Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Brad Jensen on Beating Addiction and Getting Sober and Fit
Episode Date: May 19, 2021This podcast is a story about overcoming oppressive obstacles. It’s about facing reality head-on, coming to terms with the truth, and deciding to make a positive change. Specifically, it’s the sto...ry of Brad Jensen and how he beat addiction to reinvent himself and become known as “the sober bodybuilder.” I’ll save the details for the interview, but in broad strokes, Brad was a fitness-interested teenager who found himself turning to alcohol and eventually hard drugs to get through life. This led to a decade of serious addiction, becoming a drug dealer, multiple arrests, homelessness, and repeated cycles of recovery and relapse. In other words, Brad has had to deal with far more hardship than the average Joe, but he was able to take responsibility, not succumb to a victim mindset, and completely turn his life around. And while most of you listeners luckily won’t have to deal with the same issues or episodes of intense withdrawal, I think his story will be inspiring and motivating. In case you’re not familiar with Brad, he’s a fellow podcaster (The Key Nutrition Podcast) and coach, who’s used his passion for fitness to help beat addiction, remain sober for over 8 years now, and help other people get fit and healthy. In this interview, he shares his powerful story about his transformation from an anxious kid to a homeless heroin-addict, to a successful entrepreneur and business owner. In this interview, we chat about . . . Why Brad turned to alcohol and drugs and how he got addicted to heroin Dealing with withdrawal and his time spent in jail Other addictive behaviors like looking at pornography The difference between being sober and recovery Why people relapse during recovery and how he finally broke that cycle And more . . . So if you want to hear an inspiring story of how someone faced the truth, overcame addiction, and turned his life around, you’re going to enjoy this podcast. Timestamps: 6:50 - What was happening before 2012? 12:39 - What happened after high school? 38:27 - How did you start to turn your life around? Mentioned on the Show: Brad Jensen's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thesoberbodybuilder/ Brad Jensen's Website (Key Nutrition): https://keynutrition.com/ Shop Legion Supplements Here: https://buylegion.com/mike Want free workout and meal plans? Download my science-based diet and training templates for men and women: https://legionathletics.com/text-sign-up/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to Muscle for Life. I'm Mike Matthews. Thank you for joining me today to hear
a story about facing reality, coming to terms with reality, with the hard truth of how you're
living your life, and with what it is going to take to make a true long-term lasting and positive change.
And this is the personal story of Brad Jensen, who is also known as the Sober Bodybuilder on
Instagram. And it's how he beat addiction, hardcore addiction, not addiction to donuts,
like addiction to the most addictive substances in
the world, and reinvented himself. And I'll save the details for the interview, but Brad was at
one point a fitness enthusiast as a kid, a fitness-interested teenager who then found himself
turning to alcohol and eventually hard drugs just to get through another day. And then came serious
addiction, drug dealing, multiple arrests, homelessness, and repeated cycles of recovery
and relapse. A lot of hardship, a lot more hardship than I've dealt with in my life,
that's for sure. But if you fast forward to today, Brad is a very different person.
that's for sure. But if you fast forward to today, Brad is a very different person. He learned to take responsibility for his actions and his life and stop succumbing to a victim mindset. And now
he is a sober. I don't know if he would call himself a bodybuilder anymore. He doesn't compete,
at least as far as I know currently, but he certainly looks the part and he has a lot of
bodybuilding knowledge, which he shares. A lot of similar stuff that I talk about and the rest of us in the evidence-based fitness space talk about. And I wanted to have Brad on the show to share his story because I think it's inspiring and motivating. interview, you should definitely check out Brad's podcast, the Key Nutrition Podcast. He's had me
on the show at least once, if not twice. And I think we have another interview lined up. I'd
have to check my calendar. And on his podcast, he talks about his passion for fitness and how he has
used it to beat addiction and remain sober for over eight years now. And as he talks about in
this interview, sober means not even a single
drop of alcohol because he realized that if he is going to live a better life, drugs of any kind
cannot be in it to any degree because he had just learned that even a little bit with him
would lead to a lot. So if you want to hear Brad's story about how he
learned to overcome addiction and turn his life around and how fitness helped, I think you're
going to like this interview. Also, if you like what I am doing here on the podcast and elsewhere,
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what I love, like producing more podcasts like this. Hey, Brad.
What's going on, man?
Hey, I'm happy to be able to reciprocate here and have you on my show. For people listening,
Brad had me on his podcast. I don't even know when that was. I'm in a time warp. Yeah,
a couple of months ago. And I was excited to return the favor because
Brad has a story that I think is going to resonate with a lot of you. And it's going to be about
health and fitness, about getting healthy and getting fit, but having to go through some shit
to get there. Right, Brad? Right. Exactly. Thanks for having me on the show too, man. I got to be
honest. I've done, I don't really ever keep track over the last few years of how many podcast
interviews I've done, but it was a lot. And I was actually a little nervous this morning
only because A, I've been listening to your podcast. It's one of my go-tos. And B, just
the level of respect I have for you considering when I got sober, your book was Bigger, Leaner, Stronger.
It just came out 2012.
Yeah.
That's right, right?
No, no, you're right.
It was January 2012.
Yep.
I got sober November of 2012, and I knew I wanted to get back into fitness, and we can
get into that.
But your book was the first one.
Bam, I just grabbed it and read it.
And so it's kind of surreal.
It's a cool moment to be here.
I told Adam from Mind Pump, when I get on that show and Mike Matthews, I'll know I've
made it.
So I'm halfway to making it.
I'm heavy air quotes.
You can't see me, but.
I love it.
I love it.
And you'll get there.
You'll get there with Mind Pump.
I know the thing with them, I'm sure you've been in touch with them.
They get so many requests, which I understand.
And they even have trouble, I think, sometimes deciding on one guest over another.
and they even have trouble, I think,
sometimes deciding on one guest over another,
but you're putting out a lot of good information and you are growing a following
and really becoming a player in your own right.
So I have no doubt that there's a point where,
again, it's kind of like a group team effort over there
where there's going to be a consensus.
We need to get them on.
Exactly, man. You build friendships and you provide value and opportunities happen. So
agreed. Stoked to be here though. I appreciate it. Yeah. Yeah. So let's go back to pre 2012.
What was going on? I mean, my story, I guess kind of, I'll do a little bit of a cliff notes
version here, and then you can dive deeper on any questions you have. But I make a joke all
the time, but I'm actually half serious that I feel like I came out of the womb just restless,
irritable, and discontent. If I could talk, I think I would have asked my mother for a Xanax.
Like, hey, I just kind of feel uncomfortable being here. Just uncomfortable as a kid.
Just quite didn't know. Didn't feel like I just didn it just didn't fit in. Like that's how I felt all
the time. And it really felt uncomfortable being in my own skin. But as a eight, nine, 10 year old
kid, you don't know how to go to your mother and say, Hey, I think I'm having massive amounts of
anxiety. Can we talk? So I just kind of clammed up and I felt that way. And I was also a chubby
overweight kid. And that's important because I look back and if I
could go back and grab that kid and just give him a big hug and be like, oh, bud, you just needed to
hit a growth spurt. I hung around, Mike, with the kids who I thought were ripped. I mean, we were
12 years old. Turns out they just had a rib cage because they were just those beanpole kids. But
I was like the chubby one and that felt really uncomfortable.
First you get ribs, then you get abs.
Yeah. I look back, I'm like, no, no, they were just real skinny. They weren't ribbed.
I remember that too. When I didn't have much of an awareness of body composition at that age,
I was mostly just focused on sports. That's around when I got into playing hockey,
roller hockey, ice hockey, and that's all I wanted to do. But I do remember seeing pictures here and there of people on the internet who I
would say now are, yeah, they're in shape. Sure, they're fit. They look athletic. But I remember
at a young age thinking that they were huge. They were jacked, ripped.
Isn't this so funny? Yeah. It's just such perception. I was picked on a little by them,
but nothing, not like shoved in lockers, bullied, but you know, I was picked on by my
friends, right. Kind of made fun of the butt end of the joke there. And you know, it was about 13
years old. The first time I tried some alcohol and I remember thinking, oh, I shouldn't do this.
This is for adults. And then I tried and it was a tequila of all things. And I remember drinking it. And I
remember thinking that is the worst thing ever. Why would adults do that? And about 20 minutes
later, I was like, this is the best thing ever. I see why adults do this. This is a lot of fun.
And for the first time, I just kind of felt whole. Like I felt really good. I mean, we're 13. So we
kind of had to navigate that and get it whenever we could. A couple of years later, I find myself
getting really intrigued with health and fitness because I'm still a little bit chubby. I'm about to navigate that and get it whenever we could. A couple of years later, I find myself getting
really intrigued with health and fitness because I'm still a little bit chubby. I'm about 14,
15 at this time. And I remember I picked up a muscle and fitness magazine when my mom was in
a bookstore, kind of ages me. That's back when people went to bookstores, but she was getting
a book and I was in the magazine section, found this muscle and fitness. I remember I looked on
the cover and I saw this Jack dude and I thought, I want to look like him. And it made no sense to me
because I'd never lifted weights, any of that. So I pick up the magazine and I was just enthralled
with what I was reading. The information was, I was just hooked. I was like, this is amazing.
It was the first time in my life I think I had just felt this passion for anything other than
macaroni and cheese. I liked macaroni and cheese a lot, but you know, I remember, uh, I found a meal plan in there that was probably for like a bikini girl
competitor. And I ripped that page out and I tell my mom, she actually reminded me of this not too
long ago. I forgot this happened. And I said, Hey, can we go to the grocery store? And she was like,
Oh yeah, honey, you need to get some food. I said, yeah. So we get there and I'm like, all right,
I got this, a pull up this magazine that I ripped out. She got really mad at me. She said, you can't
rip magazines. You have, we have to go back and pay for that. I'm like, oh, they'll be fine.
So I'm like, okay, I need tuna fish. I need brown rice. I need egg whites. I need grapefruit. It was
just like the worst meal plan ever. But I started doing it and I applied everything and my body
started to change during this time. I also hit a growth spurt.
So I got a little too skinny.
The minute I turned 16, boom, I got a driver's license and I went, my mom wouldn't give me
a gym membership prior to that, mostly because she didn't want to drive me.
So I got a gym membership and I was hooked.
I mean, that was it.
And I started to learn about nutrition, about, you know, that I could eat a little more food
than I was.
I started talking to all the big
guys at the gym. I was asking them why they would do that and why they would do this. I was sure I
was really annoying, but everyone was incredibly friendly. And so I got really into fitness.
And during that time, I found out how that alcohol was not the most advantageous for building
lean muscle tissue. And so I abruptly just stopped. I said, no more partying. I can't do it.
I was so enthralled with this building muscle thing that I stopped completely. And so my body transformed over the course of a
year. And I thought that that was going to be my ticket to then feel very comfortable in my own
skin because what I saw in the mirror, I would like, and that's not what happened. I still felt
this kind of disconnect in this restless and irritable nature. I couldn't quite describe. And again, it was still perpetuated by a lot of anxiety to just kind of be me.
And, you know, by this point I'm, I got the hottest girl in school and popular and,
you know, fitness became my life. But somewhere along that way, towards the end of high school,
some opiate painkillers were presented to me at a party. And I remember thinking this,
how naive I was at the time. I said, Oh no, I'm not in pain. And the guy I was with said,
no, no, no. They'll make you feel like you're drunk, but you can still go lift heavy tomorrow.
You won't have a hangover. And I was like, perfect. Let me try them. And the minute I tried those,
I remember like it was yesterday. I remember the house I was in. I remember it was this two-story
rambler. I remember there was a, you know, a kegger, like there were, I don't even know if kids do that anymore. I remember everything. There was a bunch Rambler. I remember there was a kegger. I don't even know if kids do that
anymore. I remember everything. There was a bunch of red cups. I remember just everything so vividly.
I remember in that moment, I looked directly at him and I said, dude, this is the feeling I want
the rest of my life. That's where the drug addiction really began was in my senior year
of high school. Wow. And where did it go from there? Quickly progressed. If I ever want to debate whether I'm an addict, I have lots of evidence
to prove so. And luckily over the last eight and a half years, I haven't questioned that,
but it went fast. I mean, to the point where in a matter of a couple months,
I was taking trips down from Salt Lake City, Utah to Tijuana, Mexico. Now to give the listeners
some context, I mean, it's not a three hourhour drive. It's a 14-hour drive. And because I had heard you could
go to the pharmacies there, and I would take off my door panels, and I would stuff them full of
pharmaceutical drugs, and I would screw the door panels back on, drive through the border.
And it was idiot savant, really. I had no idea the amount of federal felonies I was actually
committing by drug trafficking through country lines and state lines. But I was an 18-year-old kid and it worked.
I got away with it. And so I continued to do it. I ended up taking four trips down there.
I joke, but there's some seriousness to it. This is where my entrepreneurial journey began was I
began selling drugs to all these high school kids. And I mean, everything from steroids to painkillers to muscle relaxers.
And I thought I was the man.
I definitely thought I had arrived in life and that I was set.
And so during this time, too, I also realized how much I hated school.
And so I thought, okay, I don't want to be just a drug dealer the rest of my life.
So I actually got certified as a personal trainer during my senior year of high school and got a job at Bali Total Fitness right out of high school. I was the youngest trainer they'd
ever hired because I knew that's what I wanted to do. Now, the inherent problem was towards the end
of that senior year of high school, a kid I knew had gotten busted down there at the border. It
was all over the news.
He got stuck in a Mexican prison. And I remember I was terrified. I said, well, I can't go there anymore. And so I just said, okay, I'm going to use what I have left. And then it's time to kind
of grow up and move on. That's how easy I thought it would be. Not understanding. I'd heard about
people talk about withdrawals or being physically addicted, but I hadn't actually ran out for the better part of six months. I had had a constant supply.
And you were 18. You think you're invincible and that's a problem for weak people or whatever.
A hundred percent. Yes. Yes. No, I'm a tough dude. You know, I benched 375 and I was like,
little did I know that had nothing to do with your physical proudness to overcome something like that.
So the drugs, they ran out and I remember I got kind of sick the first day and I was
like, oh, maybe this is what withdrawals look like.
Keep in mind, I was selling opiates to, but I was selling them to high school kids that
would do them on weekends.
I wasn't selling them to drug addict junkies that were showing up at my house at 2 a.m.
pounding on my window because they need their fix.
So I never saw the ugly side of it.
And by day two, I was the sickest I had ever been.
And day three, I was crawling out of my skin.
I mean, vomiting, shaking, shivering.
I don't wish withdrawals on.
I don't have a worst enemy.
But if I did, I would not wish them upon them.
It was gnarly.
And at that time,
you know, wrong place, wrong time with the wrong people. And it was presented to me to
hear some heroin. And I remember distinctly thinking in that moment, that was a line in
the sand that like, I wasn't going to cross. Like, that's a drug addict. That's drugs.
Yeah. You're like, okay, that's now junkie territory.
Quite frankly, I've never really met one successful heroin addict, you know, that's drugs yeah yeah you're like okay that's now junkie territory quite frankly i've never
really met one successful heroin addict you know that's like my life is great i got a fortune 500
company my family loves me i have a slight problem with heroin but otherwise i'm fine
it was just that glimpse of a moment where i remember asking the guy hey what make me feel
better and this guy was older and i thought he was really cool. And he said, yeah, instantly I said, here, let me do it. And so I shot up heroin as a 18,
almost 19 year old kid for the first time. And I remember when I did it, the guy looked at me and
said, kid, your life is never going to be the same. And I knew he was not saying that in a,
it's like out of a movie. Yes. Like I knew he wasn't saying that. And like, Hey, your life's
never going to be the same. Welcome to the good life. It was like, dude, you're fucked for lack of a better
word. And so it grabbed me. I mean, I started doing that. And by the time, let's see, it was
probably about six or nine months later was all that I was on the phone calling my parents and
they knew I partied and did drugs, but they didn't, they had no idea the extent and told my
mom that I was, uh, needed some help and, uh, that I was addicted to heroin. And I'll never forget.
It was a solid 30. It felt like 30 minutes. It was probably 30 seconds. Just pause. She had dropped
the phone. She was in shock. And so they put me in, uh, in a rehab center and went into rehab
and thought, okay, well, this is it. They're going
to cure me and we'll be good to go. So that's not what happened. When I got there, I very distinctly
wanted to pick and choose, just like my clients over the years, kind of what I want to do and
what I didn't want to do. I was like, well, I don't think I'm an alcoholic because I'm not even
legal age to drink. So I'll tell you what, I'll stop doing the heroin and cocaine, but the rest of the stuff I'm going to continue to do. And they said, okay,
good luck with that. Let me know how that works. I said, awesome. I'll report back to you. I'm
excited. Great plan. You know, I got out of the treatment center and, you know, went and drank
and nothing bad happened. And then the second time I drank, nothing bad happened. But the third time
I drank, I blacked out. I never had never blacked out before. Didn't remember a thing that was,
uh, and within a week I was back to the heroin. And so this game went on from better part of what,
2003 until 2012. And in that time it got worse, never better. I would go through spurts of,
of getting my life back together. At one point, I was managing a gold
gym, making good money, had gotten a house, gotten these things, and was sober for six,
eight months at a time. And things would get good, and I'd rest on my laurels, and I'd decide I could
do a little bit of this drug or a little bit of that drug. And every time, it would lead me back
to shooting heroin. And so I would build things up.
And then however long it took me to build them up, I would lose it in about a fourth
the amount of time.
I would lose everything, lost the house, lost everything, lost the job.
And then I'd go back to rehab.
And I would do this over and over.
It was just insanity, just the same pattern back and forth, back and forth.
insanity, just the same pattern back and forth, back and forth. And got to the point where I'd been to six or seven different treatment centers. And I also had started getting arrested. Now,
let me tell you about the system. And it's funny now because I have so much love for
what these cops have to do, but I hated them at the time. I mean, if you're not ready to stop
using drugs and you keep getting put in the system, you're going to keep going back to jail. It's just how it works. And so I had 17 bookings in
a local county jail and would do a month here, two weeks here, and then three months here,
and then six months. And then every time I'd get out, I'd get out of this renewed hope to do
something different. And it was just the same pattern. And it was just this inability for me to fully concede to my innermost self that like you,
Brad, cannot safely use mind altering substances in any format.
You've tried.
It doesn't work.
That makes me think of, I've mentioned this little anecdote here and there on the podcast.
So forgive me, gentle listener, if you've heard this before, but in Ron Chernow's
biography of John Rockefeller senior, it's called Titan. In that book, he quotes Rockefeller
paraphrasing, but Rockefeller didn't drink at all. He was, I believe the word is a teetotaler.
And he had said that if he never takes the first drink, he can never become an alcoholic,
paraphrasing. And it was half in jest, but half serious. I have never been drunk. I've had a
couple of drinks in my life. I've never tried any street drugs, never cared to. And as I've
gotten older, even alcohol, well, that's not a habit worth taking up because yes, you can drink regularly and still have good health and fitness. And I do understand that, that alcohol is not necessarily as objectively dangerous as some people would have you believe. But what if I end up loving it? I have enough stuff going on. I don't need that as well. So if I've somehow found my way, I've kind of danced between the raindrops and
never tried any of these substances. I don't know if I would say I have an addictive personality or
not, but in some ways when I have something I really want or really want to do, I get very
focused on it. So what if I tried like what you're talking about, any of these kinds of substances
and loved it.
I'll just stay away from them. I'm fine. I'll figure out other ways to feel better or I'll find other outlets for stress and anger. So true, man. It's funny. Now I understand. I mean,
I have clients that drink and still here and there and get great results. As a 16-year-old,
when I read that information, how I interpreted it was, if you drink, you will lose every single ounce of muscle on your body. You will never,
ever have muscles again. Like it's funny just how-
You'll just actually replace them with fat. Your muscle will turn into fat. That's what alcohol
does. That's what happens, right? It's so true, man. And I respect you for that because I've seen,
you know, I've had even, you know, an older
brother who never had touched a substance and had a surgery, had some pain pills and really liked
them and kept getting them refilled. And that was kind of eye-opening wake-up moment for him,
but it could have really easily gone down a dark path. He didn't know he liked them until he was
on them. Yep. One of the guys who works with me, we recently went skiing, him and a couple of the other guys who work with me, and he's a compression fracture in his back and a fracture in his
shoulder. And they gave him a prescription for, I don't remember which, but one of these opiate
drugs. And he was like, nah, I'll stick with the prescription strength Tylenol. And I'm just going
to suffer through this a little bit because I don't want to know what it's like to be on those drugs because
I've just heard too many stories and it would be naive for me to think that like you were saying
when you were 18, I'm a badass. What do you mean? I'm not going to get addicted because I don't have
that kind of personality. He was like, nah, I'm going to be conservative here. Not in a political
sense, but more like I'm not going to take that him. I admire that a lot because you never know. And I fully believe it's rolling
these dice. It's this Russian roulette, like, am I going to be the one that loves them and your
body loves? I mean, it was like the minute I took those when I was 18, it was just like,
and there's other people who take them and they hate the way they feel.
It is a Russian roulette game to figure out if you're the one who loves them.
I'm guessing more people, many more people love them than hate them.
Just based on the opioid epidemic, for example.
Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah.
I mean, you know, it's crazy to have with the opioid epidemic too.
You got to remember when I really got into this too, and there was a couple of years
there where in the beginning I was doing heroin and Oxycontin because Oxycontin had, you know, Purdue Pharmaceuticals had came out and they,
you know, pushed this drug and this was, there was pill mills everywhere. And, you know, it was
crazy. That was kind of like those glory years of when the opioid epidemic and pretty much wiped
out the whole like Midwest. It was really sad. And I'm glad that Purdue Pharmaceuticals has brought
to some kind of accountability for their things, but that's a whole different rabbit hole. We don't
have to go down. Yeah. Yeah. I think it was over a half a million people died, I think is the number
over a, what, a 10-year period or something. They've had to pay out billions of dollars.
And I'm glad to see they were held accountable because their marketing
was completely a scam to say that it wasn't addictive. And obviously we know better now.
Oh, did they?
I don't know the details.
Of course, I know the name and the Sacker family.
And I've heard that they, of course, profited from what happened, but helped create the
problem by doing things like what you're saying, where just straight up lying about the strength
of these drugs and the addictive qualities of them and making it easier for people to get them and getting them prescribed
for all kinds of things. And. Oh yeah. I mean, they basically, they told to tell everyone that
it was not addictive and that it was, you know, a way to get back their life. I'm sure they had
some research to back that up too. Oh, look, this totally unbiased study that
shows it's not addictive. Enjoy it. Yeah. So, you know, I don't know all the
details either, but I know in November they pled guilty in a criminal case and they also
basically had to pay up billions of dollars in civil cases. So to kind of flash forward,
it was just a lot of incomprehensible demoralization from about 2005 to 2012.
I kept trying.
It wasn't like I was high that whole time.
I would genuinely try because I didn't want to be a junkie.
Inevitably, I would just fall back.
And it was this unwillingness to acknowledge that I couldn't safely do any of them, like
I said, in any form.
And so this went on.
And before I knew it, after so many times of going to
jail and rehabs and stealing from family and loved ones just to get my fix, they cut me off. And I'm
so, so grateful for that today. I was not grateful in the moment, but they cut me off because they
loved me, not because they hated me. And it was tearing apart my family. The attic is a classic
example of the tornado running through everyone's lives. I'm in the middle like, what's the problem? Why is everyone
so upset? We're good. The Tasmanian devil who doesn't realize that not everybody is like him.
Yes, exactly. I mean, I'm talking to my parents who are coming up on 50 years married,
almost got a divorce because my mother, bless her heart and love her so much,
but she was going to love me to death with enabling, you know?
I don't know what that is.
I mean, we have to assume that there's a deep biological drive for that because that is the kind of archetypal just devouring mother type of, well, I can't say that your scenario is that.
It may have been, but I've certainly seen that where there are, I've known a handful
of people who had serious problems of different types, not necessarily substance abuse.
In one case, more just sexual degeneracy taken to the extreme.
In another case, just completely unproductive and delusional and a very strange scenario. But in each of these
cases, there was the mom who essentially refused to even recognize the problem. And then the dad
trying to simultaneously make some sort of impact on the kid and the mom, and the mom's taking the kid's side,
so it almost becomes a weird 2v1 situation.
Exactly.
I was about to hit rock bottom,
and they, but mostly my mother,
would gently put a pillow at the bottom of that fall.
So I would hit the bottom, and it hurt,
but it was just cushioned enough
that I didn't really have to fully hit that rock bottom. And again, she was
just trying the best she could, but she would bail me out of a lot of situations. And it finally cut
me off and I'm so grateful they did. And it was probably the hardest decision I can only imagine
on their end to say, okay, we're going to let you go. And we really, really hope you don't die.
And they said, when you're sober, please come back. We can't do this anymore. We can't. So I spent all of 2011 in jail. It was
the longest stretch I'd done. I got out in 2012, beginning of 2012, and was really excited to be
sober and to get a new life back. But the problem was, is I sat in jail and I confused being sober,
being dry from drugs, with being in recovery. And the act of recovery is completely
different. That is this whole kind of spiritual, mental, and emotional evolution process that I
wasn't doing. I sat in jail and I did the same behaviors minus the drugs because there was no
drugs available, but gambling, bartering, getting in fights, the whole kind of, you know, system in there.
And so I got out and of course, because I'm the same dude who went in, just hadn't put drugs in me.
So this really actually was a pivotal moment that proved to me when, you know, they have
now classified addiction in the DSM-IV and the medical is a brain disease.
And this made sense to me in this very moment, because I got out and I had not had drugs
in my system for the better part of 10 months. I got out and that craving hit me. It was this phenomenon of craving.
My whole body started to react. I mean, I started sweating. My palms were sweating and
stomach started to hurt that pit in my stomach. And I'm like, don't do it. Don't do it. I did
everything they had told me to do, Mike. I played the tape through. I did all this stuff.
And I still picked up the phone,
called the dealer, went down, met him downtown and grabbed some heroin. And needless to say,
I did not draw another sober breath from January of 2012 until November 20th of 2012.
And that was a long stretch for me because I had briefly outlined my pattern was I'd go on
three or four month vendors and then something would intervene. My parents would put me in detox or put me in a
rehab or they'd move me away out of state because that had to have been the answer to move me away.
Or the cops even were a great intervention. They would always kind of before it could get
horrifically bad, but it just went. I terminated all my probation charges and it went for the
better part of 11 months. And I was homeless that whole year. I terminated all my probation charges and it went for the better part of 11 months.
And I was homeless that whole year.
I never slept on the streets.
I was very resourceful.
You know, there was this pride that I wasn't going to be the guy with a tent on the side
of the freeway, but I will stay in crack houses.
Like it was, I will stay in the shittiest motel.
What do you think I am?
A savage?
You know, that motel that nobody would stay in, even if they were paid.
That's where I live.
I will not stay in a tent though. Like it was just this. And I started running around on
the streets and I mean, you know, they gave me a street name of pretty boy. That is not a cool,
tough name. I remember asking the dudes, I was like, can I get a new street name?
Like I do not like this one, but that was the first year that I obviously I'm homeless. So
I'd completely given up fitness.
But man, it was really important for me to still make sure I looked to the part of doing my hair and wearing true religion jeans, which were cool at the time.
But, you know, fitness had really kind of intervened and saved me through a lot of those times because I would still, for the first couple months when I was using again, would still be trying to meal prep and go to the gym. And then eventually it'd kind of fade out.
But when you're homeless, you don't really have a... You're not going to the gym. And so
that whole year just went and it got worse and worse and worse. I just remember thinking,
is this ever going to end? And I started seeing things that I never thought I would see and
running around with people that I really never thought I'd run around with.
And so I had no safe place to go to.
So I was just going wherever I could.
My parents wouldn't, my family cut me off.
They wouldn't talk to me.
And I hit a bottom that I didn't know existed physically, spiritually, physically, emotionally, the whole works.
I missed fitness.
I missed what I used to do and helping other people's lives through personal
training. I thought about this stuff, but at some point during that year, the reminiscing about what
I used to be was too painful. And so I just fully succumbed that I was a drug addict, that was a
junkie. And just to embrace that and that this is the way I was going to die and that there was a
very good chance I wasn't going to make it to 30. And that's fine. Like just embrace being what you are,
which is a junkie. And that's what I did for that whole year. It got really cold in November. And
then I'll kind of segue. This is the end of the war stories. We call them in recovery.
End of that year, you know, November in Utah is cold. And so it started to get cold again.
And I was trying to shift and find places to stay and do all this.
And I remember my mother called me on November 15th of that year and let me know that my
grandfather had passed away. And I remember I was sad. It was hard for me to feel a lot in those
moments, but I remember I was sad. And I remember it was really important that I showed up. And it
was really important to my mother that I showed up. And so she said, I'm going to pick up at the funeral. It's in four days. She said,
please just do whatever you have to do to be right. She knew I was an active parent.
What that meant was, please don't be drooling on yourself from being too high. And also,
please don't be withdrawing sick because that's almost worse. And so I said, okay. And of course,
that day came and I ran out of drugs. I mean, it's just kind of what I did. I'd been up for
a couple of days also because I started doing amphetamines and all these other
things. And she picked me up and I remember thinking, okay, I just got to grit through this,
go to the funeral, then I'll come back and I'll go get my fix. But the withdrawals hit me so hard.
I'm vomiting in my mom's car and shaking and shivering and I look awful. And she's like,
you can't go like this. You can't.
She said, what do we have to do? And so I told her, well, we got to go get me some drugs if you
want me to not be like this. And so made my mother go get me a fix and add insult to injury.
Said, hey mom, I need 10 bucks too, or 20 bucks, I think it was. So I hop in her car. And by this
point we had to backtrack so far. And the funeral was a solid
hour and 20 minutes away up the highway. And she said, we don't have time to stop and do this.
So she knew I did drugs. She had never watched me do drugs. And so my mother's driving up the
highway and I get in the backseat of her car and I proceed to shoot up heroin. I mean, I had the
spoon, the lighter, the needle, but by this point I had collapsed a lot of veins in myself. I mean, I had the spoon, the lighter, the needle, but by this point I had
collapsed a lot of veins in myself. I mean, it was just the ultimate ugliness. And the whole time
I'm catching my mom and she's looking in the rear view mirror and she's just staring at me
and tears are just flowing down her face. She's not sobbing, but they're just flowing and she's not even wiping them off. And her gaze,
she is staring at me just with this look of like, how in the hell did you get here?
So she watches me. I make my mother proceed to watch me shoot up heroin. And I remember I looked
in that rear view mirror and I was trying not to look. And after I'd done it, of course, I
instantly felt better, but the pain was so,
so great in that moment. I looked up and I saw her and I met, she didn't say a word.
She didn't say a word, just tears, just heartbreak. And I remember in that moment,
I thought you have two choices. It was very clear to me. You either kill yourself or you get sober.
The thought of going on another day like this
was not an option. And quite frankly, my past history of trying to get sober,
the second option didn't seem too feasible. And I had never actually been truly suicidal.
Like, you know, when I was way too high on drugs or not high at all, I would say those things,
but the feeling of actually, you just need to end it. I'd never
felt that way. And it hit me so clear in that moment. And I remember I went to the funeral,
I got home that night and something else, something greater than me was looking out
because I was thinking, okay, I probably just need to find a guy to get this done.
And that night I went with a guy to get some drugs and he had me drive the car and we got pulled over real quick.
And he informed me that the car was stolen. And to this day, I didn't know it was stolen.
And that was such a blessing of just like, I remember those lights went off. He said,
Hey man, this car stolen. That's why I had you drive. And I wasn't even mad at him. I was so
relieved that I was like, I'm not going to have to kill myself. I think I'm going to try to get
sober. This cop came up and it was this moment of surrender. He took me to jail and I told him,
I said, I need to go to jail. This car is stolen. I don't have a valid license. And he was like,
whoa, whoa. Okay. He was like, yeah, that's true. You do need to go. Let's go, man. And I went and
that's where my journey began. I remember I had the worst withdrawals my whole entire life. I shook,
I shivered, I laid on the cement floor in my own vomit. And I remember it just kept
repeating in my head, this is the last time you have to do this if you want to. This is the last
time you have to do this if you want to. And it got me through. And 30 short days later, I was
released. Charges were dropped. He stole the car from a family member or something and got out of
jail and made the decision to go left instead of right. I normally would call my drug friends,
but I called my mother. She said, you can't come here. You haven't been sober long enough.
But she dropped me off at a recovery meeting, like an AA meeting. And that's where my journey began.
Some guy let me stand on his couch and started waiting tables again, or not again for the first
time. Real quick, ran into a guy that I used to work for at this fitness and nutrition training
and coaching center.
And he offered me a job again that was about three months sober. And I jumped right back into
coaching other people in fitness. And that alone, just, I mean, that moment, that opportunity,
I just seized it. And I did everything different this time than I'd done before.
I'll never forget. I was at a recovery meeting and this old guy and this burly biker dude comes up to me and he's like, you new here, kid? And I said,
yeah, yeah, I am, man. I got 60 days sober. He's like, awesome. Well, good luck. There's only one
thing you got to change though. And I'm like, oh, that's amazing. I'm just one. He goes, yeah,
it's everything. Good luck. And he patted me on the shoulder and walked away. And I'll never
forget that. I'm like, he's so right. It's literally everything. The people I talk to, the shows I watch,
what I do on a daily basis.
And so I did everything different this time.
If you like what I'm doing here on the podcast
and elsewhere,
definitely check out my sports nutrition company, Legion,
which thanks to the support of many people like you
is the leading brand of all
natural sports supplements in the world. Take us through that. I'm very curious myself and a lot of
what you've said so far, I mean, obviously it's tragic and I can't say I can personally relate
to it from my own experiences, but if we're looking at it in terms of cause and effect
relationships of decisions you were making and outcomes, and it sounds like for a while there, you were not
facing the outcomes. You were telling yourself the outcomes were different than they were.
And then you eventually got to a point where you were willing to face reality as it is.
I think that's an interesting, it's just something I've thought about for,
That's an interesting, it's just something I've thought about for, that's just an idea that has come to mind many times over many years and something that I'm capable of coming back from something like that,
but I have in different areas of life forced myself to face really where things are at and where they were going. Take porn, for example, which I haven't looked at in a long time.
But when I was younger, I did look at it. I wouldn't say, and this is something I would
like to talk about a little bit later, that I was quote unquote addicted. And you can't be quote unquote addicted to porn in the way that you can be addicted to heroin. Just look at withdrawal symptoms, for example. Do you start throwing up and do you start going through an exorcism if you don't look at your porn? No. Sugar as well. But anyway, so with porn, I never looked at it excessively, but did
regularly when I was younger. And I felt bad about it. It was something that my wife, and I mean,
this goes back to when we were dating, just didn't like. She felt that it was inappropriate,
and I understand why. And it's also something that I disagree with morally. I think that it's morally
destructive. And I think that society would be better off without it, or at least would be
better off with people who don't need to look at it or want to look at it and who are much more
interested in just having sex in hopefully monogamous relationships. I think that's much
more functional. So again, it's a kind of a
silly example compared to what you just shared. But there was a point where I kind of had a similar,
albeit much lighter version of that where it was time to just face that this doesn't work for me
and I don't want to be this type of person who essentially it was hypocritical. I wasn't
publicly speaking out against porn and then
privately looking at it. So it wasn't explicitly hypocritical, but I was professing to be somebody
who had integrity and had values and who cared more than just my own personal interests,
who did have a sense of social responsibility and who
did want to try to create good effects in the immediate sphere of influence and then
try to grow that sphere of influence. And so that, that, those things just weren't compatible
with looking at porn, but that moment of just facing reality, like similar to where like I
would, I wouldn't look at it for a bit and
then I would find myself interested and go back to it and do it for a little bit and
then go in and out of it.
But that moment of just looking at my behavior over the period of, it was years, and facing
almost like a tough love kind of, but with myself, right?
The hard truth, the home truth of the thing that
I wouldn't want pointed out to me because it's just uncomfortable. And it's the thing I had
been hiding from, so to speak, or trying to gloss over or massage to look differently,
but just face reality. That was very helpful in just walking away from it and not looking at it
ever again, basically for years and years now.
And then eventually completely losing the desire to, which is cool. I mean, every now and then
there's a part of me that's like, oh, that would be, it would be nice maybe to see something like
that, but it's easily dismissed. I would even say it rises to the level of a, of an urge.
It's more just a kind of a whisper that I just shoo away. And I've seen that also with other people, not necessarily with porn.
It can be with things that are more destructive than that.
But that ability to really look at where you are, look at your current conditions and circumstances
and look at where you've been and how you got there and look at where you are going
and be realistic with that.
I mean, I've seen it with a lot of people in health and fitness who get to that point
where they're very overweight, they're very unhealthy.
Sometimes it's a doctor stepping in saying, you need to make a change or you're not going
to be around too much longer.
Sometimes not.
Sometimes they don't need that level of like a force or kind of impact, but sometimes they just come to that conclusion
themselves where they just say, okay, enough. I am 35 pounds overweight. My body composition
looks like this. I have high blood pressure. My blood lipids are messed up and I'm at a high risk
of cardiovascular disease. And I can't play with my kids the way that they want me to play with them.
And I don't have the relationship I want with my wife or my husband because of my body. And I don't
like it. And I don't like how I look and I don't feel sexual. I mean, sometimes that's more with
women. And if I don't change anything, the most likely outcome is if I'm not dead within 20 to 30 years, I'm not going
to be living well. Every single day is going to be pain, physical pain, psychological pain,
emotional pain. And it just, that seems to be a common moment in a lot of stories I've heard where people make meaningful and lasting change in their life.
If a person's still stuck in the cycle of delusion, basically, if they're still stuck
in running away from reality or trying to pretend that reality isn't the way it is,
or trying to see things as they wish they were, or maybe as think they should be instead of as they are,
then it just seems like no amount of external influence really matters until they come to that
moment. So, you know, for whatever that's worth, I just thought it might be interesting to share
because it's just a pattern I've noticed. You're absolutely right. And, you know,
we go back to the guy who 30 pounds overweight, you know, the lipid markers
are getting out of control. You know, he's not healthy. Maybe he's even 50 pounds overweight,
or maybe even a hundred. It's really the same as recovery in the sense that, okay, so what's
required is to, if we want to start shedding some body fat is to get into some calorie deficit,
ideally probably from food and also through moving more.
And that's the base of it. And while I understand, me and a good friend of mine and some fellow
coach has been accused of, it's not that simple. It's not just calorie deficit, calorie deficit.
No, I understand that. But the base of it, if we're trying to lose fat, let's establish that's
what has to happen. Yeah, it actually is that simple. But being able to do that consistently may not be simple.
Exactly.
It just, it depends on the person and their circumstances and their environment and so
forth.
Yes.
So first step is, okay, well, you have to not put the drugs in your body.
You have to just stay sober, like absence.
Okay.
Calorie deficit.
But like, okay, it was that simple that if I don't put the first drink in me or the first drug, I won't get higher. I won't get drunk. That was pretty simple to me.
And obviously exactly what you just said, where it gets more complex is how do I actually continue
to do this? Right. Just like the guy trying to lose weight might get this burst of motivation.
I can relate with the person who, you know, they're like, I've had it. And they, they start
and they start to eat better and they move more and they get a gym pass and they start and then they lose
some weight and then they rest on their laurels and they go right back. I mean, that was me with
drugs, right? So I had to find a way to, how can I continue to do this? And really grateful that in
AA, and that's how I got sober. And I don't care how somebody gets sober. That's just
the only place that would take me. It was the last house on the block. It was free. And so
they run you through these things called the 12 steps. And it's really just kind of, if I summed
up the 12 steps, it's find a God that's not you, trust that God, clean house, clean your own house,
emotionally, mentally, all of that, and then help others. And they give you what's called a sponsor,
which is basically just a sober coach. Now, this guy gave me accountability. He gave me application and he gave me some further
education on kind of life and how all this worked for me. And I see that same thing with people who
really want to make a change. Maybe it's not always hiring a one-on-one coach. Maybe it's
a group program, but at some point kind of seeking more to learn more about how to stay consistent in
your fitness and
health journey. It's the same thing with me with recovery and shit started to happen. And it took
a lot of work, but I owe also a lot of debt to, I connected with a power grader myself, who I choose
to call God. I don't really, that's not of any religious statement, but I realized there was a
greater being at play than just me. And that I had to rely on that and trust that to some degree. And I continue to just put one foot in front of the
other. And before I knew it, like six or nine months had came and the cravings completely
subsided. The first three months were awful because my brain just didn't know any different
people. The first question they asked me is, well, sober from like everything. I'm like, yes, everything. Well, I mean, you smoke weed,
right? No. Well, you drink right now. Like, so everything. And the second thing that a lot of
people say is, oh man, there must be a battle every day. And I'm thinking, do you think if
it was a battle every day that I would still be doing this eight and a half years later? No.
At some point, this phenomenon of craving was relieved you know and there's occasional
you know i go to like a baseball game or went to family park and and i smelt the beer and i'm like
that'd be kind of nice to drink so of course just these fleeting thoughts like you talked about with
pornography but nothing that actually resonates is like a craving because i fully understand that
like i can't do those things in my life is way better when I don't.
And I'm really grateful for that. But they told me like, write down what you want in a year.
And I was like, well, you know, it was, I played so small, like what I had actually started to get
in a year's time and not just materialistic, but just things like character and integrity.
And you talked about the porn thing. First off, I've seen the ugly side of porn because
it was a spurt of my life in Vegas where I did some bodyguarding.
It was ugly.
And there's some evil nature to it.
And so I just wanted to touch on that.
Yeah, the industry.
Yeah.
You feel.
And it will always be like that.
It's just not a great moral upstanding like, oh, I have these good feelings in my tummy when I'm around here.
Yes, exactly. It's never going to be a wholesome industry or a
wholesome activity, no matter how many euphemisms like, oh no, no, no, they're not porn stars.
They're sex workers. Like, okay, cool. We can play all the word games we want, but here's the reality.
Here's what actually happens behind the scenes. Here's what actually happens to these women.
Let's start looking at data, hard numbers.
It's not pretty. No, it's not. And so I made the decision, you know, probably about a year sober that that was not for me because when I would get done doing things like watching porn or I got it
really into gambling my second year, like I wasn't a saint. This is for sure. I was cross-addicting
and whatever I could, I felt awful afterwards.
And I realized that moment you had, I'm like, I don't want to feel this way anymore. I don't
want to feel like I'm going against this moral compass because I started to get this character
and self-respect and these things that I had never had. And I truly started to find this moral
compass that like, I don't want to be involved with any of that. And so today, I have a life beyond my wildest dreams.
And still, the most important thing I'll do on a daily basis is make sure I protect
my sobriety because without that, I have nothing. And I realize I genuinely, for some reason,
I'm still here today when 90% of the people I use drugs with are either in prison or they're
dead.
And there's just not a lot of long-term hope with heroin.
And so I never want to forget that on a daily basis.
There was a miracle at play and it's just crazy to me.
It's surreal that I'm even here on this with you, but because I had gotten this job at
that place, the fitness and the training
and nutrition coaching center here, and I had to drive from this place. The only place I could
rent was 45 minutes away. And I had to drive in and I would have like a client at nine and a client
at 12 and a client at three. And I didn't have the gas money to drive back home or the time.
And so I would sit there and I read your book. I read it twice, just, you know, not to be a psychopath, but you know, I had nothing better
to do in between those. Only serial killers read books twice. Come on. By the way, I really like
what you're wearing today. I saw this morning when I was peeping through the window, but it's no big
deal. We're friends. So, you know, it's not, it's not weird that I'm in your bushes watching.
You like the binoculars? But man, like those are the moments where, you know, it,
and first off, like, thank you because it really actually ingrained me with like
what was right in this industry and how to do things right. Because the place I was working at,
kind of the way they wanted me to design nutrition stuff was kind of not jiving with me. And so,
you know, I started the company I own
today in 2017 because of that, but you were a huge influence in that. So I got to say thank
you for that. And I'm flattered. That's probably one of the more satisfying things that never gets
old about what I'm doing is just hearing stuff like that. I still enjoy getting into the inbox
and interacting with people. And it's just genuinely nice to know that. I still enjoy getting into the inbox and interacting with
people. And it's just genuinely nice to know that what I'm doing is making a difference because
a lot of other elements of succeeding at anything that's really anything actually is,
it's generally not as satisfying as you think it's going to be. Like for talking about money,
for example, going into it where you think, oh, it'd be
so great to make X dollars per year, have such and such of a net worth.
And then you get there and maybe for a day or two, you're like, all right, yeah, that's
cool.
I did that.
And then you're already looking to the next thing.
You realize that whatever that number is, maybe doesn't allow for all these other things that
now you think that maybe you want.
And so then you, okay, okay.
If I 5X that number, then I'll really know I've made it, right?
And the same thing goes with achieving any sort of status or many goals, right?
A lot of it is the anticipation and the working toward it.
And then you get there and you realize it's not as great as you thought, or maybe you realize
it's what you wanted, but really not what you needed. But this is one of those things, just
having people just tell me, hey, thank you for writing that book or recording that podcast or
writing that article. Here's how it helped me. It just never gets old. And there aren't many
things in life you can go back to that have that effect that are not
drugs that are actually enriching. I mean, you have helping others, you have food as long as
you don't abuse it, right? But you can still, you can always, I think, enjoy the foods you enjoy.
You have sex. And I don't know if there are many other things that, again, you can go back to
over and over and enjoy them just as much as the first time without destroying your life.
I mean, in a way, you played a pivotal role in me making it through that first year of
sobriety because in those three-hour gaps, I was reading your book that first little
bit and highlighting.
And that is time where this idle time is the devil's playground, especially when you're
a fragile state of trying to rebuild your whole entire life and figure out just who
you are.
So I completely agree with you.
And it's all these things I thought in sobriety, like if I get to this point with money, then
I'm going to be happy.
And I got there and I realized the pursuit of getting the money, I'm actually more unhappy.
And I realized the pursuit of getting the money, I'm actually more unhappy. And so it's been this constant tug of war of getting financially comfortable, but also
not putting so much stock into that.
Because if I'm truly trying to live a spiritual life, being so focused on money pulls me out
of that.
You can't.
I mean, those things are mutually exclusive, actually, because inevitably inevitably if you're too focused on money, that just,
you could abuse that as well, money-making. And then you become greedy and you become mercenary
and then you lose your integrity and you're willing to do more and more unethical things
to make more and more money. And then now you're the type of person who doesn't have values,
doesn't have principles, who doesn't have integrity, who's willing to cut corners.
And if, hey, if you're going to do that in your work, you might as well do that in your relationships.
And then so you start cheating.
You just, it's interesting having, I can't say I've personally interacted with many people that I know were like that, but I've learned about them.
I've read biographies of
people like this, for example. And it's just interesting how often, and it kind of mirrors
the story you've shared where early on you thought you could compartmentalize this drug use and you
could make it fit. And it's not going to spill over into every other aspect of your life. It's
not going to become all consuming. Well, take being shady in business,
for example. I have known some people actually who I would say are very unethical and I would
never want to make a living the way that they do. And they think that, well, one, they don't face
that they are a criminal. Like that's it, period. That's the word. You are a criminal. No, no, no.
Of course they have their euphemisms. They have their fake story that they've put together carefully, that they protect very carefully.
And so they don't look at it that way. And they maybe would acknowledge that they are a little
bit aggressive maybe in their business practices or something, but they don't behave that way in
other areas of their life. And that's not going to become
a problem. It's not going to spill over. And I can think of several examples right off the top of my
head where it absolutely did. And it seems to just be an inevitability, really. It's only a matter of
time. Some people maybe are able to resist the rot more than others, but things are declining
slowly, but surely things either get better or
they get worse. Nothing stays the same period, like in the known universe. And I think that
applies to us as well. So if you can't explicitly say I am getting better and here's how I know I'm
getting better, well, then you should probably assume you're just getting worse.
A hundred percent. I would agree with that. And I think that there's, you know, people ask me, so what do you like about Legion so much? Let's talk about your products
here. And I try to explain to them that they don't understand the way the supplement industry works
is Mike could be a shady asshole if he wanted to and get away with it. There's a lot of companies
that I do not stand behind because I know their products are shit because it's not regulated the
same way. And so I think that people, the average Joe doesn't understand the ethnicity that you put
into your products is not the norm in the industry. There's a lot of snake oil salesmen.
And at the end of the day, that's the people I want to be linked up with is good, ethical,
moral, honest people. That is a lost art and especially in the supplementary so i have to
commend you for that and especially i mean i appreciate that and that is one of the big
reasons why you and many other people who work with legion who have partnered with legion have
chosen legion i mean they like the products just objectively they appreciate the formulations but
what they really appreciate is what you just said is they know how the industry works and they know that
I don't have to be doing that. I could cut my costs down by, I probably cut them by 50%.
And if I was willing to, I would say operate the way that is the norm in the industry,
the way that many of my competitors, and I would say some of
these businesses, I can't even call myself a competitor too, because they're doing hundreds
of millions a year in revenue and I'm not. And some of the very big companies are by my standards,
very unethical. So I could make a lot more money. And it's not only about making more money in the
short term. It's not just about
more money into my bank account. It's also about the value of the business. A business that has a
lot more revenue and a lot more profits is worth a lot more money. So I could, if I wanted to be
like that, I could go, okay, so I could cut my costs dramatically. I could just start doing a
lot of these other companies are doing and just kind of lie,
cheat, steal, act like a pirate and a bum.
And not only will I receive a lot more immediate income, but I could grow this business probably
twice as fast, top line, bottom line.
And I could probably hit a nine figure exit within two or three years that that actually
could happen if I
were willing to do that. Now, of course, it may not work because enough people might see what I'm
doing and call me out, rightfully so. But my point with saying that is, or I could do maybe something
not as egregious as that, right? Something more in the middle of where I'm at and what I just laid
out. And I think that, and this is really not me patting myself on the back or trying to flatter
myself. I'm not that kind of person. I don't need people to admire me or tell me how good I am or
even accept me. I just do what I do. And the people who like me find their way and stick and
the people who don't leave and that's fine. But to this point of honesty and integrity, and this is,
again, it's one of these ideas that has just stuck with
me and it's kind of a pet peeve of mine because there are many people, and I can think of some
personal examples here actually, where they will profess to have certain values or certain
principles and they are not acting against them. So you're like, okay, that's cool. This seems like an upstanding person.
But once something's at stake, once their ox is about to be gored, or once they have an opportunity to transgress against one of those principles and get something, that's the real test.
Take cheating, for example. If somebody says, I have never cheated on any of, not just my wife, but any of my girlfriends.
Okay. Well, let's just say it's girlfriends, right? And you're like, so how many girlfriends
have you had? Well, theoretically I wouldn't cheat or any version of that where it's like,
if you've never had the opportunity to cheat, it's good that you haven't cheated, but don't
hop on that high horse because if you did
have the opportunity, that's the real test.
And that's something that I think that applies to business, that applies to every area of
life.
It's one thing to live in a moral fashion, and that's great, but life finds ways of testing
us, or maybe we find ways of testing ourselves.
But life finds ways of testing us, or maybe we find ways of testing ourselves. And I don't think, and this is just for me personally, what I respect the most is people
who have the opportunity to do things that they know they shouldn't do and don't, and
who instead do the right thing, even when it costs something.
And in my experience, that's pretty rare. There aren't
too many people out there who seem to generally operate that way. Maybe they do a little bit in
certain areas, but certainly when it comes to money and sex, for example, it seems to be
a lot of the people I've interacted with over the years, they can talk a good game, but then
when they have the opportunity to do something else, they find some weird rationalization for why it's different in this case.
A hundred percent. I couldn't agree more. You know, it's Gary view said like, it's far more important how you make your money than how much money you make. And you know, when I look at Mike, the guys with, you know, eight, 10 years of continuous sobriety that relapse, there was
one common thread and it's, they start to become a piece of shit.
And by that, I mean, there's infidelity issues.
There's scandals with money.
There's greed.
There's, they start going against these things.
And like, it's not like someone with 10 years sobriety that ends up relapsing and kind of
screws up their life again, or maybe dies.
Didn't just like one day wake up and be like, you know, I'm a really good person, but I'm going to start drinking and doing
drugs again. It's always, they go against this moral compass. And so, you know, how I stay sober
today is continue to try to be a good human. And I've learned a hard way through some years of
sobriety of going against some things I believed in and luckily stayed sober, but being a good
person, like that's what we need to start looking at successes. I think we talk about, you know, in happiness, like truly
being happy and being somebody who's trustworthy and loyal and a good human, like even through a
fitness journey, you know, I'd tell my clients in the past, I'd tell them, Hey, listen, like
we need to start equating success with like, are you truly happy? Do you have more self-confidence?
Do you treat others with more respect? Cause you respect yourself more? Like it can't always just be about this end number on
the scale or this weight number on the scale. Like there's gotta be more. And that's exactly
alluding to what you just talked about. So. Yeah, that's a great point. And that's something
that I've spoken and written about here and there in the context of body composition and that we can
only get so far that a natural weightlifter is only going to be
able to gain so much muscle and strength. And beyond that point, there is basically nothing
left to gain. And a lot of people appreciated that message. And that's something, again,
I've repeated many times over the last couple of years, because I think there are too many
people I've seen in the fitness space who are clearly using
drugs and sometimes sneaky, like just enough drugs to continue being able to gain a couple
of pounds of muscle per year while already being jacked. I mean, like they've gained, you know,
55 pounds of muscle from the beginning of their journey and they're still putting on a couple of
pounds per year and then talking about, oh, you see how, you know, if you just keep working hard at this and you just
keep doing the right things, you can always get bigger and stronger, just a little bit better.
And it's just not true. Like they might tell themselves that, well, this is a noble lie
because I'm encouraging people to keep going. But you're also discouraging people who have hit basically their genetic limit for muscle and strength.
And there are a lot of those people out there who are then seeing that post and thinking, why am I not gaining another three or four pounds of muscle per year?
Why am I stuck at, let's say, the natural...
let's say the natural, I wouldn't say it's a, it's not a ceiling, but it is a high benchmark to work toward of strength of three, four, five, three plates on the bench, one RM, four on the
squat and five on the deadlift. Certainly people can beat those numbers, but I think that's like
a fair average. This is that's for guys, obviously for guys getting into weightlifting. And I, what
I would say is if you can get to three, four, five, you've done well. If you can gain about 40 pounds of muscle total from your starting point,
you've done well. If you're somebody who has been big and strong your entire life,
if you were that jacked 13-year-old and you started lifting weights when you were 16,
yeah, you're probably going to be able to do better than that. But of course,
now we're talking about outliers. Oh, I can relate with that at a
spiritual level. I mean, I've been pretty open to the fact, I mean, obviously I use lots of
anabolic steroids in my drug use days, which is one reason how I kind of masked the fact that I
was also a heroin addict. But even in sobriety, when I did a couple of my bodybuilding shows
early on, and it felt very unauthentic to pretend like I'm standing here talking about,
they're mind
altering, but they're mood altering.
And I am on testosterone replacement therapy and have been for the better part of my sobriety
for better or worse.
But I'm telling you now, I literally have looked the same for three or four years.
I don't get the compliments anymore that I used to because I am doing the shit every
day.
I went through a six month surplus last year and now
in a little cut. And I'm like, I think I have like a pound more muscle. Maybe that might just be you,
uh, being generous to yourself. And that's fine. I mean, it's fine, dude. It's like at this point,
it is for the most minimal gains year over year. You have to really love this shit. Like you have
to really love this lifestyle when You have to really love this lifestyle
when you've gotten to a point where unless I want to take those androgens, which I am not
willing to anymore, I'm doing this shit for minimal progress. Let me just interject for
listeners. I have an even more depressing anecdote. My training currently is four-month
macro cycles. I'm following my beyond
bigger, leaner, stronger program for people listening. If you want to see exactly what I'm
doing, just read that book. That's what I'm doing. So I went through this, I'm just wrapping up a
four month macro cycle and I was doing well in the beginning and that's five days a week, about an
hour per workout. It's 15 to 16 hard sets per major muscle group per week. It's a lot
of heavy lifting. I work. I work pretty hard. So good compliance over the entire four months.
And then I had a little bit of travel. So I had a ski trip where it wasn't going to be possible
to lift and ski. No way. It would have been one or the other because I'm not a skier per se.
And so I just would go out there. And after I was able to do about maybe four to
five hours of continuous runs with little breaks here and there before my legs were done. Like I
actually had to stop because like, this is dangerous now. I can't even keep my skis parallel
when I'm turning because my legs are like, they have nothing left. Right. And so it took the week
to ski. And then I had Rona, which was fun, which was nothing. It was
three days of congestion. But that was also then I was a good boy and I did my 10-day quarantine
after the final day of symptoms. So I basically missed two weeks. I didn't go into any gym.
Where I was at, I was in Florida. I didn't have a home gym to work out at. So anyway,
work hard for basically four months. I was right at the end of that macro cycle before
I traveled. And then I think there was some other traveling. So right at the end of it,
things get messed up. And then I try to get back like, okay, I'll rewind a few weeks in this
macro cycle and see if I can quickly regain any of the strength. I mean, I'm not going to have lost
anything really in the way of muscle, but my strength was a little bit down and I did get some of it back. And so now I'm doing what I do at the end of macro cycles, which is some as many
reps as possible, some AMRAP sets with 95% of the one rep max that was calculated at the beginning
of the macro cycle. And the previous macro cycle, I worked for four months and I don't remember off
the top of my head, but my 1RMs went up a little
bit, which was great. Now I'm regaining strength, you could say, because I have been a bit stronger
in the past. I'd have to look at my spreadsheet, but I would say I probably, between my squat,
bench, overhead press, deadlift, I probably added 30 pounds or so to my 1RM totals, which is great,
which is estimated totals. And that is something
that obviously is not sustainable indefinitely, but because I am kind of working back up to
previous highs, there's a little bit of a quote unquote muscle memory or strength memory that
I'm benefiting from. And so the next four months of work goes by and I'm doing another round of
AMRAPs and it looks like it's a wash. My bench AMRAP, complete wash. My 1RM is actually
down a little bit. It's probably not in reality, but let's just say it's the same as in the
beginning of the four month period. And I did my deadlift AMRAP, which wasn't bad. I'll have to run
the numbers. Maybe it's up a little bit and I'll do my squat on Thursday and I'm going to do an overhead press tomorrow. And my point with saying that though is that's the life of a natural weightlifter, right? Work your ass off for essentially four months, make good progress, but then a couple of weeks out of the gym, I mean really probably three weeks or so, and I guess a very mild illness that probably didn't have much of an impact at all, but just not being in the gym, that undid, I would say, probably two months of the first couple of months
of that macro cycle. I was moving along, things are inching up, and I'm not bummed about it at
all. I actually think it's funny. And it just shows, though, to this point of once you're at
your genetic limit for muscle and
strength which i certainly am i have a little bit left it's not that i'm completely tapped out but
i'm really reaching for like probably the final rungs of this ladder and they're hard to reach
they're i'm like trying to jump up to get to them right and this the fact of being natural
is you have to work so much harder you have to work a lot more for a lot less. And so then you
have to find a way to reframe your training. You can't make it all about body composition anymore
or performance anymore because there's not much that's going to change. So you have to find other
motivations for doing it. And for me, and I know it's going to be the same for you, just based on
everything you've told me, one of those motivations is the way that my routine, it's not just about doing the workouts,
it's the whole regimen of how I eat and how I train and how I pay attention to my sleep
hygiene and supplement and so forth.
It spills over into every other aspect of my life.
Simply exerting discipline and being the type of person who cares about their health
and cares about their fitness and is willing to put effort into that and who understands that
it's a very low time preference activity at this point, meaning that I'm putting in a lot of work
and you are putting in work now. And we know that it's really just an investment in the future that one day
we're going to be real happy we did it. But if we're thinking more short term, we could do a lot
of other things with that time. And the decline would be slow enough to where we could rationalize
it away. And that's kind of something that you've touched on and I've commented on in terms of not facing reality and where things are going.
So anyway, so yeah, sorry, I've hijacked the conversation, but this has been a fun conversation
for me and a very stimulating conversation. So yeah, if there's anything else you wanted to add,
I don't want to. No, man, I just appreciate it, man, the show. Just grateful to come share my
story that there is hope, If you're struggling or you
know people struggle with addiction, there is hope. And fitness played a huge role in that.
And I'm just grateful. And I believe that gratitude is kind of the antidote to life.
And if there's one theme through the last eight and a half years is when I am in gratitude,
I also am not being a victim. You know, victims never win.
It's so true.
It's so true, man.
I mean, that mindset is so important.
It really is that no matter what your circumstances are,
no matter how many injustices maybe you've suffered,
how many things have happened to you that you didn't deserve,
there's still that point of,
unfortunately, the victim mindset only loses. It never wins. It just doesn't. And so I'm not
trying to quote unquote victim blame here. And I do acknowledge that I have not experienced
much hardship at all in my life. By my standards, what I would consider hardship, it's not that I've
had it completely easy, but I have not experienced what
many people have had to experience. And I don't want to pretend that I have, but I'm just speaking
to that mindset. And every one of us can find a way to become a victim. If I wanted to, I could
think of things that- I know people who are victims where I'm like, you have literally nothing to complain about. Exactly. Exactly. My cushy little life. Oh, for example, I'm moving
to Florida and this bank, they told me that if I buy this land, they'll give me so much money to
build the house. Okay, cool. Great. Let's do it. I buy the land. Now they're like, eh, actually,
we may not be able to give you that much. We may have to give
you half of that amount of money to build the house. Yeah, that's a problem. What do you mean?
Why are you telling me this now after I buy the land? And so, yeah, stupid first world,
quote unquote, privileged problem. Totally agree. And I'm not being a victim about it at all.
But as silly as it is, I know people who have had such problems and
they act just as victimized as maybe you were acting when you were at your worst,
homeless and so forth. And so that mentality is insidious regardless of the actual circumstances.
I mean, I feel like we could go on and on if we didn't arbitrarily decide to stop. And it's been a great discussion.
And why don't you share where people can find you, find your work and any products or services
you want people to know about anything new and exciting. Yeah, man, I appreciate that. It's
at the sober bodybuilder on Instagram, all one word. It's where I'm definitely the most active. And website is keenutrition.com. That's for any of my coaching staff and team here. And my podcast is the Keen Nutrition Podcast. And you can find Mike on there twice, once in the very, very early days.
Yeah, I remember that a long time ago i think you're like episode eight i didn't even know what i was doing and then you know more recently which got a huge response by the way
and after mike gets the move in we're gonna have one for a second time i've got some exciting
questions to ask him he doesn't even know what's coming so let's leave it that way just hit me
got a course i do called the next level experience which is an eight-week interactive intimate and
kind of intense program that takes people through a lot of the
principles of learning recovery.
So it's,
we we're in the launch for that now by the time this airs,
it's probably going to be closed,
but we do those every quarter.
You can find out more on that at my next level experience.com.
So awesome.
Awesome.
Love it.
We'll love the story.
And I love that we were able to connect and do this.
And I really appreciate your support of Legion and everything that you're doing.
Mike, you're the man, dude.
Blessed and grateful to consider you a friend.
So thanks for being a force for good in the industry.
Absolutely.
Well, I appreciate that.
All right.
Well, that's it for this episode.
I hope you enjoyed it and found it interesting and helpful.
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