Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 993: How to Avoid Overtraining, Successfully Training Deconditioned Clients, the Value of College & MORE
Episode Date: March 22, 2019In this episode of Quah, sponsored by MAPS Fitness Products (www.mapsfitnessproducts.com), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about the what constitutes overtraining, how to handle clients ...that are very deconditioned or have mobility issues, what they preach that they don’t practice enough and whether or not they will encourage their children to go to college. Organifi Pure gets the guys on FIRE and ready to go! (4:43) When did Adam start to lose his ‘luxurious’ locks? (6:30) Is brand loyalty still alive? Most Amazon brands are duds, not disrupters, study finds. Why quality matters, the importance of reviews & MORE. (13:19) Will Netflix go under?? Disney officially owns 21st Century Fox. The guys speculate on the fallout. (24:40) The future of gaming. Google unveils gaming platform Stadia, a competitor to Xbox, PlayStation, and PC. (27:08) The new frontier of Digital Wellness and creating practices around technology. (29:11) Housekeeping notes: Mind Pump switching platforms, new website & MORE. (40:55) Mind Pump & Mimosas: Live Q&A event. (42:13) #Quah question #1 – What constitutes overtraining? (44:25) #Quah question #2 – In the beginning of your career, how did you handle clients that were very deconditioned or had mobility issues? (54:34) #Quah question #3 - What do you preach that you don’t practice enough yourself? (1:02:47) #Quah question #4 – Will you encourage your children to go to college? Do you think there will be enough value to it by the time they are ready? (1:09:38) People Mentioned: Mike Matthews (@muscleforlifefitness) Instagram Enzo Coglitore (@enzocog) Instagram Products Mentioned: March Promotion: MAPS Aesthetic is ½ off!! **Code “BLACK50” at checkout** Organifi **Code “mindpump” for 20% off** Vuori Clothing **25% off** Won't You Be My Neighbor? Movie | Official Website Most Amazon Brands Are Duds, Not Disrupters, Study Finds - Bloomberg Disney-Fox Entertainment Merger Is Official In $71.3 Billion Deal Google Unveils Gaming Platform Stadia, A Competitor To Xbox, PlayStation And PC Microsoft Will Roll Out Video Game Streaming Service in 2019 | Fortune Mind Pump Episode 982: Improving Digital Wellness with Tommy Sobel Mind Pump Live – Register Now Prime Pro Bundle | MAPS Fitness Products - Mind Pump Mind Pump Free Resources
Transcript
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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 have some fun, we do our introductory conversation. Here's what we talked about before we got into the fitness.
First off, I talk about organify pure.
That is their neutropic product that has my brain on fire.
Right now, you can probably hear it in my voice.
It's pure fire.
Organify makes organic supplements like protein powders,
green powders, red juices, gold juices.
Good stuff.
If you go to organify.com-mympomp and use the code,
mympomp, you'll get 20% off.
Then we talk about Adam's hair loss again.
That was a good time.
Oh wow.
We talk about Amazon brand loyalty and why quality always wins.
We've had this debate about whether or not Amazon
is going to take over because they're going to create
all these products and shut all these brands down.
Adam brought up this article that kind of goes against that
and was actually quite compelling.
And then we talked about quality.
And of course, that reminded us of Viori athletic wear,
clothing for men and for women.
It's a company we work with.
The highest quality work out leisure wear
that we've ever seen, looks really good.
And of course, we're sponsored by them.
If you go to Viori clothing, Viori Spell VU-O-R-I,
clothing.com-sash-mind-pump,
we will get you a full 25% off your first order.
Then we talk about Netflix versus Disney,
the war is starting, who's gonna win?
Here comes the Titans.
We talk about Google's new video gaming streaming system.
And they're also gonna go to 8K.
I don't know the hell that means 8K.
That's gonna be crazy.
Yeah, holograms.
We talked about my interview I did this morning
and we talked about digital wellness
and digital fasting.
Ladies and gentlemen, the future of your health
depends on whether or not you develop practices
around your use of technology.
You heard it here first. We are prophesizing this. Then we talked about how MindPump is switching to
a brand new platform, new website. It's going to look awesome. We apologize ahead of time if there's
some disruptions, but we think it's going to be all smooth. And then we talked about our new
and then we talked about our new up and coming event, Mind Pump and Mimosas.
This is in San Jose on 420, so you know it's gonna be fun.
We're gonna be answering questions.
It's live. Get to meet us live, have a good time.
You get drinking hang out with us.
Come on.
You get to give Justin a hug in real life.
And let me tell you, it's awesome.
He's a great huger.
I'm a good huger.
He is the best hugger.
This is how you sign up for it.
Five times too long.
Go to mimepumplive.com, go there, sign up, limited space.
Then we get into the fitness part of this episode.
The first question was, we talk about the dangers
of overtraining all the time.
What if I'm sedentary?
I don't do a lot.
Does that mean I can work out even harder and more
because I'm normally lazy?
Find out the question, the answer to that question
in that episode, in this part of this episode.
That was confusing.
What?
Next question.
In the beginning of our careers, we handled clients
that were deconditioned or with mobility issues
in particular ways, and that evolved as we got better.
How do you handle people with mobility issues?
How do you convince them to work on the mobility?
Because all they wanna do is lose 30 pounds.
Next question, what is something that we preach,
but we don't practice?
Are we hypocrites on anything?
You bet your ass.
Oh, we're trying to get the dirt.
And the final question, are we going to encourage
our children to go to college,
or are we gonna talk to them about doing different things?
Great debate and discussion in that part of this episode.
Also, remind everybody, maps aesthetic,
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Watch what happens to your body.
Again, that's at mapsfitinistproducts.com and Sally.
OrganifyPure gets me on fire every time.
Yeah, every time.
Well, we need to get more water bottles
because we missed today here.
I think I got it in my mind.
It's the first day.
Oh, you did?
I mixed it in there.
You're a dog, dude.
Well, you're hiding it from me.
I do my thing, you know.
I, I, I, they have to be one of their best sellers.
It has to be.
It's one of the best products I've tried.
Did I tell you, I, I actually just,
uh, Sean, I know she would get, I don't know, should get mad at me
for talking about this.
We had to like read, negotiate,
or identify contract because our code leaked out
to one of those.
coupon code sites.
Yes, coupon code sites.
So, and next month, I believe we're announcing
the new code that we had to redo everything like that,
which, you know, so they're still making us change the code?
Yeah, yeah, we have to change the code.
It's going to be Mind Pump 20 is what it's going to be.
So much.
Yeah, it's not their lives.
So if you're listening to episode right now, it's to Mind Pump Cove.
And it will still exist.
You'll still be able to use either one, but we had an arena go,
shake the contract because they wanted to split that and separate it.
And I was like, well, that's going to screw us because there's going to be
half of our audience that's been trained to use Mind Pump, they always use Mind Pump.
Plus episodes are evergreen, they just live on the internet.
Yeah, that was quite the hassle to go back.
That's gonna be the new challenge for these companies is how are they gonna try, because
it's gonna be like old school commercials because yeah, okay fine, we'll change our code,
guess what's gonna happen.
That new code's gonna be used on another, gonna's gonna throw that up on another website or whatever.
I mean, at the end of the day,
it's went all the way around for them.
I was saying it's just exposure.
Yeah, yeah, so for real.
Them it's a went all the way around,
but it was the first, I think,
first time that's happened to us that we had to kind of figure out
our way around, how to navigate around that.
So that was an interesting thing.
Congratulations to her, by the way,
she just had her baby girl.
Oh, it did, she did just have it. Did you see the pictures do a lot of hair, huh adorable, right so great. You just love kids
What a miracle I do they're wonderful. I can't wait for yours to come that I'm pretty I'm pretty excited
I'm it you know, it's neat to hear my we're just I'm gonna teach a kid all kinds of shit
He's gonna come out all kinds of hair just despite I'm like
I'm gonna fuck off Justin. I used to have, I used to have just,
oh, just locks. Beautiful. I remember. Beautiful. Gorgeous, full afro. Curly, yeah. No,
luxurious hair. Yes, luxurious hair. Wavy. I would say, hold on a second. Wait, when did it start to thin?
Not when it went, not when it got like where it's at now,
but when did you notice it start to thin?
About 26 is when I really start.
Not necessarily.
Yeah, so the funny part is it's Justin Jared and myself,
there's three of us really, and Chris actually,
there was four of us all through high school
that were like best of friends.
And I remember the summer where the guys had said something
to me. So I think I've told you guys had said something to me.
So I think I've told you guys this before
that when we'd wakeboard, we used to make these videos,
like we'd film ourselves wakeboarding,
and then we'd edit them and put music behind them.
Yeah, yeah, totally.
It was the HS.
Yeah.
And I was the last one.
So Chris went first.
He started to go in high school, Jared went,
his freshman year of college,
Justin was around 24, 25, and then me, I was about 26, 27.
When it just started to happen, and the only way you could tell was when we used to go boating.
And you heard him go wet?
Yeah, my hair would get wet, and it would separate from the crown a little bit, and that was like the big joke amongst all of us,
is we used to fuck with each other and take video clips of it.
Yeah, hold on a second, they were started before you. Oh, yeah. Did you guys all grow up in the same area? big jump amongst all of us is we used to fuck with each other and take video clips of it. Yeah.
Hold on a second.
They were started before you.
Oh, yeah.
Did you guys all grow up in the same area?
Yeah.
Because that's kind of early.
I wonder if you guys were exposed
and talked some or some shit.
Maybe some pollution.
Did they have a lot of like a body hair
for, because my friend, like a couple of my friends
that went bald, like real early,
like there was a first to get like, you know,
the chest hair and all of them.
I just remember like them having like the facial hair and everything before everybody
and like sixth grade.
And I was like, oh shit.
It's all about DHT receptors and the density of them in your scalp.
And if you have a lot of DHT receptors there and your high, maybe your DHT levels are
high, high testosterone, I'm sure.
I was the first to get gray to go gray.
Well, I'm pretty, all my friends, I'm pretty certain that it was messing with master on for me
because up into that point, which is a,
it's a steroid derived from D.H.
Right. I'm also sounds like a cool heavy metal band.
I'm almost certain that that was the main cause
because up into that point, I never really noticed it.
And I had already messed with steroids before that in my even or younger 20s
And I didn't get in and I didn't know what the fuck I was doing with master on I use master on and since then
That's when I started to notice you were predisposed, but then you turned it on turbo
That's what I think I think I think that I was I there was a good chance that I was gonna thin at one point
And I think doing that in my early 20s just to kick that up.
So they say that the pattern which you lose your hair will determine if you can stop it
or slow it down or how much of a potential you have for slowing it down.
If you tend to lose hair in the front and top, that's harder to stop.
If you lose it just in the back, they say that that's easier to
slow down.
If it's like, it just goes peak, like it's like a V.
Dude, my brother, dude, my brother is like.
It's like, yeah.
Oh yeah, yeah.
Yeah, it breads that way.
No, my brother's started, man, it started going.
It means, yeah.
And we tease him all the time about it.
And he was making fun.
You got white hair, Sal.
And I'm like, will my white hair stays in my head.
Yeah, you're just committing stuff.
I would rather have grays than I would want losing.
There's nothing you can do about that.
But I have the back.
And I tell you what, ever since one,
not taking any steroids or testosterone,
for sure, never taking a master on ever again,
I've kind of managed it where it's at.
It hasn't gotten worse,
but it hasn't gotten really that much better.
I've mentioned before using the tools like Juve
and you're using the Saul Paul Metal shampoo now.
I am.
We'll see if that does anything.
It takes like a while of using it to know.
Yeah, I'm very consistent with it.
So since you gave it to me,
I've been using it every single day
and I'm about halfway through the bottle.
So we'll see.
I think you gave it to me about a month
ago. Yeah. And it has to be a myth. The whole like your mother
side determines it is because yeah, dude, because everybody told
me that and like, I mean, my, my grandpa was like, like super thin,
like barely any hair. And then also like, I mean, my mom is kind
of going really thin too. And my dad, super thick, you know,
bushy hair.
Crazy.
I was sitting with my daughter, we were watching TV,
and I was kind of falling asleep a little bit,
and that little shit, man, she starts pulling on my ear hair.
She's like, what are you doing?
She's like, why do you have hair there?
Yeah.
Yeah, I think she was expecting some kind of,
because I always explain things like,
well, and human evolution, whatever.
I had no explanation.
I had no idea why that exists.
No, it was here, Earhart, dude.
So I was watching the Mr. Rogers.
Finally, I watched that documentary.
Amazing, amazing.
Oh, dude, I feel.
It was my field, dude.
Definitely, and I needed that after watching Waco
in Michael Jackson and Michael Jackson
I was like I felt like everybody in the world is evil and horrible
Everybody's horrible right now. There was one beacon of light you know out there
but
What I was noticing was as he was aging his the bushy eyebrows were at a control
And I was like oh my god, I think that's happening to me.
The court news called me out on it,
and I'm like, oh shit.
I'd take care of this, it's getting out of hand.
Do you trim your eyebrow?
Yeah, dude, I do.
Otherwise, it would look like that.
Like it would squirt.
It would squirt the bushy, get squirted.
Yeah, it got like hedges, and just,
I need to take care of this.
It's, you know what, you gotta be careful, man.
You fuck up a little bit, you're fucked.
I know.
Like you fuck up on one eyebrow.
You gotta make it look like it was on purpose.
Like have like some lighting bolt thing in there
or something like that.
You look like a futuristic.
Anytime you watch a futuristic movie ever
noticing out weird eyebrows, pay attention.
It's always some weird shit.
Like what the fuck?
Well the weirdest things when yeah, they shave it off
and then you're like, you can't like identify right away.
What's wrong? It on you. You stare at them and you're like, you can't identify right away what's wrong.
It on you, you stare at them and you're like,
wait, they don't have eyebrows.
They look surprised.
Whoa.
Yeah, I had a friend who passed out at a party.
Here's a little tip for you.
Never pass out around your friends.
Yeah.
They will mess with, they will do terrible things to you.
But this way, they passed out.
And so of course, they shaved his eyebrows.
So he woke up.
He didn't even notice it for like a day or two.
No.
No. He didn't notice it. Nobody two. No, no, nobody told him.
Yeah, nobody said nothing.
But horrible, dude.
And yeah, and he was like, we took him much later.
He's like, what the fuck?
So what do you do then?
Do you like take a sharpie and like, you know, pretend for a while?
He's a guy, he just let him throw it.
He just let it happen.
So I got to bring up something that we've talked about
quite a few times on the show.
So we're big on sharing things that we've been wrong, right?
So I pride ourselves and pride myself
and being somebody.
First of all, speak for yourself.
Yeah.
Maybe just to you, that was wrong.
Yeah.
Well, this is something I talked about
and then you've actually doubled down on it.
Since I've talked about that,
and one of the things that we've said is that,
you know, the whole idea of brands are dead.
And this is kind of a cool thing to share with the audience
because this is like an internal argument that we have.
So we have Taylor on the other side
who is Mr. Brand guy.
Like he is all about building the brand
and creating a brand for Mind Pump.
And one of the frustrations that I even have sometimes
is like getting him out of that mentality
sometimes with where things are going.
And so we've been talking for some time now on the show about companies like Amazon that
they are destroying the old model of the importance of building this reputable brand because it
won't matter in the future because everybody will search the five star thing.
Well, this article comes out, I think it was yesterday and we'll have Jackie link in the show notes, but it's just talks about
how they've done some research on all these brands
like batteries and clothing and shit that Amazon
is producing, you know, because they own the platform,
they hack it and automatically put it towards the top
and it's getting a ton of sales and traction,
but people are reviewing it not so great.
And there's household brands and names that we're so used to,
people are still staying loyal to it,
because, and it makes sense
because, and let's use clothing, for example,
like, because they even try to get an hack into that space.
And, you know, we work with a brand like Viori,
who, you can just tell by the quality of stuff that they create.
Hands down, it's the best. Hands down. No, it's amazing. It fits comfortable, it looks great,
you can tell the materials amazing. There's a wash it a bunch of times, it looks brand new every time.
So you see brands like this and then you go like like man How are they gonna survive with Amazon who eventually if they wanted to one day all send get into that
But if you've done a good job like I feel like a Viori has done as far as creating a solid brand
And you've got a community enough people once you try it and you wear it like even us
Let's say we weren't sponsored by Viori anymore. There's no doubt in my mind, I would still be buying it.
Yeah, that's a hundred percent.
Because I've now, I've wore it, I loved it, it's great.
It was a massive difference.
I mean, and that was the thing too, with the whole merch side of things,
you can find materials out there and you could just put a logo on it.
It's not even going to compare to somebody who actually like,
can tailor the fit to people's bodies.
They understand what it takes for certain frictions,
certain ways that it should stretch,
certain areas.
And somebody who is up on culture.
That too, obviously the fashion of it.
What is the jack of all traits?
But what part will we wrong on?
I don't think we said that Amazon would,
that all these, I think that the argument was
that in the past for a new brand or an unknown brand
to penetrate the market was very hard,
but now people look at reviews
and even Amazon's products will get shitty reviews
unless they lie.
Yeah, and they somewhat do, right?
They have control of what they want it.
Sure, really some of that platform.
Sure.
I don't even get very similar to Costco.
I mean, it's like, I don't know.
Like, maybe their quality isn't as good yet,
but it's like, if it's a little bit cheap,
there's always going to be people that will prefer something
that's a little cheaper.
That's a great example, Justin.
Cause it's not like Costco has put
linarities at a business.
No.
It's not like, I mean, I, I, they didn't put out the,
my, I forget the name of my store that I go to,
and I see how funny it is that.
I don't even remember the name of the market that I go to,
but I, I'm so sold on the experience of going there
because of how I, they make me feel when I walk in,
everything from the butcher to the person who greets me
when I walk in to the person I that check out,
I can't, I don't even remember the name of the company.
No, Costco's not a great experience.
No, it's not.
No, it's a nightmare, right?
It's a nightmare going on there,
but you go there,
and so there's a bulk up on shit that's like the essentials,
but like, you still want,
even like produce,
it's great sometimes,
but like you're like,
no dude, I want something from the CSA,
I want something that local,
or I want, you know, quality that's like perishable.
You know, like, well, one thing that Costco did well was they did their Kirkland brand,
but here's what they was smart about.
They didn't, they're not making the, in producing and manufacturing those products.
They're buying them from people who already, so like their vodka is, you know,
I forgot who their vodka was.
If it was, I think it's sky or, or someone really good,
they're buying it from them in bulk
and then selling it through, through the way.
I don't think Amazon itself is gonna kill brands.
I think they're gonna have the power
to do kind of what Costco does
buy from these brands, produce it themselves
if the brands allow them to.
But really what they've done is they flipped,
the big part of the model that they flipped on their head was when I went to the store and I bought a supplement, for example, or
a product, I went with familiarity.
Like I've used this before, I know it's good.
I don't know.
This new product looks interesting.
It's got a nice label.
Maybe I'll try it, but most likely I won't.
But if I go on Amazon, I have reviews that I can read.
Like I just bought a dust buster.
You know a dust bbuster is a little vacuum.
And we were on there and Jessica heard that the Dyson one
was great and Dyson's a great brand.
It's got a lot of familiarity.
I've used their price.
Dyson's hilarious.
They overengineered like everything.
What's crazy.
So good, good.
Like everybody's like, oh, they're the best, right?
It's like I was like a fucking $250 dustbuster.
And I'm like, look at this one on Amazon for 60 bucks.
She's like, there's no way it's gonna be good.
I'm like, okay, it's got 150 reviews.
Let's read the reviews.
And the reviews were all very positive.
So I'm like, let's give it a shot and see if we like it.
And we got it.
And I'm very satisfied.
But if I didn't have that review process,
no way I would have gone, I would have gone,
yeah, sure.
So it's gonna, it's gonna get, it going to tap into the people like you that are cheap and
probably didn't own and didn't own a dust buster from Dyson before. But anybody who owned the
dust buster from Dyson now maybe has something to compare to and they might tell you they might
say otherwise. But there's enough people like you who said, hey, it got the job done and I paid
only $60 and that's good. And so what you're talking about is the option loyalty.
And exactly.
And that's what they're saying here is in this article,
it talks about how important this brand loyalty is
and people are becoming more savvy to that Amazon does own this,
does have control of all this.
And so they're not being as swayed
as what they initially were by the reviews.
Like what we said is people are going like, okay, like no shit, it's number three. It's
fucking Amazon's brand. No shit. It's got 5,000 five star plus views. It's Amazon's brand.
That's not enough to sell me any as it was before on doing it, especially if it's something
that I I already have been married to that brand like Dyson, but you bring up a good example. Maybe I've never owned a deskbuster before,
and I'm thinking about buying one, and that review is enough to get me to try the $60 one,
and I never know, I never experienced driving a Dyson.
It's interesting to see what's happened to Yelp, right?
They were along those lines of reviews, like that was the standard.
You know, that was like everybody would go to Yelp to like find out about like certain restaurants and certain businesses and it was like
complete shenanigans like like people buying off
bad reviews so that would just like bury the reviews like there's all kinds of shit going on
with that yeah and it just got this this general mistrust I'm not saying Amazon has it yet
all those gamers if it will those games are being played on Amazon right now.
We talked to Mike Matthews about that a while ago.
Right. Here's the future.
Okay.
Reviews, 100%.
The future of reviews is when Facebook is able to connect
with these companies.
And instead of seeing 100 reviews, you're going to see
five reviews from people I know.
Yeah.
That's when the fucking shit's going to happen.
Yeah, if it's people like, yeah, like related to you
or your friend or yeah, that's when it's going to change, you ever like related to you or a friend or yeah
That's when it's gonna change when you're looking up a product and it's gonna pull up the products that friends that you know
Well, you know if if Facebook ever collabs and actually does that which I don't know if I see that happening right now
That's giving away some of Facebook's power because right now Facebook owns that power of the connection to the friends and the ability to do that
And right now that's exactly what this article is arguing is that the power of brand connection to the friends and the ability to do that. And right now, that's exactly what this article is arguing
is that the power of brand loyalty
and with people like that is higher.
You, like, let's say, what if you were about to shop there
and I told you, oh, don't waste your money
on that cheap shit, trust me, do the fucking dice
and one, it's worth the extra.
So we go, oh, trust you.
You would trust me, of course.
Right, so even, so it would, that still supersedes
the five-sorry.
Now, so what I mean is, so take it a step further, I think A, that's going to happen at
some points, two valuables, two valuable of a tool for people to see, people that they
know, review something, because I want to see what Justin said about this creatine.
Yeah, but what if Facebook does that alone and doesn't collaborate?
They might, but I think that that's gonna happen.
The other thing that I think's gonna happen is
they're also gonna start showing you reviews
from people who are like you.
So rather than reading reviews from a bunch of different people,
it's gonna be like,
we should just start a review service.
Yeah, that's it.
As if we don't have enough.
That's a great, great, great answer.
Yeah, just do that.
We should have been charged for it. That's a great, great, great, great, great. Yes, just do that.
We should invent that.
It'll be reviews from like,
menu or age interested in muscle building
who've been working out for this long,
or it'll be people who also like
these other websites that you go to.
So you can be listening to reviews from people
who are more like you that I think
it's gonna keep getting more and more fine tune to that point.
But ultimately, for 100%, I know me,
if I see a product or whatever,
and I see reviews from people I know,
that I'm gonna trust way more than these random ones.
Right, but I don't predict,
or what I don't think is gonna happen
is what you just said is that Facebook will integrate
with Amazon, that's giving up your power as Facebook.
If anything, Facebook will try to create
a competitive type of a platform with Amazon
because they do know that, that you're right,
that hey, friends, trust other friends, recommendations,
more so than they can trust Amazon's five star rating revenue.
This is why Facebook, for me, is such a,
like this is a big buy.
Like when I talk to people about investments,
I am by the way, no investment expert at all.
So just take a little,
it's definitely a long place.
I, you have over, I don't know,
how many billion people are on Facebook now,
two billion, it is as a company,
it has the most detailed information
on its customers and people by far.
Now all these tech companies have all this information on you
because they know how to track you and see what your purchasing habits are and what your searches are.
Facebook has that plus it has all the voluntary shit. Plus it has all the articles.
Political and as emotional, like it has like way too much information.
Pictures, everything. That is so much power. I don't even think that people need to can comprehend what that can potentially mean for the future.
So like in terms of investment, Facebook's a. I'm constantly investing in because I'm like with all that
Of their nation constantly being conflict with the government the government's already paying attention to them
They're trying to fuck with them. It's it's like a dance that they're on on those notes of things that we're
You know speculating on what's gonna happen company wise. What do you think is gonna happen with Netflix now?
Is Netflix gonna go under?
I think what's going on.
I think so.
Last night was the big signing,
the official signing of Fox with Disney acquired Fox now.
So Disney owns Fox, owns.
That is way more interesting.
I'm fucking super interested in that.
Justin and I were talking about this
while you were on your interview.
Man, look out.
Look the fuck out, dude.
Disney is on there.
And, you know, I bought them too.
And Netflix has been, yeah, no, I'm in on them too.
I, that was HubSpot and Disney is what we said this year
is the two companies that I think I'm interested
in watching more than anything else.
And I really think that, you know,
Netflix has leveraged the farm, dude, they have leveraged hard on buying people and content.
They aren't this super profitable business
as you would think they are.
You know what I love about this?
It just goes to show you when you start
to see these companies blow up and you're like,
oh, they're gonna dominate the market.
Competition.
Competition comes in.
It always fucking comes in with all these companies
Here's what I think it's gonna be I think it's gonna be these are just networks like CBS NBC whatever and they're just gonna compete
And you're gonna be like hey, I watched this new show. Where'd you see it on Hulu? Oh awesome. Where'd you see it on prime?
Okay, I said on Disney that's all yeah, you say that but Disney motherfucker bot like all the networks
Dude, they just they just swooped up Fox and Hulu Dude, I heard somebody to like bring up a really interesting point about YouTube and that
YouTube is getting so many views and
The content is not necessary. They might have some paid for content, but not much. It's all
Freely given and it's almost like it like it's almost like an outsourcing thing like
or what do they call it open source?
Well, we're providing the content for everybody's paying attention to it.
You know, talk about profitability like your margins there versus like somebody like Netflix
that has to pay for, you know, the production.
They have to pay for like this director.
They have to pay for, you know, like so many things that like they're constantly
gonna have to pay to play.
You're gonna see a lot of new, up and coming content producers.
You're gonna start to see the caliber,
it's already exploding on YouTube,
but you're gonna see a lot of these independently funded
and filmed, you know, videos and films uploaded to YouTube.
Like here's where I'm gonna get my start,
and then when they get good, good and good.
And then, well, speaking of YouTube,
because that's Google, right?
Google, did you see what Google just did with gaming?
They just put their hat in the ring
for to come after Xbox and PlayStation.
Oh, they're doing like a console?
No, it's console free.
That's what you do.
And it's streaming in 4K.
Oh, shit.
And it's multiplayer worldwide. I mean, you have like controllers it's streaming in 4k. Oh shit. And it's multiplayer world wide.
I mean, you have like controllers and everything they offer.
But yeah, oh, it can be controller or controller free.
Or controller free.
It can be streamed to your phone.
It can be streamed to your computer.
Any system.
They promise it's going to go up to 8k.
Yeah.
Like, what does that even mean?
Yeah.
What the fuck?
They're going to see the future.
You see, you see atoms?
I'm really curious though to see how Google
This is and this is not like the first time this has been attempted and by the way
I know I'm saying that Google's doing this Microsoft has plans also by the end of this year to to release its
You know competitive
You know, it's I forget what it's called and I don't even remember the name and Jack Jack you will
Link this article for the actual.
So not Xbox, another gaming streaming.
It is streaming, so the future of gaming,
the one knock on video game consoles right now,
is it's like a massive computer, right?
It's a console.
Yeah, it's a big console that you have to have,
and so wherever you go, where the future is
to be able to game like that with your friends worldwide
anywhere at that that great of you know speed and clarity on your phone or TV
without this. And so with your talking about what you're going to be able to do
imagine the advertising on this too. So they they say that you'll be able to
imagine your kid playing on the stream, up pops this new game that advertises to them.
They will be able to, right away, link and play it.
Well, right away, click it, go through.
Oh, I'm going through the download.
Yes, it's whatever.
It's downloading anything instantly streamed right away,
and then you'll see a bump sell
for $50 by the whole game now.
But it's all cloud-based gaming innocence.
What a time to be alive.
I mean, it's insane.
This is so crazy.
The advancements are just moving so quick.
So fast.
Actually, I remember, so this morning I was on an interview
and one of the questions that I was asked was,
what do you think is on the, like, the new frontier
of fitness, health and wellness?
Like, what are the things that you think
health and wellness you're gonna have to focus on on and hands down 100% its digital wellness.
It's going to be on how to manage all this tech, how to develop practices around all this tech
because I see that being the biggest health challenge now or the new big health challenge
that we're all going to be facing because think about how it's just like anything else.
We're so inundated with this incredible advancements
and technology and we have no practices around them.
Nothing, we don't even know how much of a detriment,
certain practices can and can't be.
So we just kinda like open the floodgates,
use it, go for it, have a good time.
And the scary part is that the speed at which it's compounding.
So when you think of exercise, if we were to go back,
you know, 5,000, 2,000 years, go back just a thousand years,
and if they were to able to see what we're doing for exercise,
they would laugh at us.
Yeah, because you didn't go to, right, you didn't have to.
And really that, would it took for Jim and exercise to happen involved, I mean, have a practice. Right, you didn't have to. And really that, what it took for Jim and exercise
to happen involved, I mean, that was decades.
It was a lot of, it was a lot of side effects.
Yeah, slowly though, right?
It wasn't like all sudden we were this healthy nation
that did exercise and we did these laborious jobs.
And then the next day, we were literally sitting
on our asses all day long and we were all obese and fat.
This has been something, it's been something
we've been watching escalate decade over decade over decade.
It's taken time for us to become so sedentary and so overweight.
And this is fast.
This is, that's what's scary about these fasts.
We went from just 10 years ago,
nobody really carrying a phone in their pocket
or maybe a little bit long on that now, right?
So it's 15 years.
Yeah, 15 years ago, nobody even really had a phone
in their pocket too.
Not only do you every single person,
including Bums, today have a phone in their pocket,
but now you're fucking glued to it.
You're glued to it for multiple hours a day.
It's sucking you.
So, wow, and just in a decade's time, we see that.
That's why I think this message,
we need to spearhead this, we need to hammer this home, because this is now.
I wanna start a monthly, I wanna start a monthly thing
from Mind Pump, where we shut down tech for a day.
Once a month.
Once a month, we start off that, we announce a day,
we let our audience know that, hey, we're going dark.
For one day, one day, can you discipline yourself
as a person to not be on your fucking phone and your computer
and your TV all day long and you know,
and encourage people to just do anything but that.
Go be social, go read a book, go take a walk,
go spend time with the family.
It's a digital fast, just like fasting from food,
it'll give you better perspective.
It's really all it's gonna do.
Because technology's not bad, technology is not good
or bad, it's like any other tool, any tool.
If I take a hammer, a tool can do great things
about things that depends out its wielding.
It's about analyzing your own behavior with it, right?
For the most part, with fast, for me, specifically,
it was enlightening in terms of how I scheduled food,
how I felt like I was hungry,
but I wasn't really hungry.
It revealed a lot of interesting information to me
about my own behaviors with food
and how I constructed my day around.
At the bottom line is today,
if you wanna be healthy with your nutrition,
you have to have practices, you have to.
Because if you just go out and just eat and do whatever,
you're gonna end up in trouble
because food is everywhere, it's really, really good.
There's all kinds of amazing flavors.
You don't have to worry about, you know,
not having food or you don't have to worry about any of that.
You just eat as much as you want.
So you have to have practices.
You have to develop a particular relationship with food.
You have to understand it.
5,000 years ago, you wait what you killed
and it was all fucking healthy
because that's how we evolved.
With food today, you have to have practices.
With activity today, you have to have practices.
I'm saying this right now, with technology,
if you wanna be healthy, you have to have practices
around your use.
I find myself and it fucking blows me away.
I find myself, sometimes I'll get on my phone
and I'm going back and forth between platforms.
I just checked in Instagram.
I'm going back to Instagram.
Now I'm going to Facebook and I'm checking my email.
What's on my text?
Go over here, boom, boom, boom, boom.
And before I know it, an hour and a half has gone
and it was mindless.
It wasn't even intentional leisure.
You know what I'm saying?
No, wait, that's a little fun.
Look what the thing that I've noticed,
because I've been trying to put some of these practices
in place already for myself.
And I've been playing with it, allowing myself,
not allowing myself, paying attention to,
and the biggest thing that I see that suffers
more than anything, because like, I guess who cares?
If you're all by yourself somewhere
and you've got an hour to two hours of burn,
who am I to say, you shouldn't do it on Instagram
or whatever, but where I'm noticing it,
starting to bleed into my conversations,
my relationships with other people,
and primarily with my partner.
I see how distracted I am when I allow my phone
to even be close to me.
Katrina's in the kitchen, she's cooking,
we're kind of talking about her day,
and my phone's right there.
You guys are texting Instagram notifications
or popping up, and I'm doing it while she's also telling me my day.
And I can see how distracted I am.
And many times she catches me and she's like,
did you even hear what I just said?
And I'm like, fuck, bro, how dare,
and then what I realize is,
and that transfers into the whole rest of the night.
Then they come bedtime like the intimacy
and the catch connection just isn't there
because I've been distracted all day and I haven't been focused on my partner. I put the thing away as soon as I come home
and then I allow and it takes a while I notice this like it is not like I set my phone down
that also numb this ultra present person I'm into our conversation and then the romance all starts
no it's like it takes a little bit of detoxification from it to get my mind completely separate from
it and actually forget about it.
Well dude, here's what happens, okay?
So when you're getting these constant dopamine hits, your brain starts to adapt to these dopamine
hits by reacting less to these dopamine hits.
So this happens with all dopamine releases, whether it's a drug or novelty,
you go have sex with a bunch of random people,
dopamine, dopamine, dopamine,
you keep doing it, keep doing it,
that dopamine becomes less and less as your body adapts.
Here's the problem with that.
You start to model your brain after that,
and then guess what happens when you don't have dopamine
around you.
Boredom and being bored becomes much fucking worse.
It becomes more painful to be bored than it used to be.
And I noticed this.
I used to be able to stand in line at the grocery store and you know, look around and think
a little bit.
If I stand in line now and I don't have a phone, it's painful.
It changes how you perceive being quiet.
Now, here's a thing that's happening right now. There's an explosion of anxiety,
an explosion of depression,
especially among the youth.
And you can see that the charts will show you
cell phone usage, you know, smartphone usage,
and depression and anxiety among children.
Going through the roof, I think a big part of that
is these, you were busy with nonsense all the time,
not having that quiet time, not being distracted.
And so you're in this hyper state of dopamine all the time,
that is a recipe for anxiety.
So now I'm not saying that these things are bad.
I do think that leisure, I think going on your phone,
checking Instagram, Facebook, reading,
nothing wrong with that, but make it intentional.
Okay, I'm intentionally gonna have some lazy leisure time
right now for the next 30 minutes.
Just like eating bad food or not being active.
It's the same thing.
I wonder.
You just need to have practices.
Yeah, I wonder if it's like,
because I notice that too, like it sucks.
It sucks.
It's really tough to kind of just stand there
and stare at something.
Like how much of that time, like that quiet time though, you know, us like putting
all this busy shit in between that has stifled creativity, has stifled innovation, like all
these like ideas that you need time to formulate, to, you know, put it all together and your
mind does that all subconsciously, like you're not like really all the time in control of that. You need to open up that process
and it's like we're fucking just inundated
with all this like nonsense, just like look at this,
look at this light, look at this thing,
look at that thing.
Here's an easy one, practice this, try this.
When you go to the bathroom, don't take your phone with you.
And I know right now people are listening like,
oh, fuck that, I don't wanna go.
Now, here what you're thinking,
you're really freaked out about taking a 10 minute shit
without your phone because that's gonna suck so bad,
it's 10 minutes.
It's 10 minutes and it's suck so bad with that.
I know people who will stop half shit,
wipe their ass, go out, get their phone,
go back in and finish.
Yeah.
Everybody's laughing, but I guarantee you
a lot of you guys have done that.
I haven't done something that bad.
I have walked upstairs and go say shit though, realize I didn't have my phone went all the
way back downstairs to get my phone back in.
I pinched it and went and got it and then came back.
You got a serious problem.
You got to break the back in.
You got to break mid shit to go get your phone.
My point is, take your phone.
How do you know you're not it?
Don't take your phone and
get back in there and if that freaks you out you know that this is a practice you
probably need to do I told I don't know if I share this on the podcast you know
after we had the Tommy Sobel was that was his name yeah that came on with the
the brick whatever episode what I love about having Inzo he's such a
self-aware kid and he's so intelligent
and he's only 17 and so to have somebody on the staff that is that young that also listens
to all the Mind Pump episodes gives us a really good pulse on that generation coming up
and he said, man Adam, after I listened to that episode, he goes, I felt really compelled
to start to discipline myself to put my phone away.
He goes, he goes, when I hit about 15 minutes,
I can't take it anymore.
I go 15, what do you mean?
You can't go 15 minutes all day without looking at you.
He goes, yeah, he goes, I start to get anxiety
when I don't have my phone for 15 minutes.
Fuck, and this is self-aware kid, right?
This is a kid who is open to learning,
open to growing, open to being a better person.
That's very mature at 17 years old.
Not a lot of kids are gonna grow up with it.
I mean, what do you know otherwise?
Right, it's part of you.
It's part of you.
We're kind of the last generation
that really knows what it's like to be bored.
And I want to be careful, I want to be careful
and not try to promote the idea that it's all bad.
It's not bad, it's a part of our lives,
it's a powerful tool.
It isn't going away.
Same thing we do about food.
I feel like I think that's such a great analogy.
We're not, you know, there's ways for you to accept
that there are very bad habits within it.
And there's things to say that there's,
okay, it's okay to indulge and do things at certain points.
It's all about developing practices.
And so I hope we can start to come up
with some solid ones, promote them to people
and practice them ourselves,
just like we've designed workout programs
and come up with ways and strategies
to get yourself to eat better in an easier way.
I think there needs to be some tech practices.
And I think the effects will be wide reaching
and long lasting.
I've already done a few myself.
I've done very stupid, simple ones.
I don't take the phone on the bathroom with me anymore
and I leave it plugged in in one spot on my house
and I don't look at my phone for the first 40 minutes
to an hour when I wake up.
Those three, small things, huge difference.
The whole do not disturb is I'm driving game changing
so far.
Yep, love it.
It's crazy, right?
Yeah, things like that.
So stupid like that was built in there,
but nobody's been advertising it.
Yeah, it's crazy.
So I want to make a quick announcement.
We're switching platforms for our website
and where you get your programs and stuff.
So there may be some possible disruptions unlikely.
But if there are, please don't. Yeah, we're not officially alive, but we will be going possible disruptions unlikely, but if there are, please, uh,
Yeah, we're not officially live, but we will be going officially live this week, which is exciting
As hell because it's a complete, uh, re-facing, complete re-facing that I'm, I've seen lots
Of the website already. It's fucking awesome. We've separated the podcast from the program and the fitness product.
So I think it's going to be easier to navigate
I think it'd be easier to connect with us. I think it's going to be the UI is amazing. It looks amazing. I'm so pumped about it
It was a huge huge project for us that we've been working on over the last six months
It should it will go live by the end of this month or earlier. And just, we really appreciate,
and there's very good chances that someone will find
a misspelled word somewhere or find a broken link somewhere.
So we appreciate if anybody does run into that
to email us at info at myimplantmedia.com
and just let us know what you guys see
so we can fix it as soon as possible.
But, you know, we've been running it
and practicing with it for the last month or two
to make sure that it's good to go
and we should be up and live really soon here.
Another announcement that's really exciting
is our tailor has put this together.
So first time we're doing something like this.
We're excited about this.
We're doing this in our hometown.
It's in San Jose. It's on 420. Okay.
So it's April April April April 20th. It's a Saturday. It's going to be from 12 to 4pm.
It's called Mind Pump and Mimosas. We're going to do a live Q&A where there'll be it's at this
place called SP2. It's a San Pedro Square in downtown San Jose and Beautiful place outdoor. Hopefully we'll have hopefully the weather will be great for us
And like I said, they'll be serving mimosa's there'll be other drinks and stuff if you want to order those
It this will be the first event that we're we're charging obviously
It's not free for us to do all this stuff. So we're not trying to make money on it
It's only $20 to reserve your spot.
We will cap it at 100 people.
Once we get to 100 people,
that'll pretty much fill up the space completely.
And the website is live to go there
and book your reservations if you wanna come.
It's at minepumplive.com.
So if you go to minepumplive.com,
you can reserve your spot.
It's April 20th on Saturday from 12 to 4 p.m.
It'll be a live Q&A with us. Get to interact, hang out, drink, have some mimosas and have
a good time with us. If this is something that goes over really well, people really enjoy
it. This is kind of falling into that promise that we're trying to make to get out in the
community more. This will be something that we potentially do every single month with
people. If we have a great showing and it goes accordingly and people like it, we hope to do it on a regular
basis. It's going to be a blast.
Yeah. We call it.
We call it.
We call it.
We call it.
To lose calls brought to you by Max and the Bollocks. If you're looking to maximize your
overall muscle and strength, Max and the Bollocks is the perfect place to start with a full The first question is from Kyla Elise.
You guys talk a lot about the dangers of overtraining.
If I work a sedentary job and do a program like
MAPS split with MAPS hit sprinkled in,
is that really overtraining if I sit eight hours a day
and generally do not get more than seven thousand steps?
Now this is funny that this is how people would correlate. I know, I know the Southern interpret the whole. Yeah, that's interesting to me. What a great
I'm glad you picked this question because I I would that's not how this what this means like no you could be completely
Sedentary and never move all day and then very much so
Over-trained over-training is is what you're doing within that hour over applied intensity. And in fact, somebody who is the more sedentary
or the more subject you are to overdoing it.
Of course, the people that can handle
the most volume and load and intensity
are the ones whose bodies are trained and adapted
to lots of volume and load.
So here's the thing, overtraining is extremely individual.
It's all based on the person.
And it's all based on your ability to recover from the insult.
It's based off of how much other stress is in your life.
And it's also based on how your body responds to that stress.
So I'll give you an example of what I'm talking about.
Let's say Justin and I are driving home from work
and we almost get in a car accident.
We almost get in a car accident.
Like we're almost at someone, car spins,
we're on the side of the freeway, we almost die.
We get out of the car, a little freaked out,
get back in the car, drive home.
When we get home, I can't stop thinking about it.
It scared the shadow of me, I saw my life flash before my eyes.
Oh my God, I almost lost my kids.
Just in on the other hand, is like,
well, that was, who stood again?
We survived, big deal.
And he's on with it.
That same insult is gonna affect us differently.
So it's also how you react and respond
to the stresses in your life as well.
All of these play a role in your ability to handle the workout.
So why is this important to understand?
Well, it means that a workout that I can normally handle today
may not be the same workout I can handle tomorrow.
Because maybe tonight I have some stressful event
or maybe my nutrition is off, for example.
Maybe my diet is terrible.
That's another big one.
Like I notice when my diet is on point,
when I'm getting adequate protein,
when my foods are whole and natural for the most part,
when I'm eating in a slight surplus,
the workload I can handle is way higher
than when I'm on a cut, or my diet is bad,
or my sleep is off, or I'm all stressed out.
So, we talk about the dangers of over training
Because we're communicating oftentimes to these you know fitness fanatics
And it there's probably less of these people and there are the people who don't move enough
But that's why this is a challenging message. It's a challenging message because it really does depend on who I'm communicating, right?
Like if you're somebody who is addicted to the gym and you don't eat enough calories
and you train like crazy, like my message to you is completely different than the person
who eats like shit, never moves.
But still though, okay, the person who doesn't eat very well or like this person who does
only take 7,000 steps or less a day, you are more likely to over train by doing something
like this than the person who has a very physical job moves 15 to 20,000 steps a day already
consistently trains five to six days a week and has done that for five years of their
life.
Them training maps split and sprinkled and hit is less likely to be over training than the person who doesn't do a lot of exercise
Doesn't move a lot and is trying to throw too much at it. I don't understand
Why there's still people in the audience that hasn't figured this piece out and I've said it enough times
You should have it fucking tattooed on you, okay?
Our goal is to do as little as possible to elicit the most amount of change.
I like how you're in non-seated that too.
Right, so.
So, if you are trying to get to a point, which there's nothing wrong, if you have built up
to being able to handle maps split and maps hit, which is a ton of volume, and I would never
recommend that somebody starts here
at all, I think that's a total mistake.
But there's nothing wrong with working up to that.
So what that would look like, maps anabolic,
maps performance, maps aesthetic, maps split,
then maps split with a little bit of hit sprinkled in.
You know what that takes to get there?
That's about a year and a half of training.
If you follow each program to a T like that,
then it should take you a year and a half
to build up to that volume.
And what's beautiful if you've done it
in that chronological order,
like we designed the programs that way,
when you get to map split and hip,
you should be at your ultimate goal
of what your physique and you wanna look like or be like.
To me, this highlights the misconception that basically any type of magazine workout, or any kind of chalkboard
workout, or any kind of carbon copy type workout, if I'm going to look at this as a math
equation, I'm not moving this many steps. So therefore I need to make up for that and I'm going to get it all in in this like really condensed amount of time.
And this is something I do think a lot of people have this idea and they don't realize that all those factors that you're trying to mention that like in terms of like your body being able to adapt, there's a sweet spot. And when you exceed that sweet spot,
now all we're doing is we're eliminating the ability
for your body to really adjust
and create this new standard, you know,
throughout your body.
We're just now telling your body like,
oh my God, this is gonna happen
and now I gotta freak out and weather the storm.
Yeah, you're such a good point.
After you pass the sweet spot
of the right amount of working out in intensity
and you go past it,
all you're doing now is compromising your ability
to adapt and recover.
That's all you're doing.
At that point, you're not getting any more results.
Does that make sense?
So let's say my potential for getting my muscles
to build and burn body fat and adapt is a 10.
Once I've hit the 10 with the perfect workout,
which is different from person to person
in this entirely context-driven,
once I've hit that 10,
if I throw more at my body,
I don't go up any higher, it can't.
It doesn't go up any higher.
All I've done now is slow down the process more and more
and more.
So, it's very important to train smart.
Training harder is not training smarter.
Only training smarter is training smarter.
I would never want to be doing split with hit combined
unless I am at where I want to be.
I would want to be my ultimate physique
and now I just love to train.
I love being in the gym so much
that I'm sprinkling some hit training in there.
I love doing split.
I'm basically training six to seven days a week in the gym.
I have my ultimate physique.
I'm not trying to make any change.
At this point, I'm just loving what I'm doing.
You most certainly would not want to be doing split
and hit together on your journey of health
or on your journey to getting really fit or
on your journey to build muscle or to burn a bunch of body fat.
Like, that is a ton of volume and a ton of training to be thinking that your body is not
going to adapt to all that within a few four to six weeks and then your body is in a slow
down at the progress and then eventually plateau hard,
and then where the hell are you gonna go?
Yeah, it's such an individual thing.
I've known people who have an incredible ability
to handle work and workload,
where they could just throw anything at their bodies
and they seem to recover.
And then I've known other people who,
I mean, I had to be very careful.
I had to be very, very careful with how I train them
because we would over do it very easily.
And when we would over do it, they would stop progressing.
So that's the thing you want to keep in mind.
I don't even like telling people
that they're be okay and they can handle it
because a lot of people mistake the fact
that their body can handle it.
And they think surviving is the same thing.
Right. And they think just because they're like,
oh, well, okay, I mean, I do this,
you know, orange theory class or CrossFit class
five, six, seven days a week
and I can handle it.
I feel fine.
My energy's good.
I feel great after my class,
but you're not seeing any progress anymore.
The reason why you're not seeing any progress,
you've adapted to all that.
You don't want that.
You want to do as little as possible
to elicit the most amount of change.
So if you're just getting started with a maps program
and your choice was to go by split and hit first, I don't advise that at all. And in fact, you
should start with anabolic. And then from anabolic, you build into performance.
If you're a beginner beginner, start with map starter. Right. That's why we created that.
If you're somebody who's really sedentary, that's what I'm saying. If you're somebody
who's really sedentary, you're more likely to overdo it at the beginning
than somebody who's super active
and been training for a long time.
Because that person should start
and regress as low as you can in our programs,
which, like Salah just said, map starter.
Like, you should start there
because it is as low of volume,
as low as intensity,
that we have created a program.
It's really designed for somebody
who's just thinking about getting started,
it working out. It doesn't require a lot of equipment or barbells and so that it's very
basic to get your body moving in the right direction. And then you build on that by progressing
through the program.
I don't know if coincidence or not, but split plus hit equals shit. I think I think about
it. Thanks. Thanks. That's a lot, dude. It's bliss plus hit. That is a lot of volume and intensity and
yeah
highly unlikely that that's going to be an ideal
combination for you unless you're
super advanced. Right. If you're at that level like I can that's I mean shit. I mean, it's possible so but you're gonna be like an elite
one percent and and you would already be at a place place I think where you're pretty content with your you just you just want to just go for it.
Yeah, I think it's for those fitness fanatics who fucking love working out.
Yeah, then you can do it.
I can see that.
Next question is from yes, EG O. In the beginning of your career,
how did you handle clients that were very deconditioned or had mobility issues such as a recent
knee surgery, hip issues, et cetera.
How did you reassure them?
And what steps did you take to gather the information
you needed to start their programming?
So in the beginning of my career,
I had very, very little knowledge and understanding
of correctional exercise.
I just didn't know, but I did have enough knowledge
to know that I needed to start some people off slow.
And so what I used to do,
when I first started before I understood
correctional exercise was,
we would do the exercises that we were supposed to do
with low weight and we would just go real slow
and focus on the form,
which is actually not a bad way to help someone
get to a point where they can do exercises. It is not a bad way to help someone get to a point where they can do exercises.
It is not a bad way to do correctional exercise.
It's not the ideal way, but it is a way, and so that's what I used to do.
Now, later on, I learned about correctional exercise,
and I was able to be more specific and focused with how I would help people.
Now, here's the other thing I want to communicate here,
because part of this question was, how would you reassure them?
And I understand what they're talking about.
As a personal trainer,
someone's coming to you and saying,
I want to lose 20 or 30 pounds,
you do an assessment and you identify bad hip issues,
you know, poor recruitment patterns.
You need to now tell them,
sorry Mrs. Johnson,
we're not going to do workouts,
they're going to make you lose 30 pounds.
We need to do correctional exercise for about four weeks
because you can't move right
and we can't do all those other workouts
that you think you need to do.
That requires amazing, excellent communication skills,
which is why I've said time and time again,
the most important skill you have as a personal trainer
is your ability to communicate what you know
because you have to sell it to that person.
Because what happens with a lot of trainers
is that they fall prey to what the client thinks they want.
They know that they know what's good for the client
because they're trainers, but they know the client
wants a hard, sweaty, crazy workout.
And because they're afraid of losing that client
and they don't know how to communicate it right,
they just give the client what they want.
And in essence, doing what they shouldn't be doing,
just to keep try to keep the client and make them happy.
So at this point, it's important to understand
how to communicate to these people.
Talk about the process, what's happening with their body,
show them how they feel, do it with a confident assertiveness
so that the person wants to follow you and follow your
lead.
And then once they see how their body responds and how they feel, you'll probably never
have to ask them to trust you again after that first time.
But it will require some really good communication skills.
And that's everything.
I think, so I went through it.
I don't remember what year I went through CES, but that was one of the best certifications
that I got through NASM, their corrective exercise specialist.
I learned a ton that I was able to apply
to a lot of my clients.
And when I got somebody, knee surgery is very, very common.
I learned to communicate this way.
I would explain to them that after their surgery is that,
listen, what we do right now over the next six
months to a year, maybe some of the most important things that you do for the rest of your life
in regards to your overall health and fitness journey.
And then I would explain to them why and what I mean by that is that it's very common
that when someone gets an injury that they go right back to everything else that they've
been kind of normally doing.
And what they don't realize is that when they've gone through a major injury like that,
the body doesn't know any better.
It just then prioritizes neurons and muscles to fire and activate on an opposite side
to compensate for the one that's now been injured.
So if the knee goes down and you're not using it for X amount of time,
the body then prioritizes
its focus on other parts of the body to compensate for that injury.
And what ends up happening is you get underdeveloped muscles around in the area of the injury.
You get overdeveloped muscles on the area that is now supporting that or compensating for
that.
Now if we get you back and you've just finished this surgery and we don't want to address
this, that is just going to continue to get exaggerated as we go through all your basic
movements.
So if we just get into squatting and doing all your exercises that we're doing for or
get into running an exercise and moving, you have now established these new patterns to
compensate for the injury that we now have to go back and correct.
If we do not do that,
you can still get by. You can still exercise, go about your day, but it's now going to start to
exaggerate the imbalance. And so it's very important that we address that now. And how do we do
that? We're going to do that by strengthening all the muscles that support the area that was injured.
And then we're going to make sure that we start to make sure we do a lot of like unilateral
work so that we can start to even that out because if we do a bunch of bilateral or we
do in both feet at the same time, the stronger side is going to take over a lot of the movements
and we don't want that.
So that's why we're going to do a lot of this one-legged stuff.
I'm going to constantly be doing you in a split stance where I put the weight on the knee,
the bad knee, so you're having to stabilize that area.
This is where those types of things that we kind of tease.
That's what you're for.
Yeah, this is what they're really for.
When you see a trainer doing a one-legged balance, or this is where I utilize a tool like
this, is I know that this person has been on the other foot and using it so much that
now I want them to bring back
that all that attention to that bad side.
So if I have a left knee that my client just had surgery on almost every isolation exercise
that I do for arm, shoulders, shit like that, I'm going to have them in a split stance
with that front bad knee forward and all the weight on it to where they're kind of having
to stabilize and balance on that because I don't care about that back like that back latest got so
much attention for the last six months.
I want to put the attention back on the side that's been neglected.
So I think if you can explain that like South said really well to the client so they understand
that this is where our energy and focus should be to make sure that we don't set you up
for something that's going to cause you aches and pains for the rest of your life. And the irony of it is when you do this right,
you'll build way more value with the client than if you didn't do this. So the stuff that you're
afraid of communicating, if you do it right, get some buy-in, that's very important. You want them
to understand and agree, and you do it, you will be so much more valuable. It was my correctional exercise stuff
that got me all my value with my clients.
The weight loss and muscle building stuff is easy.
I'm gonna be honest, if you were to focus on anything
as a new trainer, you should dive head into
correctional exercise.
This is why we created Prime Pro.
I know you, someone's rolling their eyes
because I tend to shamelessly plug the fucking programs
whenever these, but this is why,
because we know this is a, if you're a trainer,
100% you have to have this program,
because you have the resources now to just go to that
and look at the joint or the area where the injury is most likely
because someone's gonna have an injury either in,
near the ankle, near the knee, near the hip, near the shoulder. Guess what we did in Prime Pro. We went through
it and we addressed every major joint. Those are the type of movements that you should be
teaching those people.
Well, you're not gonna value it till you really educate yourself in that direction. And,
you know, in terms of like how we, we sort of addressed this in the very beginning as
trainers like for me, it was always,
well, I still want to work with this person in their, you know, limitations and I'm trying to find
the thresholds to where, you know, their abilities lie. And I don't want to exaggerate their problem.
And so I had to like, immediately I freaked out and was like, oh, fuck, I got to get, you know,
more education. I got to go research, gotta go research the proper ways to train somebody
that just came off of a knee surgery.
That I don't wanna make it worse.
I don't wanna add something to where they're gonna go back
to their doctor and they're gonna be like,
what have you been doing?
And so the pressure is on you.
And you need to take and own that and go do your homework.
Next question is from Adam Pullman Fit.
What do you preach that you don't practice enough yourself?
Oh, I don't know.
Just to pick this one.
Yeah.
Damn it.
Why did I?
I didn't know you could string it right after that.
You gotta call ourselves out.
Yeah.
We just talked a lot about digital wellness and practices.
That is the hardest one for me.
Well, that's brand new, so that's easy.
That is hard, that is so fucking hard.
Like, I find myself getting on my phone
when I'm with people around me, you know,
during conversations, I find it, doing it with you guys
and that one is, that's a frickin' hard one.
That's a monster right now.
And I would say that's gotta be the most difficult one
for me at the moment.
Maybe I'll think of another one.
Mine is definitely caffeine intake.
And I'm always trying to like,
yeah, I'm totally working on it.
You know, like lowering it and then I ramp it up more.
You know, and it's like, you guys are like, it's great
because you guys kind of notice all my patterns.
And I think that's what's great about us
having like the three of us like brutally honest.
Like it just makes its way back in.
And I notice it, but at the same time,
I don't do anything about it because it does serve me.
It serves me when I wake up to have that stimulus.
It serves me to talk better
and it does a lot of things that I associate with it.
And so it's really fucking hard for me to ramp that.
I know I need to do it.
I have to bring it down for me
because I'm so high right now and I don't want to.
Yeah, it's bad.
I would actually say following our programs to a T,
I think that we preach that a lot on the show
and tell people how important it is
that you follow these programs to a T.
But I also think I have a good excuse for why I don't.
I think that every one of them I've been through
and followed to a tee and the philosophy behind all of the
programs I completely understand and comprehend. Therefore, I get to I get the cheat. I get to weave in and out and pick what I want this
week and to focus on certain things that I want to because I really understand the philosophy behind it's kind of like when your
teacher in math, like would teach you you know long division
Or like working the problem out. It's like you don't do that every time that you have to
Divide something that's pretty basic that you can do in your head
That's kind of how I feel about our programs is they really were designed not that oh this is the ultimate program
But it's really designed to teach people to understand the principles behind good programming.
It's a framework at the template.
Right, so you then could do that.
So if I were to say there's something
that I preach a lot on the show that I don't do myself,
it's following our program.
So I mean, what I'm doing right now
with our swimming with my swimming,
and we don't have a program that I'm following,
it's, I've got pieces of pieces of prime in there, there's's, I've got peace, there's pieces of prime in there,
there's pieces of prime pro in there,
there's pieces of performance I was doing the other day,
I was just doing aesthetic the day before that combined
was, I mean, it's, I'm all over the board,
but I understand, I understand the philosophy,
the principles, the rules of good programming,
and then I have now molded it into my specific goals right now.
Which is what I think is the message that we've always tried to get across.
Well, the foundation is theirs and it's established.
So now, like, I mean, we all kind of,
I mean, I definitely can identify with what you're talking about.
And I would love to just stay regimened in like really structured,
you know, with my workouts, that would be great,
because I know what that would do for me.
Wait, the bottom line is, I know if that I actually had a very
specific goal, like to start shaping my body for stage,
you know, following aesthetic and split, I would do.
But I'm not, that's not a goal right now, you know.
I don't have these like major, I don't want to change,
I'm not trying to change my body composition majorly right now.
I'm not trying to really improve my overall performance.
I want to get good at swimming right now.
I want to enjoy that not only for the fact of getting better at swimming, but also for
the relaxation, the meditative benefits that I get from it.
And so a lot of my exercise right now is not geared towards a goal or a performance in
an answer that I want to get to.
It's really more personal.
I got a good one for myself. That really just dawned on me.
I preach all the time about how supplements play
such a minor role in your fitness and health
and they're not, it's not a big deal.
There's a few supplements that are out there.
You first should take the most out of them.
And I fucking love them.
I love them.
And I know it's like candy to you.
I know that it's not really,
but I have a lot of fun with him.
And now that we're mind pumped and shit gets sent to us.
Like, we get supplements from everyone.
Ooh, yeah, they're a little kid.
Try this, try this, try this.
The odds that we're gonna sign with the supplement company
are, you know, 5%, 1% maybe.
You have to blow our mind so you can send us products,
I encourage it, send us all the samples you want
if it blows our mind, we'll like it.
And so I end up trying all these fucking,
I have a covered full of suggestions,
like what are you taking now?
I'm like, I don't know, it's company sent to me.
I'm gonna see what happens with this.
That's the one thing.
I think people would be shocked
because I'm always like, ah, you know,
supplements, you don't need them,
you hold natural foods this and that.
But if people saw all the shit that I would had had and took and mess with, that's a good
one.
They'd be like, oh, this hypocrite.
You self-experiment a lot though.
Well, I think it makes a lot of sense.
Well, I also think too, you know, in your defense that the message why we came out so hard
on supplements was because too many people were sold that they are that important.
Sure.
And when you take them, you're not thinking like, man, I got to take this because I want to burn some fat.
Oh, I want to take this because I'm trying to build a bunch of muscle.
It's like, you're, I get what, how you use them.
And I know for sure that you wouldn't go out and spend a bunch of money on it, especially how cheap you are.
Oh, it's the Ben Greenfield side of me.
It's the fucking, let's, oh shit, this is the new new tropic from whatever.
I'm going to combine it with this and let's see what happens here.
And I take it, it's like new formulas. Oh, shit, it gave me diarrhea. Cool. I thought you'd have to do more in the, now let's oh shit. This is the new new tropic from whatever I'm gonna combine it with this and let's see what happens here And I think new formulas. Oh shit. It gave me diarrhea cool
Now let's combine this yeah, oh I couldn't sleep. Okay, let's not do that one
You know, but I think we I think you know
Again defending you I think that the message is was really to to save all the people's money that were out there
Spending hundreds of dollars every month in hopes that that was
gonna make a big difference.
Yeah, and it's not like I don't work out and don't eat right.
Those are paramount.
And I'm not taking supplements to make up for that kind of bullshit, but 100%.
Again, if I had people over my house and they saw what I took in the morning and whatever
when I take during the day, I walk around with a bag full of supplements.
Well, I for sure, I for sure have taken more supplements in the last three years that I have in my previous fucking 12 part of that's because of me
I end up giving you guys shit.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, try this.
Yeah, give it like a handful of shit.
He's like, what is this?
I don't know. Take it.
That was interesting.
That was a good one.
I got to go.
One next question is from healthfully happy.
Are you going to encourage your children to go to college?
Do you think that there will be enough value to it by the time that they would be considering?
Oh, good question. Interesting question.
And I know our kids are going to listen to this episode one day.
I know, right.
I mean, I'll tell them what I've had this conversation with my son.
So my son's about to go to high school.
And we've had this conversation.
He actually talked to me and he said,
do you think college, because he's heard me talk before.
He goes, should I even go to college?
And I said, it all depends on what you want to do.
You have just like anything else,
you have to look at the cost and the benefit, the value.
So if you want to be a YouTube entrepreneur,
is spending a hundred thousand dollars
going to a prestigious college,
is it going to be worth it?
No, definitely not.
You're going to learn more by learning on your own online
and by being maybe mentored by people who do it,
way more valuable than going to university.
Do you want to be a doctor or a lawyer or maybe?
Any kind of clinician.
Yeah, maybe an engineer of some sort,
then yes, it definitely can be a value.
I think you gotta look at what you wanna do.
That is necessary.
Some of those things.
Some of those you have to, right?
I mean, engineer may be not necessary,
but if let's say you're gonna work
in tech management or something like that,
and it depends on the school too,
are you going to MIT?
That might make a difference
if you're gonna try and be a management at Google.
It might not either,
because if you compare that with someone who say develop their own program
and has now worked on their own and showed all the stuff and has that kind of, go get
them attitude on their own, it might not.
It all depends on what you're going to do.
Look at what you're going to get the degree for, how much you're going to earn making that,
and just do the fucking math.
Now the hard part about what you're saying right now is that how many
18-year-17 year olds that are talking about the turn 18
Really know what the fuck they're gonna do, you know at that at that age
I think I thought I was gonna go into debt. That's my advice to those kids is you don't know what you're gonna do
That's fine. You could still go to college to figure it out
But don't go into debt while you're doing it.
That's dumb.
Community college.
There you go.
There's also state schools.
That's it.
State schools are much cheaper.
And I wish I would have stayed at the state school.
I went to private school, which was like,
way, way more expensive.
But I was one of those kids, and I'm glad you brought that up
because I didn't really have the clearest idea
of what I wanted to do career-wise.
And that was something that I had to go through
the process of, like, well, I've always been interested in this,
but I didn't even consider that as a potential career.
And so breaking away from school was honestly that,
it felt like the most freeing, liberating thing ever.
And it was like the possibilities were endless at that point.
Some kids might come to that conclusion early.
And for them, I would say, yeah, definitely don't get into debt.
That's not something that if you know specifically,
this is a passion of yours.
There's a company that you can come in and you can provide internship or
you can get yourself an apprenticeship, which I feel like is the most undervalued way to
learn anything.
I think I highly suggest people look into that.
If you know, and you can specialize right away.
To be honest, for my kids, I'm just gonna evaluate it once we get there.
It's like, I don't know what that even looks like.
This is like totally speculative,
a speculation of what college is gonna become
in the future.
The rules I have for my kids are, don't be lazy.
Okay, hey, dad, I don't know what I wanna do.
That's fine.
Let's go to community college then,
even though whatever, to do that, get a job, get different jobs so you can kind of see what you want to do. That's fine. Let's go to community college then, even though whatever, to do that, get a job,
get different jobs,
so you can kind of see what you want.
Let's start experimenting and see what happens,
but you don't get the luxury of sitting at home
and playing video games and being lazy ass.
You gotta go out and make should happen.
Let's figure it out.
Hey, dad, I know exactly what I want to do.
Great, what is it?
I want to be a fitness entrepreneur.
Okay, you're not going to go to college
because there's nothing you're going to learn in college
that you can't learn interning for my pump.
Come work for us.
I'll train you myself.
You know what I'm saying?
Like it all depends on what you want to do.
And some careers and some jobs,
you'll do better off going to college.
It'll be worth the cost.
And some you're just not.
They're not going to be worth it.
I kind of feel like it's a,
I answered a question recently from somebody who asked
if, you know, when the time comes and if, if Maximus is wanting to play tackle
football, what would I say or do? And I think I would handle it the same way that I would
handle college. I think that I would, I think I would educate my, my son on the, the
pros and the cons of it. I would make him aware of where, where he fits in that because
what if your kid is, I mean,
if you have a kid, like, you sell, you have a kid like this. I mean, your kid is about to go to
one of the most prestigious schools here. He's in robotics. He's a four-o student. He may get into
fucking Harvard. And boy, the benefits of going to a school like Harvard is, and you already see
the benefits of, if him potentially going to the school school he's going to right now, like man, the benefits of that community
and being around that are extremely valuable, right?
Sure, but if he goes and he fucks off
or he goes to Harvard to get a degree in,
you know, liberal arts or, you know, ancient art
or something like that, nothing wrong
with learning those things, but you can learn those online,
you don't need to go spend 200,000 dollars going to debt to learn those things.
But my point is, like, you know, your son and where he's at education-wise, the way he
values education, the way he is.
And like, let's say, what if my son's more like a 3.2 student?
And he's just thinking about going to some prestigious college that, you know, and maybe
he barely gets by in the... that conversation's probably a little bit different
than if I'm talking to your son.
So I just, again, I think just like if I was talking
to my son who's playing, who played Pop Warner
is now in high school and he's kind of average at football
and he's thinking about really continuing it on.
Like I'm gonna let him know.
I'm fucking, I'll definitely be a dad like that.
That's a reward.
Yeah, like hey, son, this is kind of where you fall in the mix and that's fun. I'll definitely be a dad like that. Yeah, like hey son
This is kind of where you fall in the mix. That's fun. Right. Here's the people get a lot bigger stronger fast
Right, and here's a chance here's a chance of you going professional
This is where you fit in that these are your 40 times. This is your vertical this like I can break all that shit down
Because I'm into that stuff right and say you know, hey, it's up to you if you want to keep going on this path
But this is where this could potentially lead and what's most hey, it's up to you. If you want to keep going on this path, but this could potentially lead
and what's most likely where it's going to lead,
here's the chances of it going this direction.
I think I would do the same thing with college.
This is where you, in the whole,
you know, going through school, where you match up,
where your grades are, and where you want to go
for life down the road.
Here's the pros of doing this this way.
Here's the cons of doing this way,
and then let him decide on that. And I most certainly would not be a parent that just because
I had the money sends you off to a four year college, just go to get drunk on every Thursday
Friday, Saturday, and then skate through school just to get a degree, just so you could
say you have a degree. Like most certainly I wouldn't do that.
No, and you know what, there's study,
and people always bring this to me, like,
oh, this study shows that people who have a 40 degree
earn this much more in their lifetime
than people who just graduate high school.
Terrible study, they're terrible because
there's a bit of a selection bias going on.
First of all, everybody that decides to go to college,
that group of people who decide to do a 40 degree have a different mentality than a lot of people who decide decides to go to college, that group of people who decide to do a four-year degree,
have a different mentality than a lot of people
who decide not to go to college.
What we need is a study that shows the focused people
who don't go to college versus the focused people
who go to college, compare those to it,
and I bet you will find that the difference
is not gonna be that high.
If we look at all the people who are like,
I'm not going to college, but I know exactly what I wanna do.
I'm gonna do this business, I wanna start that business,
I'm a hustler, I'm gonna work my ass off,
I'm gonna learn from this person.
That person's probably gonna succeed.
At the end of the day, if I were to determine,
if I had to make a prediction on future success,
and you were to show me the schools they went to
and all that stuff, but you also showed me their attitude,
guess which one's gonna determine,
yeah, their character. Their me their attitude. Guess which one's gonna determine their character.
Their character and attitude, by far,
because I didn't go to college.
Look, we started mind-pump when I was,
I did maps when I was 34 years old.
It was my first creative map, so I was 34 years old.
Now by that point, I could have gone to college,
I could have had a PhD and a master's.
I would have been $250,000 in debt.
Would I have been better off?
No, not at all, not for what I want to do.
Now I didn't go to college,
but I definitely didn't leave high school
and then just work a part-time,
you know, minimum wage job and live with my parents.
I was fuck, I knew what I wanted to do.
And this whole time I've been working and driving towards it.
So it's a big, big, big difference.
It really depends on the child and the person.
And it could vary, look, I have two kids.
It could very well be that one of my kids,
I tell them, yeah, college is a good idea for you.
I'm gonna help pay for that.
And the other one would be like, it's not for you.
I think you should do something else.
It very well may be exactly that.
And with that look, go to mindpumpfree.com
and download our guides for free.
We got a lot of them on there.
Lots of great information.
And they're totally free again.
Mindpumpfree.com.
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