Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 954: The Best Muscle Building Lunge Variations, the Value of Perfecting Lifts, the Life Benefits of Playing Sports & MORE
Episode Date: January 26, 2019In this episode of Quah, sponsored by Organifi (organifi.com/mindpump, code "mindpump" for 20% off), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about the difference between variations of a lunge su...ch as back step, walking or side lunges, the amount of time that should be spent practicing key movements before ramping up the weight, the value of taking sides and "polarizing your content" as an "influencer," and the life lessons playing sports can provide that you may not be able to get anywhere else. Adam gives Sal a compliment! That Vuori Clothing on point! (4:03) Mind Pump Recommends FYRE: The Greatest Party That Never Happened | Netflix. (7:27) Everyone trying to make a buck these days off of teaching others how to become an “influencer”. Mostly bullshit. The new emerging market. When will the bubble pop? (13:13) How Layne Norton lives to start shit. Pro-vaccine or not? Ones to stay away from? Live call in with Layne on this subject & MORE. (20:46) Predicting one’s behavior based on the proximity of the people they know using social media. The future is here. (36:50) Green Juice Day is on Saturday and perfect timing to get your first Smoothie Box. (41:10) #Quah question #1 – What is the difference between variations of a lunge such as back step, walking or side lunges? What is the point of using different variations? Isn’t a lunge a lunge? (45:41) #Quah question #2 – What is the amount of time that someone should be spent practicing key movements before ramping up the weight? (55:00) #Quah question #3 – What do you think about “insta-influencers” who talk about "polarizing your content" and taking sides? (1:00:27) #Quah question #4 – Do you think sports teach lessons you can’t learn or are difficult to learn elsewhere? (1:10:22) People Mentioned: Layne Norton, PhD (@biolayne) Instagram Enzo Coglitore (@enzocog) Instagram Taylor (@tayvalenz) Instagram Coach Danny Matranga CSCS (@danny.matranga) Instagram Products Mentioned: January Promotion: MAPS Anabolic ½ off!! **Code “RED50” at checkout** Vuori Clothing **25% off** Smoothie Box ** Get $20 OFF your first 3 boxes** FYRE: The Greatest Party That Never Happened | Netflix Official Site The Fyre Effect: More questions are being asked of influencer marketing in wake of documentaries - Digiday @mindpumpadam How to become an influencer post – IG China 'launches an app that tells you if you are within 500 yards of someone in debt - and encourages you to report them if they seem capable of paying up' Mind Pump TV - YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go. some compliments. Really nice. That's a first. He approved of my new look, mostly,
mostly, most of my look, because I'm wearing Viori clothing. Now, Viori is performance wear. So,
it's active wear for men that looks really good and is extremely comfortable. If you go to Viori clothing, let me spell that out for you, V-U-O-R-I clothing.com,
Forts-Lash Mind Pump, you'll get 25% off,
we hooked you up.
Viori.
Then we talked about Netflix's documentary, Fire.
This was the big, what was it like a music event?
It was a disaster.
That's right.
They're testable. a cluster of fuck.
It was really crazy.
Then we talked about influencer masterminds.
That's a bubble, that's about to bubble buzz buzz buzz buzz.
It's gonna go.
We went a little hard on them, I think,
but it was a good time.
Then we called our good friend, Lane Norton,
had a little short phone call with him,
asking him why he likes to rile people up so much
about things like vaccines.
We talked about social media post that Enzo sent me
talking about how researchers can actually predict your behavior
based off of your friends posts.
What?
Yeah, that's creepy.
Pretty crazy.
Then we talked about China's deadbeat, deader app.
You'll know who's around you with terrible credit and you probably don't want to hang
around with them.
Hello, Hitler youth.
Then we talked about how tomorrow is National Green Juice Day or smoothies.
We are sponsored by Smoothie Box.
They actually send to your door whole food smoothies that you blend and they're amazing and they're healthy.
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That was the first 42 minutes of the episode. Then we get into the fitness stuff.
The first question was, look, there's a lot of variations of lunges like backstep, walking side lunges, like what's
the point of using all those different variations? Isn't a lunge just a lunge or do they all do something
different? Hmm. The next question was we talk about practicing exercises and treating the lifts
like a skill. How long should you practice a movement before you start to add weight and make it more
intense?
And the next question was actually asking our opinion on all these influencers who talk
about polarizing your content.
They say basically, if you want to make any headway on social media, you should pick
aside and be very specific.
Like I'm just the paleo girl or I'm just the keto guy.
What is our opinion on that? Is that a good strategy?
And the final question, what are some of the lessons that sports and
competition teaches you that you can't really learn anywhere else?
Sports ball for all.
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I want to comment on how handsome you look today.
It looks like your mother dressed you. I like it.
No, it doesn't.
No, I like it.
Your mom's got style in it.
Let's start from the bottom.
No, let's not do that actually because what I was going to tell you.
You're a dickhead.
I know what I was going to tell you is you look so fucking fly right now.
You've got the new Viori shirt on. You've got the Viori, the joggers that I've gonna tell you is you look so fucking fly right now. You've got the the new Viori shirt on
You've got the Viori the joggers that I've been telling you to grab what's the name of those?
I know that texture though the what I got one of those two no the so the the joggers are called the Sunday
Performance so those are my so these are my favorite that mean performance on the sun day. Yeah, what does that mean still in the couch
So these are my fate these are my favorite joggers that Viori makes.
Yeah, like, they're comfy.
No, and then you look sharp
and then you even got the black socks go there,
but then you fuck it all up with these.
So are you a runner?
Yeah, those are like grandpa shoes.
Oh, they're so comfortable.
Dude, what are you talking about?
You're a new balance.
Those aren't new balance.
Yeah, they are.
No, those aren't new.
I bought them at the, I bought them at the,
those aren't new.
Altia or whatever.
Yeah, you don't even know what you're wearing.
I don't even know, but the,
Hey man, I got them at the,
I got them at the,
what's that place called, the camping place.
Taylès.
Yeah.
No.
They're,
they're, they're,
they're super comfortable.
They're, they're, they're super comfortable.
They look age appropriate, Adam.
Okay.
They're age appropriate.ate, Adam. Okay.
They're age-appropriate.
Bro, I'm not that old.
Huh?
I'm not so old, like I just just...
No, it's just a big guarantee.
It's just a big gap between the age you dress, the age you are.
Oh, no, no, no.
Not at all.
It just seems that way for you, because you're so outdated.
Age-appropriate.
So it seems like, listen.
When's the last time you got called a silver fox?
Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
That's what I'm saying.
You're getting that.
Yeah, because that's public.
Because let me tell you something today, this happened today.
A female said I was very handsome.
Yeah, she was old.
She was old.
She said you look sharp.
You look sharp.
I know I'm busing your balls right now.
I know I'm busing your balls right now about the shoes and all, but I do.
I mean, the Viori stuff looks sharp on you.
It looks good. Dude, they kill it. What do they call it though? They don't call it active wear
They call it performance something. What do they call it? Yeah, I don't know
There's another thing I looked at the tag. I forgot terrible, but anyway, they name it something and it's supposed to mean
work out clothes that are
Super comfortable that you can and look good that you can wear
Workout clothes that are super comfortable and look good that you can wear.
Is that what they call active wear?
Performance wear.
Why would we not know that?
What a killer.
It's a barrel.
Justin, which ones you got that?
Dude, so I'm trying to maintain a certain level of style
that's unique to me.
And so I saw on there, they had these chino pants
that are stretchy.
Just like everything else that they've made that I chino pants that are like stretchy, just like everything else
that they've made that I could actually wear that I'm like, oh wow, that totally fits
well with me in my mountain cholo sort of vibe.
It does go with your...
Yeah, like it's still hacky sack, skateboard and all that, even though I don't.
They look, they're the color of, they're like khaki color.
Yeah, it's khaki color.
They're like, yeah, it's like just the chino pants you you remember seeing like these the sort of skaters and all that where so it has that kind of look to
it, but I can apparently do deadlifts and squats at them. So I'm excited about that.
They spoiled us because now that I have all these Viori outfits, I don't wear anything
else.
I know.
Now, you know, uncomfortable jeans have become jeans. Yeah, jeans are uncomfortable now.
Yeah, you know, I'm sorry.
I forget about it.
Anyway, I watched a little bit of that documentary on Netflix.
Which one?
You watched The Fire One?
Fire.
I watched a little bit of it.
So, I'm the whole thing.
I'm super pumped.
Did you guys see it on the forum?
No, what's going on?
I told you, so what was it?
Last week or whatever when I told you guys to watch it
and it would blew me away that Mark Weinstein was in it.
And today or yesterday I was on the forum
and there's already a big old thread on it.
So our forum is already, I was hoping to surprise our forum.
So those that don't know this, that's not on the forum,
fires the documentary, last week I'm watching it.
It's like 13 minutes in or so,
and Mark Weinstein comes up.
And I'm looking at it and I'm like,
I fucking know this guy.
I pause it, I tell Katrina, I'm like,
how do I know him?
And she's like, I don't know.
I'm like, no, I for sure know this guy.
Everything about him is familiar.
And it's not like familiar.
I've seen you on TV.
It's like, we've definitely talked, right?
Like I've literally had conversations with this guy
Yeah, so I had the same like experience and so I I looked him up real quick on on social media
Trying to see if that would remind me of something and I screenshot it centered over Taylor and the reason I sent a Taylor
Because he's got kind of a Taylor look
Yeah, I'm like I think I remember like yeah calling him something related to Taylor or teasing him about him being a twin brother.
Right, I was like Superman's evil twin.
Bizarro.
Bizarro, so he was like Bizarro Taylor.
He actually called him.
Right, so I sent it to Taylor and Taylor right away goes, oh, that's Mark from Spartan.
And I was like, oh, so then I look at my phone, because I knew he exchanged them.
That's so crazy he was a part of that whole debacle.
He wasn't just a part of it.
Like, he's an integral piece to us.
Yeah, he was the most interviewed person
on that entire documentary.
So here's what blew me away about,
because I only watched the first,
maybe almost the first half.
First thought, I remember reading all about it.
So I'm very familiar with what happened.
It was this huge, it was supposed to be
this extremely exclusive, massive, crazy,
it's like Coachella for just reach people.
Yeah, music festival on an island in the Bahamas.
And apparently they had bought
Pablo Escobar's island
and it was just super exclusive.
Private planes only flying in.
That's where they went like extremely wrong.
If they would have just not like advertised it,
it was Pablo Escobar's,
Ireland probably would have pulled it off.
Yeah, so and there were,
I mean, this is how crazy it was.
You could get a yacht out there for $250,000.
You could get your own bungalow for like $15,000.
It was supposed to be super exclusive,
but what really blew me away was,
because we all know what happened, right?
It turned out to be the biggest disaster of all time.
They, you know, people showed up,
that there were silly tent set up,
there was no sewage system set up,
people were serving them like relief tent.
Tent from Hurricane.
Oh, it became a massive disaster.
The guys, probably gonna go to jail over it,
but what's crazy is, first of all,
how he closed everybody on it.
And then second was just how they were able
to use social media.
They just flew in a bunch of models,
like supermodels, and had them all post on Instagram.
And then within 48 hours, they fucking sold out.
I cannot wait to talk to Mark about it
because he was in the mix of all,
so I shot him a text right away.
He's not doing any consulting for a spark anymore,
so he wasn't so that you know.
What did he do for them?
I forgot.
I remember you helped us with the product.
So he's like a special event planner.
Like so that's how he got obviously that's his gig.
So obviously that's how he got intertwined with the fire thing
is he was hired for that.
And I know that he only got paid like 30% of his money's up front.
And then the other 70, he was waiting for the event to go off and finish.
So him and a lot of other people got fucked.
But anyways, it's a crazy documentary.
I highly recommend watching it.
I've got Mark coming.
So I wanted to surprise the audience and actually get like inside perspective on it
and have have them on the show.
We are going to have them on the show.
There must be so much more dirt.
That's why I did it.
I was like, even in those documentaries out
and you could watch all the crazy stuff.
Like I can't wait to talk to somebody who had,
you know, inside info.
I mean, it's sound bites you hear on the documentary.
But for me, it's all about the psychology of it all
because just because you have a bunch of supermodels posting,
you know, and they were vague about their posting,
like what they're doing or whatever to create more interest in what's going on. And then they all posted
the orange tile on their Instagram saying, fire coming soon or whatever. And they sold
out with these super expensive, just because all these super rich people thought it was
extremely exclusive, fucking sold out.
Well, you didn't probably, if you only made it halfway through, you might have not seen
what happened to, so they're trying to out and bought out. You didn't probably, if you only made it halfway through, you might have not seen what happened.
So they're trying to hold the models responsible.
What?
Some people were suing the models.
The models for promoting it.
For promoting an advertisement.
I don't know if you could do that.
I don't think that's, I don't think that's the problem.
Well, if they're doing with their job,
they're trying to get some accountability
that definitely should be established,
but I don't see that.
Right, yeah, no, I I don't see that. Right.
Yeah, no, I find it really interesting that that's a possibility.
So, let me tell you what that would do.
If that precedent gets set, it would be like, if you're a celebrity getting paid by
Coke to be on their commercials and then, you know, someone becomes obese or something
from Coke, they could sue you the celebrity who advocated for Coca-Cola.
You know what I'm saying?
These are models that got paid,
like they got paid just post that they're gonna be the job
that they paid them for.
That's all they were supposed to do.
Are they responsible for the fact that they're all far away?
Well, I don't even think, I mean,
no, I don't think they are.
No, I don't agree with that.
Although, I do like, I like the scare of it
because it starts to have a little bit of accountability
with what's going on right now that I see.
And I mean, I just did a post yesterday.
I don't know if you guys read the post.
I just did it.
I loved it so much.
I wish I could like it.
You know what I did?
Double like.
I liked it.
I liked it and I liked it again.
Yeah.
I like it too.
Just to give it an algorithm.
You know, but it's very interesting to me to see
what's going on right now in social media
and social media businesses.
And you're starting to see a lot of people popping up
out of nowhere that gained some sort of fame.
Whether it be through photos or knowing somebody
or just being really good at creating imagery
on social media or being funny or doing cool shit.
And you know, they're getting enough eyes on them
that they can build a little business
where they're generating some revenue.
And then from there, they're pivoting
and they are selling tickets to come hear them talk
and teach others how to do it.
How to become an influencer.
Yeah, and it's becoming this vicious cycle.
And then you see like these models who are just, you know, they get up there because they
get, you know, a million plus followers because they're hot and show ass photos.
And then they just take, you know, $25,000 a,000 a post, just to throw whatever up there,
whether they're using it or if they're really gonna be there
or not, it's like, man, I mean,
I'm definitely, you know,
well, on the side of free marketing,
and it's to each surround,
and if people are stupid, then whatever.
But I do like getting them shook up a little bit
and scaring these models.
It's still completely,
it's still completely along the lines of freedom. Look, if you get sued,
because you were misleading or whatever,
that's not, so what I want,
what I wouldn't want is government regulation.
That's what I wouldn't want.
I agree, agree.
I think you should be free to,
if you want to sell an influencer, academy, tickets,
or whatever, pay me 10 grand to teach you how to build your social media business, which is what they're all doing, and you go
pay 10 grand and you think you got ripped off, taken to court.
There's nothing wrong with that.
Or post about how shitty it was, and give them a shitty review.
There's nothing wrong with that at all.
I personally think that whole model is a bubble.
I think it's going to burst.
Well, it's a bubble because what's happening right now, and the reason why there isn't a backlash is because
a lot of these young kids that are going to these,
they don't know if they're getting bullshit or not.
They don't know if it's bad or not.
And what I've noticed is if you go to these groups,
these influencer things, masterminds,
what are there's a million different names
that we're putting on them.
And you go there and there's 25 to 100,
depending on how big or popular this person is.
People there, most of the people there
are already like kinda on the right track
of trying to build their own thing
and they got 500 to, you know, 5,000 followers or so.
And they're trying to find out how do they generate millions
like this person I'm paying for to come see.
And the worst thing that happens,
even if that person didn't put on a good presentation,
the bare minimum, I meet 30 other people
that have got 500 to a few thousand
that are into the same space as I am.
And it becomes this like, oh, I networked with a lot of people.
And that's valuable to me. And so I think a lot of people are justifying the, the networking
piece of it for the, for the ticket that they pay. It really happens. They do. They connect
to these people. But then they all get in cahoots with, I'm going to post this. You guys
have enough social influence that you're going to like it. You're going to comment on
it. It's going to boost me up in the rankings.
It's a total ring, it's a racket,
it's a way to hack the system.
And you know, anytime you, this is,
and I can't remember what there's a term for,
it's a psychological term where somebody will spend
the time doing something or invest money doing something.
And because it was so much time and money
that even if the returns are objectively terrible, they'll justify it.
They'll be like, well, you know,
because you don't wanna face the fact
that you got ripped off.
Yeah, yeah, that's what I was.
You don't wanna face the fact that,
oh my God, I spent all this time.
So what they'll do at the end of it is be like,
well, I did make all these good connections
and I did have a good time
and I got to make this person.
I even rewrote, like so I wrote it out
and I was kind of like fired up, I was writing it
and I referred to the people buying these,
instead of referring to them as people,
is what everybody read.
I originally had idiots.
And I took that out because I was like,
you know what, like if I insult those people,
they're even less likely to come forward and say something,
and that's not what's gonna help this situation.
If it's gonna help this,
is more and more people coming forward
and being like, I too, got scammed,
or I too fell for it,
and I spent this money
on doing this shit.
And so cognitive dissonance, thank you, Doug.
And so I pulled that out because I didn't want to feel like I was insulting those people
because you know, in fact, a lot of them don't know any better.
This is a new emerging market right now.
That's why it's okay.
So here's how you see how bubbles start to get formed
is when there's an emerging market and there's lots of hype around it and all of all that happens when a bubble pops It's a market correction. It's the the the value of the perceived value doesn't match the actual value
And so the bubble pops and sometimes bubbles are created through
government regulation and intervention where the government let, let's say, comes out with legislation
that says, you have to give all these people loans,
even if they don't qualify,
because everybody deserves a house, and it sounds good.
And then you get a bubble and loans,
and you get a bunch of people who don't qualify,
and then all of a sudden nobody can pay their loans off,
and then that's kind of what happened in 2008.
What you have right now is this bubble,
or this all this hype and excitement around
building a being an entrepreneur with social media.
It's social media entrepreneurship.
And it kind of seems and looks on the outside really easy
because it's new.
Like oh my god, I know this, I can see this person,
they were a nobody and then they built their business
off social media, I can do that too.
So you've got all these people who are excited
and they're like, now what do I do now?
It's MLM rebranded.
I mean, it's the whole thing.
If you look at these trends,
it always starts with somebody benefiting more
than these other people now jumping in afterwards.
And it's this multi-level tiered pyramid.
You see these things emerge in different forms all the time.
And I think that people get sucked into it because initially it works.
You know, if you're first a market and you're like you're doing this and like you're getting everybody to buy into the.
All you need is one person like if I'm if I'm an if I'm an influencer and my M.O. is you know making other influencers all I need is one person.
That says that I'm the reason
why they got so big.
Now, if I'm a smart influencer, this is what you do.
Okay, I'm just gonna be straight up with you.
If I'm going through social media
and I see someone with 10,000 followers
and they're fucking, wow, this person's really awesome.
They're good looking, they're hot,
they got good information.
I'm gonna contact them and tell them I help them out
for free, that way it looks like I helped them build it
because they probably would have built it on their own anyway.
And this is what ends up happening with a lot of these people.
So you see some of these,
some of these big names who have these,
you know, whatever you wanna call them,
these what they call them, influencer academies or,
you know, what are their names?
Masterminds or whatever.
And what they'll do is they'll find some of these
talented people and they'll bring them on their team
and that makes them look like they're more,
you know, even bigger and even better than they really are.
And it's just a bubble.
It's gonna pop at some point, it's gonna be a parody.
At some point, it's gonna be, you know.
It'll be interesting.
I don't know, I don't know.
I don't know because there's, you know, shit,
MLM still exists, so who knows.
But speaking of social media posts and the other day,
I think it was just two posts ago or whatever,
I saw you kind of stir in the pot a little bit
with Lane and the vaccine post.
Wow. Yeah.
Like crazy.
Yeah, dude, he, I think he lives to start shit, you know, with people. He thrives in it. Well, what it was is his post
was all about
anti-vaxxers and so you're seeing this huge political push right now and
This is what politicians do is with a very good at is they draw a line in the sand and then they make the create an
is they draw a line in the sand and then they create an enemy off of one side.
And so the latest one is now people who are pro-vaccine
or anti-vaccine.
And what I mean by a line in the sand is
you're either pro-all vaccines all the time.
Or you're against all vaccines all the time.
There is no middle.
I mean, there is no like, like if I came out and I'm like,
well, you know, some vaccines are really effective.
Some, you know, maybe not that good.
Like the flu vaccine, not that efficacious.
Some are a bit questionable.
I don't know why you would do that.
You know, like, you can't question any of them.
Yeah, you know, like there's been vaccines
in the past that have caused problems with people.
And, you know, so I like to look at them individually.
Boom, labeled anti-vaxxer. And now you're the, you know, so I like to look at them individually, boom labeled anti-vaxxer.
Right.
And now you're the, you know, you're the other side or the enemy or you're so pro-vaccines
that you believe everybody should be forced to get all of them, forced by law to get all
of them.
And so he did this post and so that's what I posted underneath and I said, you know,
I don't, it's okay to question things
on an individual level, all medicines like that.
Like there's some antibiotics that are safe
for the others, vaccines, probably the same way.
Plus, you know, people's body makeups are different.
Anyway, so we went, I didn't go back and forth with Lane,
but there were people underneath my comment
who were going back and forth with me.
But, and then he did another thing to today on Twitter.
I'll read it. Oh, no, he's got another, I I didn't read today's yeah, he puts walks into room lights match.
Carnivore is not for optimal health. Keto and fasting are not magic and still obey the laws
of energy balance. Vaccines are very good. The government is not trying to make a sick veganism
is in a cure for cancer. Shrops match. He liked know what we should do? Let's call Lane.
Oh, we should keep stoking this fire.
I want to ask him why he's a, why he does that?
Why he likes to be a dick?
Well, I know I'd love to hear you ask him some questions
on the vaccines because I think that's a really good topic too,
just, and I think I, for me personally,
especially right now I'm in the middle of trying to make
a baby with Katrina over here.
And at one point, hopefully I'm successful.
And I'm going to be faced with these things.
And I'm going to be honest with you, like, I've heard there's so many that you get bombarded
with that I don't know, should I do none of them?
Should I do all of them?
Are there certain ones that I should do or not do?
Like, I don't even want to think about all the research I'm going to have to do when
this comes up.
I mean, objectively speaking, vaccines are one of the greatest breakthroughs in
Western medicine. Objectively also speaking, I think it's smart to always question
anything you're gonna put in your body.
Mandated, you should probably question.
And if it's mandated especially, that's how I feel.
Anyway, let's do you guys want to get them on the phone?
Yeah, calls us.
Can you, can you, can you hook it up? See if it works.
It's probably anger right now online as you speak.
It's if the answers.
Hello Lane.
Lane.
Can you hear me?
Yes, I can.
Yeah.
What's up, dude?
Hey, you're on mine pump right now.
We interrupt your Twitter anger session.
No, no, no, I can multitask.
It's good.
I can you know, it's fine. I'm driving my child
and I'll be tweeting at the same time, you know, it's safety.
Dude, what's your deal with the vaccines right now? Why are you being such a dick to the
people who don't like vaccines?
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 tweeting while driving no tweeting while driving that's that's the rule yeah no I'm no what's up with the vaccine thing right now how come you're going
after the the people who are questioning vaccines seems like that's your
thing oh well not really I just I thought it was if you look at the the post
the first one it was more if i just thought it was funny that
people want to
proof-proof vaccines
their promoting essential oils is a is a quote-unquote cure
i'm not
going to sit here and blanket they say that there's no vaccine that don't have any
adverse effects
i mean you are injecting
a weakened virus and so sometimes people
get a little sick and I mean but here's the thing. If you look at the side effects label
of any over-the-counter drug because remember even if somebody could say for example like
there's an adverse event list versus adverse effects.
So, you know, side effects are things that have been documented over and over and over,
and kind of we have a mechanism for them.
Events are things that we just are case studies.
So, for example, I can have a vaccine getting a car wreck on the way home and say,
well, you know, that vaccine
caused me to have a car wreck because of XYZ. Now that's an adverse event. Now nobody thinks that,
but you know, if you get anything, like pick anything out. So I think that, you know, a lot of people
like to kind of pick on the flu vaccine because it's i mean if you want to
if you want to go by the numbers it's a lot it's somewhat ineffective because
if they picked the wrong strain
you get so get the flu but
the research does seem to indicate that if you get the flu it'll be
less uh... less severe than normal and as somebody who's had the flu
like okay let me back up uh... less severe than normal and as somebody who's had the flu
okay let me back up
i hear a lot of people
taught sometimes say oh
yeah i think i got the flu
if you've ever had actual influence uh...
you know
because it is a whole nother ball game i don't know if you guys have ever had it but
my god like i had it and I'm a pretty resilient
person. It absolutely completely took me out for three weeks. Like I understand how that kills
healthy people. So Lane, this is Adam right now. I got a quick question for you then. Of course,
what's your if you have on today, Adam? I'm wearing a champion hoodie right now, brother.
Adam White. Yeah. So, hey, you know, right now, Katrina and I
are in the middle of trying to make a baby.
And I'm trying to literally,
that I'm right now.
Yeah, I'm videotaping.
Yeah, and so this is the fact that you post this,
I brought this conversation up with Sal today
because, you know, never have I really had to think
about this stuff and soon obviously, or hopefully,
I'll be having to look into a lot of this.
And so this is not an area that I typically go into
and get into debates with someone like yourself or so,
but just at a curiosity,
are there certain vaccines that you would stay away from
or are you say take them all?
Do you have a certain ones you're like,
I think you absolutely should take those ones, but not others.
I mean, so first off, I'm not immunologists, right?
So this is, this is completely 100% by opinion.
You know, I think if you don't want to get the flu vaccine or something like, you know,
like in your kids, like, they're, let me put it this way, let me back up. Something like
the measles, something, you know, vaccines of things that are caused completely preventable deaths.
I think those, I would recommend people get them. But, you know, there are some vaccines where it's
kind of, you know, optional where, you know, like the flu vaccine, those sorts of things.
I, after, again, after having influenza a couple of years ago, I will elect to get the flu shot.
But if somebody doesn't want to, you know, that's, although I mean, so,
as we know, I know you all fell libertarians. The libertarian side of me struggles with this,
As we know I know you all fell libertarians the libertarian side of me struggles with this because I
Know I think I think I've read that you guys have said you know, well, we're not necessarily against vaccines
But we don't think it should be mandatory is that is that kind of
Absolutely, I don't think you should be for and we don't have a great track record of forced things the government does to people We got a pretty terrible track record. So I'm the soon to tell me i have to do something i always my ears perc up every time
uh...
so
uh... you know
i
so this is something i would struggle with is libertarian from both sides just
uh... because
for okay so that
the devil's advocate argument
is that
uh... well
if you don't get it, you're reducing the
kind of herd immunity, the overall immunity of the community, and increasing the likelihood
that more people are going to get sick.
So you are effectively could negatively impact somebody else through your actions, which
is a fundamental crux of libertarianism that you know basically
do no harm, do what you want, but as long as you do no harm to others, right?
So vaccination, forced vaccination should be something I'm really struggling with.
I'm not sure, from a philosophical standpoint, what the right answer is there.
It's kind of like, so Sal, you kind of the other day you asked me, like, what are your thoughts
on like a abortion, religion,
and healthcare?
Right?
So I'll be honest, like I really struggle with abortion.
I really do, because on one hand I sit there and say, well, I'm not a woman, I don't
know what that's like, it's not my body.
And on the other hand I say, well, it kind of comes down to, where do you
establish the point of life, right? Is it once a baby is delivered? Is it conception? Is it once
you hear a heartbeat? Is it once there's lane? Lane, don't you dare take us down this
household? Don't you dare take us too far, dude hold. Don't you dare take us down this round of hold. Let's take this too far, dude.
I'm gonna ask you one quick question
and you have to give me a short answer
before we hang up with you right now.
And I want you to give one piece of advice
to a young man, a young nerdy man,
maybe not as ex, not much of an extrovert,
maybe not dated a lot of women before,
maybe a little insecure.
What would you give him one piece
of advice on how to pick up a hot chick like Holly?
You guys must have, so did you see her post where like there was like five different dudes
who were like, what are you doing with Lane?
No, I didn't see that. I did it, but I do want you to get, if you were to tell this young
man, you're going to give him a piece of inspiration,
what would you say to him,
because he looks up to you, what would you say?
Yes, Lane Norton inspiration for nerves,
trying to get a hot chick everywhere.
Yeah, I like that teacher.
All right.
So, I only have an end of one, right?
So, we're dealing with complete anecdote.
So short answer.
Yes.
You have to have confidence.
You have to have confidence.
Whether it's, you know, confidence in yourself, whatever.
But that's, that's so here's the longer answer real quick.
I'll cut it down to 60 seconds.
Okay.
Confidence is not something you can just have.
You have to build it.
And it starts small.
You know, set small goals.
Get yourself some victories so that you can build that confidence.
My confidence was built over years of, hey, I got an A on this test. Hey,
I hit this PR. Hey, I did this in business and it worked. You know, that was what built
confidence. And from, you know, Holly is not like a lot of other women though because she
is very attractive, but she's also very smart. Billy said she essentially was gave up on dating until she met me because she's like I
didn't think I'd meet somebody who was intelligent enough but also allowed
me to be independent and didn't get threatened by my independence you know I
think that's also another thing if you're if you're gonna if you're gonna that's
no no no that's it that's all you That's all you get. That's all you get. That's all you get
We'll call you we'll call you
Controversial topic. Yeah, love your brother talk to you later. Yeah, all right guys. Have a great one. Thanks. Yeah
He just said that you say she's not like other women. She's good-looking and smart
She's not like other women. She's good looking and smart.
Oh, God.
I love that.
That's cool.
You know, there's another one.
Have a way with it.
Here's what I like about Lane.
He just goes.
Yeah.
We were talking about vaccines, which is already a third rail.
Right.
He goes right into a portion down onto a portion.
I'm like, no, whoa, whoa.
Yeah, we're not going down.
We're not talking about that.
It'll be a hour for us.
We always open up a can.
No, not every time. No, I're not going, we're not talking about that. It'll be a hour for us. We always open up a can. No, not every time.
No, I think, I like what he says about it.
I think he, when you pin him down and ask him,
he stores up a lot of shit, but when you pin him down and ask him,
he's a lot more measured than he seems.
He throws that out there to get the eyes and the attention and all that.
And I see what he's doing.
Well, I get a lot of people that are not fans of Lane,
that question, why do we like him or why are we that way?
And you know, I found Lane originally
when I was getting into the bodybuilding thing
and I was actually really frustrated
with the information that I was searching and finding
and the people that I was talking to in the space
because there was just a lot of bullshit
and really bad stuff, really bad information.
And so I come across this guy
That's kind of you know he's very combative with the way he he comes after but I get it because I had the same kind of
You know anger towards like oh my god look at all these people that are just providing terrible information and so I
Know his heart is in the right place, you know
So that I think that's the part of me that that likes him is that I know that his intentions are well.
And what's happened that I think that is good and bad
is that he's gained a lot of attraction or attention
by doing that.
That was your 14th slip.
Yeah, sorry.
He gained a lot of attention by doing it that way.
So it's fed into it even more.
And so now I think he even comes off harder on topics
that I know him well enough to know
that he doesn't feel that strong about that, you know what I'm saying?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm with him.
So because we're talking about social media and all that stuff,
there was an article that was shared, who shared this one?
I want to say it was Enzo.
Enzo must have shared this, yeah, he did.
Enzo sent this one, good job, Enzo Enzo. Enzo must have shared this. Yeah, he did. Enzo sent this one.
Good job, Enzo.
Yeah, Enzo's kind of.
Such a good kid.
You know, he said to me the other day,
that fucking cracked me up.
I'm gonna go off on a little tangent here.
It's hilarious.
He's sitting in the office.
Dude, dude.
Oh yeah.
He's sitting in the office and, you know,
he's doing his job or whatever, like a good kid.
And I walk in and I'm like,
what's up everybody?
What's up, Enzo?
He's like, hey, Sally goes,
I got my 23 and me test back. I'm like, what's up everybody? What's up, Benzo? He's like, hey, Sally goes, I got my 23 and me test back.
I'm like, oh, that's cool.
And he goes, so, did you know that there's a gene
that they can test that shows that you have genetically,
you are genetically predisposed for muscle strength and power?
Or there's a gene that you have that shows
that you're predisposed for athletic endurance?
Oh wow.
Or there's an extremely rare gene.
It's not common that's neither strength, neither power nor endurance.
It goes, that's the one I have.
We were down here wrong.
Because the way he said it.
Yeah.
He's like, I got the worst.
I got the, the rare ones there.
I got the worst thing. I got the rare ones there. I got the gift. Yeah, not strong or stamina.
Anyway, it was great.
But he sent this article, that was pretty awesome.
So researchers took people's tweets
and were able to, through examining the tweets,
were able to approximate someone's behavior and location
and it wasn't the person doing the tweet.
Okay, so let me reword that.
Yeah, explain that.
So let's say you're hanging out with friends or whatever
and you're like, I don't wanna be on social media,
I don't like that, they know too much about me,
I don't like that they target me with advertising,
I wanna stay dark, doesn't fucking matter.
If your friends are tweeting and shit like that,
and you're with them and around them,
and everyone's while you pop in one of the tweets
or whatever, people can use all the people around you
to find shit out about you and find out where you are
and find out lots of valuable information about you.
So even though you go dark,
all the people around you that you hang around with,
they can use their information to find shit out about you.
Explain how they do that.
They can predict it through the online behavior of people
that you know.
Right, so if I'm, if they see that I constantly talk like I
engage on Instagram with you two more than anybody else
probably, right?
And then the two, and then there's lots of pictures of
you and I together.
You've also seen me go to Chipotle off of whatever street.
And then you two happen to be there, but you don't see me.
So I saw a little bit of an example that on that show you on Netflix.
Yeah.
How he was able to find and triangulate like where she would be at this coffee shop or whatever.
And he just show up.
Yes.
Yes.
So I'll read a part of the article.
It says the researchers found by gathering 30 million public posts on Twitter from nearly 14,000 users that they could use
information and tweets posted by eight or nine of a user's contacts to predict that it,
to predict the user's own future tweets just as accurately as if they're reviewing that
user's actual Twitter feed. So in other words, the online behavior of those close to you
on social media
can be just as predictive of future behavior as your official recorded social media activity.
Dude, we are creatures of habit. I mean, at the end of the day, like, as much as we don't want to be,
it's like, every day has a pattern to it. Well, look at what it says here, the researchers also
revealed that those who abandon their Twitter or Facebook profiles
and those who never signed up for social media platforms
to begin with can still have their future behavior tracked
and predicted with 95% accuracy
using the online activity of their friends.
Wow.
So you may be someone that's like 90% active.
95% wow.
So you could go and you could be like,
I got a flip phone, you don't even have a smartphone.
Doesn't matter.
It doesn't matter, advertise or everybody's gonna do it.
They'll know what you're gonna do
just because of the people around you
and what they put out.
How fucking crazy is that?
Well, that is that.
And that kind of goes into this other article
that Taylor actually sent me,
which was like talking about like China's new app.
So this is why we had concerns
because we see already now that it looks a lot like
like these Nazi journey practices already.
Big brother.
So you have this app that basically it will let you know
based off of proximity around you who has debt
but could also pay that debt and is not
Paying their debts so that you could basically like shame them
For not paying their debts and now do you get points because they have that social credit system It's kind of like a big social media platform, but owned and operated by the government right to yeah to manipulate people into certain behaviors
Do you lose points for being around people with bad? Yeah?
Yeah, you lose points.
It's called map of deadbeat deaders.
Like that's like literally what it's like people.
Yeah.
Oh wow.
I'm like, this is absurd.
It's like whistle blowing.
You know, like when somebody would see something
and then they would just like tell the authorities
right away for just like the most minuscule thing.
So it's like you'll have this app, you'll be walking and then I'll send them a beep, beep, beep, beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep I mean, that's too, you know, there was a leopard.
You kind of want to get the fuck back.
Yeah, if it's a leopard, yeah.
Yeah, that's crazy.
So you guys know what's got out of control.
You know what tomorrow is?
No, it's not.
Apparently, there's a fucking thing every day I sort of got.
But I think it's just my birthday tomorrow.
Like donut day, it's not like that.
No, it's not, is it your birthday tomorrow?
Is it really a birthday tomorrow?
Yeah.
Holy shit, happy birthday, buddy.
What do you think, man?
You turn in 39. Yeah, right?. Happy birthday, buddy. Thanks, man.
You're turning 39.
Yeah, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's not quite the big four zero, which, yeah.
Your gray hairs are getting there.
Yeah, but good for you, buddy.
Yeah, 29.
Happy birthday.
Happy early birthday, man.
But you.
But you.
Anyway, what were you gonna say?
Besides Justin's birthday.
I can't believe you're gonna tell us.
I just hijacked your commercial.
Yeah, right.
Yeah, tell me what is tomorrow. It's green juice day. Is it really? Like people. My favorite car. So it makes sense. Hey,
a pair of an asshole. Your co-host knew that it was fucking green juice day tomorrow.
But it knows your birthday. Man. Why does that make so much sense though? Well, that just backfire.
He keeps it a secret. No, I do. I am not. I know. I'm not. I'm not like. You tried to get you in. I don't want anything.
I literally thought you're leading into that fact.
That's why I said that. I was like, try to jump the gun.
No, no, not backfire. No, tomorrow is like green smoothie
juice day. So it's a great time to talk about a smoothie box.
Yeah.
Do you, do you guys like their green one?
So yeah, I'm on it now. I don't know if I told you guys that.
I don't know. Yeah told you guys that or not.
Yeah, so I think that since the last time we've had
the commercial, I hadn't been subscribed to it now.
Are you looking carefully at the ingredients?
Tell me it's not freaking amazing.
No, no, it's awesome.
Yeah, no, it's awesome.
And I really like, I like them all,
but I really, really like the Clementine one.
Clemente.
Clemente, Clemente.
How is that Clementine?
Clemente.
Yeah, what is it?
Is it gonna make it sound fancier? Yeah. Yeah. No, it tastes it tastes really good. What I
am is Clemente. What I haven't done, which I plan to do, is to kind of boost the protein by
by adding extra protein into it. Yeah. So it comes with 20 grams of collagen protein. Yes. So
you throw like another 20 or 30 grams of protein. So the green juice I'm gonna Matt like kale and
We got apples like all the like the green of the pigments of a cotto's in there. There's nuts in there
See it's so it's got healthy because a lot of times when you make smoothies
It's all hundred percent sugar from fruit. Yeah, this has got proteins. It's got fats
Healthy fats and then of course it does have some of the fruit sugars in there and it's tastes really good
It's refreshing but here's the secret. My recommendation is add a little bit of stevia or add a little
bit of honey to it to make it a little sweeter. See I don't even think I wouldn't even give that
advice. I don't think it needs it but what I will say is you don't need to add any ice because it's
frozen and so that already makes it thick.
And you probably want to put,
I do about a cup and a half of almond milk
because one cup, too thick.
Too thick.
Yeah. And you want a good blender.
So it's because it's all real food,
it ends up being really, really thick.
You need a blender.
What's the one you guys use that's so damn powerful?
The Vitamix.
That's it.
That makes it turn into like a...
Which would be sponsored by them.
We need to be.
That was, it made it like a creamy texture.
You know what I'm saying?
It wasn't, because I used the regular blender
and it didn't do nearly as good job.
That, the, it's almost like a milk shop.
I don't even want to say it's a knock,
but that's something that people should know is that
it's not, it's not like this process, shake that you would get it like a, you know,
neutral shop where you,
no, it's real throw it in and you shake it up.
You're not going to want to shake this up. You want to blend.
You want to blend it.
You have to. It's chunks of food. It's chunks of vegetables and fruits.
Yes. That's,
that's so I think that's important to let people know like you're gonna,
you're going to want to blend this. What's nice though is that you don't have to
go get all the fruit and vegetables and store it
and then some of it goes bad and then chop it all up.
It's so quick, you just dump it in the blender
and then blend it.
I give it to my son post workout after his workout.
So I'll give him, he's he likes that,
I'm giving him something cool like that.
And then I'll do it, I probably do it three days
out of the week in the morning.
That's my breakfast.
Nice.
What is it?
300 something calories, very balanced with the collagen.
And sometimes I'll add a little extra protein in there.
More so.
No, I'm liking it.
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First question is from HUNK in that funk.
Oh, what is the difference between variations of a lunge,
such as a backstep walking or side lunge?
What is the point of using different variations?
Isn't a lunge a lunge?
Oh, that's a cool question.
Yeah, so here's the part of the answer
that I think is the most important part.
Because I think we'll go into the whole, like,
you know, exercises a skill and because it's different, that alone
is a, is a, sends a different stimulus to the body.
And we'll get into that in a second, but here's the, the, the,
the better part of the answer.
When I'm stepping forward into a lunge, although the exercise looks the same
as I'm doing the lunge, as it it would if I were stepping back into a lunge
It's coming out of an into the lunge that also make a difference. So when I'm stepping forward
I'm decelerating my body coming forward, which means I'm gonna be focusing a little bit more on knee extension of the front legs
It's gonna be more quadricep when I'm stepping out of it and pushing myself back to a normal standing position again
I'm stepping out of it and pushing myself back to a normal standing position. Again, I'm having to focus more on the extension where I'm kicking off with my leg.
It's going to be more quadriple.
Yeah, there's a different firing sequence that's happening between those two as an example.
And so the focus is different.
And so it's good to vary that in order to build up strengths within both of those different applications.
And then we can get into different angles in terms of stepping into a different plane
and then creating a different dynamic that way as well, which is valuable in terms of functional
ways of moving and being strong in all kinds of different directions.
Well, a side lunge is way different, right?
So if it's a different point. That's a totally different exercise. Yeah, right. Ifge is way different, right? So if it's a different point.
That's a totally different exercise.
Yeah, right.
If it's a different plane, it's a different exercise.
At that point, for sure, it's a different exercise.
But I like this question because you're still
in the sagittal plane when you're moving
to a front lunge or a back lunge.
But there is a big difference.
When you do a reverse lunge, too, pay attention to,
so like when you do a forward lunge,
like, salsa, there's more knee extension,
and then your knee will even come forward, right?
So as you, in the momentum is carrying your body forward,
when you do a reverse lunge, your knee doesn't go forward at all.
It stays in that fixed position,
and so the glute takes a lot more of the load
as you come backwards.
So what would normally be taking a lot of the load,
the deceleration of the forward lunge is a lot of quad dominant.
When you go backwards and you step back,
the glutes are what it really, now both are incorporated
in both the front and the back,
but you put a little more emphasis on the glute
by doing a back step lunge.
It's, you can feel the difference
in the anterior emphasis versus the posterior emphasis
by like decelerating that force, like you said.
Yeah, I mean, when you step back,
what gets you out of a back step,
so imagine somebody,
and I wanna paint this picture,
cause I think sometimes we forget
that we're not talking to other trainers, right?
If you imagine someone standing straight up
and then they step back into a lunge
and then step back forward to the standing position,
the muscles that are pulling them forward
are the glutes and hamstrings.
When you're stepping forward into a lunge
and then pushing yourself back into standing position,
the muscles that are pushing you back are more quadricep.
So it's literally emphasizing different parts of your body.
So if you want to work more glutes,
back step lunge, if you want to work more quutes, back step lunge, if you want to work more quads,
front step lunge, but it's not just that
because that's very simple, simplistic way of explaining this,
but it's not just that.
The body also adapts to small differences
just because you have to become coordinated to them.
So even though the exercise looks very, very similar,
I'm having to acclimate to the fact
that I'm moving differently than
I normally do.
And that challenges my body a little bit differently.
And all these small variations in stimuli cause more changes in the body because the body
adapts very well to novelty.
Now there's also the, you also want to get good at something enough so that the novelty isn't so overwhelming
that you can't really apply lots of force.
Like if you're just stepping all over the place
and you never have good balance,
I'm never able to really generate enough force
to really do what I need to do to build muscle and strength.
But novelty itself sends a different signal.
This is why you could take someone
and have them bench press a particular way and
change the novelty enough to where I can literally have someone do the same amount of
reps, same everything. And just tell them, I want you to take an extra grip or go extra
two seconds on the way down and way up. And that will change alone.
Right. Change is the extra.
There's little variances and it changes the sequence, like, you know, I'm saying. So it's
like, although the prime move is involved in the exercises are probably the same, just adding that
different stimulus of where you're firing first or where you're stabilizing
first or, you know, varying that to some degrees, going to create a new ability
to adapt and change. I actually think that there's an order of operation too on
like teaching the lunch of somebody. So I think that there's an order of operation too on like teaching the lunges to somebody.
So I think stationary lunges first,
then I think a back step lunges second,
and then I think a forward lunges actually third.
And the reason why that is that there's
normally a limiting factor on the front lunges.
The front lunges, if you don't have good ankle mobility,
then a lot of people will travel forward.
They're healed, come off the ground,
or they'll stress their knees because they
don't have the ankle mobility. And when you do the back step lunge,
like I was mentioning is it keeps you in that fixed position with
your shin. So your, your knee doesn't travel forward. So it's a great way
to channel. It's also easier to maintain that upper upright posture.
So like it, yeah, you step back. Yeah, when you step back. So
that's why I start there because
yeah, I'm trying to really establish that, you know, tall chest and shoulders retracted position
to where the natural tendency a lot of times when you go forward is to lean into it. So, I'm going to
take it to another level because someone may be listening and saying, oh, okay, cool. So if I step
forward, it's more quad. So therefore, walking lunges are more quad.
No.
Walking lunges are also more glute.
Even though you're stepping forward,
you're not pushing yourself back to a standing position.
You're stepping forward,
but then you're stepping forward with the other leg.
A walking lunge is actually far more like a back step lunge
than a front step lunge.
That's good point.
And so I would even say that I would take someone
through walking lunges before I do the forward step lunge.
I would take a walking lunges mimics more walking
and I think it's an easier way to transition someone.
I could get down with that.
You know?
Yeah, I agree with that.
But a forward step lunge is much more like a back step.
But think about this way, if you're stationary stationary and what I mean by stationary is you're stepping
into a lunge and stepping back to your starting point.
The direction, if you want to work the sides of your body, if you want to work your ab
ductors, side step lunge, if you want to work the front side of your body, your quads,
front step lunge, if you want to work the back side of your body more, back step lunge.
So it's a really easy way to remember this.
So if you're kind of a beginner and you're like, well, okay, what is it?
Okay, think about it this way.
What sides of your body you want to emphasize?
And I'm splitting hairs because you're working all muscles.
To that point though, which I think it's, this is also why I used to give a lot of crap to the,
you know, the, the girls that do the, and I shouldn't say girls, I'm sure there's some guys that do it,
that do the, they stick their asses up in the air, they do the abductor machine and stuff like that.
So, I think it's way more functional, way more beneficial
and I think you'll get more gains from doing like a side lunge
because you get all the benefits of incorporating
your abductors and adductors by doing a lateral lunge like that.
In addition, you know, it's very functional.
You're gonna burn more calories,
you're gonna build more muscle from it.
So that's what was my knock on those machines.
And I remember when we first started the show,
we even had Craig back then,
and he was, I was razzin' the machine.
He's like, oh, I think there's a purpose for it.
I'm not saying there's not a purpose for it.
Just, there's a million other exercises
that I would do first, and the side lunge
is one of those that I would do instead or a side step up.
And I get the same benefits that machine is giving that person with a lot more carry on.
Now, a lunge technically is a split stance squat.
And a lunge is a great way to get to learn how to squat.
It's easier for me to teach a new person how to lunge properly than it is for me to teach them how to squat. It's easier for me to teach a new person how to lunge properly than it is for me to
teach them how to squat. I like squats. I love squats, one of the best exercises you
could do, but they're very complex. They're difficult for people to do, requires a decent
amount of control and stability in the entire body. And so when I take a new client, oftentimes,
I'll only have them do lunges for a while
and then slowly progress them to be able to do
more of your traditional type of barbell squats.
But lunges are phenomenal,
and I don't think they get the credit that they deserve.
They're an excellent muscle-building,
strength-building exercise as well.
I mean, back in the day,
lunges were considered a shaping movement.
It was like only girls did him,
and only people who just want a tone did it or whatever.
But no, man, lunges, you can get really strong
at doing lunges.
You will build a considerable amount of muscle
and shape in your legs, even if you never did a squat.
Next question is from MCD, Matt.
You guys keep saying practice exercises
and treat each lift as a skill.
How much time should be spent practicing these movements
before ramping up the weight?
That's a great question.
It's a hard one to answer too,
because it's like...
It's like asking somebody who's teaching their kid
how to play a sport.
Like when do you progress into the next move
or when you push them to the next level,
or when do you add something to that?
It really depends on how quick that you pick up the skills.
If you're trying to learn something,
and it's shaky and scary, and you feel an aches,
and you don't feel right, and it doesn't feel smooth.
Keep practicing.
There's no reason for you to keep increased. There's no reason for you to keep increased.
There's no reason for you to really increase weight yet.
But you get to a point where you're in a groove
and you feel great and then now you start adding stuff to it.
Just like I would teach a skill of a sport or a trick.
You teach somebody how to snowboard or wakeboard
for the very first time.
The very first day you get them up on the water,
you get them on the snow, you're not teaching them how to do it, you know, an indie grab or a mute grab or some
of a 360, it's like, that doesn't make sense.
It's like, get this person to understand the fundamentals really well.
And then you build upon it.
The same thing goes with weight training.
Before you start adding a bunch of weight, you got to, you want to perfect the skill for
it.
What's a mute grab?
It's a type of, you, where you grab the board.
360 Tomahawk flyer.
No.
It represents where you grab the board. 360 Tomahawk flyer. No. It represents where you grab the board.
Okay, so that's not sports ball.
No, that's not sports ball.
So you're not in the no sell.
I talked about this a little bit yesterday.
My aunt actually, she asked me a couple months ago if I take her team, she manages a team
of investment bankers.
If I take them through a workout and talk to them about nutrition and fitness and stuff.
And so I took them through some mobility exercises that, you know, I didn't want to beat them up with a
workout and I talked to them, told them why that's a good idea. And then I told them about practicing
exercise versus going to the gym and just beating the crap at yourself. And so this came up, you know,
how do I know when I go harder them? And so the analogy I like to use is video games, okay?
So it's like when you're playing a video game
and you can choose from easy, medium, hard,
and expert level.
You know it's time to move to the next level
when the one you're on is easy.
It's no longer challenging.
So if you're playing easy level
and you're having a tough time
and you're getting killed left and right
and you're still figuring out how to aim your gun and how to run and how to
jump, probably don't want to move to the medium level.
But when you're going through that level at easy and you're like, this isn't challenging
anymore.
I need something different.
Now it's time to move to the next level.
Go harder.
That's literally the advice that I'll give you when it comes to exercise.
When you're working out and your form is getting good
and then it gets great and then the weight is just easy
and it's not challenging and you know when you get to that
point, add weight and better safe to go that way
than it is go the opposite direction,
which is I don't know if I should add weight,
but let me just throw some weight on it and see what happens.
It's that's usually the wrong time to do it.
And sometimes it's the right time to do it, but usually it's the wrong time to do it.
If it's no longer challenging, throw some weight on it.
Your goal is to be perfect at what you're doing, be good at it, and for it to no longer
really be challenging, then move to the next level.
If you just did that every time you worked out, you would progress incrementally, but consistently
throughout your whole workout career.
It really is as simple as that.
And that's why it's such an individual experience.
However, I also would pay attention to the recovery afterwards
and see how my body felt based off of what kind of,
what I was doing in the gym and how that affected me
in terms of how quickly I could recover
and felt like I was charged into pursuing the next workout.
So these are all things too that I would just,
I would weigh out based off of like, well, that,
I'm great, I'm charged.
That felt like, that's kind of where I find where that is,
that seems like now I could add some stress
and a little bit more to that work out I did previously
because I didn't feel like, you know,
that really put me out and I had to recover more.
People also underestimate the stimulus and challenge
that learning and skill places on the body.
It doesn't have to be intense.
Like if I, if I went outside right now
and I were practicing a sport that I never play,
I wouldn't have to play it very hard to feel it the next day.
Even though I'm fit,
even though I work out every single day,
I wouldn't have to practice it that much.
I'll have clients all the time who never work out
and I'm just walking them through the movements
and practicing movements, no weight, nothing,
they're not even sweating or shaking that much.
And then I'll get a message the next day.
And I'll be like, wow, I didn't realize that was working me out.
I feel sore in these areas.
It's just a brand new stimulus.
I've experienced it with, like if you put me out right now and a pool and had me go swimming,
I never go swimming.
But if I did, I didn't even have to challenge myself.
The next day, I'd feel like I worked out my body a little bit.
So don't, and I can't stress this enough.
Try not to judge your workout effectiveness
by how sweaty and crazy tired you are during the workout.
Don't worry about that.
Go in there, practice the exercise, get really good at it
when it's easy and it's no longer a challenge.
Throw some weight on it and make it a little bit more challenging.
And just do that every time you work out,
and watch what happens.
Intuition.
All right, next question is from Zenia Rador.
What do you think about instant influencers
who talk about polarizing your content?
For example, veganism and pro carnivore diet
are on opposite ends of the spectrum.
So if you want to build your fitness and health business,
choose a side.
The reasoning is some people will love you and others will hate you and you'll get
more eyes on your content. What do you think about this strategy?
Yeah, it's a good discussion.
Yeah, now it's a great discussion because there's a point, I get the point.
Don't you feel like new media has totally made this a thing? You had to be so general
before with old media, you know?
It is, but it's a very, it's a very scary place to get yourself in.
I mean, you're pigeonholing yourself into a position
or a stance on something that for all you know,
maybe dead in a year or two.
And I'll give you an example.
Like right now, the celery thing,
I didn't even realize it until I got an celery diet.
Yeah.
The juice diet or what? Yeah, it's just and you know they're they're they're posting all the crazy health benefits
attached to it and
I think the only thing that's less
Nutricious than a than a stick of celery is a is a head of lettuce. I think I I correct my fiberglass
Maybe correct me if I'm wrong. I. I don't think anything is less nutrient dense
than a stick of cellar than a fucking,
so basically water with a little bit of fiber.
Right, and there was a trend in the 90s or 80s,
maybe even on the cabbage diet
that was like huge for a minute.
Apparently if you just eat cabbage,
you lose weight or fucking mind blowing.
Right.
And so, you know, you gotta be careful
when you attach yourself to these made up words
and these made up diets and these made up things
that somebody else created to monetize it
and make money off of it.
And you jump on that bandwagon and boy,
it sucks when it's not cool anymore.
I mean, I'll tell you right now,
the carnivore diet
Is as pro as I am about some of the the benefits that I and how it could totally change and change someone's life and help somebody
It'll be it won't be talked about in two years. It won't it'll be dead. It'll be a dead topic
Nobody will be care about it. It's just hot right now. It's so hot to talk about it But But it's going to die. And if you built your whole business
around example, like I just think it's crazy, people that name themselves paleo whatever, or keto
F I M, uh, check right, or yeah, exactly, or keto whatever. And they attach, they attach themselves
to a diet like that. Man, I just, maybe you'll have a nice little run for a minute when
it's being hot and it's being searched like crazy, but good luck keeping that business
going on years later.
Well, even, look, if we started Mind Pump, it's funny we had this conversation when we started
our podcast. When we sat down, we literally talked about how in the new media space, being
specific will get you initially more attention and more eyes. So, if I did, if we started in the new media space, being specific,
will get you initially more attention and more eyes.
So if I did, if we started a podcast that was
the Keto Fat Loss podcast, 100% guarantee
we would have gotten traction faster
than naming our podcast Mind Pump.
But let's work it through the entire process.
Look down the road.
Would we be able to have gotten as big as we are now
if we were called the keto fat loss podcast?
Well, no.
First of all, you're limited to what you could talk about.
Second, like Adam says, these trends grow and then they die
and when they die, you're screwed
and you're limiting yourself quite a bit.
So this is a little bit of a dangerous game
that you're playing by putting yourself in one box.
Here's the thing, if you're gonna put yourself in a box,
you better be fucking the expert on it, okay?
If you're gonna be the keto guy,
you better be Dom Diagostino, okay?
If you're gonna be the Carnivore diet,
you better be the Carnivore Diet expert.
But you see a lot of these people doing this
because they think it's gonna work for them.
They're not that person,
they're not that supreme expert.
It's just tribalism.
And it's not gonna work.
So I think you sure you wanna definitely know your market,
but don't get caught up in the fads. Don't get caught up in that. I think it sure, you want to definitely know your market, but don't get caught up in the fads,
don't get caught up in that.
I think it's stupid.
Well, part of why,
thanks Justin.
Part of why it's not stupid,
like if you're trying to get attention or traction
is because the algorithm is built this way.
So, and I was actually explaining this to Danny
the other day when we did a video
that was a little controversial, right?
He did a video that was behind the neck press, shoulder press, which I've talked about on
this show multiple times.
And I remember when I couldn't do it and I worked towards doing it.
So I'm not anti against the behind that, but it is something that, you know, maybe more
than half of the population above the age of 30 can't do.
And so it's not the safest thing for someone to do,
but I think we should all work towards the ability to do that.
So he did this post and we got a lot of hate
and a lot of comments right away.
And he messaged me and he's like,
oh, Adam, you know, should we have not
have done that video?
I said, no, Danny, I said, you know,
and I gave him some coaching points
and on maybe, you know, at the beginning of the video,
maybe explaining a little more.
I anticipate that you're getting the heck out of me.
Yeah, exactly, anticipating that
and then explaining to people that this movement
isn't for all people and that we should all try and work.
And I thought he did a good job
because he does do it in there,
but I said maybe in the future,
you do that a little bit more at the beginning
just so you don't get as much.
But I said honestly, bro,
I said I'm not too worried because the way the algorithm is built on YouTube and Instagram
is if you do post something and it gets a lot of comments really quick, but doesn't matter
if it's good or bad, it shoots you up on the explore page. It shoots you up on the recommendation
page for YouTube. And so, you know, in a social media world right now, the reason why these people
are probably recommending this as advice that you should be controversial or polarizing
is because it feeds into the algorithm. Now, mind pump, but since day one, it's been about
the long game. So we didn't play these tricks. I did it post like six months ago where I talked
about this. You know, our goal was to deliver as much free,
superior content than any of our competitors
to a point where the average consumer
could not consume all the free information
that we are giving.
And it was all about adding value, adding value,
adding value, and that has been our model.
And it's a much slower model.
That's why you look at all of our pages
and by the size of our Instagrams,
you would never be able to guess the success of the business
But a lot of these other people are chasing the the look of being really successful and the and hacking algorithms and getting likes and getting ads
And so advice like this to become public and this goes right back into the topic that we started this whole fucking podcast with which is the
Mastermind groups and influencer groups. It's no different to me than any other flash in the pan idea.
Like, any other shreds out there that has, they figure out something to be polarizing,
to get it eyes and attention, but, you know, they're not willing to acknowledge other
counterpoints and really have like an approach where I can trust what they're going to put out is valuable information.
So if you're going to do this and have a hard stance on one particular topic or another, you just have to know that it's going to be that much harder for you to ever voice something in a different direction because that's going to solidify a
consumer's opinion about, you know, what you have going from then on forward. Yeah, it's hard to talk against too because
people make a fortune doing it sometimes, you know, like I'll give you a good example.
Muscle-stim machines have been around forever. I mean, literally forever. I mean, back in the 60s, Bruce Lee would buy these
stem machines, attach them to his pecs and they'd make them,
these are the machines that you put on a muscle,
you turn it on and it makes the muscle flex.
Yeah, the butt ones are hot right now.
And so every couple of years.
There's cycles.
Yeah, every couple of years you see one come out
and for a while there was ab ones.
Put this belt around your abs.
It makes, it's like doing a hundred sit-ups while you're working at your desk and it just
makes the abs flex.
You know, there was another one for back pain, you know, or whatever.
And so they recycle them.
Well, now there's one for butt.
Now, part of me is a little bit irritated because I'm like, son of a bitch, of course.
All you have to do is take some stupid shit that always people always buy into
and put it on a body part that everybody's into.
And right now everybody's into the butt.
Now that being said, I think there's something
that I agree with with taking a polarizing stance.
I think there are some things that we do intentionally
like that.
But it's real.
No, of course, so that's our real opinion.
So my point is there's a way to hack the algorithm or there's a way to
Get a lot of people talking about the information you're providing without falling into this trap of you've got to have take a hard stance in a camp
And what I mean by that is like in sounds a good example. He does this a lot on his page where
He will take he'll say something like cardio sucks
Like that's a very polar'll say something like cardio sucks.
That's a very polarizing statement right there, cardio sucks.
But then underneath it, when you read the information, he explains what he means by
that.
And the, the idea is to get people on their comedy and talking and having discussion and
learning and getting educated from it.
And so I think that's a really cool way to take a polarizing stance without getting in a camp
or attaching yourself to a name like keto, like paleo, like veganism, like carnivore diet.
Instead of just taking a stance or getting in a camp with that, there's nothing wrong
with you making polarizing statements and then supporting it with science to get good conversation
happening.
Next question is from Robert M.75.
Do you think sports teach lessons you can't learn
or are difficult to learn elsewhere?
100%.
I think we can say sports,
but I think to be more general competition,
but sports are a great way to do this.
The lessons you learn,
the great thing about sports
and competition is this, especially sports,
is it takes the lessons that you are gonna learn in life
and it makes it very simple and clean.
So like, what lessons do you learn in life?
You need to learn how to work with others.
That's team sports.
You gotta learn how to really work with others.
Know your role, do your role at your absolute best
and work with the people around you.
You also learn with sports how to lose, how to fail.
That's a very important lesson in life
because life is a series of failures.
It's just, it's very few successes,
mostly a bunch of failures.
And so you gotta learn how to roll with those
and grow with those.
Sports teaches you how to how to grind. It teaches you how to focus. I think the reasons why sports are so these are the reason why sports are so important for children. Not to make them physical,
although that's awesome, sure you get physical and you exercise and all that stuff. Not to get them to move and all that stuff,
although those are great, really it's the other lessons
that you get from sports, you can have a kid
that's terrible at sports their entire life,
but they're gonna get a lot out of them
because of all these other lessons.
Yeah, there's a lot, and I look at it
from a movement perspective as far as the expression of like if I looked at what
I'd learn in school particularly academically, I learn a lot that leads me into a specific
direction.
Like, oh, I know a lot more about history because I really focused on that and I have a lot
of information now that is relevant.
And this is gonna help me into my career
or this is the ultimate epitome of where I could go
with that knowledge.
I wanna know the ultimate epitome of where I can go
with my body, with skills, with movement.
And to just train my body to benefit for health is great, but there's also, there's
more potential to it. There's more ways to express myself and figure out where my boundaries
lie, where the ultimate performance capabilities are, like what I could do with my body. My
body has its own particular language. I'm able to do things and communicate
with my fingers, with my toes,
with the way that I can stop,
with the way I can twist,
which the way that I can catch something,
I can predictively learn things
and have like ultimate consequence for.
So for me, sport is,
it's basically like another way to test what I've learned based off of what I've acquired in the gym.
That was a really nerdy answer.
Yeah, it was really good.
Yeah, I wasn't expecting that from you.
I expected that from him more.
Ironically, he went into the thing that I probably would have thought you would have where the direction you went and I agree with Sal that which I think is why you explained it really well as
it's not just sports, it's just competition I think is so important.
And I think it's more important today than it's ever been because we keep, we're going
in the direction of like, oh, don't be competitive with somebody else or be an individual and don't
compare yourself to them. And so we're turning into this society where everyone's equal, but in reality, that's not
true.
Like if you're better than the next person, you tend to succeed more than that person.
And I think in sports, I learned that lesson first.
And I think back to when I first started playing sports, I don't think I'm a, I call myself an athlete
or think I'm athletic, but when I really think about it
and go way back, like, I'm not a gifted athlete at all.
And I think this was one of the first lessons
that I ever got with hard work.
And, you know, I wanted to play,
because I was a kid, dude, and my friends boxed,
and we played basketball, and we played football, and my friends boxed and we played basketball,
we played football, we played baseball,
we played soccer, and you name it.
Like, we did all those things.
I had active friends that were into sports,
and I was a late bloomer, and I was young for my class,
and so, and I was skinny and small.
So I got punked a lot in sports.
I didn't win, but I wanted to play, and I wanted friends.
And so, if I was gonna get good at something, I had to win it, but I wanted to play and I wanted friends. And so if I was going to get good at something,
I had to practice it.
And it wasn't as simple as just showing up on game day
or showing up on the recess and playing.
If I didn't go when nobody was around
and put shots in and practice my skills
and dribble the ball in the house
and put in all this work to better my skill sets,
I would have never been able to compete
and then one day be pretty good at the sports that I played.
This is such a great thing you're saying
because if you have parents listening right now
who are afraid to put their kids in sports
because they suck, like, look at who you became
because of it.
Oh man, that lesson that I learned from sports
and I never became a great athlete,
but the tenacity that I built from not being good
and then wanting to play with others
and getting good enough that I could,
that I could hang and actually got pretty darn good,
that lesson was, I just can't compare it to anything else
that I've ever learned in my life,
and that is now transcended in other other aspects of my life like business and work
You know, I for the longest time I I struggle with with reading and retaining information
I never I never scored high on that. I've joked before about being dyslexic
I you know, I know that that has been a challenge for me for most of my life,
but because I learn those skill sets of hard work
and applying myself and getting back up from practicing sports,
I've learned that in business and learning and growing
and being successful.
And those things I think, you can't get that much anywhere else.
I can't think of any other places in life
where and you're compared in sports.
If I go out and my coach puts me in,
and it's objective.
Yes, my coach puts me in, you know, in basketball,
you have what's they call a plus minus.
So if I got five minutes on the court,
I mean, the coach tracks how many points got scored,
why Adam was out there, how many points got scored against him?
Did he turn over the ball?
Did he make a bucket?
Did he get a rebound?
And I can objectively look at the guys that are in front of me and say,
did I outplay him?
No, I didn't.
I don't.
And my mom can't come over and tell me, good job son.
You're just as good.
No, I'm not mom.
You know, Tommy was in front of me.
Tommy out rebounded me.
He outscored me.
He played better than I did.
And that's a fucking
fact.
And if I want to compete with him, I'm going to have to do more than what Tommy is doing,
which means I'm out there when it's dark and I'm shooting hoops and I'm dribbling in
my house, like I said, and I'm doing the things that I need to do so I can compete with him
and hopefully get better than he is.
And when you start to learn that and then you apply it and then you actually see it
pay off.
Man, it's an incredibly motivating thing to know that you harness this power if you're
willing to put the work in effort and I don't, man, I think sports teaches that better
than anything else.
It's the confidence builder.
It's the best confidence builder because where do we get confidence from?
We get confidence from, not from always winning, okay?
People think, oh, if you're always succeeding,
you're gonna get confidence, that's not true.
True confidence comes, because what happens
is somebody who always succeeds,
the first time they fail, they're crushed.
Real confidence comes from being challenged
and then overcoming, being challenged to the point
where you're not sure if you're gonna make it,
and then you overcome,
now you feel more confident for the next challenge.
I remember learning that and I didn't compete
in traditional sports, but I did in martial arts
and I did judo as a kid.
And judo is a Japanese martial art,
but it's basically wrestling with a Ghee and it's full contact.
And I remember as a kid, when I'd go in the class,
the way you train judo is you wrestle with each other.
So you're actually getting very, very physical and you're trying to pin each other and you're
trying to throw each other.
And I remember my first tournament, I think I was 12 and I was fucking nervous, man.
I was so nervous to go stand on the mat with all these people watching me and go against
the kid who's trying to throw me and I'm trying to throw him.
So, so nervous, I was so nervous, I was so nervous,
and then I went out there and I got second place.
I think I won my first student matches,
lost the second one and won the third one,
and I got second place.
And the confidence I got from that was
that I can do things I'm scared of.
I literally learn that from that tournament.
Like I can be scared of something and do it anyway.
God, is that a powerful lesson?
You know what, me times that has gotten me places.
How many times I've had to do things?
The first gym I managed, I'm a 19 year old kid,
I'm walking to the gym.
I've had a staff of 30 people.
Every single one of them is older than me.
I'm just a kid.
I live at my parents' house.
That gave me the confidence to walk in there
and lead that team.
It gave me the confidence to start my first business.
It gave me the confidence to talk in front of the camera.
It's, these are lessons that you learn
and sports is great because if you lose a game,
you lose a game.
It's okay.
If you never learn how to lose in life, fuck, you're screwed.
Yeah, it's a microcosm.
It's like, for me, it was always like,
it was something where if I'm on the field,
I'm gonna get like the ultimate forces against me.
I was out and I was literally humiliated
because we were getting our asses kicked so bad,
but it was all about how we come back.
How do we come back from this?
Like, are we just gonna next game?
Are we just gonna be dog shit again?
Is that what's gonna happen again?
Are we, like, it just taught me like time after time,
like what you had to do to pick yourself up
and put the efforts in that will get you
through these types of situations.
It's completely changed my perspective on everything
that I do.
I have a completely different lens when I approach everything.
I mean, I remember first getting into podcasting,
I remember talking to Katrina and her being like,
are you afraid or you nervous?
You all of this and I'm like, no, not really.
She's like, do you think you're guys gonna be really good?
I'm like, no, I'm probably not gonna be, I'm probably,
I'm probably not gonna be good at it.
You know, I don't expect to be good.
I expect to be terrible.
I expect it to be challenging.
I expect to fuck up.
Like I expect all those things.
And then I expect that I will pay attention to that.
And then I'll put practice in and I'll put work in.
I'll try and improve my craft,
I'll read, I'll study others, I'll do what it takes
to become better at my craft.
So, I now approach many things in my life
that I've never done before, or that would probably
scare the average person with zero fear.
I just don't fear it, because I expect to be bad.
I expect to fail. That's not going to
keep me from pushing through. And I think sports really, really taught me because I can't think
of anything else that I got that from. And many, many times that I play a sport and come off the
bench or have a guy bigger, stronger, faster in the same position that I was competing for to try and take that position.
And many, many times I was in the cold first thing
in the morning before anybody woke up
or late at night being out and practicing
and doing those things that I'm hoping,
I'm praying that that guy isn't willing to do
what I'm willing to do to get better.
You can't bullshit your way through those games.
And that's the biggest thing it taught me.
As far as practices in your life, it stops on you.
You are the reason why it went that way.
And it's crazy because that consequence is real.
That's why I loved about it.
And really, to take it a step further,
it's not even that you don't feel fear
because I think we need to be more clear.
It's that you perceive it differently.
It means something different to you.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, if I get nervous and anxious now,
it's different because I've been there before
and I've challenged myself and overcome.
So it's not that you're gonna make you a fearless person
in the sense that you just don't feel any fear.
It's that it feels different now.
It's fear doesn't scare you anymore to make it.
And look, the best coaches understand all these lessons.
So if you watch sports, you watch team sports,
you put your kids in sports,
you can see the coaches that understand these lessons
and understand that it's not just the game
that you're actually teaching these kids
had to be better humans. You know, my kids, my boy plays on the basketball team
for his school and they just did it this tournament
and they made it to the finals.
And at halftime, the other team was just warped on them.
I mean, the other team was 20 points ahead
and they were just better.
They were just a better team.
Lights go out, we lose power in the building,
so we had to stop the game.
We get an email the next day that they just gave the game
to the team that one, that was ahead at halftime.
And that was so angry with that, because it's like,
look, first off, there's always a chance for a comeback,
and I'm not delusional.
They probably would have won.
They were beating us, they were a lot better.
But that's not the point. What lesson did you teach the kids? You taught
the kids that they're so far ahead, were over anyway, doesn't matter. They would have
won. What are you doing? Kids come back, teams come back all the time. Life will be, many
times in life are you fucking behind the eight ball and you're screwed, but you come out
on top. And the second lesson that could have been learned is that they lost. Let them
lose.
Fine, they got their asses kicked by 40 points.
That's a great lesson.
I really got angry that they allowed the game to end that way
and just say, oh, they just won
because they were already 20 points ahead.
Silly, I don't care about the skills they learn
where they're playing.
I don't care about all that.
It's all great and that's all plus.
To me, it's like, teach my kid, how to win, teach my kid, how to lose, teach him how to work with the team,
teach him how to push himself,
and have them build confidence.
That's always the most important things in my opinion.
Look, if you go to mindpumpfree.com,
you can download any one of our fitness guides for free.
They're all free, there's about 10 guides on there.
Again, it's mindpumpfree.com.
You can also find all of us on Instagram. We have individual Instagram pages. Mine is
MindPump. Sal, Adam is MindPump. Adam and Justin is MindPump Justin.
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