Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 979: When to Cut Back on Training, How to Become a Better Runner, Ways to Spot a Fake Influencer & MORE
Episode Date: March 2, 2019In this episode of Quah, sponsored by Organifi (organifi.com/mindpump, code "mindpump" for 20% off), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about whether it pays to deload the entire body if on...ly certain muscles feel overtrained, the frequency at which correctional/repatterning movements should be performed, how to practice the skill of running and tips on being an authentic influencer and how to spot the fake ones. PRx Performance has a brand new ‘finish’ to their squat racks. Find out why Justin is angry about it. (3:55) What are Mind Pump’s favorite machines? Plus, what is their ‘dream’ gym set-up? (7:54) The worst offenders in the steam room. (15:00) The importance of relationship building, why everything is not meant to be faster and cheaper & why personal trainers are the evangelists against the battle to beat obesity. (17:04) Sal’s daughter tries the Organifi green juice for the first time. (33:50) #Quah question #1 – When doing full body splits and feeling over trained on a certain muscle group (yet getting stronger on other body parts), should you deload the whole body or only the body parts that feel over trained? (35:46) #Quah question #2 – How frequently should you work on correctional/repatterning movements (like in MAPS Prime Pro)? Once a day, twice or for time? (42:05) #Quah question #3 - How without over training would you go about practicing the skill of running? (50:54) #Quah question #4 - Tips on being an authentic influencer and how to spot the fake ones? (57:05) People Mentioned: Dave Asprey (@dave.asprey) Instagram Ben Greenfield (@bengreenfieldfitness) Instagram Coach Danny Matranga | CSCS (@danny.matranga) Instagram Taylor (@tayvalenz) Instagram Ben Pakulski ® | Official (@bpakfitness) Instagram Red Dot Fitness (@red_dot_fitness) Instagram Dr. Justin Brink (@premiere_spine_sport) Instagram Products Mentioned: March Promotion: MAPS Aesthetic is ½ off!! **Code “BLACK50” at checkout** PRx Performance **Code “MINDPUMP” 5% Off + free MAPS Prime on orders of $500 or more** Organifi **Code “mindpump” for 20% off** Big Tex Gym: Train Like You Mean It Adam’s IG post on ‘Relationship Building’ Red Dot Fitness Muscular Adaptation Programming System | MAPS Prime Pro Program Mind Pump Free Resources
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go. MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND one minutes, we do our introductory conversation before we get into the fitness question.
So here's what we talked about.
We start out by talking about PRX's new Sarah Cote racks.
These are lifting racks you put in your home
that actually fold out, but they're coated
with this new ceramic coating, it's like gun metal, I guess.
You said it right, too, I'm impressed.
Yeah, it's not Sarah Cote.
Yeah, Sarah Cote.
Anyway, we do work with PRX performance. So if you go to PRXperformance.com forward slash mine pump and you use the code mind pump,
you'll get 5% off your order and a free maps prime program with purchase over $500. Yes. Then we
talked about our favorite all time exercise machines, a lot of old machines in
that one because you know we're all old here.
Then we talked about Adam's return to 24-hour fitness and how he spoke to trainers and
we talked all about our enjoyment of talking to trainers.
We talked about my daughter's first taste of organified green juice.
She kind of liked it.
That's a win.
Now organify makes organic supplements and they she kind of liked it. That's a win. Now, organify makes organic supplements,
and they are one of our sponsors.
If you go to organify.com.com,
or slash Mind Pump, and use the code Mind Pump,
you'll get a massive 20% off.
Then we get into the fitness questions.
The first question was,
when working out your whole body,
if only one body part feels like it's being overworked,
should you scale back on that one body part,
or should you scale back the whole body
and let the whole body kind of rest and recover?
Next question.
You're flexing.
How frequently should you work on correctional exercises?
So if you're trying to correct a recruitment pattern
or fix your posture or fix the way you move or walk
or whatever, is that something you should do all the time?
Or should you do it infrequently
with a high level of intensity like you do
when you're trying to build muscle?
Next question, we talk a lot about how running
should be practiced like a skill or a sport.
So if somebody wants to start running,
what is our recommendation then?
How do you go about practicing the skill of running?
And the final question, do we have any tips on being an authentic influencer
and do we have any tips on how to spot the fake ones that you find all over social media?
Also, this month, one of our most popular muscle building, body building, physique competitor,
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Dude how angry how angry are you Justin? I'm angry. Yeah, cuz you you got
I'm not going to be able to do it. You're not going to be able to do it.
I'm not going to be able to do it.
I'm not going to be able to do it.
I'm not going to be able to do it.
I'm not going to be able to do it.
I'm not going to be able to do it.
I'm not going to be able to do it.
I'm not going to be able to do it.
I'm not going to be able to do it.
I'm not going to be able to do it.
I'm not going to be able to do it.
I'm not going to be able to do it. I'm not going to be able to do it. I'm not going to be able to do it. I'm not going to be able to do it. and workshop great for you. But are you annoyed now that you don't have the serricote one? A little bit.
Did you see that?
I'm a little bit perturbed.
Yeah, it's way cooler.
I mean, basically the serricote,
which I thought it was pronounced serricote,
just because I wanted to pronounce it that way.
Yeah, it's actually this layer over the top
so you can actually see that steel finish,
you know, like guns and all that
where they have that cool finish,
where it's like a clear kind of transparent.
They use it in the gun industry, right?
Because it's like, non, it's what is it, corrosion resistant or whatever.
Yeah, but also why it's cool is because of all the damage.
Like, so I've already had little bit flakes and when I go to rack the weights with the bar,
like it'll scratch and like kind of ding it a bit.
Which is fine. Like I'm like, I'm like,
yeah, I'm just like,
Hercules, in my house.
Is it more money for those ones that are finished with that
or are they going that way?
Oh, that's a good question.
Yeah, that's a great question.
I don't know.
I have no idea if they're trying to be unprepared for that question.
Why didn't you get that one, Justin?
They didn't have the option.
Okay, so it was brand new.
Oh, okay, so it didn't exist before.
Yeah, okay. I'm at that. Okay, so it didn't exist before. Yeah, okay.
I mentioned.
No, it's a very cool look.
And, you know, if you're gonna have it in your house, like, yeah, I would totally would
have gone with that option.
Because the powder coating, it does, I mean, it's great and it protects the steel and everything.
But it flakes it.
It flakes, yeah, I was gonna say, I mean, after a long time of banging on it, it's just
kind of inevitable.
Yeah, yeah.
It must be, I wonder if it's more money or they just went to all their stuff.
They don't have to look up PRX and see if it's new like that where all of them are converted
or it's an option that you can pay more to have.
Yeah.
Yeah, I'm not sure about it.
I know right now I'm kind of renovating to that room where I have it in.
So, I'm actually trying to like upgrade that wall and do kind of like the what we did in the front of
Our studio and like have all that
That would
Reclaimed would kind of finish would be would look really cool with that there too
So yeah, you know, I I have a thing for gyms that feel like gyms
You know, I'm saying like Like the color gray, metal plates that clang.
Just like, I just have a thing for it.
Gyms get real, they make them real nice
and aesthetic nowadays.
But some of my best workouts ever
where as a kid and some of these iron dungeons.
Oh yeah.
Yeah, it's some motivating about it.
It's even if it's like beat up
and I mean, just screams that it's been used. I don't's even if it's like beat up and it,
I mean, just screams that it's been used.
I don't remember what gym was it that we went to?
Oh, it's when we filmed big text.
No, well, no, that one's fucking love that place in Texas.
No, when we filmed, originally filmed a map,
Sestetic, we went to that gym, Modesto.
Modesto.
And they had so much equipment in there
that was old school and a little. Oh, I remember that.
Old school and a little fucked up,
but still worked.
And her sport.
Is that what it was called?
And her sport Modesto.
Is this still there?
I actually think they closed that down.
Oh, that sucks.
Because I know the owner, she was,
she's a listener.
Hopefully she's still listening to podcasts.
And the last time I talked to her,
she was telling me that I think they
were moving on from that place.
Someone else might have reopened another one, but the original owners and the inner sport
that I used to go to when I was a kid, like, it's not, it wasn't the one you worked out
at when you were a kid.
No, no, that was.
I'm saying now it's different, I think.
I don't know for sure though.
When we went there, it looked just like what it looked like when I was a 15 year old kid.
We got in there.
That feels so awesome.
Yeah, it was pretty weird
when we were in there shooting that.
It's cool.
Yeah, there was one machine that I hadn't seen
in a long time.
It was a Nautilus chain fed or chain belt machine.
So squat one?
No, no, that one too.
But now days, if you go to a gym
and it's a, if it's a, you know,
selectorized piece of equipment,
selectorized is the one where you take the pin out.
Yeah, it's all cables.
Yes.
And it's either cable or belt.
So they'll use like a nylon belt or a cable to pull the weight rack.
Well, when the original machines, like Nautilus was one of the original manufacturers of those kinds of machines, had a chain.
Now, for obvious reasons, they had to change that because the last place you want to get anything caught in
is between the chain and the camp.
But the thing about chains, that's really good.
It gives the machine a really good feel.
It's like instant contact.
Now do you think it's a really good feel
or do you think that there's a part of you
that's attached to it to a micerove?
I'm sure there is.
I'm sure there is.
But some machines, they haven't been able to duplicate,
like Nautilus had this incline fly machine
that I've never seen anybody make ever again.
So most fly machines now will have handles
that you hold on with your hands.
This one had pads that went in the crux of your elbow.
Do you remember this?
And you do this with it to do a fly or whatever?
Have you messed with the air compressed machines
like Kaiser makes?
Yes. I love those. Yes. And it's like fly wheel. The ones that give you resistance on the way back
as well. There was a machine at actually a whole row of machines at the 24 hour on
Nautilus, the original Nautilus. And I've never seen these since where you would load it was a
electronic resistance. So you type in the weight, so okay, I wanna live.
Yeah, that's a trip.
120 pounds.
And I don't know how the resistance was provided,
it was with magnets or something.
And it would calculate, it would calculate the negative.
So when you lower the rate, it would make it an automatic
like 20 to 30% heavier.
So if I push out 100 pounds, it would come back 120
or 140, whatever it was.
It was a really weird feel.
See, now that was a ARX, I think a bolt proof exec guy like promotes like that.
It's like this crazy expensive piece of equipment, but they always have it like
paleo effects and all that.
So is the one that bend did?
Yeah.
So it like it it overloads like the eccentric portion and like you can only get like maybe like three,
three, yeah, two, three reps into your just like fried.
That's what when we interviewed Dave Asprey,
didn't he say that that's how he worked out?
Yeah, I think he'll 12 minutes.
He's like, you only need to do 12 minutes.
Once a wounder, how many of those things they sold?
And he's like, he gives you all the benefits
of a workout that you would do every day.
And at that, that's the moment we all checked out.
The fuck, that's okay.
Talk to us about coffee.
Cool story.
We'll talk about fitness.
That's not true.
You're wrong about butter coffees.
You got it.
But I used to love that, that novelist.
And then there's another machine that I have yet to find
as good as the original, which was the original that pulled out,
excuse me, pull over, pull over machine. The Monterey has one. They have the original, which was the original that pullover machine.
The Monterey has one.
They have the original one?
Yeah, oh no.
No, it's plate loaded.
It's plate loaded, you're right.
Yeah.
But it's pretty good though.
It's not bad.
Yeah, it's pretty good.
Was it cyan, gym?
I mean, they had a lot of these cool machines
and like you're the only one that's been there.
I can't wait till you guys check it out.
One of the coolest gyms I've ever been to.
And we've been to cool gyms
like I haven't mentioned big text and like the Reno gym like this Trumps all my keep saying and I
Love those guys. They're not so cyan gym is not in Sacramento. Where are they?
I know Santa Rosa Santa Rosa and it's you'd never know it even existed like they they don't promote it
Like there's just like a few members. I don't even know how
many members are actually there at one time, but people come in and come out and there's power
lifters, there's bodybuilders. It has something for everybody. It's the great gym. Yeah, it's a
playground. I heard from Danny or Taylor told me that the owner inherited a bunch of money and literally
just built their dream gym.
Well, it's totally a lifter's dream.
They nailed it.
I don't know how they figured out the layout.
If they designed all that themselves, but it was pretty much perfect.
The way that it was all aligned up.
It's pretty much perfect. Pretty much, I don't know another word pretty much perfect. The way that it was all lined up. It's pretty much perfect.
I don't know another word than perfect.
It takes, it's difficult to make a good amount of money
or to make a successful business on a gym
that's just based off of awesome lifting equipment.
As sad as it is to say that, I feel like that's a tough model.
You know what I'm saying?
To make money with a big box, it's like you gotta go the, you know, what's it called, planet fitness route or 24 fitness type of route.
Like it's tough with like a, a gym that's like a lifters paradise. You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, yeah. I could see how tough that would be. One piece of equipment that's more modern,
that actually is a reflection of old equipment actually that I loved. And if I ever, ever, ever open a gym again in the future,
I will definitely have this,
was that Incline Bench at Pekolsky's gym.
Oh, I like that.
That was so great.
That's actually the first time I've ever used that.
I, me too.
Now that's how Bench's, that's how Incline Bench's originally
were designed and they were wood.
There was like a wood plank that you'd lay back on.
But if I, if doing an incline.
Just like standing and then leaning back.
Yes, because doing an incline press with dumbbells
in an incline where you're kind of seated,
so much better to be able to stand,
lean back and kick the dumbbells back.
I feel like I have better CNS activation,
being able to stand and do that press.
Well, yeah, it's well-standard.
And those that have a hard time using leg drive for actually pressing it totally promotes that because you're standing on your feet versus
You know learning how to try and drive through your legs. I really liked it
Plus there's a lot of other things you could do with that thing the real dealt flies
We are doing on there we're doing some laterals on there. No, it's a great
His gym was my favorite bodybuilder gym that I've been in so far that one big Texas
It would be the gym. I would want to lift in though because I like favorite bodybuilder gym that I've been in so far. That one. Big Texas, it would be the gym I would want to lift in though,
because I like the bodybuilder stuff,
but I also like the fucking heavy dirt.
That motivates you quite a bit.
I was into the Reno one a lot too.
The Reno one with the basketball courts.
Do you like how they flattress the Grass Hill?
And then it had a whole floor that was nothing but deadlift platforms.
We know what I'm saying?
And then it upstairs.
Oh, that hill that you could go to the grass
to push the sled up there.
That was like, oh my God, that's crazy.
I think if I could build the gym closest to my house
that I would use most of the time,
it would probably be something like that facility.
The only thing it was missing
that would make it a more ultimate gym for me is,
you know, and I'm loving this right now,
being back at club sport is,
I do like the little spa side of it,
you know, it's nice to have a really nice,
really nice bathroom and nice locker room, steam,
you know, dry end steam, sauna.
It's a whole, yeah, it's 100%
it sounds way more appealing now.
You're getting older, bro.
Yeah, but they also have good,
they have, you know, a good lifting area too.
So it's normally and club sport finally got their shit together this last year. But before that, it was all, it
only attracted the older spa people. But now they've got that that kind of, you know,
hate to say crossfit air functional area, right? That they have that's got a ton of like,
now are you, have you made the transition to full naked in the locker room and steam
room? Are you still covering yourself up. Wow.
It comes with the hot questions.
So I'm a comfortable naked guy,
but I'm not glad I'm my way to walk around
the locker room naked guy.
So I'm like, when I get my shorts off,
I just take my shorts off and I'm standing there
and naked in front of my locker,
but I'm not the asshole who walks around.
Walks around.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I feel like, yeah, I feel like I could get that done in my towel.
Oh, dry your blood.
I'm right there.
And then I can drop my drawers right before I put my underwear on.
I used to hate it when I would walk in
because you do your walkthrough of the gym, right?
I would do my walkthrough and every time I'd walk,
because you know, I'm the manager,
so people know who I was.
I'd walk through and there was always some dude
that wanted to talk to me about something about the gym
or his membership and this is the part that annoyed me.
And there's his just wizard staring at you.
Yeah, this thing.
Yes.
It's like, god damn it that way.
The thing you know it irritate me,
isn't that he would be completely naked.
It was that he would have one or two articles of clothing
that didn't make sense to put on for like a socks.
Yeah, like a socks, socks and flip-flops.
Like a beating or something.
Yeah.
So true.
Like really guy?
There was one guy that would just wear a headband on.
You would just wear a t-shirt.
No, you would just wear a t-shirt.
And the t-shirt barely, t-shirt and no pants.
And the t-shirt would barely cover.
That's my at-home move.
That's my at-home move.
Is that your thing?
Yeah, at-home, I'm like that. That's weird. Do you really That's my at home moves Yeah, home I'm like that. That's weird
You're really yeah home. I'm like that. It just hangs down a little bit easy at that point
You know the worst was at that same gym
I I was like walk around I noticed you know
There's some guys older guys that are totally just cool be naked
But one of them was watching ESPN in that little room naked sitting on the chair
Your balls are touching where I would sit.
Come on guy.
You know, like you have standards.
Oh, that's disgusting.
No, but that's, I don't know what that is.
There would be guys that would go in
and they would, again, put their t-shirt on,
nothing underneath, and then they go shave.
Which doesn't make any sense.
Why are you doing this?
Just speaking of it, speaking of gyms,
I actually stopped by- a old stomping ground.
All of us, Hill'sdale, I went by Hill'sdale
24-hour fitness.
Oh wow.
Yeah, yesterday.
You were there too, huh?
So, at one point, Hill'sdale?
Yeah, I re-granned open that one.
That's the one where we all were.
Yeah, well, we both took 49.7, too.
So, because Sanatrisa, all of them.
Yeah, Sanatrisa.
Yeah, so I re-grand open Hillsdale,
and then I grand open Sanitrisa.
All right.
Yeah, so those are the two San Jose clubs.
Hillsdale's, the original one that I worked out at,
but it wasn't where it is now.
It was where the home depot was.
And that first one was old school
because it had a women's area.
So men were not allowed in the women's area.
That's where they had the different colored upholstery,
it was the same fucking equipment.
They had racquetball, which racquetball
is not a thing anymore, but in the early 90s.
Oh, it was huge.
And 80s, oh dude, that's how you made your money.
Athletic club, you know,
I always would call that and you have racquetball
and you got like tennis.
And then you traded it for basketball
because then the new one moved over
and then they had the,
it's not even a full basketball court,
it's a smaller version, like a mini version.
And then you learn if you have a basketball court
in your gym, you are going to have to break up fights
constantly.
Every night, it's a constant thing.
So you were over there, huh?
Yeah, yeah, you know, it feel,
this is probably the longest I've gone without not
like going into a 24-hour fitness, especially to go see somebody who I know it, it feels, this is probably the longest I've gone without not like going into a 24-hour
fitness, especially to go see somebody who I know there. It definitely, same feeling, but
very different feeling for me. Like, to everything's the same in the gym, you know what I'm saying?
Like, same people, same type of people, same layout, same everything, right? Like the
feel of it when you come in. But what feels weird for me is not being the guy.
Like that was something that,
and this is something I teach trainers that work in a gym,
even if you're not a manager,
even if you're just the trainer there.
Like, you know, the guy who's willing to,
or the girl who's willing to put in the work
and be the trainer who like everybody knows
because you help and you answer questions
and you're friendly and you'll walk around
and it's always available.
Yeah, and you just, you get become known
and you meet all your regulars and it's like cheers
when you walk in and like you're looking
to create that culture.
Hopefully the leadership there is doing that
but even if you don't have good leaders there,
you as an individual if you're a trainer should create this
and you know, I'm used to walking in a 24-of-fitness
and like, oh yeah, yeah, I'm, oh, no, you know,
like this and making my rounds.
Are you far enough removed now?
Yeah, I'm told you're, I'm nobody.
You know what I'm saying?
I ain't nobody, so I walk in and I don't get that.
Like, in fact, I want you to do an uncle Riko thing.
Yeah, back in the day.
No, no.
Who's your DPR?
No, you know why?
I think I was like that.
Like, I think it reminds me of being the athlete
just at a high school,
who comes back to the high school reunion
and you're talking about your days and some of that.
But I think I'm so far removed now,
that it's not even cool to tell stories
unless someone's asking that.
But I walked to the front desk and I'm like,
hey, it's Thomas.
So our good friend, Justin knows Thomas well
because we work together.
Yeah, Thomas.
Yeah, shout out to Thomas Ben and Ben Randall, who's the regional vice president who
He there too. He's RVP. Oh nice. Yeah, Ben's the regional vice president. He's he's the one who gave the approval for Thomas to get there.
I guess he reached out to Thomas and Thomas was like, hey, I want X, Y, Z as far as pay.
And Ben said, let me see if I can get it approved.
And then he was there like the next fucking day, dude, you moved him into that and then
went in.
So yeah, I went caught up with him.
And I've seen Thomas in years and we had some great, we had some great years.
Now, I heard rumors that they are, they're trying to go back a little bit to some of the
older ways of operating clubs.
Is that true?
So, the unfortunate part is, yeah, they already did that.
And now they're starting to make their way again to some of the car-leabort moves, which
is, so yesterday I had a chance to sit down.
Thomas, I got there, got caught up with him for a while, and then he wanted to introduce
me to his assistant sales manager and his fitness manager, and just kind of spend a little
bit of time with him
and let them pick my brain and shit.
And so he calls them in and we're talking about
like how things are around now.
And they're looking to move in the direction
of actually eliminating the entire sales team
and moving towards the direction of like the McDonald's.
No sales team.
Yeah, no sales team.
Move to the order.
Yep, off the menu.
Yep.
Wow, good luck.
Yeah, that's what I thought that was really interesting
that because I know that they don't.
I don't know why people do that.
People need to realize that.
Well, because fitness isn't like that.
Well, that's the problem.
And this is what happens when you hire CEOs that are,
I forget, like his, the DM, I mean,
besides Ben Randall, who's the RVP,
the other RVPs and DMs and VPs are all from other companies,
dude, and the CEO, like nobody's from fitness.
You have people that, and they're all coming from
respectable companies, and the guys can crunch numbers
really well, but you're right, like this is the,
fitness is unique, it's about the people,
and you take that element out, I mean, so funny,
it's actually, I just posted today on Instagram,
I don't know if you guys saw my post
about the importance of relationship building.
And like, everything is happening.
We're in this tech age now where everything is faster
and cheaper.
And it sounds like that would be a great thing,
but there's certain things that weren't meant
to be faster and cheaper.
And one of those is relationship building
and building value with another human being,
especially when you're selling them on a dream
That isn't tangible. Yeah, this is not something that they can go buy. It's something that you're not physical
No, people get confused
people are not paying a gym to have access to all this wonderful equipment
I know that's what it looks like
But that's not what people are really paying for and by the way the evidence is in how many people pay and don't ever go
That's not what people are really paying for. And by the way, the evidence is in how many people pay and don't ever go.
That what they're really paying for and why they buy it is because they want to change
how they look and how they feel, which isn't in your fucking gym.
I don't walk into a gym and then see what I'm going to look like and feel like.
That's not in there.
All I see is equipment.
I just see a big fucking room.
And if you're going to sell me on just the room and the equipment, well, then I'm just
going to look at the price and I'm going to look at all the other gyms in the area and I'm going to compare the price. And if you're gonna sell me on just the room and the equipment, well, then I'm just gonna look at the price
and I'm gonna look at all the other gyms in the area
and I'm gonna compare the price
and that's what's gonna win me over.
And eventually what that does is it drives the price down
so low and then gyms become these kind of dirty, cheap
facilities or you get these really expensive type
and it kind of, it segregates itself that way.
But really what it is is people are paying for
just like you said, Adam, a dream.
And people don't know what that is,
they don't understand it.
If they did, everybody would be working out.
That's the bottom line.
The bottom line is, and fit.
That's it.
The bottom line is if everybody in the world understood,
if everyone in America understood what we in this room
understand about what, you know, an act of lifestyle
and what eating properly can do for you
and do for everything in your life,
everybody would do it.
That's the problem.
So you need to have people to be able to communicate that.
If you don't have that, you're good luck, you're fucked.
So the whole thing actually inspired me to,
and I told Brianna to help me out with this.
So I'm gonna put it down the podcast
because I haven't put it down the podcast yet,
but it reignited something in me that I just,
I love to do, and I forget how much I like this,
and I like leading other leaders,
and I love spending that time,
and I got to spend probably two hours
with both his managers that work for him.
And I just, I love when I'm able to give to somebody
that I can tell truly appreciates it
and then they look like they're gonna go apply
some of the newfound knowledge or information.
And so what I'm gonna commit to is starting to pop up
in any local gyms in the Bay area.
So I've got a lot of relationships with a lot of GMs.
If you're a podcast listener and you're a GM
or a fitness manager and you want me to
drop in and come talk to some of your trainers, I don't care if there's fucking three of them
or you got 40 of them.
That's fun.
Obviously, I appreciate the more people I can reach and touch that helps me, but I will.
I'll come down and just talk to a handful of people that are in your club and come
hang out and I'll try and bring Justin and Sal as many times but personally,
I'm going to commit to that and start popping up in some of these gyms because it does. I forget,
we get so removed because now we have our own facility and we're here and I feel like a lot of
the people that we're impacting are actually in these big box gyms and trainers that are working
in these gyms. I mean, I would say that a good chunk of our audience
are trainers and other fitness leaders. And, you know, I always feel like we make a greater
impact when we get to spend that one on one time. And that was kind of the motivation behind
the post that I did this morning about relationships is remembering that, you know, because I too
am getting so immersed in this digital world now of podcasting and DMs and
inboxes and emails and it's like you know it that'll never surpass the power of being
able to connect with somebody in person and the value of that it's just it's it's unmeasurable
in comparison to this this touch touch and go where we're just trying to touch people text them
like them smiley face bullshit, like,
nah man, if you don't get to really understand somebody
and know what makes them tick and then find ways
to add value in their lives,
like you're not gonna forge a really good relationship
and I can't stress how important that is to anybody.
Jim's and trainers and people in the fitness industry
are the front line against, in the battle against obesity and poor health.
If anybody's going to solve, because I don't think people quite appreciate the predicament
that modern societies are in, the chronic health issues that we're having to tackle right
now, really do threaten to bankrupt some of the wealthiest nations in the world.
I mean, the rise of things like, of course, obesity and diabetes and anxiety issues and all these
all these health chronic health problems that you can't treat with medications that you have to
treat with changes in lifestyle. The fitness industry has the answers and the soldiers in that
battle, the ones on the front line, are the trainers,
more than anybody else. There's lots of people who are going to help this problem. You
have doctors, you have speakers, you have social media personalities, you have people providing
great information, you have podcast hosts. But the only reason why I'm saying this is because
I was a trainer for 20 years and I know how many people we impact through our podcast.
And I really appreciate that.
We reach a lot of people.
But if I can work with someone in person,
boy can I be effective?
And like I said, those are the, that's the front line.
Those are the soldiers.
Yeah, it's interesting.
I was just like listening to another speaker talk
about this and about addiction. And again,
bringing up that study about the rat and the cage and then changing the environment of the
cage, you know, of the cage and how different it was. And just by the results, yeah, despite
all my rage. But thinking about that in terms of the front line and the trainers and that
human interaction, it's the connection. The opposite of addiction is connection.
And so, we can only go so far as like from a podcaster,
from Instagram or from these remote ways
of community interacting with people.
Whereas that human interaction is actually, that's the bridge.
That's the real power when you build connections
with people to battle addiction,
to battle depression, to battle anxiety,
to all these things,
that's the most potent way to combat it.
Well, the trainers, personal trainers
are the evangelists of fitness.
They're the one, people become trainers mainly,
and again, through all the trainers I've ever met,
it's a job of passion, it's a job of purpose.
Very few people become personal trainers,
they're like, oh, I'm gonna be a trainer,
so I can be rich, or oh, I'm gonna be a trainer,
so I can be glamorous.
Most people become trainers, like, wow,
I really love fitness, I have a passion for this,
and I wanna work for people, so here's what I'm gonna do,
and they become the evangelist for this battle against poor health.
Some of the things I like to communicate most to trainers is just how to communicate more effectively.
I mean, it really comes across and teaching them how to sell their ideas better.
Because that's the part that I think we could all use help in.
Are you scheduled for Red Dot yet?
Yeah, I'm going to go speak at Red Dot on the, I think March 22nd.
And the whole focus of that is, as I'm going to be talking to trainers
and training them on sales skills or on effective communication,
because that just in my experience, you can teach trainers,
training techniques, you can teach them diet techniques,
you can teach them new exercises techniques, you can teach them diet techniques, you can teach them new exercises, and all these great things.
But the biggest impact that trainers make is when they learn how to really communicate
the most basic ideas, but communicate them in ways that are really effective.
And that's also, you know, what sales skills are.
So if you do them right and you really do a good job, you can get people to modify their
behaviors in effective ways.
Now, as RedDoc, going gonna open their doors up to allow others
to come in, do you know?
He's gonna be advertising it.
Oh he is.
Oh shit.
So I think it'll be, I think it'll be open,
but now that we're seeing on the podcast,
I'm pretty sure he'll get a lot of a huge response.
Well, that would be my recommendation
if you're somebody listening right now and you're local
or even if you're not local, I guess if you wanna come in for that,
I mean, it's definitely valuable to spend time with you.
It's RedD Dot Fitness, yeah.
Yeah, DM them.
They're, I think they're Red, Red underscore,
dot underscore fitness, is that what the actual,
I think they're handless.
I'll look right now, but yeah, I mean,
it's fun, you know, it's fun for me
because yeah, it's Red underscore dot underscore fitness
and dot spell DOT.
I, you know, it's fun for me because when I talk
to other people who are in fitness,
the feedback that I get is,
we don't get lots of feedback like that through podcasting,
you know, through sitting down and talking to people,
actually training people.
And talking to other people helps me also organize
my ideas and my thoughts.
And so it helps me deliver what I want to deliver
on the podcast even better because I was just talking
to a bunch of people live and personally getting
a lot of questions and stuff.
But it's also, it's a passion, dude.
It's a lot of fun.
Yeah, no, I just enjoy doing it.
That selfish for me to be honest, it's really is
because I felt fulfilled from it.
It's like, here I am doing something where I'm giving my time
or giving my information,
but there's something about knowing that the two
I'm talking to are other leaders in their space
and they're gonna go impact 10 people underneath them
who then are impacting all the consumers
that are coming through the gym.
So, you know, even though it's only two people,
I know that those two people
are greatly impacting that community. And that feels really good, especially when I know that I'm
breaking through. Like, when I'm saying things that they're going like, holy shit, like I was taught
the opposite of that, or I was told this, or I didn't even think of that, or wow, that's
fuck, I can't wait to apply that. Like, you're getting feedback like that. I'm like, fuck,
I'm, that's cool, you know, like, so even though I'm no longer the guy anymore when I go in there and I'm used to that feeling I can still be someone who can
impact it positively which is a really cool feeling and it's there's a little bit of selfish
motivation behind because I really don't have the fucking time to be doing this but I tell you what man
it it was very fulfilling to do that I mean shit it was great to reconnect with somebody who I
I have a strong relationship with like Thomas Kubota and I have a lot of respect for, by
the way, do you guys want to have Mike Tyson on the show?
Uh, yeah. So he, uh, he, he, hold on a second. How the fuck what? Yeah, he's got, he, he,
he offered to me, he said, uh, so I'm calling you out, Thomas, if you're listening right
now. So I hope you weren't blowing smoke. Yeah, see it happen. Yeah, no, he's he's
really good friends. He coaches a baseball league with his best friend. So he knows him really
well. And so he's like, yeah, no, I can absolutely reach out to him and see if you will see
what happens. Right, right. For our audience is like, when's the mic?
I don't worry. I'll give Thomas the social up so they can fucking with everybody.
I'm putting the pressure on him right now.
There you go.
Let's go.
Thomas balls in your court, buddy.
That would be fucking awesome.
Yeah, he literally just text me that right now.
Wow.
No, no, trainers are the ones working with people.
There's a lot of researchers out there.
There's a lot of doctors and PhDs and people who talk about the latest
research on nutrition about the latest research
on nutrition and the latest research on exercise,
and here's what we think needs to happen.
Here's the other things that we think need to happen.
But you talk to a trainer who's been training people
for five, 10, 15 years,
and they'll tell you exactly what has worked
and what's worked is that individualized coaching,
is that understanding people,
and it is understanding how to communicate to people.
And so that's why those are my favorite people to talk to.
They always will be.
So anyway, I was wanna tell you guys that yesterday
I had my daughter try the Organifi Green Juice.
For the first time?
Yeah, she tried it for the first time.
Oh, I didn't actually like it.
Yeah, so, yes, she actually did.
So at first she didn't want it because it's green.
Yeah, you know? it's like my dad.
Yeah, it's easy like that too.
It's so resistant at first, you know.
Yeah, green ew.
No, no, so I'm serious.
So she's kind of getting into why the,
why she eats certain things and what they provide her.
So I thought this was a good opportunity to,
so I mixed it up and I said,
well, this is, it's a, you know,
it's a powder drink, it's, you know powder drink, it's dried super food vegetables or whatever, spirulina, chlorella,
all that stuff, and I kind of explained it to her.
And I said, and then they also made it kind of taste kind of good.
So you'll probably feel energy from drinking this and she got all excited, so she tasted
it.
And she's like, it's not bad.
I'm like, yeah, win.
You know, it's still my favorite.
Dude, that minty aftertaste is awesome.
Yeah, it actually feels really good.
So have you combined it with the pure?
No, I've combined the pure with the red
for the pre-workout stuff.
Oh yeah, that's gotta be pretty good.
Forget his name who suggested that to me,
but he's like, oh, I'm talking about I like combining
their shit.
I mean, I like taking their stuff and mixing it up.
It's a nice little experiment.
See what happens.
Yeah, just a cool $50 drink, nobody goes.
One, sir.
It's one serving.
It's one serving.
No, but performance-based.
I haven't done that.
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Alright, a first question is from Chris Lima's 94. When doing full body splits and feeling overtrained
on a certain muscle group, yet getting stronger
on other body parts, should you de-load the whole body
or only the body parts that feel overtrained?
Okay, hold on, I gotta reread this.
So basically what he's saying is when you're working out your body
and some of your body parts are progressing
but some of them feel over-trained.
Like let's say my biceps are just feeling really fatigued
they don't seem to be improving, I feel like I'm doing too much.
But all the other body parts are doing great.
Should you de-load everything or g-st-de-load the area
that you feel like it's being overworked. I think
it's a really good question. It's an interesting question. And I don't know if I've ever
been hit with that question like that. And I'm trying to use your your analogy where let's
give it give me an example where you may have seen this with a client where they've said
this to you like hey I felt this for a while. So give me let me hear your example so I
can then better give an answer. Yeah, so I felt this before where like,
I'll be training a particular way and my pressing movements
are feeling good, pulling movements are feeling good,
but I feel like I've done too many deadlifts
and my low back is feeling a little bit over fatigued.
So then what I'll typically do is back off on the deadlifts
but I won't back off on the other exercises,
versus should you to de-load everything, in other words.
And it is a good question because-
Okay, so then yeah, and I think that's the answer,
is exactly what you said, is I would definitely wouldn't,
if I'm only feeling fatigued in one part of my body,
there really is either one, I'm probably doing too much
of something like deadlifting because
that is a good example.
I think you just back off of that movement that's probably causing you to feel this way,
your low back being fatigued, or because I can't give any other example than that.
But we know your biceps going to be fatigued and it's not like if you're rowing, couldn't
you? like your, we know your biceps gonna be fatigued and it not like if you're rowing, couldn't you correctly?
Like, you can definitely overwork one part of your body
and the other areas improve.
However, there is a systemic effect too.
So, and the bigger the muscle group,
the more the systemic effect probably takes place.
So like if I overwork my legs,
it's probably gonna influence the rest of my body more
than if I overwork, let's
say my forearm flexors, for example.
So I think that the logical thing to do would be to de-load the area that feels like it's
over being overdone.
And the way I de-load it first is reduce the intensity.
I typically don't...
Or just or pull out the exercises that are probably causing that much damage.
The only time I've ever feel like this is your example of, and this has definitely happened
to me where I know that I'm squatting too much, or I know that I'm deadlifting too much.
My knees start to get achy, or I feel like I'm not really progressing strengthwise.
My squat, in fact, there's times where I'll feel this, where week over week over week
I was feeling stronger, stronger, stronger than all of a sudden I hit kind of a plateau
and maybe even see a decrease in weight and see myself in a
weaker. That's normally a sign to me that I'm overdoing. It's time to de-load. And that's
where I would, yeah, I guess I've had that with bench press too, where I feel my shoulder
really like talking to me and I'm like, I, and between that and then all the other shoulder
pressing moves, you know, in combination with that, it was like the volume of it was
really increased where I was like, okay, I need to like extract some of these.
So then what would you do?
What would you do?
Just pull one extra one.
Yeah, one or two major one.
Major, major, major.
Yeah, right.
That's what I would do, too.
I pick one offender that's probably cause, that's most likely causing this.
Yeah.
I wouldn't avoid all movements, you know, in that, in that particular muscle.
But if you put, if it's a big body part
and you push it too hard,
then you may need to deal with the whole body,
but that's not as common.
But here's something interesting.
So I just read, I can't remember where it was.
I just read a study where they were determining
the recovery ability, the general recovery ability
of individual body parts, and they were ranking them.
Oh, right, I mean, yeah.
So like which body parts require the most rest?
Which body parts can handle the most frequent load
or the most work?
So I said, core and cast.
So it was a lower body and then core
were the ones that you could work the most.
The most, you recovered the fast.
Yes, and then it was like chest and back and stuff
that required the most amount of rest.
Now I found this fascinating.
And it kind of feeds into the old,
you know, I guess, like work your core every day.
Yeah, bodybuilder mythology where they're like,
oh, calves need to be here every day.
Hit your core every day.
Legs can be worked out more frequently,
but you need to work these areas a little less frequently.
And the speculation was,
are these body parts inherently different?
Is it that your legs and calves are built different
and they need more work?
Or is it that you just use them all the time?
Yeah, that's what I think.
I think they're just involved with like every movement.
Yeah, I can tell you know,
it's like, it has to recover,
but like your body prioritizes the recovery.
Yeah, because I think if you take the average person,
the average person at least walks. So they're, you know, people don't walk on their hands. Yeah, because I think if you take the average person, the average person at least walks,
so they're, you know, people don't walk on their hands.
Yeah.
So their calves can probably take more work than the rest of their body.
So I mean, that kind of applies, I guess, to this question, where some body parts just
aren't going to be able to handle the load or the training or the intensity that other
body parts are going to be able to handle.
And so just scale those particular areas back
and then see how you feel.
Have you guys noticed areas of your body
that you can just be able to handle way more than others?
Yeah, my buys and tries.
Anything that's incorporated in my arms,
and I train that for so many years,
I think to handle that much volume and tensi,
that now it's almost impossible.
Matter of fact, it was used to be really difficult for me
to even get a pump in them because how much I over did them.
I've actually had to lay off for many years
just so I could feel them again,
but I used to be able to just hammer my buys and tries
for an hour and a half and walk out the gym
and be the next day I could get them again if I wanted to.
That, I think, is important to think about
is like the things that you've neglected the most
are probably the most sensitive to feel over trained
and over done, the things that you have built that intensity,
built that volume up over years
are probably gonna be able to handle a beating or like you said,
you guys referenced the walking,
like your things like calves and she'll like that tend to be
able to handle a lot more. Next question is from sd ward 92. How frequently should you work on correctional
repaturning movements like in maps prime pro once a day each movement twice or for time?
Okay, so correctional exercises are best done very frequently as possible.
Yeah, with with with a low load and lower intensity.
And the reason, here's the reason why.
So if you're trying to build muscle,
you want to use a certain load and certain intensity.
It's usually a high load and high intensity,
because that's what tends to work the best for muscle growth.
But when we're trying to change a movement pattern,
we're not trying to build muscle. We're trying to change a movement pattern, we're not trying to build muscle.
We're trying to change how your body literally fires muscles and relaxes other muscles.
And it's called a recruitment pattern. And what you're trying to do is you're trying to change
that. And if you add too much load or too much intensity to that, you're going to revert to the
pattern that you do all the time. So it's like, imagine if you're trying to run a new way,
you get a running coach and the running coach says,
okay, here's changes about the way you strike your foot,
changes about the way you run.
And so now you're practicing, you're practicing,
but oh fuck, there's a bear chasing me now.
So now I gotta run real fast.
You're gonna go back to the way you know how to run best.
The other example I like to give is using a tie-priter. If you know how to type just two fingers and I'm teaching you with
all of your fingers and then I'd say hey type as fast you can it'll give you a
thousand bucks. You until you've learned how to do it really really well with
all your fingers you're gonna have to go back to the two fingers because that's
the fastest way you know how to do it. So when it comes to correctional
exercise it's got to be done a lot but it's also got to be done kind of at a
lower intensity because too heavy or too hard and it just goes back.
Yeah, it's interesting going through the coaching process of sports and like paint attention to all these little nuances, like wrist position, you know, how they're incorporating loading of the back foot and driving of the hips and all these things are have to
have to add up and line up in sequence for it to produce the best result and
I mean this is no different than that like we're we're we need to refine that process and that takes a lot of practice and so just
Just honing in on that particular movement
and really paying attention to it
and being present in it is gonna be like the determination
of whether or not it's gonna stick
because your body already has a way
that it's like this is the most effective way to do this.
And so we're fighting that natural tendency.
And so it just takes repetitive, repetitive practice to then build it into
the subconscious where now this is the new operating system.
Yeah, it's tough.
I used to tell clients to do correctional extras.
I would give them a few and the problem with this is it's tough.
When I train people, they come in, they'd work out with me for an hour.
That wasn't hard because they were there and they showed up.
The hard part was, okay, here's your homework. Like go do this on your own.
And so what I found to be the most effective
is I would do correctional exercise with them
at a bit higher intensity
because I could watch them and kind of force them
into position.
Then I would give them like one or two movements
because I'd wanna give them five,
but there's no way they're gonna do them all the time.
So I'd say here's your one or two movements.
And then what I wanted to do is
why you're sitting at your desk every other hour,
just do five reps of this movement right here,
just and really connect to it.
And I'd have them do it all day long every day.
I had the best success, you know, doing it that way.
Yeah, and to find opportunities to include it is everything.
So the first thing in the morning, you know, like before I get in the shower,
like there's certain mobility moves I'll do.
And, you know, I'm struggling with some pain right now.
So I'm like, every opportunity I have where I'm sitting
and listening to somebody and it's not like a really weird
awkward thing for me to like, plop into a 90, 90 or whatever,
I'm gonna do it.
You know, I'm like watching TV, I'm just gonna do it.
Like I just, I think of that as like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm Yeah, I do like short foot and foot exercises
that we learn from brink.
And I just do them throughout the day, you know,
like sitting here while we're podcasting
and I'll start doing it on my foot.
Like, you know, while I'm writing,
I'll do it on my foot or if I'm watching TV.
And that's been the most effective way I've done it.
Before my belief was that, oh, you do,
you gotta do dedicated hour of correctional exercise
twice a week. And it just did not work nearly as much.
It has to be something that overrides your old habit,
and then it's gotta turn into something,
you don't, you use subconscious, that's perfect.
It has to turn into something you don't think about anymore.
Like, when people are like, oh, good posture, okay,
I'm just gonna try and stand up with good posture all day long.
That's impossible.
You don't wanna have to think about your posture all day long.
I'm not stressful, that is.
You imagine every time you stand,
you have to think about what you're doing with your posture.
We wanna get you the point where your good posture
is natural.
That's just how you stand.
Or when you're squatting down,
that's just how you squat.
That is your new default pattern.
And that just requires lots of practice over and over.
I know, Adam, when you were working on your squat,
you would just sit in it throughout the day.
I might see you would do it all the time.
Yeah, no, that's been, and now it's the control position.
I know everyone's, was commenting on that last photo
that we took of all of us in the group,
but like it's now a comfortable spot.
If I need to, if I need to kneel or get down,
I'll get in a squat first, which that was never like that before.
It took the time of having to create the habit
and actually do all the work.
And this is, I like to focus on one joint at a time.
So, for me, I worked the ankle first,
then I went to the hip and then I started focusing
on my shoulders.
So, I like Sal, I've had the most success with clients
with one thing.
Literally, I want to create, for me, it was a combat stretch,
which, and why I like one thing,
because it's so fucking tedious in itself,
and that's why I think a lot of people don't do it,
but it was probably one of the most impactful stretches
that I ever did to improve my ankle mobility,
which was the combat stretch.
And so it was like, it was all about the combat stretch.
So every single time that I went to the gym,
I for sure did it before I got started.
If I was good, I was also doing it after I finished my workout
and then one to two times throughout the day,
I'd be doing it.
And then it would just get to a point
where I was doing it so much
that now I could get down in the squatted position
and I could kind of do a combat stretch
in a squatted position.
Because all it really is is you driving your knees forward.
So I can do that intrinsically,
pushing my knees forward over my toes
till I feel that limit to where it can't anymore.
And then I just lift both toes up.
So I've now learned to combine a lot of the mobility drills
that I had to do by them, isolate and do by themself
multiple times per day to get that new found range of motion.
Now that I have there, I just,
just to stay connected, I can kind of combine all of them.
So you see on my Instagram, not that long ago,
I posted the squatted kind of reverse fly move that I do,
which I'm priming and working on my thoracic mobility and my shoulders there.
But I'm also keeping my good ankle mobility because you can't see it, but I'm also lifting
my toes up towards my shins and I'm upright, and I'm tucking my chin back.
So I'm actually doing one move that's kind of just keeping
good mobility in all these other joints,
but I had to get there.
I had to isolate one and do it as much as I possibly can,
because like you said, Sal, it's like,
you're trying to combat not just some bad patterns,
but bad patterns that you've been doing
for probably years.
And so, you know, five times for three weeks is not enough.
You know, this is something that you've got
to fuckin' drill in and it's gotta be,
like you said, second nature.
And then once I see progress in that joint,
I'm moving to the next one and then now I'm just about
trying to keep it all up.
Think about it this way, it's like learning a new language.
The most of anybody will tell you the most effective way to learn a new language is to
immerse yourself in that language and live in the place that speaks that language.
You learn it real quick because you practice it so often.
So that's the most effective way I would say, but of course you have to be pragmatic.
So for pragmatism's sake, I would say do the correctional or repraterning
movements, at least twice a day, spend 10 minutes twice a day, even better would be three
or four times a day.
Next question is from Kray Manley. You guys talk about how running should be practiced
like a sport. How would you go about practicing the skill of running?
I would say slowly.
You know, you gotta start really, really slow.
I, here's the thing, ideally, I mean,
I'm gonna talk about generals here,
but this is so different from person to person,
that if you really wanna be a,
if you really wanna run, okay, if you're an adult,
and you really wanna run for a workout,
and you wanna develop a, you know,
a long habit of running, and enjoy the benefits that come from running and the skill of running.
The best, absolutely best thing you could do is hire a actual coach that specializes in running and literally tell them, hey look, I haven't run a long time, I'm not a runner, I want to be able to run for a workout, but I'm not hiring you to do a workout, I want you to teach me how to run properly in a way that I'll be able to do
for a long time without injury. That's the absolute best thing you could do. Now, generally speaking,
for most people, I would say don't run to fatigue, that's number one. So you want to run, as you
start to get a little tired,
stop, because that's just going to throw your formal off.
Focus on running well by watching videos and reading books on it.
And do an adequate amount of priming before you go out and run.
So before you go out and run, it's like part of your warm up.
Prime your ankles, prime your hips, prime your core, maybe even your thoracic
because believe it or not, running can encourage
forward children a lot of people.
And then go out and do it real slow and practice,
practice the skill of it.
You start to get tired, stop for a second, catch a breath
and try it again and give yourself a lot of time.
Give yourself a lot of time to get better at it.
Yeah, the coaching part is very important.
I think that having other eyes assess,
your gate assess like your ankle mobility assess,
you know, the way that your spinal alignment
and everything else is set up in terms of like,
the prerequisites, you know know before we get into the actual training
for running. Just to get you in a good place where now I can, this repetitive stress, which is
really what running is, like it's just this repetitive stress and this same mechanical movement
that we're trying to refine as you go through the practicing part of it.
To really set yourself up for it,
it really is going to require somebody to sort of break down and look and see
where these potential deficiencies may lie.
I really highly suggest you get a good assessment
to make sure that as you're striking the ground
and all these pressure points and all these, the pressure points
and all these things are lining up
and stacking up in a favorable way,
where if it's a long term,
in terms of endurance, is that your goal?
Do you wanna be a good sprinter?
What particular event or what's like drawing you in
towards running?
Like what's the motivation there?
I think that's gonna be a big determiner for me,
even as a coach to try and get you running
for that particular way the best.
Yeah, right now, if you want to,
like let's say you wanna start running
and you go to like a running store,
that sells really good running shoes.
What they'll do is they'll have you run,
they'll watch how you run,
and then this is
what they do.
I would tell you some insights.
Yeah, be careful of this.
Yes, and this is fascinating.
And it works in the short term, right?
They'll watch you run and be like, oh, and they're smart at this.
And they do identify running patterns, and they'll say, okay, you have your feet pronate,
meaning they both turn in, or your feet supinate, or your toes turned this way or whatever.
I have the perfect shoe for you,
and then what the shoe is designed to do
is offset and almost set up a crutch.
So if your feet pronate, it's gonna have a strong,
you know, aspect in it to prevent that from happening.
And then you'll run in these shoes
that are designed for your dysfunction,
and you'll be like, whoa, I feel so much better running,
but it's really not fixing the problem.
It's masking it.
Prime your body, learn the mechanics, stop before fatigue.
It's the same process I'm going through swimming right now.
Get me sure my body is primed in a good position
before I get in there and I swim.
I've learned the mechanics now.
I've been watching tons and tons of tutorials
and picking up on the areas that I would,
what I was doing poorly.
When I get in there and I start doing,
25, 50 meters at a time,
anytime I get beyond 50 meters,
except for at the very beginning when I have a lot more gas,
but as soon as I start getting beyond 50 meters,
I start to notice the form breakdown.
My legs start to drag a little bit.
My head has to roll back more to get air.
I start slamming my arms into the water. I could still keep going.
But as soon as I feel that, I stop.
Because I'm trying to perfect my mechanics right now.
If I'm really gonna, and I'm approaching swimming
the same way that I would think you should approach running
is learn the mechanics, understand what good mechanics
look like, whether that be hiring a coach
and our shit, there's probably great YouTube tutorials
just like I found for swimming, you know, that you could learn and study. Which I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, a coach or a ship, there's probably great YouTube tutorials, just like I found for swimming, you know, that you could learn and study.
And I film yourself, which, right.
So I've done all this stuff and I've now started to pick apart my mechanics.
So either, and there's a handful of things like I just talked about, my legs start to
drag.
I rotate my head up for more air when I'm, when I'm starting to get fatigued, my arms,
I start slamming them in the water. So I start doing these little things, right, I'm starting to get fatigued. My arms, I start slamming them in the water.
So I start doing these little things
right as I start to get fatigued.
And like I said, I could keep going
for another easy 50, 100 meters, but I stopped there.
I stopped, I gather myself, I let my heart rate
come all the way back down,
because I'm not trying to just build endurance.
I wanna create good mechanics.
And so I care more about that than telling somebody
Oh, I just did a thousand meters straight like well, I could do that
It would be ugly and awful and I would also start teaching myself bad habits where I don't want to do that
So running would be the same thing learn the mechanics
Understand what good running looks like and
Prime the body before you get in it and don't push yourself beyond fatigue. Next question is from Jay David Sousa.
Tips on being an authentic influencer
and how to spot the fake ones.
Oh man.
How much do you hate, you guys hate that term,
Influencer.
Influencer, yes.
It's the worst.
I think so.
I think what we're kind of in the middle
of an influencer bubble,
because social media has allowed so many people
to build a business and grow a platform.
Well, it's really the new celebrity.
If you wanna throw a term out there,
it's like the same shit.
Well, I think it gets more competitive.
It may change a little bit.
Right now we're seeing kind of this bubble of,
you know, like become an influencer,
learn how to influence people.
This is what you wanna do or whatever
to say you build your business.
As far as it being authentic,
I mean, the only tip I can give to be authentic
is to actually be authentic.
I don't know how else to answer that.
You know what I'm saying?
How do you spot the ones that are not?
I think that's the question is,
how do you spot the fake ones?
The ones that are not really authentic.
How can you differentiate mind-punk from so and so
who claims to be this authentic person, but isn't really.
It's a hard thing to do.
I mean, it's like porn.
Like you know what, when you see that, I know.
You know what I'm saying?
I know a fake when I see one.
You never heard that term?
I think it was a Supreme Court case where they were talking
about pornography and how do you label it?
What's porn, what's art, whatever.
Yeah.
And they said, well, I just know it when I see it.
You know what I'm saying?
So psychically.
You know, like I know there's a lot of,
look, I can be obvious.
Like I can say, oh, the lighting was a little better.
I can say all the fitness influencers that,
and I'll stick to fitness because that's my expertise
or whatever, but, you know,
people who don't know what they're talking about,
people who post lots of pictures of their butt to get lots of likes, people who change their message to
move along with the fads.
You know, I could say all that kind of stuff.
I think a good one is measure the value that they're adding to your life.
You know, if you are, and you have to ask yourself yourself this if you're following a quote-unquote
influencer and you really ask yourself what is it you like best about this person?
What is it because they do funny shit on their Instagram or they do cool impressive shit or they drive cool cars and
That's is what's driving you to their thing ask yourself if that's really things that add value to your life
Maybe it does. I don't know.
But to me, if that's the things that you are, if you're trying to decipher whether these
are fake ones or not, I mean everyone's real, right?
And if people are going and buying things because of them, they're all influencers, right?
They're not fake, they're just as real as we are.
The difference is they use gimmicks and bullshit to persuade you to try and buy
things. And you know, the only way I would be able to tell is how are they doing that? Are they
doing that through, you know, showing you cool shit that has nothing to do with the value they're
trying to add in your life? Like I think that's the best way to separate who maybe you should or
should not be following. But that's going to be different for every maybe you should or should not be following,
but that's gonna be different for every person.
That's tough, dude,
because I mean, there's times
that you see people like virtue signaling
and things like they say things that they know,
oh, it's gonna buy my empathy,
or like I'm like, oh wow, like yeah, he's so real,
but it's all planned. But it's all planned.
So it's a tough question to answer
if you don't apply critical thinking towards all these.
Like exactly, so if they are applying value in your life,
but also that they're willing to,
I don't know, like a connect,
like I hate to say real, but like you just feel,
it feels like they really care
and they're passionate with the subject matter.
Yeah, there's an old saying, I think,
in advertising where it's like donate,
you know, $10,000 to a charity
and spend $100,000 letting everybody know that you did that.
That's the virtue signaling.
Exactly.
And you do see a lot of that in social like,
oh today, it's a picture of myself or whatever.
Today, I had a great day.
I actually helped all these people
and I helped this person do this.
And I just wanted to talk about how I helped all these people.
Or, hey, today I'd like to talk about,
there's a lot of that right now.
That's why I bring that up.
Yeah, I'm trying to not have a big ego.
So let me tell you about how small my ego is
and how it all I am.
And here's my post and please like it, type of deal.
That kind of stuff, it comes across as the kind of fake stuff.
But at the same time, we use these platforms
to promote ourselves.
Right.
And we're trying to talk a lot of businesses.
And at the same time, as consumers,
we're following and we're buying.
Yeah.
So are they not real?
I mean, they're influencing people.
So we're all doing the dance.
It's kind of more like what's your flavor?
You know, if you're still,
and some people don't give a fuck
about the superficial side shit.
Like, I mean, they're there.
I follow some Instagram accounts
that I am not allowing them to influence any part of my life,
but they post cool pictures.
They got cool pictures of bulldogs,
or they snowboard, or they got dope ass cars,
they got their enda watches.
Shooting guns with the wheels, aren't they?
But I most certainly, I'm not taking advice,
or I'm not allowing them to influence me
in the things that I do.
But I think there's nothing wrong
with following people,
because you like some of that cool shit.
And I don't think it's a matter of deciphering
whether somebody is a fake influence or a real
influencer.
I think if they have a following and people are going and doing things because they do
them or they say them, they're a fucking influencer.
I was having a conversation the other day with a potential guest that we may have on the
show.
And I don't want to talk too much about him because I want to leave it for the episode.
But we were talking about how this age that we're were in media, social media and technology.
And what he's saying is that in his generation, these are younger people, there seems to
be this huge movement of people who are trying to unplug more and start to abstain from
using social media, or at least start to put parameters and limits on it because they're
finding it's becoming all-consuming.
And one of the things he said is he says,
you know, ask yourself, there's nothing wrong
with using media and there's nothing wrong
with listening to certain people's advice and stuff,
but when you're on social media,
ask yourself if what you're doing is constructive
and helpful to you or if you're just wasting time.
That's the biggest thing.
Like, am I on here just kind of bullshit
and because then that can become addictive
or I'm on here because I'm getting information
or I'm trying to run my business
or I'm trying to figure something out
because it's a powerful tool.
I thought that was an interesting conversation,
interesting thing to think about.
Well, something that I like that feels
the most authentic and real to me.
Cause I'll be honest, like,
even Instagram and itself doesn't feel
fully authentic and real to me
because I grew up most of my life without social media and I've always been a, be honest, like even Instagram and itself doesn't feel fully authentic and real to me because
I grew up most of my life without social media and I've always been a, I mean, I used to
tease my friends that were big into Facebook when Facebook came on and said, like, I don't
need Facebook, I have real friends in real life.
And that was kind of my comeback to why I made fun of myself.
Right.
Why I was on it.
I mean, I've evolved from that and I believe there's a lot of value in it, but at the same
time too, there's some parts of it that I feel like, you know, I try and present things that represent the stuff
that I'm into and who I am. So if you're somebody, the way I look at it from a business perspective,
if you're dropping into my page and you scroll through it, at first glance, I feel like if you read
the captions, you look at the photos I have, you get kind of an idea who I am. I'm sarcastic,
I'm kind of an asshole sometimes, I say, whitty shit. I talk a little bit about fitness.
You know I'm into working out and helping people. I'm into business type stuff. I love bulldogs.
I like to snowboard. I feel like it's a business card or a representation of who I am,
but it doesn't feel super real and authentic. The most real and authentic part,
I feel on the social media platforms is either this
one right here that we're doing right now on the podcast because it's long form and not
scripted or when I do the Q&As with people where they drive the content.
They ask the question and I just respond the way I would react, which sometimes is a
smart ass response, sometimes it's funny, sometimes it's deep, sometimes it's fucking whatever,
or I don't fucking know the answer.
That's me, that's like what you get when you deal with me.
I think that's as authentic as I have ever felt
on this on these platforms.
It's a luring to chase the likes,
you know, on the pictures and the approval.
And I think that sometimes directs people
in a way that is not authentic to themselves.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, somebody notices, oh, if I post a picture of myself flexing
or whatever, or my shirt off, I get lots of likes
and that encourages them to do that more.
And when in real life, this person would never do that.
I was this example.
I used to tell you guys this,
when we were first building this,
and it served its purpose to take the selfie, me or selfies.
And I thought I've added a lot of value for people as far as showing them what I looked like,
showing what I did,
carbs, protein fat, this and that.
But it required me to be in front of the mirror,
not only looking at myself,
but posing and taking a picture.
That could not be further away from
who the fuck I really am.
Like I didn't, and I never cared about body building
or anything like that stuff.
So when I first was building the Instagram
and obviously every other post is that,
if you're a person who drops into my page then,
you think on this self-absorbed asshole
who's into his body, sure he knows this stuff
about fucking working out and stuff like that,
but you get this kind of perception of me
that I don't think is a good, isn't really good.
I'm not sure.
Yeah, accurate perception of who I really am,
where I feel like my Instagram is more really who I don't chase likes
I don't try and drive traffic anymore on that
I just post occasionally when I have time and I normally post things that I think represent my life
What you see me doing or what I'm into and I try and be as as real and authentic as I possibly can but originally
I wasn't I was chasing follows and I was chasing likes and that was working.
And I remember it ate away at me.
It ate away at me because when we transitioned
in the podcast, you know, and that's why
I feel sorry for a lot of these people that I'm not impressed
if you've got millions of followers
and you're having to do things that aren't really you
every single day to get there because I know
what's inevitable.
I know that eventually that wears and breaks
you down. I know eventually it causes all kinds of anxiety and depression and you fucking
end up quitting or you can't live with yourself over or you're taking a bunch of pills to suppress
it. And I've seen a ton of this. So you want to be yourself. You want to be as real as you
possibly can be because even if it's working for you right now to get a lot of likes and
follows, if sooner or later that shit comes down.
It does.
And the irony is from a business perspective, if you have 5,000 actual real followers who
really connect with the authentic you, that is from a business perspective worth more
than 50,000 lucky lose who have no idea who you really are and just following this fake
facade. And it's very very true
I know lots of people with huge
Followings can't get can barely turn it into a $10,000 a year business because if they've built this this whole persona
That provides no real value. So if that said make sure and follow me on Instagram at mine pump Justin
You know just go do that.
Yeah, you can find me at Mind Pump Sal
and Adam at Mind Pump Adam.
Also, if you go to Mind Pump Free.com,
you can check out some of our guides,
and they're free, they cost nothing.
Download all of them, check them out.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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