was overwhelming.
That was the time at which I was really specifically talking about in my stress for
success.
I could give a shit about the credit card companies.
I talked about this on Dave Palomo's podcast recently that those guys are investors.
They get a profit from lending me money and they get an interest and that they're investors.
So that's at risk capital.
And if I can't pay it back, then hey, you know,
we're all in business.
So I didn't really worry about that.
A lot of people stress about credit cards and I'm like,
why?
I even had people ask me for my help to pay off
their credit cards and I'm like,
because the credit card company is more important
to you than me.
I thought we were friends.
Great point. Yeah, so I just, I can't understand the mentality. I thought we were friends. Great point.
Yeah, so I just, I can't understand the mentality.
I know it's stressful, sure, but why, you know,
when you anyhow.
So he sent me that money and I used it to pay down,
you know, to maintain some of the monthly payments
on the credit cards and to give quest
enough so they wouldn't shut my lines off.
Because we were anticipating that we would start generating enough revenue to be able to pay our bills. Me and a business
partner and the phone company, I started out of an apartment and I had no furniture in
the apartment. I had a couple of fold-out tables and we had some staff come over and answer
phones during the day and we couldn't afford headsets and stuff so they were just picking
up those little nine dollar phones and holding them to their ear like this all day long.
We were knocking on doors and with letters of authorization trying to sign people up for
phone service, this is the fuller brush sales reference I made earlier, just knocking
on doors.
The same way I knocked on doors at the Limpia last week, it hasn't changed.
And so I was hugely in debt and my father loaned me that money, 75% of his home is everything
he had.
He's on a modest pension with the government. It's like $4,000 a month home, is everything he had, he's on a modest pension
with the government, it's like $4,000 a month,
just to give you a feeling that he's not a wealthy guy,
never was.
And the anxiety and the stress, I missed more sleep,
I never knew what anxiety was,
my mother's suffered with her all her life,
she's been in and out of mental institutions
and on medication and was a chronic alcoholic
I was growing up and always suffering from these manic depressive disorders and anxiety attacks and what have you
And I never understood it. I was thought, you know, this is crazy. What's going on?
Then I experienced it one time and I'm a whole different person as a result when somebody tells me they have anxiety
I'm not like, oh, you know, get over it. I'm more empathy. Oh my God. Yeah. When you feel that, just the way that lights up your whole body.
And that was because of the money that I owe my dad and I didn't think I was going to be able to pay
back. We thought we're going to go out of business. I don't know what this has to do with your
original question, but it was going to get there with the proudest moment. Right. And that was the
proudest moment is when we were
able to turn the corner. I was able to start to pay some of those bills and I was able
to give my father back the monies that that he gave me. And then I was able to pay off
his home. And then I was able to buy him a brand new car. He'd never his whole life bought a brand new car.
We had a used Pinto, we had a used station wagon,
and I bought him a brand new car,
and he wanted, you know, he didn't need the sunroof
for all the different bells and whistles,
but of course I got him the top of the line.
I had him.
I just gave me goosebumps, you know.
That's what I'm talking about.
That was the proudest moment.
Right, right. And I've made a. That's it. That was the proudest moment.
Right, right.
And I've, you know, I've made a lot of money, spent a lot of money, done a lot of things,
but that's the one that sticks out in my mind is, is, uh, and he lives with me today.
He's 89 years old.
Yeah, that's cool.
Yeah, he's mostly blind, but still in good health is on no medication.
The doctors had him on a few different meds, statins, and a couple of others, uh, five
years ago, but since he's been living with me, I've changed his diet.
He does this 10-minute walks, and he's on no meds.
That's great.
That's excellent.
How's your relationship with your mom?
That's still tough.
I bought them a home and moved them out here.
So she's a few miles from me, and she's some very severe mental challenges in and out of mental institutions.
And so it's really, really difficult.
She's not all there.
It's challenging.
There's no question.
How did that affect you?
I had a very dysfunctional childhood growing up and, you know, it's taken me years and
years to work through and unpack a lot of the stuff and how it's formed and shaped my personality. What are some of the things that you notice in yourself as a grown man now that
maybe your relationship with her when you were younger has affected you?
Yeah, you know, she was what we call a functional addict and so my relationship with her growing up
was extraordinary, it was excellent. She was the den leader, she was the house mom, everybody wanted
to come to our place and hang out, she was the Cub Scout leader. When I got a job, she got a job there. When I was working at 7-11,
she applied for a job there, we worked there together. She became manager and I would do the books
at night for her. She's always helped me when I got a job managing an apartment community, I brought
her into, to help leasing for me. So we worked together through most of those years,
but as her conditions, and she was still
an addict throughout those years, alcohol was the major one.
But then when she came on to psychiatric meds,
those became progressively worse, some of which,
I think, have caused a lot of the degenerative issues
that give her the delusional behaviors
and those.
So, there are some of those, and I've gone to counseling with psychologists over the
years with her to try and talk it through and just see how we can manage the situation.
But it's really difficult.
It's not the same person.
They're so influenced by those medications and addicted to them, pain pills, she'll
talk to her shop and she just always seems to be compromised.
When did you become aware of that?
If she was a functioning addict back then, it sounds like she wasn't always new because
she would go through these depressive.
I have that same kind of mentality.
She would overwork herself when she was managing in a bakery. She would talk to them in a video one time about how they couldn't afford to, they couldn't
afford the baker anymore, so she would come in and bake at night, and then she would deliver
things at four o'clock in the morning, and she would sleep on the bench for a couple of hours,
and then open the store. She just overly commits herself at the complete sacrifice of her health to the point where
she just dies out after a while, she just goes completely blank and then she's at home
in bed for three months and can't open the door.
If somebody opens the door, then she gets anxiety.
That kind of situation, the front door, you've heard of people having those scared, they
can't leave the house.
And she would stay in her bed all day long, and only come out at night to eat.
And then this would go on for months at a time.
And then she would emerge, and then she would invest herself
into another project and share enough
with another, depending on how long it was
within our couple three years,
we'd have a recurrence of the same kind of behavior.
So it's been a lifelong thing,
but I got a lot of her work ethic is part of the problem,
and a lot of those obsessive behaviors.
And I mentioned in my stress for success rant that I've become, I was, I experienced a
lot of negative effects from investing myself too much into my work and had to continue
to manage.
I had a friend recently asked me, how do you manage your stress?
And I said, you know, with proper nutrition, proper sleep, and proper exercise. That's the only way to do it. If you can bench 200 pounds, if somebody puts 300 on the bar, that's stressful.
But if you can bench 400 pounds, and somebody puts 300 on the bar, it's not stressful. It's the same
300 pounds, but it's two different individuals. One's prepared for the task, one isn't.
You cannot get through life and be successful without engaging stress.
It's going to happen in any business.
If you want to be successful, you need to actually be able to handle more stress.
You have to chase that as a stressful situation.
But how prepared are you?
That's the big thing. And my preparation, some people may throw in yoga
and meditation and stuff like that.
I've really just, my meditation is just going to the gym
and blasting out workouts.
I think Joe Rogan said on this site,
he doesn't know anybody who trains hard
that has depressed or has those issues.
And I've found over the years that people that I,
who have had suffered from depression
who have poured themselves into intense physical activity
have been able to emerge from that
with good nutrition and sleep.
Right, yeah, they've done studies
that compared exercise to SSR eye drugs
for mild to moderate depression
and find that they, it performs as well
in the short term and better in the long term.
100%
Now, are you only child you have siblings?
I have a brother and sister.
Oh, okay.
What's the age difference?
Sisters a year older, brothers two years older.
Okay.
And then what's your relationship like with them?
Good.
My brother lives in Iowa and my sister's in your Chicago now.
Oh, terrible.
I don't even know where she lives.
She bounced around a little bit from New York,
they were in upstate New York, and then they've since moved.
But it was always excellent.
They understand the challenges as well,
but I'm right here trying to do the best I can to do that.
It sounds like you're carrying a lot of the load here.
If you got both parents or nearby you,
you've kind of supported them, like,
yeah, it doesn't feel heavy to me
It to be honest. Well, that's because you left fucking nine hundred pounds
Almost anything says feels like compared to that. Yeah, I just for the last ten minutes talking about this
You know this horrible situation with my mom
But it doesn't for some reason doesn't feel heavy for me. I just I look at it
You know who was it Wayne Dyer was the motivational speaker
that said once, when you change the way you look at things,
the things you look at change.
And I, you know, it is what it is.
And I, I guess when you set expectations that can't be met
then you're disappointed, you know,
undersell over provide kind of thing.
I don't have the expectation that I'm gonna be able
to fix my mom.
My expectation is that I can manage this and I've provided her home, pay her bills, send
people over to clean the house.
No, I get that sense when you talk about it.
Yeah, I just, I look at more as this is what I'm able to do.
I've talked about, I think in Iran, I talked about the fact that at some point, even when
I'm writing things down that, for my to-do list, I write things down that are
stressing me out and just recognizing what it is and whether or not I can do anything
about it, because sometimes I worry about shit I'm not in control of.
And I just have to look at and be like, I'm not in control of that.
That's not on me.
And I just cross it off my list.
I might write it down again in a couple of days because I realize it's in my head and it's stressing me out.
I offload that shit at night before bed.
I have a notepad and pen next to my bed
or I'm on my phone just dropping in things
that I know I have to get done
that I wouldn't be able to sleep thinking I would forget
and I'd wake up in the morning and I have to respond
to so-and-so, and I have to type that down,
and I can set it down and it's offloaded.
My brain's clear.
And a lot of the stuff I offload isn't anything I can do anything about.
A lot of times it's stuff that I just realized that I'm stressed about and I don't have any
control over it.
So I have to define it as such.
Actually, do you have a spiritual practice or your faith practice?
I don't.
Be honest with you.
I don't.
Good. Well, I tell you what, honest with you, I don't. Good.
Yeah.
Well, I'll tell you what, man, great, great time talking
with you.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You seem like a very purpose driven person.
And yeah, very, obviously, very successful,
but talking to you, I know why.
I know why you're very successful, so.
Thank you for the opportunity.
I know I blather on.
I've probably never done a short interview,
but that's, we don't either.
It's all good. We know't go for hours, man.
Yeah, we have that.
You know what though?
I love to get into this different parts.
I mean, it was good to listen to you talk about bodybuilding and diet and stuff, but these
are all things I've heard you talk about a million times.
I really like to know the things that make the man behind that tick and what's turned you
into.
And I could tell just by, I mean, you even got a little emotional talking about your dad.
I can tell that there's definitely something there for sure that has probably driven
and motivated you for a very long time.
I go into his room and he'll show me some Dr. Oz episode about something and or he'll turn
on Jeopardy and he still answers the questions.
I got to get up and leave.
I feel bad about myself.
I can't answer any of those questions.
My pops is in there, 89 years old. He's like boom, boom, boom. We're not at the answers the questions. I gotta get up and leave, I feel bad about myself. I can't answer any of those questions. My pops is in there, 89 years old.
He's like boom, boom, boom.
We're not even answering the other answering questions.
Yeah, that's cool.
So I talk till I'm hungry, and then I reach down
in my bag and I have three thermos in there
to get me through the rest of the day.
So we'll leave somebody, we'll leave,
we'll close off with the tip of the day.
My, and the tip of the day is the thermos.
I'm so proud of this thermos that
heat my meals up before I left the house this morning. I heated up four really hot monster mash
and I put them in these thermos and they'll stay hot for 10, 12 hours. And so now every three hours
all day long is whether I'm coming here or I go to Canada or when I went to the UK, I took six
meals. It was a 16 hour day. And I had meals every three hours the whole way there. And so I have all my athletes now
to prepare for their day or an event
when Brian Shaw came to the Olympia.
We sent him a big bucket of meals
and he stayed at a place with a kitchen
and he filled up his thermos every day full of hot meals.
So when he was at the expo during the day,
every three hours he could eat, he never wanted for food.
And that's one of the hugeest things in terms of,
like I said, meal prepping, meal planning.
The number one predictor of success
is your ability to control your nutrition.
And not just in terms of calories,
but now I also know that my stomach's gonna feel good
because I'm not at Smash Burger at the airport.
Right.
Yeah.
ABC stands.
I love it.
Yeah, I love it brother.
Thank you very much, man.
Pleasure, man. Thanks, brother. Thank you very much man.
Pleasure man.
Thank you.
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