Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 913: Yoga vs Mobility Training, How Fragrances Affect Your Hormones, the Difference Between MAPS Prime & Prime Pro & MORE
Episode Date: November 30, 2018MAPS Quah! In this episode of Quah, sponsored by MAPS Fitness Products (www.mindpumpmedia.com), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about the difference between mobility training & yoga, th...e difference between MAPS Prime and Prime Pro, if people should be concerned about perfumes and other scented things and their worst habits. Beware of Predatory Scammers Out There. (3:58) Mind Pump Thanksgiving Recap: Family Time, Guido Workout, NED talk, Flex Spending & Health Savings Accounts with Felix Gray & MORE. (12:43) How Long Do the Guys Want to Live for? Reevaluating the Retirement Process. (27:08) Another Step in the Human Evolution Journey. CRISPR bombshell: Chinese researcher claims to have created gene-edited twins. (30:20) Snatch-Chat. Snapchat Sex Workers Being Reported to IRS For Taxes? (33:20) Why You Shouldn’t Pay Someone to Build Your Social Media Following. (37:33) Continuing to Disrupt the Market…Watch out, retailers. This is just how big Amazon is becoming. (39:25) Flock You and Merry Christmas. (45:30) #Quah question #1 – What is the difference between mobility training & yoga? (49:09) #Quah question #2 – What is the difference between MAPS Prime & Prime Pro? (1:03:41) #Quah question #3 – Should we be concerned about perfumes and other scented things? (1:12:32) #Quah question #4 – What are your worst habits? (1:22:30) People Mentioned: Andy Galpin (@drandygalpin) Instagram Dr. Justin Brink (@premiere_spine_sport) Instagram Layne Norton, PhD (@biolayne) Instagram Warren Farrell, PhD (@drwarrenfarrell) Twitter Links/Products Mentioned: November Promotion: MAPS Anywhere ½ off! **Code “WHITE50” at checkout** NED **15% off first purchase** Felix Gray **FREE Shipping & FREE Returns** Flex Spending & Health Savings Accounts – Felix Gray Some of the Parts: Is Marijuana’s “Entourage Effect” Scientifically Valid? Taming THC: potential cannabis synergy and phytocannabinoid-terpenoid entourage effects CRISPR bombshell: Chinese researcher claims to have created gene-edited twins People Are Threatening to Report Sex Workers to the IRS in #ThotAudit Searching (2018) - IMDb Watch out, retailers. This is just how big Amazon is becoming The Four : The Hidden DNA of Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google – Book by Scott Galloway After General Motors layoffs, more bumps ahead for U.S. auto industry Corksoakers - SNL - YouTube MAPS Fitness Products The Politics of Plastics: The Making and Unmaking of Bisphenol A “Safety” Xenoestrogens: mechanisms of action and some detection studies. Endocrine-Disrupting Chemicals: An Endocrine Society Scientific Statement AdapNation Podcast #52: Mind Pump’s Adam Schafer - Building a Digital Fitness Business, Personal Passions, Hard Home Truths & His Deepest Aspirations Mind Pump Episode 872: Dr. Warren Farrell- The Boy Crisis Mind Pump Free Resources
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mite, ob-mite, up with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
Inside this episode of Mind Pump.
For the first 44 minutes, we do our introductory conversation.
We start out by talking about scam messengers.
Messengers, sorry. so this was a-
Sangez.
Yeah, you got it.
Just and got a couple texts and Adam got a couple texts.
Fake people trying to rip them off.
Yeah.
Don't fall for it and ladies,
if you find these messages on your boyfriend's phone,
they're fake.
Yeah, don't freak out.
Don't freak out.
We're gonna scam.
It's a thing.
Then we give a little bit of every guy's gonna use that to melt it.
How do you, how do you, I don't know what she is.
The same thing.
The same thing.
Then we did our Thanksgiving wrap up.
We all had a good time, we ate a lot of food
and had a lot of fun.
Then we talked about using Ned in place of cannabis.
And of course, Ned is hemp extract, full spank drum.
Hemp extract doesn't contain,
and it doesn't have or contain any psychoactive THC, but it is full of
cannabinoids that have health benefits.
Combined, contain, convey.
It's got all those things, yes.
If you go to helloned.com forward slash mind pump,
you'll get 15% off your first purchase.
Then we talked about purchasing Felix Gray,
blue light blocking glasses with your health savings account.
Yes, your HSA account may qualify to pay for your blue light blocking glasses.
So check this out if you want to find out if you can get your HSA to pay for this.
Go to Felix Gray that's g-r-a-y glasses.com-s-mindpump.
Check it out. Oh, by the way, you'll also get free shipping and free returns.
Oh yeah.
Then we talked about living to a hundred.
How old do we want to be?
Then we talked about the IRS wanting a piece
of the Snapchat sex industry,
or as Adam calls it, Snapchat.
You.
I'm trying to get their money.
Yeah, give me some money.
And then we talked about Amazon taking over e-commerce.
They're actually projected to take over
something like 50% of all sales online in America.
That's insane.
Then we get into the questions.
First question was,
what's the difference between mobility training and yoga?
What are the big differences between the two?
Next question, the stretchy pants.
Another difference question.
What's the difference between maps prime and maps prime pro?
A lot of confusion between these two programs
because the names are so similar,
but they are very different programs.
So we kind of break down what prime does
and what prime pro does.
And then we give you some tips on stuff
you can do at home on your own.
The next question, well, one of our good friends,
Lane Norton likes to post when he sees
pseudoscience out there and likes to rip on people that promote pseudoscience. Well, he recently did
this with a young lady that talked about how fragrance fragrances and candles can affect your hormones.
Are, is Lane Norton correct? Does she have a point? Do we think he needs to stop picking on these
people? Find out in this episode. All the above. And the last question, what are our worst habits in nutrition, exercise,
relationships, and professional, we bear all in that part of this episode. Seriously naked.
Also, it's the last day. It's the final day for 50% off. Maps anywhere. I want to remind
everybody, maps anywhere has been updated.
Brand new, new videos, new blueprints.
It looks really, really cool.
This is the program that teaches you how to work out without equipment.
It's a full workout program you can do at home.
You can actually do anywhere.
It's what it's called maps anywhere.
It's the final day for 50% off.
So if you want to take advantage of this promotion,
go to mapswhite.com and use the code
white50wit 50 no space for your 50% off discount. Make sure you act fast. This is the final day.
Two or three nights ago, I got a text message that looked just like if someone a normal person was text messaging you.
Yeah. And it was a girl, and it was like her lips down,
and it was a selfie of her squeezing her boobs together.
What?
Yeah, and it said,
Hey, honey, it's a Liana. I'm in town.
Do you want to meet up?
Fuck you.
See, it's the same.
Wait a minute. Hold on a second.
That's, and you don't. You obviously don't recognize it.
Oh, I know.
So it just comes like that.
Yeah, it was, that stupid, identical one.
Wait a minute, how are your numbers getting,
so out there like that?
Well, Facebook automatically puts your phone number up there
if you don't fucking take it down.
So if you haven't looked at all your Facebook accounts,
be careful because when you first start Facebook,
it says options for you to open up your contacts
and search your contacts to find friends.
And I don't remember which one of my Facebook accounts
I had that, but I was like going through like a year or two
later and I saw my profile that my fucking cell phone number
was on there.
I was like, oh shit, dude, this is crazy.
Like somebody could actually grab my phone.
Bro, that's straight up, that's,
you better have a strong relationship with this kind of fire.
That's dangerous, because I'm not imagine.
I told my girl right away, I was just like,
cause I showed her right away.
It's like a part of my phone and I was like,
I know, I don't know.
I don't know, the name, and it was a name,
they God that I don't know, I don't even know a girl.
No, what if it was random, Lisa and girl?
I leave it like a Lisa or some shit. And they're like 20 things, they look like it. They look really bad, you know I don't even know a girl now what if it was randomly some girl I leave so like a Lisa or some shit like 20 things look like it really bad, you know
That's terrible. Yeah, whoever's doing that's gonna get in big trouble because I guarantee you
It's gonna cause problems for people because imagine if you have a relationship and you and your girl a little bit on the rocks a little bit and
Fuck me on the rocks. You can be in a good. You could I mean even my girl was like a little bit on the rocks a little bit and fuck me on the rocks. She gets it. You could, I mean, even my girl was like a little like,
well, who, you sure it wasn't someone you know?
I mean it.
Yeah, I got like, still the 10 questions,
even after a set girl from college.
Yeah, she said, look at your outfit.
She's like, you sure this is like one of your old
girlfriends that I'm like, nah, dude, I don't know.
And it just literally says, hey, I'm not recognize
those tits at all.
Did they say your name?
Hey Adam.
No, it said it.
Okay, that's it. Because they don't know your name. They your name? Hey Adam. No, it's okay. That's it.
Because they don't know your name.
It's like, hey, Han, and it was like, hey, Han, comma.
You know, it's-
Did you respond?
Like, who the fuck is this?
No, I didn't even respond,
because I knew it wasn't for me.
Yeah, and it didn't seem like an accident.
Like, it was obviously strategically,
she took a shot to not show her eyes.
And so it was like her mouth and her tits.
So you know, it's funny.
How many guys do you think that'll actually work on?
Like I think a lot.
Like if I was single, I would respond to single.
Yeah, you're just like, I was just walking around.
I was like, hey, I haven't seen you in a while
not knowing who it is.
Hey, what's going on?
Oh, yeah.
What would you put up to?
Let's get a drink.
My, that would work on someone like my brother.
He's the kind of guy he'll get like a DM on Instagram.
Hey, I like your profile.
Looks like you've got certain amount of followers.
Do you want more followers?
I think there's a lot of my brothers like,
do people are trying to see my potential?
I'm like, dude.
You do realize that that's a fucking bullshit.
You have nobody cares.
Nobody cares like you're seven or a half.
You get to get it all over the place.
Yeah.
Yeah. You see my potential. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But I can see that piece of meat.
I can see that actually working on some dudes
where they'll get that text and then they'll be like,
oh, oh, yeah, look at this.
I mean, because we already think that, you know,
it's gonna happen.
Yeah, yeah, just some chicks in a random randomly.
Yeah, and what world?
Yeah, like I'm an order pizza and it's gonna go down.
Well, would it throw me for a loop? For sure, if it was like a name I recognize. I mean, if it was yeah like I'm a or a pizza that's gonna go down for a loop for sure if it was like a name
I recognize I mean if it was a name I recognize out of it like what how do they know you're a guy, too
You know, I mean is there a way to figure it because what if it was what if it was it was attached to my if it was attached to my
Facebook program all right, you know, so these are
These are scammers. This is not real. This is not like you know, I mean these are scammers
This is new to like I haven't had a text message for it This is not, you know what I mean? These are scammers. This is new too. Like I haven't had a text message like that.
It's a scam for.
It's a scam because you know what?
I still get a lot of, which I used to get a lot more of before.
Was that fake phone call from the IRS agent?
Yeah.
Have you guys gotten that?
Yeah, I've gotten that a couple times.
Oh dude, oh, this is the IRS.
You need to get back to us immediately.
We need to rectify whatever.
That one freaked out one of my old clients and she was having a horrible day as a result.
It was just like,
it came in with her hair just to shoveled
and her eyes were just bags and it got me one time too
because there was a time when it happened to hit me
the first time.
So I think it's so smart
because if it hits somebody at the right time,
it makes sense.
I remember I hadn't done my taxes in like two or three years.
So you're already like, ah!
Yeah, so I was like doing, I was doing,
they called me finally.
I was doing back.
It was on to me.
I had just filed like these back taxes
and I was like, oh fuck, you know,
how much am I gonna owe and I'm gonna all stressed out
about, I was already stressed about the taxes
and getting caught up.
And then I got that message and I was like, fuck, you know, you saw it.
It definitely's gotta get some people per time.
Well, that's what I'm saying.
That's what they're counting on.
They're counting on.
And here's the thing,
IRS is gonna call you on your phone.
No.
That's not protocol.
No, and they're not gonna threaten to take you to jail.
No.
They want your money.
At the end of the day, they want your money.
That's it.
So they're gonna give you opportunities,
given their money.
So I have a buddy and I'm not gonna tell too much details because if he knows that I'm
talking about him, he'll be so mad.
So I have a buddy who got a call from one of those scammers saying that they were from the
IRS.
And he, it's probably again, perfect timing.
He kind of cheats on his taxes, kind of not.
You know, it is a little bit of this like, maybe it's good, maybe it's not.
So he was already, he felt really, really insecure about it, got really
scared, and they scared the fuck out of him. So, you know what they talked him in doing?
And this is, by the way, till this day, if we ever drink together, I'll bring this up
because it's such a sore spot for him, because it's the most, I don't know how someone
could get closed so hard in such a dumb way. They got him to go buy a bunch of
Like cash cards or what? No, they didn't swear to God
They got it because they're like if you pay now, then we'll be will eliminate these fees and you don't have to listen to that
He's like, well, how am I gonna pay now? How do I do that over the phone?
So he went how do I do it?
Let's give you all my bank account
He went to different
Different like 7-Eleven or whatever and, and got those cash cards, and then read them
the numbers of the cards over the phone,
and gave them, like, 5 grand.
And I'm like, at what?
It works.
I said, I told him, I said, any point,
did you think to yourself, like, why does he RS?
Want me to get 15 cash cards,
because they go up to a back, so, like, $500.
And tell him, what was the phone?
Did you ever think that? That was it.
Right, like, there's some kind of hitman. Yeah, no, he was sweating, and he didn't do that. And I was like, back to like $500. Yeah, and tell them what the phone did you ever think that that was right?
Like there's some kind of hit man. Yeah, no, he was he was sweating and he did that.
I've had family members get nailed for the one word someone sends you an email from like overseas
And they're like, oh, I got robbed and all my this I took a sob story. Yeah, they took my phone
They took all this stuff like that. Could you send me over like $100 or what about that?
I've seen them getting nailed for shit like that.
There's a few, very, very few people.
It's so predatory.
Especially with old people, dude.
There's, I had another client who did that,
one of my elderly clients, who somebody called them,
said they were from Microsoft.
You need to update your whatever.
Please give us access to your computer.
He gave them access so that they were literally
in his computer and they stole everything.
Dude, they stole all the shit.
You noticed, too, this totally ramps up, like, leading into the holidays.
Yes.
Like, they just, like, I mean, it's everywhere.
Oh, I had my, the first time I ever had the credit card fraud.
So, I, and this was, the scary part to me was that they had it sent to my house.
So I, I just used my credit card, I was shopping online for Christmas stuff and then like three weeks later
I open my I go to my my front door on my deck right at my my old condo and
There's like a full blown like computer setup. I mean tower bad-ass kid like all of a shit and it's like it's to me
And I'm like looking at it. I'm like what this is like fucking $7,000 with the computer shit
I'm fucking looking at it. I'm like, what? This is like fucking $7,000 with a computer shit.
I'm fucking pay for this.
So I call them up and they're like, oh yeah,
sir, no, you ordered it on this day.
And I'm like, no, I fucking order any of this stuff.
So these fools got it and had it shipped to my house.
And then I'm assuming they were trying to time it
and then get it off my deck.
Oh, wow. Oh, shit.
They actually shipped it to your house. That's the balls he moved. Yeah, they shifted to my place and then was probably I mean, I can't I don't know why else you would do that like why why order with my credit card
Have it sent to my house other than there's there's very few people in the world. I want to physically beat up
The theft yes people that steal like that. I want to physically beat the chef
Partially because these aren't like poor people that really like like you know what I mean? It's like, oh my god, I'm going to starve if I don't.
No, these are fucking scammers, lazy fuckers who won't work
and they, you know, that's what they do for a living.
Yeah.
And they just want to just take.
Yeah, you just want to beam up, you know what I mean?
Like, like, school yard.
I feel like it did.
Like, school yard beam up.
Yeah, you know what I'm saying?
Just choke them out.
Anyway.
How was your guys's holiday?
Man, it was nice, dude.
It was so exciting.
I am a little glad it's over
I went through the the gauntlet of family and friends
We had like 10 things you think yeah, that was that was a lot man
It definitely definitely felt good. This just last two days where the first two days could train and I have been alone
And I was like oh man. That's what we went to the warrior game last night and
It just felt good to not have anybody
in our house because we did. First we did the friends giving. Then we followed up with the
mind pump Thanksgiving. Then my uncle John and Aunt Jules came in stayed for two days. Then my mom
and her husband Lonnie came in and stayed for two days. And then we had actual Thanksgiving
with Katrina's family. So it was just like- So you're just ready to go bang everywhere, yeah.
And we hosted, you know, we hosted most of that.
Only one day, did we go to somebody else
that we went to Katrina's family's house
for actual Thanksgiving.
But it was actually great, man.
And normally the family thing, I'm not, you know,
my M.O. is I'm not a big fan of the that much family stuff.
And I actually had a really good time.
It was nice and it was nice to have everybody come over to our place and have a place that was
comfortable for everyone to stay at.
So I really enjoyed it.
I had a really good time.
And then man, to see, I mean, the business over this week has been, has been phenomenal.
It's been really nice.
This is the first year I feel like we've been able to do, you know, Thanksgiving
or, you know, vacation and see the business operate and keep the business still driving.
Yeah. That's a really nice feeling. That was probably one of the main things that I was
really thankful for this year is just, I mean, it was pretty neat to sit around and, uh,
and to really enjoy that and then not be also working. Like it's kind of what I do is I'm typically,
even when I'm off I'm still kind of working,
but I really did take it off, man.
I took off some time and it was nice to see,
it's Taylor's out in Italy right now and we've got people.
He goes in, he just randomly goes in.
He's like, he loves some girl out there still, right?
I know, that's what's going on.
And I told him too, when he told me he's going Italy,
I'm like, are you gonna go meet up with that girl?
That's out there.
He's like, I'm there for the V news.
What if he doesn't come back?
He's like a chick when it comes to those things.
Chicks are really secretive about their personal life.
He's not the normal guy.
He don't kiss and tell.
He doesn't say anything.
He keeps everything undercover.
He don't like none of his personal business out there at all.
Yeah, he is a bit secretive isn't it?
Oh, he's big time.
He's serious.
Yeah, I'm mysterious.
Mysterio.
What if he didn't come back?
What if he's, what if he's, what if he's going to get a text from Mary?
Yeah, I just got married.
I just got married.
I just went over to the Mind Plum Palace, right?
So there's no way he didn't come back.
They just all moved in together.
We got Eli, Rachel and Taylor living together. I went over to see them after their first
day. I'm moving all in. It was it's cool to see they're getting all the sponsors are
filling the house up. So it's full of all kinds of my, I don't know if you're watching them.
My pump story. But it's starting. So check this out. So a mayor with Taylor and his
house, their place has like a underground parking garage and they
have you guys ever seen those rotating parking spots?
Yeah.
So they've got like those where you yeah you pull into like these really narrow garages and
then they're they rotate so cars are on top of each other.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I've never seen when a person I've seen them online.
Yeah.
They're pretty wild so that he's so you go and you enter your code like a
Like a yeah, yeah, you put a Vinnie machine. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, it's super super wild. So I'm there and he's telling me that
The the day before they were they had the moving truck down there and their unloading stuff and and the moving truck was kind of like
Almost blocking one of these guys this this guy's got to pull up
in a new Tesla.
And Taylor was like, oh man, I'm sorry,
we're almost done.
He's like, you know, let me move the trucks
and get in, he's like, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
I got it, I got it, I can get in and Taylor's like,
no, it's, I can get in, he's like,
do the guy was taking forever to like pull in.
It was such a tight squeeze.
He goes, and then he almost gets in
and then drags his whole fucking side.
And just destroys the side of his Tesla.
And I tell it to the other, I'm like, oh man, what a shitty way to start off your
relations.
You're like, you hurt your balls.
Oh, dude, and you know that you know the neighbor inside is just like fucking mad,
even though it's his, even though we said, I'll do that.
Yeah, even though it's his fault, you know inside you're like, fuck this guy.
Damn.
That sucks.
Yeah, we did ours.
We did ours at my aunt's house.
And it's always a lot of people.
We always have a ton of people at our get together.
It's just like 30 or 40 people.
And my cousins were all there.
By the way, we had a great post Thanksgiving workout.
I'll tell you guys about that afterwards.
Oh yeah, no, I smelled you guys when I came in.
No, it was really good.
What do you mean you smell to us?
I came into workout. I forgot. I came in the air. Yeah, I came in that day.
Katrina, me, I think every Taylor, I had a group that came in with me that I told
everybody that we were going to meet there. And we just didn't get up that early.
I think we didn't get there till like 11 or noon. You must have been there earlier.
But I forgot that you, you were going to go because I didn't see that just didn't get up that early. I think we didn't get there till like 11 or noon. You must have been there earlier. But I forgot that you were gonna go because I didn't see that you didn't post anything yet.
And we get in the studio and it was really clean. It was all clean and nice.
But there was this smell in the air and I'm like looking at Katrina, I'm like,
who was smoking weed in our studio?
And then it dawned on me. I was like, oh, this is fucking sound.
This family girl coming in here.
That's what we do.
That's a part of the workout.
But no, I got to my aunt's house
and my cousin had one of his friends come hang out with us
because his friends family was at a town.
So he came and had things to do with us.
And just met this dude and he's a fucking mind-pump listener.
So we're sitting down having great conversation
and we started talking about, you just met him?
Yeah, just met the dude, you know,
and I think I might have met him once before.
Great guy, he's a Brazilian Jiu Jitsu,
I think he's a brown belt, a purple belt,
high level competitor, real smart kid.
And so we sat down and talked all about stuff
that he's listened to on the show,
and then the topic of cannabis came up. And we started talking about cannabis, and he had listened to on the show, and then the topic of cannabis came up.
And we started talking about cannabis, and he had listened to the episode where I had
reduced my cannabis consumption, and my testosterone had gone up.
So he's like, do you think my testosterone is being affected by my cannabis use in my
home?
As you guys are smoking weed.
Yeah, I'm like, no, this is on my aunt's house.
No, no, no, my aunt's house.
And so I'm like, well, how much do you use?
And he's like, I use it every day my aunt's house. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. And so I'm like, well, how much do you use?
And he's like, I use it every day.
And so we're going back and forth.
And then we start talking about the science.
And he's pretty privy up on the pharmaceutical companies
who are starting to use cannabinoids to treat things.
But here's what the pharmaceutical companies are running into.
And this is something I was aware of as well,
but it's cool to hear from someone else.
The problem with the pharma companies is medicine likes to take one compound, concentrate
it, and then use that compound to treat illness.
What they're finding in a lot of these studies is what they're calling the entourage effect
when it comes to cannabinoids where when you have multiple cannabinoids combined, they
seem to have a countering effect.
Well, no, an effect that multiplies.
So it's not like one plus hands is it.
Not just enhances it, enhances it more than the components
add up to.
So it's not like one plus one equals two.
It's like one plus one equals three.
And so I was talking to him and then the topic
of our sponsors came up and I was talking to him about NED and how NED is the full spectrum hemp extract, which I appreciate because it
has all the beneficial cannabinoids that you'll find in the different types of cannabinoids.
Everything.
So we all know about CBD, we all know about TTC, but a lot of people don't know that
other cannabinoids and terpenes, which are what give hemp or cannabis its smell, also has an effect on the body.
And this may be why some people, for example, just talking about weed, if they smoke a
strain that has, let's say a strain that's 10% CBD and 10% THC, or they'll smoke another string that has the exact 10% CBD, 10% THC.
One makes them anxious and the other one relaxes them.
And I'm like, that doesn't make any sense.
It's because we're not at the point yet where we're really starting to calculate and figure
out all the other stuff that's in the plant.
And so we were having this great conversation.
He's, like I said, he's pretty privy to it. And he thinks that the pharma companies can have a tough time. Because as this
stuff starts to come out more and more, people are going to start treating themselves with
either cannabis, or if they want something that isn't, isn't psychoactive, hemp, like
Ned, or they'll just use hemp oil extract. It's got all the cannabinoids, and it's more
beneficial than getting pharmaceutical
just CBD or whatever.
So I thought that was, I thought that was,
that's really interesting.
Yeah, I thought that was pretty fascinating.
It makes me feel,
because you can't just concentrate,
it doesn't have that same sort of quality.
That's the thing about nature that makes things
that are natural, in some cases, better than things
that are not natural.
It's that it has all these other things in it
that comes with the package.
And many times, things in nature,
we co-evolved with nature.
It's already balanced.
Right, and so we basically utilize
all these things in the way that they come together,
rather than, for example, it's like saying,
it's like taking calcium for your bones.
Well, now we know that without vitamin D, calcium alone,
isn't nearly as effective.
And in nature, you find some of these things in combination.
And so it was a really, really good,
interesting conversation.
So we had a lot of fun with that.
That makes me feel good about our sponsor, then.
Yeah.
Well, totally.
So I told them all about Ned.
And what he's going to do is he's going to start using,
and this is his experiment.
So I'm not necessarily recommending this.
But he's going to start using, and this is his experiment, so I'm not necessarily recommending this, but he's going to start using Ned Hempoil Extract to reduce his intake of marijuana
because the constituent in cannabis that probably affects your endocrine system the most
is the high amounts of THC, the psychoactive amount.
So I said, you know, it might be better to just switch over to this for a little bit,
so you can reduce your intake of cannabis,
but still not get the crazy withdrawal.
Speaking of our sponsors, Doug,
would you look at, what's the name of the insurance
that covers our Felix Grace?
I've been wearing like all, all, you know,
during this time with those around family,
everyone's like, when did you need glasses?
And I was like having to explain, right?
I'm wearing it.
How are they talking to me?
I'm just looking cool now.
When did you start eating glasses?
First of all, don't talk like that.
Because I've been wearing the few sprays more and more.
I've just gotten their comfortable.
I wonder if you,
because I think everybody's sensitive to blue light,
they're finding out everybody has negative effects
from blue light.
But some people are more sensitive than others.
I wonder if you're just hypersensitive.
Yeah, it's not like me to take something like this
and to wear it as much as I'm wearing it.
Because they're not prescription, it's just...
No, no, and they're super comfortable, man.
They really, they don't feel like they're on my face at all.
I don't feel like they change my vision at all.
It's not like the old school amber color
looking blue blockers, and I do feel better.
And my sleep, I've noticed noticed now that, I mean,
cause here's the thing, who doesn't look at their phone
up until eight, nine, 10 o'clock at night?
It's so hard not to.
So before it was kinda like, oh, only if I was doing
like computer work and I was like really working on it,
but now I'm just like, fuck it.
I look at my phone and Instagram all fucking day
and night all the time, so I'm just gonna keep wearing them.
Yeah, the phone's worse.
And we're on our phone way more often.
Yes.
So yeah, it only makes sense.
And I've seen you wear them like pretty much
like all the time now.
Yeah, it's been, they look good on you.
So, I mean, it sounds like it all look good.
So I found out the other day,
one of my buddies who bought him after he seen me wearing them
and he loves him.
And he says, hey, you should tell your audience that,
and I forgot the acronym that he said.
Oh, HSA.
Is that what it, HSA, that's what it is.
Health savings accounts.
Okay, so they, yeah, it's, it's,
it's collecting.
And it's like spending accounts.
So they'll let you use that to buy these.
Yes.
Oh, wow.
Wow, that's awesome.
Oh, that's pretty freaking rad.
Yeah, I felt like such an asshole for not knowing that
and not telling the audience.
Yeah, because they also have the prescription
for the reading glasses,
like, you know, with the blue blocking effect,
which is what I need,
because I have the,
I kind of have been switching them out
because I have the blue blocking ones,
but then I also have my reading glasses,
but like, I keep forgetting they have the combined one on the website.
So, what does it say?
They're pre-called.
So, if the prescription glasses they're covered, if they're not prescription, if you're
just getting them for the blue light blocking, then you have to check with your, you have
to check to see if they're covered for just the blue light blocking computer glasses.
But if they're prescription, then they will be.
That's right.
Yeah, so that's pretty cool.
Cool, right?
Dude, so yeah, I mean, my Thanksgiving, we had celebrated my grandma's birthday, like,
at the same time, it was pretty cool.
She turned 96.
Wow.
Dude, I was like, how does she look for 96?
That's like 69, but back then.
She looks 96.
I mean, but yeah.
I mean, like, she just, you move around.
Yeah, no, she's still moving around and she's, it's interesting. Like usually when somebody
old like breaks their hip, like this happened a few years ago, like it's, that's like,
you know, that's like a sentence right there. But like she totally fully recover. She's
a very strong woman, like very strong willed and strong mind. I mean, it has dementia. So there's that, but at the same time,
when we get her, like, focused on games, and so we played a ton of games, like throughout,
you know, my Thanksgiving with cards, and we played like rook, and we played like Domino's,
and all these different types, like Mexican train, and sounds like an oscillation.
It's the name of the game, it's a domino game,
but it also sounds like it could be a porn title.
Don't Google that.
Yeah, don't Google that.
Don't Google Mexican train.
Yeah, I didn't want to bring that up in front of the family,
but yeah, no, we had a lot of fun.
It was great to see like my mom's side,
there's like the women on my mom's side
just have this ability to live just like to like 100, man.
And it's like crazy.
It's just, it's crazy to me, but it's great.
It was great to see all the generations all in one place.
And she recognized it and was like, you know,
seeing like my kids, my brothers' kids
and all interacting and everything.
So yeah, we had a great time.
How long do you guys wanna live for?
I don't know.
You know, I have this, I would like to live a long fucking,
but I would like to live a long time,
but be held to.
110, I would like to hit the hundred mark.
I was thinking about that.
You know what percentage?
I wanna go.
You know how small of a percentage the population
makes it very, very small.
It's extremely small, right?
It's super, super, super rare.
Yeah, that's why they study places.
They're little world men, right?
Especially for men.
But that's why if you want to live to 100,
your highest chance of doing that
or if you move to Sardinia and just start living like that,
that's the highest concentration of men
over the age of 100.
I also hear that's like one of the most beautiful places
in the world.
Supposed to be gorgeous.
I've never been there, but it's an island off the coast of Italy,
and it's supposed to be absolutely phenomenal.
But it's one of the, I think it has the highest concentration
of men over the age of 100 than anywhere else in the world.
That's crazy.
I would love to live a long time,
so long as I'm sharp, and I can function.
You know what I'm saying?
I don't think this whole like extending your life,
but then you being totally sick, that kind of shitty. That sounds like torture.
No, I want to mean to, I mean, if that's why it's so important to keep working out and
keep up everything and keep your mind sharp. I feel like it's going to be our generation
that has some sort of a crazy breakthrough that's going to allow a lot of us to live beyond
a hundred. We'll see, dude, you know what would be weird? Because here's something we need
to consider. I mean, look what we've seen happen in just in the last like 15 20 years
You're right. You're right
But consider this like because now we're starting to have to reevaluate
Retirement age and when people get benefits and all that stuff because people are just living a long fucking time
So it's bankrupting the system
But also, you know the human psyche. I mean we evolved to not live that long
So imagine if all of a sudden the lifespan let's say doubled But also, the human psyche, I mean, we evolved to not live that long.
So imagine if all of a sudden the lifespan, let's say doubled, let's say the average human instead of living to, what's the average now, 75 or something like that?
I'd say 160.
Yeah, say it was 160.
That was the average, which means that some people probably make it close to 200.
I mean, what does that mean?
Does that mean you have to work rather than retiring your 60s, you're gonna retire when you're a hundred,
because how you're gonna support yourself after that,
or you're gonna see more people
go through different careers,
because think about that.
If you live till you're 160,
you theoretically could have two, three successful
long-term careers, you know?
And you can watch your grandchildren have the-
I think we're already seeing that now,
where people are working working longer and longer
and I actually think that that actually contributes to the longevity. I think that you know part of
what you see when a lot of people retire they begin dying because you lose kind of purpose.
That's actually true. I think yeah retirement. I don't ever want to like fully retire. I don't
ever. It doesn't matter what money amount I have. I feel like I always will want to have something
that I'm working at or working towards.
So I do.
I do.
I have repurposing your efforts in a different direction.
Yeah.
Bro, it's like realizing your skills.
It's like, you know, my uncle, he retired early.
And then after that, he completely renovated his backyard,
his front yard.
He was like, you didn't know what to do, you know what I mean?
He's like remodeling everything and he's like,
he told me he's like, he's like a sucks
because every morning I would wake up and go to work
and now I don't have that.
And I don't know what to do with myself.
He's not driving force, dude.
I was getting, did you see what Andy Galpin,
Dr. Andy Galpin posted, just recently?
No, no, no, no, oh, dude.
He was talking about CRISPR, you know, the CRISPR program? Andy Galpin, Dr. Andy Galpin posted just recently. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no They're saying they did it for. So apparently the father was HIV positive.
That's what it is.
The mother was HIV negative and they wanted the baby
to not have HIV.
So he edited the genes of the fetus.
To not have it.
So that it would not get the HIV,
which I think is bullshit because there's lots
of very basic treatments now that will do that.
I think with a country like China
that's so centralized and controlled by the government
that they're just doing what other fuck they can.
They're just looking for the next advantage
to see what they can do.
So it's a matter of time before we start seeing some.
Yeah, I don't think there's any barriers.
I feel like it, break this study down,
I just now pulled up Andy's thing.
What all went down here?
I didn't even know.
They edited the genes of...
So CRISPR is the...
Well, they claim he claims it wasn't proven
that this actually happened, but...
But it's possible.
But it's possible.
Because we've done this with animals.
Yeah.
So this technology lets you literally edit genes.
They did this with sheep, right?
Yeah, I think that was in England.
So this is the first human that was edited
from using this technology, if it's true.
But I think that's the future.
I really do, I think selectively,
a parents will go through this process
of selecting the types of genes they want their kids
to already have.
Here's what it'll happen is you'll take the two people
who you're mixing to make this child, right?
So you're taking the father and the mother and within those genes and
combinations, you have an upper limit of intelligence.
You have a lower limit of intelligence.
You have an upper limit of health, a lower limit of health, an upper limit of
physical performance, whatever.
So they'll just edit the best possible outcome for their combination.
Combine that theory with what Elon Musk believes as far as like how we're going to be able
to process and download information like, oh wait, we're not going to create AI robots.
We're going to turn ourselves into it.
Totally.
Yeah.
That's my belief.
I do not think I don't think they'll take over.
I think we're just going to meld.
No, it's this is another jump in evolution of the race of humans.
Yeah.
It's just going gonna happen like crazy.
We're gonna be so obsolete.
I know.
We're gonna be the old like, Fogies.
You know, just watching it all happen.
Everybody's gonna be all smart and jumping over our head.
And grandkids will be like,
my grandfather's such a name.
Yeah, you're so slow and dumb.
Yeah, you know, he doesn't know anything.
You're like, hey, hey, let me tell you what happened.
I'm more angry.
I know what happened, grandfather.
I just looked it up in my brain. Yeah, I'm connected to the internet. Yeah, anything. You're like, hey, hey, let me tell you what happened. I'm more angry. I know what happened, grandfather. I just looked it up in my brain.
Yeah.
I'm connected to the internet.
Yeah.
Right.
Our brain won't be able to process at their speed, you know,
so we're just gonna be left in the dust.
Actually knew what you were gonna say in fact.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, they all like tell a connector or whatever.
So check this out, you're gonna love this.
So there's this thing going on right now where,
so you know how there's a lot of like these snapchat,
they call them Snapchat sex workers,
where they'll charge like money.
I call that Snapchat.
Yeah, that's right, exactly.
And maybe that's what we got our text message.
That's true.
So these are people that use Snapchat
and will sell them doing stuff over Snapchat.
And it's become a big business.
Like a lot of people are paying for this
and there's a lot of people you want.
They'll tell you pictures or Snapchat with you.
I've talked about this a lot.
That's the new thing with the girls on Instagram.
Yes, it's like peep-shuts back in the day, right?
Like these creepy dudes going off,
this is in New York where they'd paid
for the door to open and then they'd watch them do stuff.
Well, they're trying to, oh tell me.
Yes, what?
Wow, wow, wow.
So what do you think, what do you,
okay, let me ask you guys a question.
What happens when something starts to make a lot of money?
Who starts to perk up their ears and say,
hold on a second, we need a cut of that.
Go for me dude.
The IRS.
No, the IRS.
The IRS is now going after these snapchat,
you know, sex workers.
Okay.
And they're telling people to report them
and they're trying to get on them
about reporting how much income they've made.
I heard a rumor.
I heard a rumor, it's really hard for the IRS to track.
And what I mean by hard is I mean,
like if they actually made the effort to it,
I think it's just because there's so many people doing it
to track like income on Venmo and PayPal
and the transactions like that.
Do you know anything about that?
I don't, I don't know, but the last people
I would ever mess with are the IRS.
Oh no, I agree.
I'm just saying like that,
because how many of these girls are really paying
their taxes on this, right?
Well, I mean,
if let's say the IRS is looking at potential money
and they're calculating,
well, we could be collecting all this revenue.
Trust me, they'll find ways of doing it.
Yeah, it's traceable if it's electronic, you know?
Exactly, it's not cash.
Yeah, and they're doing this in person.
So that's, yeah, it's gonna sneak up and bite them.
Yeah, and I wanna interview a girl
that's like making really good money doing this.
Can we look, can we find one of these?
Can we? We'll, we'll, we'll, we'll we? Yeah, I post it. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
I'm a tech tech girl back. Yeah. You wouldn't have a
new guy trying to get your hair. I am in your air research. Actually, you want to come on the show?
No, I'm just, I would be really interested to hear somebody who's got a legitimate following.
And because I've, you know, there's quite a few of these girls that have come across that have
a good size following hundreds of thousands, maybe some of's quite a few of these girls that I've come across that have a
Good size following hundreds of thousands maybe some of them in a million and they all do these
You know paid monthly
Things where they you get access to just photos for 1999 you get access to
Photos and you get to communicate with them via snapchat for this much then you get full on like video conversations, with IE, sex talk, right?
For X amount of, and they're all monthly subscriptions,
and I'm thinking, man, if these girls got a few hundred
thousand followers, and if you just got half of a percent
of those people.
You're making good money.
Yeah, you're making probably really good money.
It's funny because a lot of these girls
or people, I should say,
because I'm sure there's some guys doing it too,
but just the market for guys is not good.
I'm not sure how I feel about it.
It's almost like, I don't know,
if you ever thought about doing prostitution,
I would go this route first.
Way safer.
But you have to be kind of,
I think you have to be better looking though
to do it this way.
You know what I'm saying?
Like you can make more money.
Like if you're not attractive,
you're not gonna sell your photos or videos to someone,
but they may pay you to give them a hand job
or something like that.
You know what I'm saying?
So I feel like, I feel like,
I mean it's true.
Look at it like any other business, you know what I'm saying?
Lots of liars.
Yes.
$100 for a hand job.
Or my buddy Steve could do it for 25.
I mean, a quarter of the price.
He'll do it, you just look at his clothes,
my eyes, okay.
You can think of me while you do it.
I'll look at you.
You got soft hands.
He'll do it.
No, it's funny because some of these people using Snapchat
to make money wanted it to be a legitimate business.
And we're like, this needs to be legal,
this needs to be legitimate.
Now they're all, fuck, we have to pay taxes.
What's going on?
I'm waiting for the next big thing to pop up.
Oh, that reminds me, talking about all this social media stuff.
Have you guys watched the movie searching yet?
Did you watch it?
No, I haven't watched it.
Damn you, watch it.
Damn you, I want to talk to you about it.
I think it's really fast.
I thought you guys were going to watch it that night. No, I was going to watch it. Would you bail watch something else?
Yeah, I don't remember what we watched. We watched something else, but I'll watch it.
Aren't all the good movies supposed to be coming out right now, isn't it?
I just watched Record Ralph last night. I thought, what a smart movie. It was great.
It actually did a very, very good time. It was smart. Yeah. It's really, really smart. The way they tackled the internet and the way they tackled using the internet and all that stuff
Yeah, it's a funny wit and air, you know with the princesses and all that
Oh, yeah, yeah, they make fun of the different princesses. It's pretty good
It's pretty fine. I feel like we should have some really get somebody told me to watch the
Our forum someone posted the the documentary follow me. It was a guy who was going around talking about
You know building a social media business
and it's not, it wasn't that good,
so I'm not recommending to anybody else
to go watch it, it lost me after about 30 minutes.
But you know what I think is so funny?
Is there's just a plethora of these social media people
that are trying to get you to pay them
to help you build a following?
And I just think it's so funny because every one of them,
oh yes, let's talk about this.
They have like a thousand followers or less.
I'm like, why would I ever pay somebody to build them?
Even like 20,000.
Yeah, dude, go away.
Right, you're not killing it.
No, why would I pay someone to teach me to do something
that they couldn't even do for themselves?
It's so funny because-
It's like hiring a fat trainer.
Yeah, it is.
It's a very sense like any baker. I don't care how is. It is very sense any bacon. I don't care how smart
Yeah
Carehouse smart you are man. You can't apply some of that shit towards it
It's funny if you think about it if you have like three million legitimate followers on Instagram
You could easily make help people build their Instagram following pay me and I'll just share your post on my right
It doesn't make any sense to me. No, it's all scamming
It's a hustle.
So did you guys speaking of the forum?
I love it.
Oh God, I love the forum so much for this one thing, right?
First of all, the discussions on the forum get so good.
We have so many smart people on there.
We were having this debate about whether or not science
needs religion,
art, ferro,
or morality.
Post that, right? Yeah, and we were going back and forth,
and I apologize if I don't remember your name,
but one of our forum members actually researches this,
actually researches.
Oh, really?
Yeah, the psychology behind morality.
And he said the people who act in his research so far
from what they've seen, the people who act the most moral are the ones
who have morality or a type of morality
as their central way of living.
And that's the argument for religion
because it becomes the top thing that you follow, type of you.
So we had this great discussion,
but anyway, the other thing I love about the forum
is that I don't have to look for articles
or studies anymore.
People just post them on there, left them right and tagged me,
and I get to read this all some stuff
This is a business post. It's not a science one
But you guys will fucking love this one. In fact, I tagged you guys. I don't know if you looked at it
So trip off this is Amazon one. Do you know big fucking Amazon is getting?
Yeah, I read all about bro. Amazon is expected ready for this to take almost 50%
Yeah of the US e-commerce market by the end of the year.
Crazy.
And Walmart isn't number two.
Walmart gets like six percent.
Bro, 50 half, half of everything that's bought or sold
on the internet in America is Amazon.
Apple was like 12 or something.
It's like a huge discrepancy between you know.
For sure, one of the best books,
and I got asked this on my Insta Story yesterday. So herecy between for sure one of the best books and I got asked to some of my
Insta story yesterday, so here you go like one of the best books I've written a read in the last
Five years has been the four that book is so fucking good
You guys if you if you like this stuff if you're listening that book is a must
Well, bro check this out. Okay second place. So you're like oh shit 50% what second place getting second place is you in percent 6.6%
Yeah, that's second place. Yeah first place is it's they're getting all the way down to six
Yes, now here's the thing because a lot of people might have an issue with this
Be like oh, they're getting too big or whatever. No the reason why they're that big is they're good
Yeah, they're kicking every because there's no there's no laws in place to protect Amazon from competition
So it's not a monopoly because of laws or whatever.
They're literally doing this
because they're murdering everyone because they're so good.
They are, they're expected to reach $258 billion this year,
which is 30% higher from a year ago.
That's how much they've grown.
Yeah, that's insane.
I have a prediction, by the way.
I think that this last, this Black Friday,
or this holiday season, I predict
there's gonna be one of the biggest spent seasons
that we've seen in a long time,
because the way the economy has gone up
and the perception of the economy's gone up.
Oh, plus, they created their own day,
like a Black Friday day, they call it Prime Day, right?
That's just another addition to this whole mega juggernaut.
Well Amazon is a beautiful thing because they allow
all these small businesses and stuff
to be able to sell their stuff online.
It really lowered the barrier to enter that market,
which is why they're so fucking successful.
And then Prime, if you really think about it,
what a gamble that was when they first came out with Prime.
We're gonna give you free shipping on everything
for this one flat rate,
but they knew that they would just gobble up.
And the first with the one click,
yeah, I mean, they just went right to it.
You know, like, let's do this.
Everybody wanted it.
I mean, I don't, it still blows my mind
that people go out and actually shop right now.
I mean, I was, I thought I was late to the party.
I'm not forget about it.
By getting on board about two years ago,
but now it's like, it's so rad.
Like Katrina and I, we went to her fan,
like Thanksgiving, that's also when we do all the
exchanging the names and who,
because that's what we do with her family,
right, you pick one person you buy for
and then we buy for any of the kids, right?
Yeah, that's what we do too.
And then, you know, right afterwards
that we were in all in a group thread,
everybody sends their Christmas list.
And it's like, we sat down, you know,
in front of a fire,
having a glass of wine and did all of our shopping.
He was like, and then the best part is it comes in a box.
You know what I'm saying?
So then you just gotta wrap it.
I mean, it's like, this was way too easy.
Yeah, and I actually enjoy it.
I really like, because I hate going to the mall,
going to the store around this time.
It's like, I get so mad at myself
if I go there and I forget that it's holiday season.
Like how many times have you done that?
Sometime between?
Why is there no parking?
Yeah, oh, I forgot.
It's that time of year.
Was there any riots or craziness?
Cause I know, I would drove by Best Buy
and I was going to go to Home Depot to get some stuff
and there was still going to go to Home Depot to get some stuff and there was still like those railings
in between the, like they had like huge lines there
the day before for Black Friday, so I'm wondering
if there was still like hysteria physically.
Dude, I don't know, but I'll tell you what,
what we're seeing right now,
because here's some other news and believe me,
it's all connected.
GM and Ford are laying off shit tons of people.
14,000. Did you guys see this? Ford are laying off. Shit tons of people.
14,000.
Did you guys see this?
Shit tons of people.
14,000.
Yeah, just tons.
And what's happening right now is you are seeing,
and I know why, it's because a lot of money
is going into automated cars or self-driving cars.
And what you're seeing, what you're going to see
in the next 10 years is so much disruption in the market.
Like the old dogs of the auto industry,
that's gonna be shook up like crazy.
And then retail, retail brick and mortar businesses
are gonna be shook up like crazy.
And we're just starting to see,
if Amazon sales increased 30,
we're already massive last year,
30% from last year.
What are you think is gonna happen in 10 years?
That means everybody's going,
you know, into the like,, on the internet to buy everything.
That's just where it's going.
It's going to be crazy.
It's so disrupting.
I can't even imagine.
It's one of those moments in history
where it's hard to imagine what it's going to look like.
Like, we can guess, but I don't think anybody really knows
what it's going to look like.
And it's, for me, it's exciting,
because there's so much wealth being created right now
and so many opportunities, I think it's pretty fucking rad.
But I'm like, you add, I hate going to the store.
Jessica loves it.
Oh, really?
Yeah, she likes the whole Christmas music.
Decorated, not.
Yeah, she likes the Christmas music.
She likes the Coca-Cola.
She likes the Christmas music.
She likes the Christmas music.
She likes the Coca-Cola.
She likes the Christmas music.
She likes the Christmas music.
She likes the Coca-Cola.
She likes the Christmas music. She likes the Coca-Cola. She likes the Christmas music. She likes the Coca- refuse to go anywhere there right now. No, the way to do it is go to a Christmas tree ranch and go cut your tree, have all that
hot cocoa, all that kind of stuff, and then you don't have to get all the consumers in your
way. Did you just, you just bought yours or whatever?
Just cut your tree. What kind of a tree was it?
Douglass for it. It is a Douglas for it. Okay, that's a good one I heard. Yeah, I don't know
what, I don't know any other options. You know, there's a good one I heard. Yeah, I don't know what. I don't know any other options.
You know, there's a silver noble.
There's a...
Well, I think the Douglas fir isn't that the one that's supposed to last a while?
Like the best, the hardest or whatever.
Yeah, you know why I'm asking?
Because I...
It smells good.
We didn't cut down a tree.
We went to a lot in Los Gatos of all places and I bought myself a Douglas fir, a Cosmog
hundred bucks.
I'm like, why is this tree so expensive?
Like, is it because it's this...
So how much did you pay for your tree? Six, five. Yeah, cost me 100 bucks. I'm like, why is this tree so expensive? Like, is it because it's this, so how much did you pay for your tree?
65.
Yeah, I see.
Wow.
That's for an already cut.
Yeah, that's robbery.
Yeah, I feel like.
That's about right, dude.
Is it really?
Oh, yeah, Christmas trees are typically,
every the last, I don't know, five years
are trees anywhere between 100 and 150, for sure.
Really?
Yeah, but aren't there cheaper ones?
Yeah, of course.
You could spend 40 bucks on a tree
and get a Charlie Brown tree
My kids wanted the the white the ones that were sprayed with white
So we do cancer all over it. I love it. I said no
Who knows what that is? I do like my justice. It's called what's it called?
It's called um fuck. What's the name of the white stuff that they spray on it? It's I can't remember it was a snow bro
No, it's not snow. It's not real It's it't remember. It's snow, bro. No, it's not. It's not real.
It's it's something.
It's a funny name.
Make sure you're gonna say Giz.
No, no, no, I did it.
No, I'm glad you held out.
Oh, my God.
The Giz tree.
Yeah.
Mary Christmas.
No, but my daughter wanted one so bad.
And I'm like, no, I'm like, who knows what the fuck is in this white stuff that they spray
all over it?
What do you mean you who would take your breath?
This shit, keep it all the chemicals out, man.
What's it called?
It's like, there right there.
Yeah, I don't know, there's a name for it.
I don't remember.
Flock.
Yeah, I knew it was a funny name.
Flock?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, cause I was, I was,
cause I was, cause I was messing with my kids all the time.
Yeah, what are you doing?
So you get fluck in my dreams.
You know what's funny, you're new.
The fact that you, I bet you, I bet you, I bet you there flak in my dreams. You know what's funny? You're new. The fact that you at Bet you. Shut the flock.
I bet you.
I bet you there is a ton of guys that are paranoid just like you.
And I bet you somebody has made like an organ.
Natural flock?
Yes.
Organic line or something.
Organic flock.
Look it up. Look it up. I bet you there is something.
You should have been spoken.
Why were we sponsored by that?
That would have been a great sponsor for it.
Hey, damn it.
For all you tree flockers out there.
Stop flakining the fake stuff.
Yeah, that's a flock out here.
Yeah, so that's that's why I knew there was a funny name
because my daughter kept saying it and I was cracking up.
And then we started making jokes about it.
Yeah, anyway, that reminds me of this one skit.
It was a cork soakers.
What?
Yeah.
What's that?
It's a, so like these Italian, it was on SNL.
Was that why you were looking at me?
Yeah, they were at, they were at like, it's winery
and they were like, hey, what are you doing?
Hey, we're sucking the corks, huh?
I'm such a good cork, a sucker.
Oh, anyways.
Now.
Shhh.
Shhh.
Quick call.
I'm going with my everything.
Max.
Quiles.
To these calls, brought to you by Max and Obolic!
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Max and Obolic is the perfect place to start!
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It's the motherfucking Claw!
Eagerness Landish! Quee-claw! I'm gonna get started today. It's the motherfucking world. The eagle has landed.
Quee-qua.
First question is from Shawnee Step.
What's the difference between mobility training and yoga?
I get this a lot.
I've picked a big difference.
I picked this question because I do get this a lot.
A lot of people assume a lot.
They do and they assume that if they're doing like static stretching or yoga,
that they're doing the same things
that you would be doing in mobility,
and it's not true at all.
No, yoga is a structured methodology of exercise
or whatever you wanna call it,
but it's a modality.
Yeah, it's a modality, it's a structured class.
Now, traditional yoga, when you do it properly, or you're maintaining tension in the movements
and you're doing the poses and you're flowing through them, does improve mobility quite
well, but it is not mobility training.
It's yoga.
Mobility training is very specific to the individual specific.
Yeah, like if I, it'd be like saying, I don't know, it'd be like saying another sport that's
good for building strength in comparison to strength training.
Strength training is individualized, so is mobility training.
I could take an individual and I could look at the areas that they need to focus on and
I could design a mobility type of workout for them to benefit them specifically.
Yoga is just a structured type of class.
Not only that, but most yoga poses
are stationary static stretching.
You always talk about this like flowing it out,
but most yoga, if you're taking a yoga class,
you get into a pose and you hold a pose for a long time.
Some of them, there's the Yin yoga,
like Yin yoga where you get into a pose
and then you hold it and then you just sit there and relax.
Right.
But like the Vinyasa type classes and the Vinyasa flows, you're in these positions and what you're supposed to do is you're not supposed to sit in them and let your joints support, you're supposed to maintain tension.
I think Yen Yoga is the most popular one.
I think when you think like every class that I ever saw at 24-hour fitness, which is probably a big majority
of some of these people taking these free classes,
they're, they're staticals.
Yeah, no, I don't know if it's the most popular,
but you're right, there's different versions
because yoga now is this American, you know,
it's become this American phenomenon
where they'll call it yoga,
any stretching is gonna be associated with yoga
at this point.
There's the same thing with CrossFit, any kind of functional exercises associated with CrossFit.
Yeah, like I saw once class, it was a strength yoga, and I'm like strength yoga,
and I watched the class, and they were doing yoga holding dumbbells.
So it's like, well, just because you're holding dumbbells doesn't make it straight ahead.
And it also doesn't make it yoga.
But again, yoga is a structured class.
Mobility and training is totally different.
Look, what I would do for my body for mobility is going to be very different than what Justin
may do for his body for mobility, which may be different than what Doug will do for his
body for mobility.
This is why we created maps prime and maps prime pro within those programs or tests that you take yourself and you identify
areas of your body that you lack good mobility.
But, you know, I think we need to define mobility another time.
I know we've done it before on the show, but I think people confuse it with flex like range
of motion or motion.
No, yeah.
So it's actually the ability to have strength in all of the incremental angles of that range of motion.
So basically, I'm flexible and I have the capacity to achieve greater range of motion, but I
am actively intrinsically able to produce force from each one of those angles.
Yeah, so like babies, babies are really flexible, but they don't have good mobility.
Like a baby, you could stretch their legs out in arms, but they don't have any control over that range of
motions. That's just painting a picture. So you see a lot of people who have this crazy flexibility,
but they don't have strength within that rate, that flexibility. So they have poor mobility.
And so that's what we're referring to mobility.
That's what we're talking about.
A mobility training aims to give you the ability
to own all of your ranges of motion.
Because where injuries tend to happen
is in ranges of motion that you just don't own.
You'll move in a particular way
and you don't necessarily have control or stability
in that way that you're moving.
You got there through momentum or you got there through some other
Means to where like your body is now in this position. It's it doesn't really recognize or have an ability to get out of.
Yeah, I would say that yoga is if somebody is looking to improve their mobility and they don't have a lot of time or access to training or
information and they just want to go do something structured that they could show
too. It's not bad. If you do the right yoga class, it's not bad. It'll probably help you.
Especially if it's complemented with some good traditional strength training.
Yeah. You know, especially if you're training weight training two to three times a
week and then you're on opposite days,
you're going and doing yoga.
I think there's nothing wrong with that,
and I think there's a lot of benefit to that.
And I think too, like, is it the Yin yoga
that's more of the parasympathetic
or what we're trying to really kind of bring the heart rate down?
And so like, I see value in that
in terms of like recovery, active recovery days,
and not like, but then again, you see these other yoga classes
that are like extreme and it's like heat yoga
and you know, you're holding these poses
for like an insane amount of time.
And so it becomes something totally different.
Hot yoga is really cool.
I enjoy it.
It's, you get the benefits of the heat.
So which is all good.
We know about temperature contrast.
Right.
And then heat depresses the central nervous system and increases range of motion and flexibility.
If you're super flexible, you don't want to do hot yoga because that's where you can
actually hurt yourself.
If you're super flexible, even yoga is not ideal.
Yeah.
Well, for guys like me, who's tight, who's fuck, hot yoga or yoga.
And yoga is into the position.
Yeah, like yin yoga was great for me
because what I would do is I go take a yin yoga class
and it's sitting these poses on the floor for three minutes
and it's crazy when you do this
because you'll stretch and it'll hurt
and then like 30 seconds or a minute into it,
you get a little deeper
and then you'll try to relax and then you get a little deeper.
And like by the end of it, you're like,
okay, I need someone to pull me out now.
Yeah.
Because I'm in a range of motion, I have no control over.
But then what I would do is I would take that
and then I'd go and I'd work out with weights,
really light, and I'd play in those ranges of motion
to try and connect to them,
which is I think what's really important.
Now, I have nothing bad to say about you.
I think yoga's incredible.
And like if we could complement it with strength training,
it's ideal, right?
If we're doing two to three times a day of weight lifting
and then yoga once or twice, I think is great.
The problem that I have is that,
most yoga classes are an hour long,
and I just don't have that much time to dedicate
to doing a lot of these stretches
in conjunction with my strength training.
So when I do mobility drills,
I'm doing typically two to five, depending on my time,
or what exercises I'm doing that day,
that are very specific to what's making the most improvements
on my body.
So, an example is like a lizard with rotation,
a 90, 90, combat,
and like a zone one test that we have in prime
for my upper body.
So those are like staple mobility drills
that I try and do as much as I possibly can.
Now, where I see the major benefit
of mobility training versus yoga is,
I know that those those five exercises
are so are the most beneficial to what I've got going along with my body and I don't need
a whole hour of structure to do that. I can do that. I can do one of those exercises
right now. I can in between us talking right now, I could drop down and do some combat stretch
for two minutes and get some really good benefit from it.
And that, to me, is far more beneficial
than taking a kind of generic class that is.
They do a broad stroke of all these different
movement abilities.
And so it's good for a practice if you do have the time
to kind of hit up all those areas.
But yeah, to be more specific and be efficient
with your training,
I definitely recommend specific mobility type movements that you practice and you ritualize
before, after or throughout the day to address very specific issues that you have.
Well, something else needs to be... Two things. One. One yoga is also a class. So classes are never going to be as good for you as things that are individualized. What?
I'm not going to start going there.
We're hammering this again. Here we go.
But I got a lot of people. Did you get more? I did.
Oh yeah, good times. But I also got just as many people that I think that it helped
have them look at it in a different, in a different light, you know, and I don't think it's a,
I don't think it's much as a negative't think it's as much as a negative thing
as much as it is me saying or us saying that.
We're just shining a little light on it.
Well, there's something more ideal.
Of course, of course.
So here's the other thing too,
that needs to be stated more often.
Okay.
Proper resistance training.
Okay, emphasis on the word proper.
Is a fantastic way to improve
your flexibility and mobility.
It's fantastic.
If you do it right, if you go to the gym,
and you're perfecting your squat,
and you're practicing your squat,
the way that we talk about,
where you're not in there to hammer yourself,
but you're in there to practice
and perfect the form of a squat.
You're constantly challenging your ranges of motion
with a little bit of load,
and you're moving deeper and deeper deeper and you're improving your mobility.
If you're properly doing a chest press with dumbbells especially or a fly or you're properly
doing a dumbbell pullover or a pullup or you're properly doing a stiff leg of deadlift
or any exercise, there is a stretch component to the many of these exercises and if you do
them right, you'll improve your flexibility
and mobility.
And that's not set enough.
And it needs to be said more.
That resistance training is a fantastic way.
Even basic resistance training.
If you do it the right way and you're doing it properly,
you're not in there trying to beat yourself up
and you're not focusing on your form,
you'll get probably all the mobility improvements that you need
for the average person would need, I should say, because most people don't need insane levels
of mobility and flexibility.
They need the type of mobility and flexibility that allows them to do their day-to-day tasks,
drive a car and not hurt.
Yeah.
You know, pick something up off the ground without hurting themselves, play with their kids,
throw it for his B, throw a baseball, reach up above their head and
grab something out of the cupboard, twist in the car to grab something behind them.
That's the kind of everyday mobility people need.
In traditional resistance training done properly, it gives you more than that.
It gives you enough, you know, what you're probably going to need.
Now, of course, people like to train themselves harder and like to achieve greater levels of
performance, just like, you know, I'm stronger than I'll ever need to be.
And that's totally fine.
In which case, structured individualized mobility training before your workouts is probably
your best bet.
Again, I mean, like Adam said, I don't have any issues with yoga.
I took yoga for a little while.
But it is a structured class.
If you like that, that's great.
But if you're just looking to improve mobility,
mobility training is gonna be a little bit more superior.
The other thing about yoga, that's interesting.
If you guys take in a lot of yoga,
I know you at one point we're gonna do.
We're gonna do it.
Not a lot, but I've taken a few.
It's yoga, it's funny because,
and this is the thing I hate about fitness is so tribal.
So you walk into a, you know, you walk into a CrossFit box or a Bodybuilder gym or a Power
Lifter gym, you know, you kind of get that sense of it, right?
Man, yoga is fucking tribal, especially when you're a dude that goes in there, it looks
like you lift weights.
Like I took some classes and the looks I got
and the way that the instructors talked to me in the class,
I was like wow, you really don't want me to come back,
it feels like, like everybody's kind of looking at me,
like look at the big tight guy over there,
the muscle head or whatever,
and I got that impression quite a bit,
and it made me give me a little bit of empathy
for people who go into gyms first time,
who may feel that,
you know, that kind of a vibe.
So that's the one thing about yoga,
I'll knock is that I've been to quite a few classes
where you a little bit of that tribal.
I feel like it's a little bit of every,
I think it's like that with almost every, every modality
and the refelt it before it.
Because I think a lot of people that are hardcore yoga people,
trying to change their mind that it hasn't been like
the one of the most impactful things for them is almost
impossible because if you are somebody who is super tight
and have a ton of overactive muscles,
they don't exercise.
And that are causing chronic pain in your body.
And then you start taking yoga and you start to eliminate
a lot of this chronic pain.
That's like a life thing.
Everybody else is stupid.
Right, it's a life changer.
It reminds me of like the like some of the vegan community
when they all of a sudden go from not eating vegetables,
whatsoever, to going to vegan.
And then all of a sudden they just feel amazing.
You know, their body fat drops, their energy levels,
their mental clarity.
And then all of a sudden it becomes about veganism
more than it becomes.
Well, maybe it's just because you needed
some more of those greens in your life.
I feel yoga is the same way. You somebody with chronic pain. That's not very flexible
They start taking yoga and it's like oh my god yoga has changed my life
It's well, no, maybe you needed some more flexibility drills or mobility work in your life to address some of these issues that we're causing chronic pain
It's the same thing. Yeah, you know what's interesting too about yoga, is they have a spiritual component.
So you take a class and it's like meditate and think
and intention and the intention of this class
and then at the end of a class,
I'll read a quote or something and you lay there and you think,
and you know what, there's some real benefit to that.
Of course.
Of course.
I have clients that, you know, we're going through
very difficult times in their lives
and they're saying that yoga was such an integral part of them healing
because they went to this quiet class,
they didn't have their cell phones, they weren't working,
and they were just quiet and had to be there
with the thoughts while they're holding
these structures and doing stuff.
Honestly, they were onto something with that.
I think that it's interesting that you don't see that
in a lot of church structures throughout,
whatever denomination or whatever, like practice.
I've always thought that, Justin.
I'm like, why aren't you providing a physical component
to this, to have a holistic understanding of,
you know, your relation between you and God
and what that all, you know, entails.
It's just baffling to me.
Next question is from Alec Gladwell.
What exactly is the difference between Maps Prime and
Prime Pro? Yeah, we get this question all the time. Yeah, there's a nice transition from that last
one. Yeah. So, well, it's pro. We. Let's move on. Maps Prime, easily, I could say pretty confidently,
was the program that required the most, I guess, creativity, brain power between the three of us.
When we went to write and create Maps Prime, our goal was to create a program
where people could assess their own body and then based on that assessment,
design what they do before their workouts to prime their body.
Now, before I get into that, why is that important?
Well,
priming your body actually will significantly impact how you feel during your exercises,
the type of results you get from your workout, how quickly you can get into proper movement
that the way you activate your muscles, it basically sets you up for a very effective
workout for yourself. So how you prime is very important,
but also priming is very individual.
And this is why it was so difficult for us to write primes.
It's like, okay, I know how to assess an individual
being a trainer for a long time,
but gosh, that's so different from person to person.
How the fuck are we gonna write this in a program?
And then, how are we gonna tell people what to look for?
Like I know all the different parts to look for
when someone's doing an overhead squat assessment
or whatever, or posture, how are we gonna teach people,
the average person to do that in a program?
So it's a very difficult thing for us to create,
but we came up with a way of doing that,
which I think works really well.
Probably one of the programs we're most proud of.
Definitely, definitely.
And you do three tests, and those three tests cover the general basic movements of the body, all of
them. And based on those tests, whether you pass or fail and we teach you very explicitly
how to read them, then you pick what you do for your priming because what Adam may do
to prime before his workouts, he'll be different than what I do to prime for my workout. It's the most distilled, comprehensive thought out to like assessment process we could have
possibly put together.
I mean, it was like, but simplified.
That's what I mean.
It was like the most simplified presentation for the consumer that you could go through
Prime Pro, we're kind of taking that and we're diving deeper
and we're going more comprehensive
or addressing more joints.
So it's less broad strokes and it's more like,
okay, well, my body really doesn't function
the way it should hear my ankles
and my toes aren't really like doing what I need them to do.
And this is where we had, you know, Dr. Brink and his extensive practice come in and really
like identify all the little minutia involved with, you know, all the different joints in
the neck and everything else.
Well, we talked about this being one of the possible mistakes, and we're not even, for sure, it's
a mistake, yeah, but we go back and forth on this of how we named it because of this exact
reason, because it creates this kind of like confusion of like, well, if I have prime,
why do I need prime pro? If I have prime pro, why do I need prime? And they are different.
I think the idea that we had when we named the Prime Pro,
Prime Pro was, I think we really thought it was going to be
a more geared towards the professional.
Somebody who is a trainer who's looking at a client
and their client goes, hey, I've got knee pain
or oh, my back or my shoulder hurts
or our idea was to go through the entire
body and address all the major joints and then teach them how to do these mobility drills around
them to help alleviate chronic pain which is extremely common with clients when I think about
that's the most value you'll bring the average client. Right when I think about 80% of my clientele
this this program probably applies to them.
I think of prime, I think everybody should own prime.
Prime to me is everybody should own prime.
I think it's necessary to go through an assessment
like that to find out where most of your dysfunction lies,
what types of priming movements you should do specifically
for yourself before you go into lifts.
And then I think of prime pro, and I'm like,
anybody who has either,
if you're listening and you battle any sort of chronic pain
or have battle chronic pain, it's for you.
And most certainly, if you're a professional in the field,
this is probably one of the most beneficial programs
that you could have in your library
is this Prime Pro because I know for sure,
80 plus percent of everybody I train I would
have used this tool.
Totally.
I mean, to put it simply, Maps Prime teaches you how to set up your priming sessions before
your workouts and what you do at the end of your workouts just to amplify the effectiveness
of your workout.
Prime Pro is much more correctional and much more dare I say rehab based. So Prime Pro is
much more specific. It's not teaching you necessarily what to do to prime your workouts. It's teaching
you how to correct your individual dysfunction. So you're going to go in there and you're going to
take some of the tests in Prime Pro and figure out why your hip bothers you or why your back bothers
you. And then you're going to have a good, and then you'll be able to do exercises to alleviate that.
You could totally approach that program with a preventative mindset, too.
It's not like after the fact, when you have to rehab or you have chronic pain all the
time, it's just for two, for people that really want a deep understanding of their body and what, you know, how everything should effectively function, what your alignment should feel like.
That's a program that, you know, if you really did the due diligence, you could learn
so much about your body and then carry that forward, you know, forever for you.
If you're a trainer, if you're a personal trainer, you wanna become a trainer
and you wanna be successful in this market,
hands down 100%, I can say this with full confidence,
learning how to correct people's muscle imbalances,
alleviate pain and get people to move better
is by far your biggest value, 100%.
I've had people lose weight and build muscle
and get strong and do all that stuff,
but the value you provide someone,
when you can get someone who's had back pain
for five, 10 years, or shoulder pain,
or, oh, I've got this knee that always bothers me,
no big deal.
And then I fix it for them with correctional exercise.
They're with me forever.
It's tremendous amount of time.
Not to mention one of the coolest things ever
to, you know, wow, a client, the first time
that you have met them, is to take them through something like this.
I mean, you have a client who's got knee or hip or something going on with them, and, you
know, they haven't didn't do an injury or something.
They just have chronic pain.
And you assess it, you get to the bottom of it.
You do a couple of these prime probe movements around that major joint.
Become an instant wizard.
Yeah, instantly they will feel a difference.
This is not like one of those things like,
hey, you didn't take weeks or months.
You don't need to train with me for the next six weeks
to see fat loss or muscle gain.
Or that's a, that's more challenging.
So when it comes to you and says,
I wanna lose a bunch of weight or gain a bunch of weight
or build muscle, that can take a while
and a lot of convincing that,
hey, I promise you, we're heading down the right track where someone comes in and they battle with this chronic pain
and you show them some of these moves instantly.
It'll alleviate some of them.
I'm going to be honest, the two most lucrative markets you could ever pursue in our industry
are alleviating pain and also the advanced age, you know, group.
And so this fits great to address, like all those, you know, very specific issues.
Oh, 100%.
And look at your, look at the market right now.
What do people do all day long now?
Yeah.
They sit down.
It's gonna be even more, yeah, in front of a computer.
What do kids do all the time now?
Yeah.
They sit down in front of TV,
your front of computer,
or on some kind of a device.
If you're a trainer,
learn correctional exercise,
it will make you fucking valuable.
Not only that,
but somebody comes to you and wants to lose weight,
which is the most common goal.
You gotta have to correct the imbalances anyway.
That's where you gotta go.
That's where you start.
It doesn't even matter.
That's where you start,
regardless,
but the value you'll provide your clients will go through the roof.
This is how I would separate myself from other trainers.
Is I would get good at this and believe me,
I got no shortage of clients because of the skill.
So, I know there's other small markets in our field,
like high level athletics and that kind of stuff.
But the big market is this kind of stuff right here.
This is the most the people that are gonna come higher you.
This is where you're gonna provide the most-
The longest clients you'll get.
For sure.
Next question is from Madness Fit.
In light of Lane Norton's recent post,
shitting on a girl that went public
about fragrances and candles affecting hormones.
That sounded bad for a sudden.
Right.
You're like,alled right there.
What is your take?
Should we be concerned about perfumes
and other scented things?
All right, so we gotta give the audience a little backstory.
So we're gonna defend a cross-fitter here, yeah?
Is that where she is?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, we're not talking about cross-fitter.
She, so Lane does this thing where he'll take a post from someone and something that he really disagrees with.
And many times, you know, the post is like promoting pseudo science and bullshit.
And then he will...
And this is to Lane will hear this because of course he'll listen at one point.
Somebody will show this to him.
So Lane, stop picking on people fucking smaller than you. That's not what I mean.
This is something that I know that we,
mine pump was known at the beginning to kind of do similar shit,
but that was when we fucking had no social power at that time.
So we weren't afraid of picking.
Well, he rips people and then they,
he rips like small pages.
This girl's only got 25,000 followers
and you're pumping the shit out of her.
And then his, and then his, but to his, you know,
what he says, the reason why he says he does it
is because he says that stuff needs to be called out.
He's educating at the same time.
So I respect that.
Yeah, but there's different ways to do it.
Like you could, you know, post about that type of subject,
which is what I used to do, which is what I still do.
So if I see another page posting some bullshit,
rather than calling the person out,
I'll just make a post about why people who say this thing is bullshit.
We used to do this to Joe D for a while there.
I was a good time.
We used to do something very similar.
Joe's for post.
It's right.
Joe D would put something out and then Sal would follow up, but he didn't tag him.
He didn't call him out, but he would just, you know, refute the science intelligently
and educate the followers that were probably following both they but yeah
So this post was talking about the the dangers of fragrance fragrances and how they can affect your hormones and of course
Lane saying this is complete
pseudoscience bullshit. I'm going to have to
Disagree with that statement. It's not 100% pseudo-science bullshit. There are
chemicals that are in the environment, many of them synthetic, that are known as
Xenoestrogens. And I think Xenoestrogens, in fact, are all synthetic. There's other types of
estrogens that can be found in nature. But Xenoestrogens are called Xenoestrogens because these are chemicals that seem to interact
with the estrogen receptors in the body.
So they'll either have like a really weak affinity
for the estrogen receptor
or they'll somehow interact with it.
And what happens is if I activate your estrogen receptors,
then you're gonna have these estrogenic things
start to happen in your body.
Like if I activate all your estrogen receptors, I can either block them so that, let's say
something activating them is blocking them, so now your estrogen can't do what it's supposed
to or it may exert estrogenic type properties and qualities.
And this is not really pseudoscience.
Look, there's plastics that have been banned
that are Xenosestrogens, you know, BPA and PCBs,
those are synthetic Xenosestrogens that affect the body.
They've been now studied for a long time
and scientists are now figuring out that
some of these things are endocrine disruptors.
They tend to disrupt hormones or act on the body.
Could these potentially contribute to cancers?
Maybe.
Let's say you already have a cancer that's estrogen sensitive.
Let's say you have breast cancer.
Many times what you'll do, what doctors will do if you have breast cancer or pre-cancer, is they'll give you something called Novodex, which is a selective estrogen
receptor modulator.
It sits on the estrogen receptor and it blocks it.
So essentially, it's like you don't have any estrogen in your body and this prevents the
cancer from growing.
So what if you are exposed to Xenestrogens that activate the estrogen receptor and you have
this potential for this estrogen-sensitive cancer?
Now, do we have-
Could it make it worse?
Do we have any idea the amount that it would take in order for this to affect, like
that, for example, like, you know, or to- I think she's talking about perfumes and stuff?
Like how much of those xenoestrogens are you actually picking up when you spray the perfume on you or the air fresheners that are in your house?
Like, how much of that is your body intaking and how much of that is potentially changing the chemistry in your body?
See, this is the thing we ever measured that or do we, like, here's the thing.
You know, they ever try to test that in like a rap by like injecting the rap with these perfumes.
They do, they do, but here's the problem with that is that what they'll do is they'll
identify, they'll, they'll test a chemical in isolation at a particular dose.
And they'll say, okay, expose that the doses that you'll be exposed to, it's probably safe.
Again, remember, studies are short.
Like, these aren't, they're
not controlled, 10-year studies. That's too expensive and impossible. So they'll study
it and they'll deduce and say, okay, it seems like it's safe at this, at this amount
or whatever. But the problem is you're not exposed to one chemical in isolation. You're
exposed to shit tons of chemicals. And so the problem becomes the cumulative effect
of all of these things.
So, okay, fine, you get some Xenos from your perfume
and you get some from your hairspray
and you get some from your cosmetics
and you get some from, you know,
the plastic tupperware that you wore and your food up in.
And then you get some from, you know,
process.
Air, air fresheners, process.
Air fresheners, process foods, whatever.
So it's that cumulative effect that people
You know say to watch out about now
In defense of of Lane You know should the everyday person who probably eats terribly and doesn't exercise and doesn't get good sleep
Right in the great about the free in the grand scheme of things right are you should you be worried about your air freshener perfume when you're
Eating like shit. You're not exercising and you're making a bunch of other choices in your day
Is that really making that big of a difference? Yeah, I mean attention the big rocks, right? Yeah
But that being said are is there some potential validity to what she's saying? There is it's it's actually quite
It's been studied
You know quite a bit and it's not it's not pseudo science
Is it pseudo science to say that doing that's gonna
give you cancer and do kinds of crazy things?
You probably, I don't think there's any evidence
to show that.
She didn't say that though, did she?
No, I mean, it's a little alarmist.
She concluded that, yeah.
A little fear mongling a little bit.
Yeah, it's a little bit alarming.
Yeah, it's a little bit like that,
but you know, it's funny, they do studies on wildlife
on the stuff all the time,
and I'm looking up one right now where they showed
that discharge from human settlements,
including runoff and water flowing out of wastewater,
treatment plants, releases all these Xenoestrogens
into streams, and then they find like huge alterations
in aquatic life, you know, from that.
Now that's high exposure to things,
but a lot of the science around Xenoestrogens
is around the environment in wildlife, because of the science around Zenoestrogens is around the environment and wildlife
because of the shit that we dump into,
you know, streams and oceans and bury and that kind of stuff.
Yeah, how much of that shit do we already breathing
and in taking anyways?
Dude, I don't, I mean, here's the thing,
like I'll give you, let's use another example,
like antibiotics.
You know, antibiotics for a long time,
when we were kids, you went to the doctor
and you had a sore throat,
they threw an antibiotic at it, no problem, no question,
no questions asked.
Now we're seeing that all this antibiotic use is contributing to these antibiotic-resistant bacteria
that some scientists say potentially in 20 or 30 years could be-
They'd kill us all.
Yeah, it could be like the biggest, like one of the biggest problems that we encounter.
But we just didn't see it at the time.
we encounter, but we just didn't see it at the time. You know, exposure to all of these potential
and doctrine disruptors, incommunation,
incumulation, you know, all over the place
in the environment on us, could that have
a cumulative effect?
Probably, it probably does, we'll see what happens,
you know.
So I mean, I think saying that is okay.
And limiting exposure, I mean, just,
it just sounds like that's something
that you want to consider, but at the same time,
yeah, to conclude that it's producing this,
you know, that's, you can't really say that.
Here's something interesting.
Have you ever, sorry, I don't know.
Have you ever seen this?
Have you ever seen like a chart of like,
you know, order of operation on the things
that are probably the most damaging,
some of the microwaving plastic and then like,
or drinking, you know, like,
EMF and you can just add all these things.
Like, what, and what, and what,
like, where does perfume and fucking air fragrance
fall in the order of?
That's a good question.
I don't know.
I know cosmetics is a big one
because you're rubbing that on your skin
and they're not regulated the same way
as like food or whatever.
So that's a big one and women wear makeup every single day.
I know deodorants that have aluminum in them
that's been implicated in a few different things.
And I think again, it's just you've been using them for a year.
So it's not like you use them here in this chronic exposure.
Yeah, for 15 years I've been putting makeup on my face
and I've been using aluminum type deodorants.
You know, back to the whole antibiotic resistant bacteria. Do you know
that they are identifying a pharmaceutical drug that they think has a major impact on that?
That has that is not an antibiotic. I forgot the chemical name of prozac, but the antidepressant,
the chemical name of the antidepressant that's in Prozac.
Their finding is causing bacteria to mutate in a way that makes them resistant to antibiotics.
When you take Prozac, at least 10% of it comes out in your waste.
When you poop or pee or whatever, some of that's in there and then it gets in the sewer
system and then it gets in the environment.
Now they're finding that that's probably having an impact.
So it's all this kind of stuff that we really don't know now.
We just talk people from shitting.
Yeah, be careful who's poop you eat.
Yeah, next up is Christian Rilo.
What are your worst habits?
Oh, nutrition, exercise, relationship, and professional.
What you got here, let's get one for each one.
Wow, wow.
Can you give me one for each one?
Well, everybody knows my cheese obsession,
but that's it.
Well, you start off, Justin,
then you got to use the cheese in later.
Yeah, the cheese in later, I love things,
and so that's where I get drawn into trouble, right,
with pizza and like, that was just something,
I always just, oh god, I love cheese on everything.
And so I have to control myself with that.
But yeah, so exercise wise,
let's see what my worst habits exercise was.
I think it's just like,
maybe just a consistency in terms of,
you know, like sticking to a plan
for a longer period of time versus like always changing it up.
I just get bored and I get a little too creative sometimes.
So for me, I tend to probably jump out of phases a bit early
and hop on to something else that interests me at the time.
So.
Yeah, I've worked out ADD.
I do.
I have worked out ADD.
And I think it's just because I don't know.
I might see something like a video that inspires me to go learn like a new
skill or like do something else that's like different.
But yeah, I tend to jump around quite a bit.
Which I don't necessarily think that's such a bad habit, you know, that there's some
positive sides to that also, you know.
What about relationship wise?
Relationship wise.
Well, my wife would probably say listening. What about relationship wise? Relationship wise?
Well, my wife would probably say listening. But, I don't know what she says though.
I don't know what she said.
She said something. I don't know.
I wasn't really listening.
I've worked on that quite a bit.
So, I'm curious to see if she'd sort of retract that.
Because I know ahead of time,
like my focus can be elsewhere
as she's talking or whoever's talking
and you know if I'm thinking
in terms of business work, whatever it is.
So I've tried to really address that problem of mine
and be present more.
And then also just being more considerate in terms of like, like her day
and like what sort of things I could do to contribute more to alleviate some of the stress
instead of just worrying about all my own stress and like bringing that in the mix. So yeah.
And then what about professional?
Worst habits professionally. I mean, you're not really professional, but if you've never been professional ever
Yeah, actually I used to be really professional and now I'm you know the opposite totally yeah, regressed
It's all the butt taps you give Doug all the time. I think that's probably when you're like you want to acknowledge
You know when somebody had a good game
Little baby. Yeah, little baby.
Yeah, little tap tap.
It's a little low into the center though, do you know?
Yeah, that's what, that's the wrong way to do it.
Lingerie too.
Gooch tap.
Professionally, I think, I used to be a lot more organized.
I think I need to work on definitely getting that back.
Because of our business, our business is so different than anything I've ever done
before, to where there's just so many different legs, so many different moving parts, so
many different cogs that I'm always trying to find my place in all of it and be focused
in a direction. So I think that my weakness is not always knowing where that is and where I can most benefit
the team or find my navigate my way through and be like, okay, I'm focused completely on
this and this is going to translate into dollars or this is going to contribute to the
overall place that we need to be. So I think it's just for me in terms of defining
what I can contribute in my role
a little bit more specifically would help.
You remember when you would interview people
who would come work for you at the gym
and then you would ask them questions like this
and they'd give you some bullshit answer.
Like, you know, tell me what your weaknesses they'd be like,
well, you know, my weakness, I worked too hard
to get the role positives.
Yeah, and I, you know, I tried to do a good job
all the time and that's kind of,
that's bullshit.
That's a way to get this.
Oh, my answer like that.
Yeah, I knew it.
I knew it.
I just knew it.
It's just too perfect.
I should go off every once in a while.
I'm so happy.
No, I mean, let's see here.
Nutrition for me, God, what would be a bad?
I'm pretty good with nutrition,
but one of my bad habits is I can get stuck in a cycle
of eating the same thing.
So like every morning, right now I'm into this,
you know, six to eight egg yolks scrambled with, you know, ground,
lamb, a ground beef cycle.
So I literally have that every single day, every single morning.
And so I have this tendency to do that where I like something.
And then I'll eat the fuck out of it until I develop.
You're in simplicity in the way you dress too.
Oh, thank you.
Thank you, Justin.
Yeah.
No problem.
I appreciate that.
Was that a compliment?
Yeah.
I don't know.
We'll see in your defense. Also, I don't know, we'll see.
In your defense also, I don't know how much of that's too negative either, because I think
there's also some nice positives to consistently doing that, because then it gives somebody,
it's hard to, if you're rotating your food, which I know we promote, and I think is ideal,
food rotation is important.
But there's also something to be said about doing something consistently for a while, so
you can really tease out how things are affecting like oh man
Yeah, man when I'm eating those egg yolks every single morning
It's definitely impacting my strength right gives you that ability to do
Yeah, but you know, I guess the bad side of it is you can develop a food intolerance for me to do the same thing or because I like something
And I can get away with eating it now. I think I can eat it all the time and get away with it
So I think that's probably
one of my worst habits. For exercise, that's an easy one for me. I'm extremely consistent. I almost never miss a workout, but I will definitely almost always veer towards heavy strength training.
Like that's just my favorite thing to do. So I'll move away from that and then I'll notice some
benefits and then be like, I wonder how much I can lift now.
And then I'll go back to, to have these strengths
training.
And so I get stuck in that, I can get stuck in that phase one
type of training.
And I know when I'm there, because I start to slowly
lose mobility.
Or get certain aches.
And I start to get like these aches and pains.
Yeah, it's my joints, and it's like the insertions of muscles.
So it's not like muscle-building soreness.
It's like my SI joint or like where my bicep inserts at my forearm or something like that.
I can tell my connective tissue starts to pay the price.
And it's just because I love it.
I love doing it.
It's my favorite thing to do when I lift.
And so I can neglect other aspects of training in favor of doing that.
It's probably the worst with lower body training.
Part of it is because I like to deadlift in squat heavy and the other part of it is I hate.
15 reps of squats is cardio.
It just ruins my day.
Yeah, like after doing three sets of 12 reps in the squat, I'm pretty much
toasted.
That almost rather get on the stairmaster.
Totally.
It's just a fucking retard.
I can't stand it.
Anyway, so there's that relationships.
Well, you know, I had a lot of bad habits when I was married and I hope to I hope I
learned from my divorce, but I would have to say with my current relationship, the bad habit I have is trying to,
I have to be careful to not have Jessica pay the
price for what may have happened in my previous
relationship. So I have such a low tolerance for certain
things. I don't want to get any details because it's like,
it would be too personal, but if there's something that
happens, normal tolerance would be like, oh, that's okay.
Let's talk about it.
But because sometimes it gets slapped on to the end of,
you know, my last 10 years of marriage.
So it's just cumulative.
I have no tolerance for it now.
You know what I'm saying?
And that she can pay for that sometimes.
And I'm trying to become more aware of that
because she's not, you know, she wasn't my,
yeah, that's very hurt.
No, not fair at all.
But I can identify.
I know how low my tolerance is for certain things
and sometimes afterwards I'm like,
I might overreact a little bit.
Yeah, you're pretty aware of that.
You can express that before.
I'm aware of it after sometimes.
Sometimes when you're in the middle of something,
it's hard to be aware because you're in it,
especially when you get pushback.
You know what I'm saying?
Like if you're arguing with someone
and they're just pushing back at you,
then what you focus on is that.
Versus something that's real effective
that I found is, you know, if you're arguing with someone
is to not react and allow them to recollect into themselves.
Like, oh, wait a minute, what am I doing?
I'm type of deal.
Professional, you know, this is something
I'm really trying to work on and
it's trying to write and create content on a schedule versus when I feel inspired to. That
was a difficult one for me because, you know, I like to write content. I like to express
myself a lot, but a lot of it comes from the impetus of, you know, like, I'm inspired.
Yeah, what interests you? Yeah.
So like I read something that, oh my God, I want to tell you, and I write about it.
Or I'm in the mood, you know, type of deal and I can just go off.
And what was very hard for me in the past was, okay, Sal, we, you know, I need to create
an article or a blog or a guide on this particular thing and feeling like I have to do it.
All of a sudden, makes me not want to do it.
And so what I've started to do now
is I've started to schedule it and I sit down
and whatever happens happens.
I know I'm supposed to sit here though, so I'm not gonna leave.
And so far what's happened is I've done it.
I've been able to do it, but it's a hard cycle
to kind of break out of, but I'm starting to learn it.
I mean, I did it yesterday, I sat down
and we didn't come learn it. I mean, I did it yesterday. I sat down and, you know, we weren't,
we didn't come into work and I said,
well, I'm gonna write a big guide.
So I wrote a guide, a 3500 board guide,
and I just sat there and made it happen.
And that's opposite of how I used to do these things.
Which is how we have a business.
That's like, you got to do it that way.
Extremely critical for us,
and it's been huge for the evolution of that for you for us as a team
because those that are listening maybe want to know why, why don't you just write what you want.
But you know, when we have a marketing team on the back end that has an editorial calendar and
you know, they're having to, I mean, everything they're doing on their end takes, you know,
weeks to build up and so they're relying on you to be able to deliver a specific topic so they can plan ahead
of time.
Plus, it just makes you more productive.
I mean, when you, I've been doing a lot of studying authors lately in the process of writing,
and that's what they say to do.
They say, schedule it, sit down.
Sometimes you get out of sentence.
Sometimes you get out, you know, a few pages, but you have to structure it that way because if you wait for the inspiration, then your
productivity goes way down. So that was a tough, that's a tough one to tackle, but it's
simple. It's not a complicated one. Like, I know what I need to do. I just got to sit
down. This is the time I'm going to do this and then just sit there and make it happen.
You know, and I would say for nutrition, for for sure my diet coax, I think that...
You're still having those, huh?
I'm off and on, but I'm more on than I am off.
I'm always aware of it.
I'm always paying attention to how much I allow it into my diet.
When I find myself allowing it more on than off I would consider that a
bad habit right if it was if it was really sporadic that I that I had it here and there I
don't think I would consider it a bad habit I think I would call that normal living and
balance but because I more consistently have it than I don't I would consider that my
worst habit so that's my worst habit. Other than that like you, I would consider that my worst habit. So that's my worst habit nutrition.
Other than that, like you, Sal, I feel like I got a pretty good grasp of my nutrition.
I never allow myself to waver too far body fat percentage.
I, even like right now, I've decreased my volume of training significantly.
I'm not getting nowhere near the steps, but then I automatically adjust my food.
I don't continue eating the same way I was eating three months ago when I'm training
five, six, seven days a week and a lot more intense.
So nutrition, I have pretty dialed aside from that.
I would like to see less of the diet coke is probably in my nutrition.
Exercise-wise, pretty fucking solid in this.
I have this ability to be able to weave in
and out of modalities, to do like just
in where I will all practice a skill
and get into unconventional training for a while.
I have the ability to discipline myself
to follow a program for beginning to end.
Obviously, I'm in a competed right.
So the thing that I would probably knock myself on is I know right now I should address
more of our zone one in prime for me.
So my upper cross syndrome, I know I should be doing some real tedious type movements that are boring
and seem simplistic, but I think beneficial to my overall posture. And so even as good
as I think I am at priming and doing mobility work, I could do more of it. So if I were to
critique that or say a bad habit for me is not putting the due diligence in addressing these imbalances
that I have on a more regular basis because if my goal is long-term health and overall
good posture and eliminating chronic pain, I know that I should be doing more of that
so I would say that would be my worst habit.
And then professionally, without a doubt, time management. I've never been good
at time management. I live by the philosophy of who gives a fuck at what you're not good at,
focus on what you're good at, and be great, which serves me most of the time. But I'm also
always skipped over relationships, then. Yeah, you did. It's all right. I wasn't going to bring it back.
See if I get skirted by that. Yeah, I'll do it.
He's turning ghost.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You're doing it.
You're kind of a bitch.
I'll finish the professional.
So time management, I would say, for the professional,
although I will say that it has significantly improved.
Like Sal was kind of talking about the things
that you've improved on professionally.
I think I have to, I had an interview just recently
that was really good.
I think I posted on my Instagram
and I think actually the comment that I was talking about
is in relation to this statement
about time management and getting better at that
and one of the things that forced me in that,
I don't know if you guys even listened to that episode or not, but I talked about the struggle that I had when
this business first started with the three of you all being fathers. And you know, you
guys were at a place in your life that as important as building this business was maintaining
a good relationship with your children and your wives
was far more important than the success or dollar amount that my pump produced and
It really drove me crazy at the beginning and I had a I struggle with that
But I have so much respect for you guys that it was an area that I had to really reflect on myself and saying like well
You know why can't we figure this out between this nine to two range, the things that we need to get done together. And, you know,
over the course of the last two years, I feel like we wouldn't say we mastered it yet, but I think
we've gotten really good at it. I mean, I remember when we first started, I would come home really
frustrated and I would express to Katrina, I'm like, fuck, I just, I feel like we just do the bare
minimum every day. We do what we just need to, you know, basically get done, which is the podcast
stuff. And there's so much more work to be done. And, and, you know, I think that was a lot of
myself projecting out what, how I felt when it really had nothing to do with you guys and being
great fathers. It had to do with me and my time management and how could I get better at organizing our
day.
I think that we've arrived there and I've had a lot of growth in the time management
and the appreciation of that decision that you guys made of listening.
I'm not going to waver on what's important to me and my kids and family.
I respect that so much.
It's forced me to elevate my game there.
But I still have room to get better. I still think that when I see people like Doug and Katrina,
who I think of like our integrators within the business, I think that they are extremely talented
or disciplined in that department and I can get better. And it's something that I'm always trying
to improve on. Relationship wise, my bad habits, that's easy for me.
I don't tell Katrina, I love her enough.
I don't tell her that she's beautiful enough.
I don't compliment how amazing she is and her strengths are.
I do it way more on the show and she gives me shit all the time about that.
Because I feel, I think in my head because I'm saying it, I know she listens to the show.
Is it easier for you to say good things about her
to other people than it has to say it to her?
And I wouldn't say that it's hard for me
to say those things to her.
I definitely naturally do that.
Like anybody who's ever met me
and heard me talk about Katrina knows that.
I speak extremely highly of her and just
love her so much and think she's just an amazing human being and partner.
And I do express that a lot to others.
And so because I think I am talking about it all the time, I think in my head, I just
assume that she receives it all the time.
And I don't tell her to her face enough.
So I think that's an area that I can always improve upon is,
and I try and remember, I think I shared too on another interview,
something I think this was a sex with Emily interview,
something that I put into practice in the early years
when we first started getting together as, I'd never say I love you.
I mean, it should, it was over a year before'd never say I love you. I mean, it's shit.
It was over a year before she even heard I love you out of my mouth.
And a lot of that is just because of my childhood bullshit.
And I really value that word.
I just don't throw it around to anybody.
So if I say it, there's something that sparked it and I mean it.
And so I've always challenged her to challenge me.
If I say I love you, you know, because what I mean by that is
I mean how many times have you caught yourself or you just it's part of the routine you hang up the
phone with your girl. I love you. You know, I'll see you later. I love you because I love you.
And it's like what does it really mean to you when you when you say it like that?
Or me if I say I love you, it's because I've had to take the time to express what just went through my head.
She did something that made me feel that love,
and I thought it, it's taken me a long time
to practice verbalizing it, and now that I do a good job
of that, and one of the things that I always tell her
is that challenge me.
I won't just say I love you, to say I love you,
because I'm walking out the door
or because we hung up the phone or just because I need,
I think I need to practice saying it more.
If I say I love you,
that means there was something that went through my head
right then and there that made me think about you
and want to express that.
So in our relationship, if I say I love you,
she always follows that up for texting
or for talking in person.
What are you thinking about?
And I can always give her something specific.
I saw you do this or because you treat me this way
or this reminds me of and therefore I love you
and I was thinking about that.
Was your family really expected,
were they expressive and touchy feeling
when you were growing up?
Did you get lots of hugs and kisses?
Yeah, that's the crazy part, right?
Is my mom is very touchy,
feely, and lovey, expressive,
expressive, and says,
I love you to me a lot.
But see now, that's probably why,
because my mom said all those things
and made me feel loved from her.
But I didn't, I thought we said of a lot of things in our
household that our actions didn't reflect. And so I don't, I didn't value it the same way. I mean,
in the same day or week, my mom could say, I love you and your kids mean the world to me,
and then her and my stepfather could be throwing fucking
pots and pans at each other and cops are in the house
and then the kids and I are crying and saying,
leave him, leave him, let's get out of here
and my mom not willing to do that.
And so to me, it's like, well, if you really love us
and you care about who we are and care about us,
it's like you say you do,
then you wouldn't make us go through all of this.
So I think that, even though my mother has always been really good about showing her love
and I think she's expressed that really well and she's always been someone who touches
me and makes me feel loved, I think that I had a conflicting understanding of what love
meant or what it means to.
Isn't that interesting how much of that is formed from childhood?
Like how much of that is, you know, like the way you express yourself,
you see this a lot with, especially with men, fathers,
when they become dads, they have a tough time showing affection to their sons,
especially, you see that a lot of time.
And then when you talk to them, it's because either they didn't have a father
or their fathers didn't show them affection.
So to them, it's like, feels weird.
It feels awkward to show my son,
you know, that I'm gonna love him or whatever.
And it's a very interesting,
it doesn't mean they don't love him necessarily.
I know a lot of friends who are fathers
who have loved their kids more than anything and great fathers otherwise
But then we sit down and talk about and usually the reason why it comes up is we'll be hanging out and
You know sometimes people will comment on how I am with my kids and I'm just overboard. I'm very
Touchy-feely and expressive and well, I mean my son's 13
I'll still you know still pick them up and kiss them and whatever and so people will will usually comment, and it's usually the moms, and then the dads
will be like, oh, they'll roll their eyes,
and then we'll have this conversation.
And they'll tell me, they just feel awkward doing it
because when they grew up, they didn't have that.
So it's very interesting how much of that shapes.
Oh, yeah.
Who you are.
I don't remember how old I was when I really started
to put all of that together.
And so now I have this ability anytime that, if Katrina and I are getting into it about something
and we're having this disagreement, no matter what, I disagree with her about automatically,
I start to unpack and go backwards.
Why do I feel so strongly about this?
Why do I disagree with her?
What part of this do I own?
How much of this was forged in my head as a child?
I mean, they said it was five to seven of the most formidable years of our
Our little our little brain as we're as we're starting to find it's all about that
It's about that that that practice and repetition of those things, you know
I see her family and I see the way they all interact with each other and it's just it's so natural
As soon as you walk in like your family seller but he hugs and kisses each other and it's just everybody kind of helps each other. And it's just, it's so natural as soon as you walk in, like your family's cell
or buddy hugs and kisses each other.
And it's just, everybody kind of helps each other
out in the kitchen.
There's this cohesiveness, you know,
and it feels like I'm playing a game I've never played before.
Like I feel lost, you know, it's like,
and I have to be like actively like paying attention
to that, like, oh Adam, don't I come natural?
It doesn't come natural, you know.
And the thing that I think has been the hardest for me
is to communicate that to other people that,
this is not a lack of love.
This is not a lack of like, I don't wanna be here.
It's not a lack of any of that stuff.
It's that I don't know how to play.
I've never, I've never, I've never been shown this
as an example.
I've never been with a family of 30 people in the house
and, you know, making the effort to do that with all of them.
Like, so it's something as an adult that I've had to.
And I can see we're in the past that has caused major division between me and a partner
is because then they're like, what the fuck?
You don't like coming over?
Because to them, to them, you doing that or not doing that means,
you don't like us or you're not happy or you're not loving.
Right.
Because they're judging it in that way and not realizing that it just feels weird.
Yeah.
Not sure how to, you know, how to operate in that situation.
And they don't realize that that that may not be that normal for everybody and that they
were raised a certain way that that is so normal that it's like, you know, this is why they
say it's so important.
Like one of the biggest, most important things
that a father does is rough house with their kids.
And I remember Dr. Mark.
Yeah, he said that and I've done more reading on it
since then.
And rough housing with your kids,
you think it's just funny games,
but they learn how to be physical,
how to be empathetic so they're not pushing too hard,
not hurting each other, hurting you.
And then if you have a girl,
if you rough house with your daughter,
she can feel comfortable being physical
with another man and not being sexual,
which is a very important thing to understand, you know?
It's all those boundaries.
I thought that was such golden advice.
You know, I was already sort of doing that with my kids to begin with, but it really emphasized
the importance of it in what I was actually doing by, you know, setting aside time to have
that kind of quality time with my kids and like provide the type of feedback for them.
Because it is, it's an impression multi-time too and like my youngest is five and he's still trying to figure out
like how rough is too rough you know like he punched me in the face a couple of times
and I'm like so listen like you can't punch in the face of the balls like this is not
gonna fly oh he's trying to hit you in the nuts yeah like it's like you know and these are like
important things to carry on going into school.
I don't want him doing this to other kids.
And also too, it's an outlet, right?
So like, for me, specifically, you know, I needed,
I needed physicality.
I needed that.
I needed to express myself and get it out.
And, you know, for me, like, my dad me, my dad helped me with this too,
but who else is he gonna punch?
How would I rather him punch me?
I try to explain this to my wife,
because she's always like,
nobody ever punches him, ever?
You know?
No, there's times you punch.
It might come up, so I would rather him punch me and get it out.
And like we work our way through this and like we can be constructive about it and
be controlled and understand, you know, socially, like how this all works.
And he learns how to be physical and not cross the line.
Yes, beyond that, which right.
A lot of that's what kids learn from that kind of stuff.
You can't just say, no, don't do this. You know, like that doesn't, doesn't have any sort of like constructive way of dealing
with it.
You know, it was a big one for me was something that my mom did, which I never realized
was so powerful was if my mom made a mistake, or if she lost her temper in a way that was
inappropriate towards us, she would come up to my room, sit down next to me,
and she'd apologize.
And I never realized that that was that big of a deal
until I had my own kids, and the power of doing that,
like, because you're not perfect as a parent,
you're just human, like anybody else.
You're gonna lose your temper,
you're gonna do shit that's not great.
And I think a lot of parents are afraid, like they don't know, no, I'm the dad, I'm not gonna apologize for yelling or I'm not gonna apologize for whatever.
No, no, no, if you were, if you went too far, sit down with your kid and I did this with my son and my daughter.
I remember what happened, but they were doing something, I got really pissed.
And I said some things that I shouldn't have said.
Some pretty mean things that came out of my mouth
and it really hurt their feelings and I could tell.
And at the time I was like, whatever
and then they did what they were supposed to
and then they went up to the room.
And then I thought about it.
I'm like, you know, I shouldn't have said
that what I said to them.
I should have told them that their actions were wrong.
I shouldn't have whatever.
So I went upstairs, I brought them in a room,
I sat them down and I said, okay, so here's why I got upset with you. Do you guys know why I got upset?
First I wanted to clarify, I wanted them to see if they knew. And they said, well you got
mad because they sat in the other, and so they were on point and I said, okay, now I want
to apologize to you guys because I said this, and that's not true. You're not these things.
I said, I was mad at this, but this I shouldn't have said that. It's absolutely not true.
And the power that
yeah, that you have when you do that because your kid can see that you're not you're human,
but you're also strong enough to admit when you did something wrong. Yeah, that's so important.
That's a lesson that they need to learn and be able to carry forward too, because they're
going to make mistakes. And then how do they deal with that? You know, and I had that
same moment the other day too
with Courtney and like, think,
God, see, this is another thing.
Like, I'm glad there's somebody else there
to kind of check me on my parenting
and it's important.
But like, my son comes up and he's like,
I know like he wants the weasel to stay up late.
You know, and this is just like a game they play like to come up and like, oh, I don't feel good.
And so I just, I've somewhere along the lines, I just lost all empathy.
I have nothing.
I'm like, no.
Stop faking it.
Just take, get some thumbs or it'll settle down.
You just need to lay down, quiet know, get some thumbs or, you know, like, it'll settle down. Like, you just need to, like, lay down quiet down, like, whatever.
I'm just telling them, just harping on them about all this stuff, like, he needs to do,
and just go down and, like, how bad it's going to be tomorrow, because he's going to be so tired
and all this and then she's like, I mean, like, like, like, with the eyes.
Yeah. And I'm like, oh, no, like, I've just been hammering him.
And he actually did feel bad. And so like, and so like, he's talking to him
and I come back out of the room and I'm like,
oh man, I was just like way too harsh on him.
I had to apologize.
And then I took him down like, you know,
and tried to like calm him down and went down there with him,
but it was just like, you just check yourself
in the moment, you're like, wow, like I just don't,
see what I'm doing.
I've got a moment like that that will always live
in my mind and it's fucking terrible.
I feel so bad about it.
And I'm sure it's not that big of a deal to my kid,
but to me it is, my son, he wanted me
to make him scrambled eggs.
He was, he was a lot younger, he's probably,
I don't know, 11.
Oh no, maybe, maybe nine or 10.
And I said, listen, if I make these four,
you better eat them because we had gone through this process
of like me making them food and him leaving it. I said, if I make these four, you better eat them because we had gone through this process of like me
making them food and then leaving it.
I said, if I make these, you're gonna eat it.
He's like, okay, well, I'll eat them.
So we made the eggs and no, so later on that morning,
I made the eggs, I bring him to him and he's like,
I'm not feeling that good.
I'm like, oh hell no, you're gonna finish these eggs,
yeah, right?
You're gonna finish these eggs.
He immediately think they're weasel.
Yeah, and he's like, no, no, my stomach kinda hurts.
I'm like, no, you're gonna eat these.
And so I made him, I sat there.
Oh God, then he throws up.
He throws up.
Oh no.
And he had a fever.
Oh no.
And I felt fucking terrible about him too.
Until this day, by the way, he won't eat eggs now.
I traumatized him like eggs make him want to throw up
to this day.
So I feel so bad, you know.
That's the shit that happens.
That's happens, man. Yeah, totally. Parenting is just a sequence, that's the shit that happens man.
Yeah, parenting is just a sequence of feeling guilty for shit that you fucked up on.
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