Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Hafthor “The Mountain” Bjornsson on Life as the World’s Strongest Man
Episode Date: June 14, 2019Hafthor Bjornsson is the strongest man in the world, and in this podcast, he gives us a behind-the-scenes look at what it’s like to be him, a 6’9, 420-pound man who can squat, deadlift, and bench ...press over 2,500 pounds. He’s also the 2018 champion of the World’s Strongest Man competition (and hopefully the 2019 champion by the time this episode goes live), which involves incredible feats like . . . - Lifting five large stones ranging from 220 to 350 pounds onto columns the height of a man. - Pulling gargantuan objects arm-over-arm using a rope, such as planes, boats, cars, and giant tires. - Carrying a 900-pound yoke made of two refrigerators across a 30-meter course in under 60 seconds. You probably already know this, but Hafthor also played Gregor “The Mountain” Clegane in Game of Thrones (RIP), and in this interview, we talk about how he’s currently training to defend his World’s Strongest Man title, how he manages his recovery, what his diet looks like, what supplements he takes (Hint: Legion), his favorite Game of Thrones experiences, how he’s dealt with injuries, what his long-term aspirations are, and more! As a genuine Hafthor fan, I had a hell of a good time talking to him, and I hope you enjoy the interview as much as I did. 5:33 - How do you train in preparation for events? 7:53 - Do you try to achieve your PR at the gym or at events? 13:21 - What weakness have you been trying to address in your training? 14:49 - What do you do for hot and cold therapy? 19:50 - What are some of the big lessons you’ve learned? 21:52 - What is your diet? 24:53 - What’s your sleep hygiene like? 29:10 - Do you have a routine at night to help you relax? 36:30 - What is your supplement routine? 42:36 - What drives you? 51:23 - What was your favorite experience with playing The Mountain in Game of Thrones? 55:16 - How do you prepare your diet and training when traveling? 58:41 - Have you had any serious injuries? 1:03:28 - What are your long term goals? 1:07:31 - What’s new and exciting for you? Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: https://www.muscleforlife.com/signup/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, hello, Mike Matthews here and welcome to the Muscle for Life podcast.
This episode is an interview with the one and only Hafthor Bjornsson, who is, at least
as of, let's see, June 11th, the strongest man in the world.
And I say that because the World's Strongest Man competition is coming up in the next couple of days.
And we'll see.
Hafthor is going to be defending his title.
And in this interview, Hafthor gives us a behind-the-scenes look at what it's like to be him.
A 6'9", 420-pound man who can squat, deadlift, and bench press over 2,500 pounds. Yes, that means that
he pulls over 1,000 pounds. He squats nearly 1,000 pounds and benches in the mid fives.
And as I just mentioned, Hafthor is also the 2018 champion of the World's Strongest Man
Competition. And I hope he's the 2019 champion
by the time this podcast goes live.
And that means that he does rather incredible feats
like lifting five large stones
ranging from 220 to 350 pounds
onto columns that are the height of an average man,
pulling gargantuan objects arm over arm using a rope,
like planes, boats, cars, and giant tires,
and carrying a 900-pound yoke made of two refrigerators
across a 30-meter course in under 60 seconds.
Now, you probably already know this, but Hafthor also played Gregor
the Mountain Clegane in Game of Thrones. May he rest in peace. And in this interview, we talk
about things like how he is training right now to defend his world's strongest man title,
how he manages his recovery, what his diet looks like, what supplements he
takes, spoiler alert, they're all Legion, his favorite Game of Thrones experiences,
how he has dealt with injuries in the past, what his long-term aspirations are, and more.
As a genuine Half-Thor fan, I had a hell of a good time talking with him, really enjoyed the discussion
and where it went and the information that he shared. And I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.
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Hafthor, I have the world's strongest man on the podcast. I'm excited because I'm honestly a fan of yours.
Thank you so much, man. It's great to be finally speaking. I'm a fan as well. I've read your books. They're quite interesting. It's awesome to be finally speaking.
Yeah. Thank you for taking the time and figuring it out with your schedule.
You've been traveling a lot, right?
Yeah.
I've been basically traveling and all kinds of work.
But right now, I'm staying home and mainly just 100% focusing on World Series Man, where I'll be competing to try to defend my title in June.
Yeah, a couple weeks away, right?
Yeah, 13th of June it starts. So, yeah, very close, like two and a half weeks away.
That's my birthday. Oh, that's awesome. That's cool.
So you're going to do great. Yeah, definitely. 100%. Yeah. That's awesome. Wow.
Yeah. So I'm curious, what does your training look like in preparation for one of these events?
How do you work it in terms of, I mean, you can go into as many details as you want, really. The people listening are pretty familiar with periodization and how you regulate volume and intensity.
I'm just curious myself.
And how do you prepare yourself for what is, I mean, I'm assuming that you're working up to essentially like this is your maximum capacity in one of these events, right?
Let's just start coming.
Like I train five times a week
and i do pressing actually twice a week do overhead and back exercises together i'm squatting
once a week and deadlifting once a week with a lot of obviously accessory workouts in it as well
but with strongman what takes the most time and i'm usually in the gym
roughly about two or three hours the reason why i'm so long is because you know the setup of the
equipment put it back and everything it takes longer than just bodybuilding where you can just
walk up to a machine and do your 12 reps, four sets, and then you go up to the next exercise.
Strongman is a lot like the equipment that we use,
the log, the big tires, the little flip, the farmer's walk.
It takes time, and that's why my exercises can sometimes take up to three hours.
But sometimes I might even split my sessions up to two parts
because I don't like to train that long.
So let's say if I feel like it's going to take even more than three hours then I will definitely take a break I will train
for maybe a one and a half hour or two take a break eat and come back and finish my session
and when I'm training heavy let's say if I'm doing heavy sets of deadlifts
I can rest up to 10 minutes between sets there's a lot of rest but when you're trying to maximize
your strength and when you're going up to like 400 kilograms I find that eight to ten minutes
is the best way for me to get maximum strength yeah that makes sense i mean
my version of that is maybe lifting 400 pounds and resting maybe like three or four minutes
in between sets when you're working up in terms of intensity in terms of load the amount of weight
on the bar are you setting prs normally in the gym or is it usually at events where that's where you're going for your best?
It usually happens in events. I want to peak when I compete.
But if it happens during my preparation, then that's just a good thing.
And it might happen, let's mention that again, I might do a PR once or twice maximum a year it doesn't happen more often than that
then i just do my prs in a competition this year i did a pr before um arnold classic in columns ohio
in my training session i went up to 470 i believe two kilograms 2 kilograms or 3. Something like that.
473 kilograms.
And just for people listening, that's 1,040 pounds, give or take, depending on if it's 3 or 2.
But that's a small car.
Yes, yes.
So I went for PR there.
And the only reason I decided to go for PR was because I knew I had more than 10. I would never go for PR because I knew I had more than a tank I would
never go for PR if I thought I was going to fail failing is not an option for me I want to build
so much confidence in myself that I honestly believe that I can lift anything I train that
way that I never really fail in my sessions I always get stronger and stronger each session. But I've trained
like this for years now.
I worked with Sebastian Orip, who's a great coach
from Australia.
And yeah, I'm getting stronger, you know,
each year. I'm currently the world's strongest man,
and I can't complain. You're always
or most always
doing sub-maximal training, so
you're not pushing yourself to
even the point of technical failure
where your form starts to break down i mean that happens of course you know like for example today
i was training i was doing uh two sets with 177 kilo log for three repetitions to work on my um
shoulder power on the second set on the second rep as well I lost the balance and I fell back
that's okay that happens you know I'm not perfect and I make mistakes in training I just decided
after that set to say that's it you know I'm not gonna be annoyed that I didn't finish my
set completely you know I make mistakes like everyone else. I lost my balance. That's fine.
I'm going to step away and now finish my other exercises. I'm always trying to improve every
way I can basically, you know, and I make failures like other people, even though people might not
see it because Instagram these days, you know. It doesn't make the highlight reel.
Yeah, exactly. Yeah, no, that makes sense. But in terms of your programming, you're generally not trying to take your heavy sets to either technical failure or muscle failure.
You always have at least a rep or two in the tank.
Definitely, 100%.
I'm obviously pushing myself very hard, but I'm always improving.
But I'm making sure that I have at least something more in the tank.
Yeah, that makes sense.
And that's generally a good practice, even for people who are just bodybuilding,
especially with the compound exercises,
because it can even just be dangerous for an everyday gym goer
to put a bunch of weight on the bar and squat until they can't squat properly anymore.
It's generally smart for everybody to end most of their sets i mean sure
if you're doing some bicep curls right i guess it doesn't really matter but on the big exercises
at least that's what i've always recommended and i've always done myself at least over the last
several years is always leave a couple reps in the tank one or two usually yeah i agree of course in
the bicep curls or like bodybuilding and strongman or powerlifting, you know, there's three different things.
You can't compare it.
Three different sports.
People train differently, you know.
All bodybuilders don't rest for 10 minutes between sets.
I don't rest 10 minutes between sets.
It's just when I'm doing really, really heavy squats
and when I'm doing maybe a very heavy deadlift.
That's like my maximum rest between sets, you know, 10 minutes.
When your load is this much, when you start to squat or deadlift more's like my maximum rest between sets you know 10 minutes when your load is this much
when you start to squat or deadlift more than 400 kilograms you have to give the body more rest time
be doing a program for let's say you i would never put that in your program resting 10 minutes or
eight minutes that's too much for you your load is less and then therefore your training is different
yeah totally for me and for most everyone listening in between set rest on the big,
heavy, like squats and deadlifts, mostly probably three to five minutes is reasonable. I think for
most people, depending on how you feel. Hey, quickly, before we carry on, if you are liking my podcast, would you please help spread
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What have you been working on in your last training block or two to improve on?
Like, are there any weak points that you feel like you've been trying to address?
Yeah. So I'm always trying to get better. I'm always trying to find weaknesses where I can
improve something. Now, lately, it's stretching, where I go and I meet a person three times a week and I'm stretching I'm just
doing a stretch session because I feel like I'm a big guy I weigh 200 kilograms and I'm 205
centimeters tall and my flexibility isn't the best and I believe with a better flexibility I
can perform better I can recover perform exercises better if I'm more flexible. So I did that this year, and I definitely have better progress with that added in my routine.
But I do a lot of other stuff.
I do hot and cold therapy a lot.
I do karastun.
Do you know what karastun is?
No.
It's like scraping.
Okay.
Yeah, I've done that before.
Like a metal, almost like a shoehorn.
Yeah, I do that approximately twice a week as well. There's a lot of things I do outside the gym that makes me this level I am today, you know.
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, it helps, I'm sure, with recovery, right? It just helps you be able to keep on pushing harder and harder in the gym.
Yeah, that's the main point.
I want to recover as fast as possible so I'm able to go to my next session and push myself to the absolute limit, at least as far as I can,
without going to failure.
What do you do for hot and cold therapy?
I do it for recovery and to strengthen my immune system.
I've been doing it for years now.
I do it at least three times a week, up to five times a week,
sometimes every day.
I do three to five sets as long as I want to in the hot tub.
And I just take like two minutes, three minutes in the cold.
So is the cold, is it ice water cold, 50 degrees water?
Yeah, it's pretty cold.
I feel like if I don't do it, I've done experience with it on myself.
I've tried to not do it for a week or two weeks. In those two weeks when I didn't do it,
my body was aching everywhere. The soreness was just unbearable. So I just had to start doing
it again. And when I'm doing it, I'm barely sure. I just feel great.
Interesting. I know there's a bit of research on cold baths in particular,
and there's no question that if the water's cold enough and you're willing to submerge yourself in the studies that I'm thinking of, there are a few where it was
submersion up to like the neck basically. So it's more or less the whole body submerged
for, I want to say around five or six minutes that it does markedly reduce inflammation.
So, but most people like cold showers are kind of a trendy thing. I don't know. It was maybe trendier a year or two ago when Wim Hof was kind of making the mountains in the media. And we know that cold showers, although they're cold, I've cold bathtub, most of your body submerged for several
minutes, that's likely to make a difference with inflammation. But if you just took a cold shower
for a couple of minutes, it probably wouldn't make much of a difference. I don't know if you've
tried both, but the ice bath is just that what most people are not willing to do. Like they
might be willing to get into the shower for 30 seconds, maybe 60 seconds, the
end of their 10 minute hot shower.
But to go into the bathtub with a bunch of ice in there and just sitting in there for
five minutes, not so much.
Yeah, I agree.
And we mentioned this information.
That's another part that I forgot to mention.
It helps a lot with that as well.
With heavy training, you tend to get sore elbows sore biceps sore knees you know
a lot of information going there so doing the hot and cold i feel it helps that a lot as well
but i think it's also a mental thing and you get used to it it definitely makes you tougher on the
long term so i do it also for that you know i don't want to do it always. You know, I might be feeling tired or just like, oh, I'm at F2.
This is fucking cold.
You know, I don't want to feel miserable.
But I do it because I know I'm going to feel better afterwards.
Yeah, I mean, that's also one of the, I mean, I'm just doing showers in the morning.
But there are some mornings where if I didn't sleep well, it seems like some of those days my body temperature is naturally just lower.
And I'm like, God, I don't want to get in there.
And I live in Virginia.
So in the winter, it gets cold.
I mean, it's probably the exact same what you'd have over in Iceland in terms of the
water temp.
It's like in the 50s.
But I think there is something to be said for just doing it anyway and doing it for
that purpose where it's like, yeah, I'm going to feel better after.
You have plenty of those situations in life, right? Where I don't care how much you like your job, whatever you're doing with your time,
there are always going to be things that you need to do that you don't really want to do.
So I think there is a mental, it maybe helps you with that mental edge, at least a little bit where
you get used to just forcing yourself to do something that's going to be good for you,
that you should do, or you need to do, but you don't really want to, and just being able to override your feelings,
basically, right? Yeah, 100%.
I mean, I'm sure when you're stepping up at the Arnold, right, you pulled, what was it,
1,046 pounds for the record, right? Yeah. I used kilograms, but yes,
1,042, I believe. Do you even get a little bit of that,
like, I don't want to step up to a 1,000-pound bar and deadlift it,
or my body doesn't want to, but I'm doing it?
I'm super pumped.
I'm super excited for lifts like that.
I honestly believe in myself 100%.
I've told myself probably like a billion times before I'm doing that lift
that I'm going to lift that lift.
I've decided to lift that lift a year in advance.
I decided to do a record a year in advance like when I did the record year before I decided that I was going to
break that record again again next year so like I've had a lot of preparation and with preparation
when everything goes 100% when your diet is on point when your sleep is on point when your
training is on point when you just don't't cheat. You're working hard, very consistent with everything in life.
I never have doubts. I just know that I did put in the work. When I'm approaching the bar,
I know I'm going to lift it. I could see that. It makes sense. That point that you just said
where you know you've put in the work and you've done everything right.
And so you have no reason to doubt yourself, right?
And you just know that.
I've been in this sport now for 10 years.
I've learned a lot.
What are some of the big lessons that you've learned?
The biggest lessons, I mean, stay humble, stay hungry.
I mean, I don't know.
It's hard to say.
It's just like you never know enough.
You always can become battery.
I don't know. It's hard to say. It's just like, you never know enough. You always can become better. The moment you think that you're the best or think that you can't improve or think like
you have that attitude, that's the moment when you stop improving. And I mean, I had those attitudes
along the way and I've learned a lot throughout my years. I have a different mindset these days.
I just know that I can always improve if I'm willing to put in the work. And I know I have a different mindset these days. I just know that I can always improve if I'm willing to put in the work.
And I know I have to put a lot of work in it, you know.
But that's with everything.
If you want to become best at something, you know, you have to sacrifice things.
And you have to put in the work.
If you're cheating, you're just cheating on yourself.
Eventually, either it's a major fall from grace or maybe it just slips in your performance
or maybe it leads to injury or whatever.
I'm sure with what you're doing, you have to have all of your recovery protocols in.
You have to make sure that you're managing your diet correctly, your sleep hygiene.
It's not just like, oh, you've put in so much work that you can kind of just coast.
You have people that are always trying to knock you off the throne.
No, of course. There's other people that want to be to knock you off the throne.
Yeah, of course.
There's other people that want to be the best,
and all they get is training their asses off and doing everything.
I think it's more difficult to stay the best.
When you're at the top, you have to be very hungry and so obsessed to stay at the top.
And I'm that right now.
I'm so obsessed when it comes to being the best I possibly can
like I'm willing to do anything to win the title this year as well and I'm doing anything in my
power to win it for example I haven't mentioned that this yet I'm taking three till five minutes
walks throughout the day for my digestion so I can eat more throughout the day so i can finish my six meals a day i never
skip my meals people fail a lot i think it's with a diet they tend to get tired or just lazy
or just burned out on eating right like what does your diet look like right now in terms of
calories and macronutrients i don't count the calories or the macros you know i i know roughly i'm eating 200 grams of ribeye steak i usually
eat the ribeye steak is higher fat i actually grind it and then i make burger patties then i
grill it the reason why i grind it is because easier to digest and easier to eat when you're
eating six times a day you have to think about those things as well. Like what food can I eat that's easy to digest and easy to eat?
If I would be eating a ribeye steak every two hours, it would take a lot of chewing.
The world's strongest jaw.
The world's strongest jaw.
I would be very tired of my jaw if I'm doing that.
Basically, if I'm going to run through my diet when i wake up i have six eggs six pieces
bacon bowl of rice the spinach in it then the next five meals are usually rib eye steak or any other
meat you know but usually rib eye steak granted into patties with rice or potatoes.
If it's rice, it's usually with spinach.
If it's potatoes, I eat the skin and everything.
And then I have carrots, peppers in my meals as well,
and I snack on, like, tomatoes throughout the day.
I drink, like, a glass of orange juice with each meal almost.
I'm a huge believer in potassium.
Potassium can improve your performance,
improve your strength, you know.
And many people don't get enough.
That's a common micronutrient deficiency.
I mean, the standard recommendation from the Institute of Medicine
is between four and five grams a day.
That's just like a normal everyday person.
And most people get maybe half that, maybe?
Yeah, maybe that, not even. I think for females, it's like three or four grams. And for males,
five grams a day. I try to never get less than five grams a day.
Do you supplement or are you getting that amount from food? Because it's actually kind of hard to
get from food if you don't pay attention. I do get a lot from potatoes and peanuts and tomatoes
and there's obviously potassium also in orange juice and steaks what i've been doing as well
i think coconut water that's very high in potassium i'd have to google it yeah actually
like i drink maybe one liter of coconut water a day. Oh, coconut water. Sorry, I misheard you.
Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
That's like two grams of potassium just in that, almost two grams.
That's a lot of potassium.
Do you like bananas?
Because bananas are like my one or two bananas a day.
Yeah, I actually do eat one or two as well, and it's high in potassium as well.
It's funny how we can maybe so much forget.
Yeah, I eat this as well.
I eat half a banana.
These small things that you call snack. Yeah. But yeah, I do. how we can maybe like sometimes forget like yeah i eat this as well oh i'd have a banana like
these small things that you call snack yeah but yeah i do i do try to have a count of my potassium
intake and roughly like five grams a day yeah that makes sense what's your sleep hygiene like
how much sleep do you get do you have a very specific routine you go to bed at the same time
every day yeah so i go to bed usually almost every night i don't
want to go later than 11 p.m and try to get at least eight hours every night if i wake up earlier
try to fall asleep again and try to sleep like at least eight hours for maximum recovery but if i
wake up and i just can't sleep more i always just wake up and i have breakfast yep and have you
tried sleeping more than that because you know there some research out there. I think of one study, it was done
with basketball players and increasing their sleep from eight hours to 10 hours a night,
markedly improved. I think it was their accuracy, either on free throws or three
pointers. I don't remember. It was a couple of years since that study came out, but
there were a couple of similar studies. the takeaway from the few studies out there on the benefits of getting a bit more sleep than even would be normally
recommended is just that it improves performance basically yeah i would if i could i just can't
keep more yeah i'm the same way i've always been that way i do try to take naps at least one a day
and i were able to take two naps but i try to take naps at least one a day. I'm never able to take
two naps, but I try to get at least one time like a nap for 20, 30 minutes. My sleep has been on and
off since my kids. I know that's pretty normal, I guess, because I was a deeper sleeper before I
had kids and now I tend to wake up easier. I think that's normal. Do you get eight hours every night?
I try. I'm in bed for eight hours. So like you, I think that's normal. Do you get eight hours every night? I try.
I'm in bed for eight hours.
So like you, I usually go to bed around 10, never any later than 11. But I would say between 10 and 10, 15, my alarms at six.
And these days I'll usually wake up probably at least once.
And some nights it's just bad.
And there's no real explanation for it.
I'll wake up a number of times.
Last night was just not good.
I don't know why.
But I'm not too concerned about it because I'm doing everything right.
There's nothing else that I can do physically to try to sleep better.
Quick question.
Have you tried the supplement Lunar from Legion?
I find that's been helpful.
I have actually.
And whatever is going on is too strong for any supplements because there's just no
real correlation between taking supplements and sleeping better or taking supplements and not
sleeping better. So melatonin does seem to help a little bit. So I know that, but I'm not too
concerned about it again because I'm doing everything right that you're supposed to be doing. And it is pretty normal, I guess, when you have young kids to
just naturally be a worse sleeper. There's also, I don't know, over the last couple of years,
as the businesses have grown and the problems have grown, I guess maybe there's, I've been
impacted probably by life stress to some degree as well. Have you run into that? I mean, just with
the amount of training
that you're doing and the amount of travel that you do and just the bigger everything gets, the
more, of course, exciting it is. But at the same time, I feel like, I don't know if you've
experienced this, but it takes more, not necessarily effort, but it can be easier,
I guess, for me at least to get a bit-unquote serious. It becomes a bit harder to maintain a kind of carefree, not careless, not like I don't care, but more just carefree and not particularly worried about things.
And it just felt like it was easier to just focus on the work and just keep on going when things were smaller.
That's how it is for me at least yeah of course when i think like if i think about like 15 years back like i never had the problem with sleeping and i just
left like a rock nowadays with everything going on like like you said with your company growing
and with with more things going on in your life you know it it gets harder and i ran into that as well but overall i'm quite happy
with my sleep at the moment you know it could be better it could be worse i do wake up like
at least once sometimes like even more up to three four times that's very annoying if that happens
but it does happen but that's just life with everyone you know people have their own problems
you know everyone has something on their mind that is maybe affecting their sleep you know
totally do you have any sort of maybe routine or specific things that you like to do at night to
help you relax i try to stay off my phone when it comes close to bedtime. I put it away. I don't sleep with it in my
bedroom. I try to have my room as black as possible. And I do, I actually sleep with
a CPAP machine. And that helps me a lot. After I got used to using that, my sleep become
a lot better. My sleep has actually improved a lot like it started to improve
late 2017 since you started sleeping with the machine yeah well actually i've had it for years
i just never got used to it but i knew if i would get used to it it would improve my sleep a lot
i forced myself actually my wife she helped me a lot. One day, I just told her,
babe, can you just please tell me, like, if I don't sleep with it, I snore. That bothers
her sleep as well. So I just told her, like, babe, if I take it off and I snore, can you
just please tell me to put it back on? Because, like, when you're half asleep, you can't really
think. You're just, like, trying to sleep. So she started to do that. And then that's
the time when I got used to it and then my sleep got
improved and everything improved and i started to win everything i won everything since i won
everything back in 2018 i won everything this year and it's like with my sleep improving like
everything got better like my mood is better everything is just better my strength is
improving this is awesome yeah yeah i, sleep is the ultimate biohack
and I'm not a fan of that term and I'm not a fan of that whole trend. But if you want one weird
trick to improve literally every aspect of your life, anybody listening is try to sleep as well
as possible. It doesn't mean that you necessarily have to sleep 10 hours a day, but if you can just be in bed for, let's say, anywhere between seven and eight hours and have
good quality sleep, yeah, I know exactly how that is on the days, especially since over the last
couple of years where my sleep has been hit and miss, it's now especially clear to me because
previously I would just sleep good basically always. And so I just took it for granted. I
didn't really realize how big of a difference it makes in everything inside and outside
of the gym.
Yeah.
And one tip for people out there listening, easy tip that people might not really, I can
probably guarantee that a lot of people do this all the time.
They take their phone to the bedroom and they lay in bed and all of a sudden an hour has
passed and they're in their phone texting someone or sending an
email or doing something you know instagram instagram for example you know watching videos
of you training yeah for example you know if you want to improve your sleep put your phone away
elsewhere not in your bedroom don't take it with you in bed when you go to sleep
just go in the bed lay on the and go to sleep close your
eyes and i promise you you will fall asleep faster you will sleep better 100 that's the
one tip i can give you guys and it's gonna work my wife likes to be on her phone before she goes
to sleep but funny enough i would tell her this right but she didn't actually have trouble sleeping
and she would tell me like you know it actually it actually, it makes me really sleepy. And then I fall asleep quickly. And I was like, okay, I mean, this is one of those tips that even if you
use the, I don't know what they call it in iOS, but where it changes the temperature of the light.
So it's not blue light. It's like this warmer light. And yes, we, okay. We know that that's
a little bit better than just blasting yourself right in your face with blue light right before
you want to go to sleep, but still just having light in your face before you want to go to bed is not good for melatonin production
but to her credit i mean i guess it works because she'll be on her phone for maybe five minutes and
then she's very tired and then she just falls asleep and she sleeps fine so i guess you can't
argue with uh well if it works for her it works for her it might work for some people exactly no
no no and that's the point is that yes yes, for most people, that probably would not help them for whatever reason.
For her, it's just like after taking care of the kids all day and doing everything she has to do, it's her way to just kind of turn her mind off.
Have her time.
Yeah.
Even if it's just 10 minutes, no one's asking anything of her and she doesn't have to talk and she doesn't have to think about anything.
And she can just like look at pretty pictures on Instagram or something.
Yeah, that definitely might work for some people.
So I'm not saying necessarily, okay, I take it back.
It might not work for everyone, but if you're having trouble with sleeping,
try it at least, and see if it works for you.
Something also that has helped, well, I mean, I guess for me,
my issue hasn't been falling asleep, it's just staying asleep.
I'll tend to wake up, anyway, yeah, one to a few times a night.
But for falling asleep, something that has worked nicely for me is focusing on relaxing
all the muscles in my body, like starting with my face and my jaw and then letting my shoulders
drop and kind of just moving down my body, consciously relaxing everything. And then just
not thinking about anything, just taking kind of slower rhythmic kind of breaths.
And usually I'll be able to fall asleep fairly quickly if I do that. So for anyone listening,
who has trouble falling asleep, you can try that. It might help. There've been articles
on the internet that have gone around, which I think it was like from some of them say like,
this is how military people fall asleep in two minutes flat or like how airline pilots or
whatever. But the method is always some version of that. And then there's also like some visualization,
which I find I don't really need to do. But I think the two things were one picture yourself,
like lying in a canoe in the middle of a serene lake and looking up at the stars. Right. And then
the other one is like picture yourself cocooned in a black
velvet hammock, almost those two, or just repeat to yourself over and over. Don't think, don't
think, don't think. And those I haven't needed to do because I haven't had a problem like trying to
shut my mind off. Usually it's okay. I can just lay there and not think about anything until I
fall asleep. But anyway, for anyone listening who has had trouble falling asleep, those tips have worked
for me and apparently are used by many other people who can fall asleep in a few minutes.
I'm not that fast, but...
I've actually never tried.
I have to give it a go.
Yeah, the relaxation definitely will help.
It just feels good.
You just relax.
And like for me, I never noticed when I first started doing that, that my jaw would always
be kind of clenched a little bit and my shoulders would be shrugged up a little
bit and simply releasing my jaw and my face muscles and letting my shoulders drop down and
just kind of feel relaxed felt more relaxed than clenched jaw and shrugged shoulders yeah definitely
100 yeah that was a good go.
I honestly think after I got used to the CPAP,
that's kind of like just hearing that noise
when it's on, you know,
that's like a sleep medicine for me.
I just get so relaxed.
The moment I put the CPAP on,
I think I fall asleep very fast,
like in probably like five minutes.
Nice.
I don't know what the machines sound like,
but I'm sure it's kind of just a white noise, something.
It's very soft.
Just like relaxing to me at least.
And your wife doesn't bother her?
No, she's just happy because I don't snore anymore.
Yeah, yeah, no.
I guess if it's like, you got to take your pick.
We can have the soothing, soft white noise or the snoring.
I snore sometimes.
And I thought about doing a sleep study just for fun,
just to see if it's something like that.
Because that could also be part of the issue as I've gotten older.
It could just be breathing obstruction.
Yeah, might be.
What does your supplementation routine look like right now?
Currently, well, I'm using Legion.
Shameless plug of mine, of course, but I had to add.
I do take mostly of what I use like on a daily basics is the atlas gainer I use it
always after my sessions I use the pulse pre-workout before my sessions and I use the
reach outs as well post-workout after my sessions I do take the lunar sleep I do take the Lunar Sleep. I do take that before bed.
And I do take also the Casin before bed as well.
So those are my main, what I use on a daily basis.
Interesting.
So are you taking any sort of omega-3 supplement?
I do.
Yeah, I do.
You guys have omega.
You have the Triton.
Yeah, yeah.
I do take that on a daily basis as well.
I do take vitamin D and magnesium and all of those stuff as well.
I just forgot it because I put it all this, like I have a box of vitamins where I put
throughout like two weeks straight.
I have it all in there and I just take it with my breakfast all mornings.
Yeah, that makes sense.
I do a little satchel every day.
Just put my daily in a little paper towel and bring it with me.
It works great for me. I love the Pro Projects. I don't take Luna every single evening just because on days where I feel like I need it, I won't take it so I can feel the effect.
Yeah.
And when I need it, when I take it, it definitely helps me.
Yep. That was the intention with that formulation was something that you don't necessarily take
every day, but you save it for like exactly like that. Maybe you take it every other day or just
a few days a week. So it stays maximally effective. And I think also it is generally a good idea to not
supplement with melatonin every day if you don't need to.
My sleep is quite good on a normal basis.
But of course, you have days where you're just still.
Because I want to have a routine 100%.
So let's say if I'm just not tired and it's 11 p.m., I'm going to take Lunar and I'm going to force myself to bed.
Yeah, that makes sense.
I don't want to stay up late.
I don't want to change the routine. I don't want to like change the routine.
I want to, I like to stay in a good routine.
Yeah.
Same.
And you have to with what you're doing, because you know that, like you've mentioned earlier,
that it's the accumulative effects of all the little things that you're doing add up.
It's not just getting in the gym and moving a lot of weight.
It's all the little things that support that.
And so that comes down
to the routine. I mean, there's no other way to do it. I mean, you hear about those stories here
and there of, I think of, I don't watch American football. I don't really pay attention to American
football very much, but a couple of the guys in the office do. And they've mentioned there have
been some, I want to say, was it Terrell Owens? Yeah, maybe I'm remembering wrong, but there have
been some specific, I think mostly wide receivers, these guys who are just super freak athletes and all they would eat just like
McDonald's every day and they wouldn't pay attention to anything and they would show up
late to practice and not really try. And they're just for a period, they're just incredibly,
incredibly good. And those stories, people hear those things and they're interesting.
That's more interesting. That's sexier or more glamorous than what you're talking about. But the majority of the
people who are at the top of their professions are exactly like that. They have very specific routines
and they could tell you on any given day at any given time exactly what they're going to be doing and most of their
life revolves around what's essentially their work and their routine that allows them to perform at
such a high level right i've been around athletes like that that are just like the right word just
laziness you know they're just lazy and they just like they eat hamburgers pizzas and stay up late
you know they even might drink.
In different sports, guys like that.
And I've been around guys like that, and they still perform like you're just looking at them.
You're just like, whoa, this guy is a superhuman.
It's just incredible how good he is or how strong he is or how fast he is.
Yeah, I've seen many guys like that in my career.
In many cases, they don't last is the thing usually you
don't see them performing at that level for 10 years or you know they have their 15 minutes of
fame which may extend out depending on what it is for a little bit longer but eventually all the bad
habits catch up with them right yeah usually it's like younger athletes around 20s who can't get
away with these things you know and somehow they're just able to eat shit
and might train okay,
but they might get away with it.
But when you're getting older,
it will get tougher.
It will get harder.
And then it might be too late
to try to work your ass off
and try to be on point with everything.
Yeah, there's the physical side of it.
Then there's also the psychological side of it, right?
So if you've been very loosey-goosey with diet and maybe less so at training, but just
in general, and then all of a sudden, maybe there are some injuries now and things are
not what they were, there's the physical side of it.
Yeah, it may be too late in that regard, but then there's also, I think it would probably
be very hard psychologically to go from being so lackadaisical and so kind of freewheeling with your routine to then have to go
to what you're doing. Everything needs to be very precise and very strict. And you're spending most
of your time in a purposeful manner. You are doing the hot and cold therapy because of this reason.
And you are eating these times, these foods for this reason and everything is
very regimented for many people that sounds like torture you know like for me it's just like
part of my life doing it now for 10 years straight i honestly love it generally love what i do you
know and that's a great thing you know even though it's a lot of work and i put a lot of time and
effort into the things i do i still love it i love every time of it and that's a lot of work and I put a lot of time and effort into the things I do, I still love it.
I love every time of it.
And that's a great thing.
And that's why I'm probably so successful in it.
Because I do enjoy working my ass off in the gym and outside the gym as well.
What drives you?
What drives me?
There's a lot of different things.
Probably proving people wrong in some
part you know the naysayers the people that say that i can't or those people they might drive me
also my family have a huge support system and having their support means a lot to me and i
want to make them proud i just in general I want to work hard. I want to
achieve my goals. Those two things probably drive me the most and I don't need anything else.
I remember back in the days when I started competing people said Thor has a potential
in winning the World Series man but he'll never win the Ardenalds. Those things when people say
that you can't that puts a fire inside of me that's like
you're just making me hungry to work harder to make sure I win it to prove you guys wrong
and yeah I remember those days when people said that they never win the Arnold because it was too
heavy I was too tall my squat wasn't strong enough my over pressing wasn't strong enough
and that was enough.
I worked my ass off every single day to make sure that I would improve and get stronger.
So one day I would win the Ardennals.
And I won it first time in 2018.
And this year as well.
I actually dominated this year.
I won three out of five events.
It was quite a dominant performance.
on three out of five events.
It was quite a dominant performance.
It's a great feeling when you do something that people said that you would never do.
That's the best feeling.
And it's just this feeling of being the best at something
is the best feeling in the world.
I can't explain it, you know.
It's just, I thought when I would win the World Series, man,
I thought, oh, fuck, when I win the World Series, man,
my hunger might go away. but no it didn't it's just the feeling of being the best it drives me
more it's just because I know the other guys they want to take the title away just thinking about it
just like so driven and so obsessed with everything when I'm sitting on the sofa at home
just finish my meal or sitting at the kitchen table just finish my meal I'm sitting on the sofa at home, just finish my meal, or sitting at the kitchen table, just finish my meal, I'm just like, what else can I do?
Yeah, let's go hot and cold.
Because, you know, I'm just thinking about one thing, and I'm thinking about winning that contest.
Nothing is going to stop me.
Nothing.
And it's just like, I don't know.
I'm just, in general, just a very driven person.
In general, I just really want to win.
I want to be the best.
That makes me think of an interview with Tiger Woods when he was in his prime, when he was winning everything.
And he was to the point where other professionals were complaining, basically, that this is bullshit.
This guy, half the time, if he's in the tournament, we're just playing for second place.
Yeah, that's crazy.
I've heard that myself as well.
When I'm competing, the guys are just like, well, just have to compete for second.
competing the guys are just like well just have to compete for second at that moment when they say that i know i won the contest because i know that they're not strong enough in their mind to
believe it it's almost like sun tzu like the battle's over before it even started yeah if
they're gonna tell me that like i've heard guys that say that for you're too good we can't beat
you that's the moment i'm just like wow you just don't want to win bad enough you're like you're
not willing to put in the work to win me to to beat me. Well, that's okay. I'm just going to work even
harder to dominate. I don't care. I'm still obsessed. I'm still in this to be as good as
possible. That's exactly basically what Tiger, so his answer, the question was like, what drives
you? You're so dominant, yet you keep practicing, you keep working harder and harder, and you
keep just winning more and more and more.
And so they asked him, like, what drives you?
And his answer was one word.
It was just winning.
That was it.
Yeah, that's a good answer.
And exactly what you're saying makes me think of that.
And I can understand that.
I've not been in that position myself, but I can imagine being in that position and that just being like the thing you just love to win and it sounds similar that you just love
to win yeah winning is great losing is awful being second is the worst thing ever and i've
been second many times before i placed second three times and third three times before i ever
won the world's most man and that was each year was just so hard all the hard work
all the effort you know that went into training was just like fuck each year i just thought to
myself what can i do what like what am i doing wrong what can i improve i guess maybe the sleeping
was the thing you know i put my sleeping late 2017 and also just like with aids with years like
every year that passes you become better and
stronger and you have more knowledge and you know it's just like yeah like with everything in life
you become better at everything do you think that part of it was your body and i'm thinking of even
your bones having to adapt to i mean because that's a slow process of adapting to the types
of loads that have been getting heavier and
heavier over the years.
A professor named Stuart McGill on the podcast, it was, I don't know, months ago, and he was
just talking about that he's worked with a lot of high-level powerlifters and just mentioned
that it can take many years for powerlifters.
They usually don't start putting up their big numbers until later.
I want to say even in their 30s, it takes that long for their skeleton and their joints and their tendons and ligaments, all the stuff that just the muscles can adapt quickly.
But everything else, it just takes so much time to build up a support structure in the body that can handle those kinds of weights.
Have you found that to be true?
Yeah, I think that's true.
I feel like most of the world's biggest men winners, they usually win in the late 20s or early 30s. That's usually the case.
And there's obviously going to be a skill component as well. It just takes a lot of reps to get good enough to...
Yeah, it takes time. I've been working my ass off for the last 10 years. It took me a long time to become the best. I feel like a lot of young guys and people out there, they get frustrated with not seeing progress straight away.
You just have to stay patient with your journey.
And some people, it might take a lot longer.
They just have to work harder and you have to stay patient.
And on the long run, it will pay off if you want it bad enough.
You just have to want it bad enough.
Yeah, that's true. And even I'd say that applies to whether you're going to become the best in the
world at whatever it is we're talking about is okay. Obviously there only can be one person
who's the best in the world at any given time. But if you are willing to work hard enough,
I think that it's fair to say that anyone can get really good at anything if they're willing
to work hard enough. can they be the best
in the world maybe not depends on what it is and depends what we're talking about and the person
and whatever but can they get really good absolutely yeah i agree i think everybody can
become very good at something just willing to put a lot of time and effort be basically obsessed
with it you know you have to become very good at something,
anything in life, basically. Some people might be gifted with some certain things and find some
things easier than others. But most of the times, if you want to be very great at something,
you have to. You have to put time and effort and you have to be obsessed with it.
Yeah. There's a bit of research out there on that from Dr. Anders Eriksson that basically just shows And you have to be obsessed with it. Also, Jeff Colvin spoke about this in his book, Talent is Overrated. Talent actually just doesn't
really factor in all that much where, sure, you can have some people who are a bit better at
things to begin with. But if you take that person versus someone who has a little bit less talent,
or maybe even quite a bit less talent in the beginning, and they both work hard,
and they both are given the same amount of attention from teachers or mentors. So you don't have mentors. What can happen in sports, for example, is you have the kid who's just naturally a little bit better than all the other kids and then he gets more attention from the coach and then you look at people who have reached the top tiers.
Talent, it's a negligible factor. It's just not true that the people who are at the top of any field were just naturally the best.
And it always just came easy to them.
And they didn't have to work as hard as other people who didn't make it.
It's almost the majority of their success comes down to a lot of the stuff you've been talking about here is
they're just doing all the little things right for a very long time, putting in the time, putting in
the work, not trying to find shortcuts, not trying to cheat the process, staying patient and so forth.
Yeah. Yeah, definitely.
All right. So now I have to ask a Game of Thrones question.
All right. That's cool.
So I'm just curious, what was your favorite aspect of the whole experience of playing
the mountain and being involved in that show, which has been at this point, probably the
most successful TV series of all time?
I mean, favorite part, like acting part for me in Game of Thrones was season four when I fought Pedro Pascal,
Red Wyvern, and I squeezed his eyes out.
That was the moment where your character was like, oh shit, this guy is a savage.
Yeah, that was definitely a highlight. I really enjoyed shooting that scene. Even practicing it,
you know, with Pedro for a couple of weeks before was just great and came
out great i was very happy then obviously you know going at the premiere that was huge memory
and great to be a part of that i was very honored to that i got that invite that they invited me to
go to the premiere with all the biggest actors of the show i felt privileged and i felt like
honored they wanted me as well i guess you know the mountain the character even though he's not with all the biggest actors of the show. I felt privileged and I felt like honored.
They wanted me there as well.
I guess, you know, the mountain, the character,
even though he's not always on the screen,
he's still an important character in the show.
Yeah, well, you were always waiting for the final showdown.
You knew it was coming, so...
Yeah, I mean, the people that were waiting,
they wanted to see...
I'm just going to say this now.
I'll put in the intro, spoiler alert.
Yeah, yeah yeah if you
haven't watched it already then stop listening the people were waiting for the fight between me and
my brother and yeah finally it happened epic fight scene that plays in belfast and the most difficult
part during that fight scene was probably the makeup oh that was horrible i had to because the
armor goes off parts of the scene every morning I had to, because the armor goes off,
part of the scene.
Every morning I had to wake up.
You know me,
I'm a routine guy
and I had to wake up
one o'clock in the fucking morning
every single morning for a week
to do a makeup for eight hours
and then I had to shoot all the day.
And fuck, it was a torture.
I hated it.
I mean, I loved to be a part of it,
but I didn't like the progress i didn't
like makeup i had four guys every morning i had to sit still for six or eight hours and they were
like four guys like doing the makeup like with the small pencils you know and there was so much
detail and like oh and then after all that progress i had to start putting the armor on
in the beginning i had the armor on they wanted the beginning, I had the armor on. They wanted
me to do the makeup because the way they were shooting it, the helmet and stuff went off.
Yeah. And you also, you needed to see though through the helmet.
Yeah. On top of that, we were fighting in stairs. So like we were fighting up and back,
up and back, like thousands of takes again and again and again and again.
It wasn't easy to be honest, but it was worth it.
Yeah, it's amazing how much work goes into producing a show like that.
I think people that haven't seen the behind the scenes don't realize that what you just said, eight hours of makeup every day.
And then I'm sure that your days were long in those days.
Like what time did you get to bed on average on those days?
I tried to go to bed like as soon as I came to the hotel.
Let's say if I got to the hotel at 8 p.m. or 9 p.m.
I can't remember exactly, depending on the days.
And I got maybe four maximum hours of sleep and then just worked the next day.
It was torture.
I lost 10 kilograms in that week, Even though I tried my best to eat,
I remember that there were times where my wife,
she was feeding me because I was maybe wearing the armor
and the armor is like, it's hard to eat with the armor and everything.
So she was feeding me basically between takes
because I didn't have a lot of time maybe between takes sometimes
and I had to eat.
So she was just trying to feed me between the takes
and it was a lot of work but definitely yeah how long did that go for you
lost you know whatever 23 pounds or so yeah 23 pounds over what year over a week wow approximately
a week yeah when you're traveling whether it's for that or you had mentioned you were in the
middle east or how do you plan around that to
try to mitigate the downside of weight loss or not being able to train your entire routine has
to change right yeah it does like i meal prep all the time and i take meals with me on the road
and then i make sure that i have a chef or a meal company that send or make meals for me. I always have my six meals every day.
And that's just part of my job.
I make sure, like, it doesn't matter where I am in the world,
I make sure that I take meals with me on the plane
so I have enough for me to eat for my journey all the way to the hotel.
And then I make sure that I have a fridge, microwave, and everything there,
and I make sure that I can either cook or have a chef or a milk company ship me some food to me so I can stay on point with my diet.
And then I always, before I travel anywhere, you know, I make sure I find the best gym songs, the places, you know.
If I have a trouble, for example, I was saying I went to Cairo in Egypt not so long ago I was shooting
a film and I had some difficulties finding a good gym there so I had to like search online and I
asked people on Instagram if they had any suggestions of where I could train at you know
I needed this and this and this and I got some suggestions but to be honest not the best teams
but I was able to do the work and And sometimes you just have to make it happen.
Yeah, no, I understand.
I mean, I don't travel much for work and my requirements for training are not nearly as intense as yours or as specialized as yours. But my version of that is, for anybody listening, is, yeah, when you're traveling, if it's a hotel gym and you can make do with that.
Or sometimes I'll look also around, is there a local gym that I can maybe just get
some day passes to or something and make that work? And same deal, is there a grocery store
nearby or with Amazon Prime, like Prime Now, can I order groceries and have them be there so I can
have food to eat? Because I often get asked, especially people who need to travel a lot for
their work, they would like to be on some sort of program but they're just curious as what's the trick and the trick is there is no trick it's just paying attention to
all the little details it just doesn't make it happen you know if you really want it then you
just and of course you're just going to milk everything i use these thermal boxes so i warm
up my food put it in that and it keeps it warm it can keep it warm for up to six hours so i have
meals with me for up to six hours of
traveling on the road that's what i did because you know i prefer to eat my food warm if i can
but if i have to like if there's no other option i'll eat it cold it would be epic for you in
terms of your acting career you know amazon they're doing the lord of the rings series
if there's some way i don't know lord of the rings well enough there's probably a character
in there that needs to be massive and intimidating.
Yeah, it would be cool.
I would definitely look into it.
I'm always trying to, I'm going to go more into acting as well.
You know, I still want to compete.
You know, I'm competing now in World of Swordsmen
and I want to take a small break, do some more acting.
But like next year as well, I'll still compete
just because I have a passion still for the sport.
I really love training.
I love competing.
So I still want to do it, you know, even though I can make a better living on acting and the sport.
It's just because of the love that I have for it.
It doesn't feel like a job to me.
As long as I stay healthy and I have no injuries, I want to keep on competing for sure.
Yeah, that makes sense.
Have you had to deal with any serious injuries along the way i mean i had injuries i had a nerve problem in my right arm
at the beginning of my career so i had to have a surgery for that and that actually affected my
grip strength a lot because one of my nerves were not working properly in my right arm so the grip
in my arm wasn't working 100 and i lost a lot of grip and that affected
obviously when i was competing and my grip wasn't maybe as good as it would had been i was losing
points in gripping events and so on but now it's back to where it was like before and now my grip
is one of the best in the world so i I can't complain. I tore my quad muscle back in 2017.
I did PRP injection.
Do you know what that is?
Yeah, I do.
I did PRP injection.
And that helped me a lot with recovery.
And I was able to actually tore my quad muscle.
I have a picture where my quad was completely black.
And they told me that I can't remember like six or like eight weeks rest time.
And I was like four weeks out from World Series event 2017.
I was like, there's no way I have to compete.
And you know me, I'm obsessed.
I was looking at my options, what can I do for recovery?
And then I saw this PRP injection.
In Iceland, it's very hard to get that.
So I had to, I knew a guy in Boston, a doctor that I spoke to,
and he was able to get me in like a day or two.
After I tore it, I booked a flight to Boston,
and then after that, I did the PRP injection.
Literally like a week after, I was back squatting.
Wow.
It was like the recovery process was insane.
Wow.
It worked very well for me, at least, like with my experience. I've done PRP once insane wow it worked very well for me at least like
with my experience i've done prp once and it worked very well for me for people listening
it's platelet-rich plasma therapy and if i haven't looked too much into it but i'm getting this right
right so they take blood out and they put it in like a centrifuge and they spin it and then they
get it's like a yeah and i've, I had gotten a treatment on my face
where they like put a bunch of needles in your face. Cause I had acne when I was younger and
there's still a little bit of scarring and I heard it can help. And I don't really care that much,
but I was like, sure, whatever, I'll try it. And so they needle the shit out of your face.
And then they do that. They take blood out, they get spun and they pull out the platelet rich
plasma. And then they, in this case, they just platelet-rich plasma and then they in this case
they just put it on your face and you're supposed to put it on every day but in prp they're injecting
it back into the area that needs recovery right yeah that's correct yeah because i think people
also do it for joint issues too right it can help i think tendon issues even ligament issues or
just joint issues in general i believe so as
well but yeah i tried it once and it worked amazingly for me obviously i was able to get
back into training like week after always like i went slowly i didn't i didn't squat heavy like
four weeks after i tore it i squatted 320 kilograms for 12 repetitions with the actual bar in the finals other world
swissman and i was super happy with that because i wasn't sure how my squat was like when you're
four weeks out that's the time when you have to really push yourself and like squat heavy and
train heavy you know but i couldn't do that because of my injury.
So I was very frustrated part of the game.
But I don't want to use the word lucky
because I don't think that's the right word for it.
But I haven't had any other injuries.
I want to say that's because of this workout.
I take care of my body.
Yeah, and it's probably all the other stuff
that you're doing to help with recovery.
And it sounds like you had mentioned earlier something about alcohol.
It sounds like you don't drink alcohol.
Yep, I don't drink alcohol.
I don't do anything that can affect my performance.
If anything, it will make me weaker.
Like I said before, I'm just very obsessed with getting better.
Even the nutritional side of things with how you eat is going to impact that over time.
And you mentioned some of the guys.
Yeah, when you're 20 and you're invincible, basically, you can get away with just eating a bunch of junk food, but eventually the micronutrient deficiencies, they will catch
up with you and especially as you get older. And so having eating well for a long time, I'm sure
just makes everything in your body work better. And it's something that is, I'd say it's gaining popularity in the bodybuilding and kind of general
fitness space. But for years now, it's been kind of the thing has been, oh, it's so amazing that
if you just control your calories and your macronutrients, you can have a six pack and
eat like shit. Yeah, sure you can, but you only can do that for so long until
it starts to drag you down. Yeah, I agree. What are your long-term goals? That's my last question
for you. Where do you see yourself in the next three years, five years or 10 years or however
far forward you're looking? I mean, my long-term goal, I'm married like you guys know, and
obviously have more kids. I have one daughter from my past relationship she's
10 years old i want to have more kids with my wife and just stay driven and go more into acting
put more efforts in my businesses that i have currently yeah that's about it i stay in the now. I don't look too far ahead. I try to work on what's going on in my
life right now and try to make those things better. I don't worry about the future. I know
that I will always work hard, at least I hope so. You know, if you're willing to work hard,
things will go your way. Yeah, I mean, I can relate to that. It's a point of where you know
that when you're doing all the things right in the day to day and you're putting in the hard work
and you're paying attention to the details and you're continuing to improve, we can be talking
about training or talking about business or acting or whatever. And I've felt this way myself that
it's cool to have a vision for your future, I think. And it's cool to have some kind of big,
as they say, what is the BHAG, the big, hairy, audacious goal. But it's comforting to know that if you just keep
doing everything that you need to do in the day to day, that the future kind of takes care of itself.
And you don't have to, at least for me, I've never been like some kind of self-help
motivational people say, oh, they write down their goals every single day.
And there's a lot of emphasis on, you know, have your dream board of all of your, you know, put up pictures of all the things, all the trinkets that you want to have and all the vacations you want to take.
And constantly looking at it in terms of stay motivated, stay motivated, look at the big picture, look at the big picture.
picture, look at the big picture. But I have found that by just focusing on the work and just kind of the daily routine and making sure that that is calibrated to an overall strategy that can produce
the goal, then you don't have to worry so much then about, I mean, maybe you think about it here
and there, but it's more about just continuing to do everything that you're doing because you know,
it's going to get you there. At least that's how it's been for me. I agree with everything you're saying. Of course, it's good
to have some goals for the future, but live in the present and do whatever you can to make the best
of it. If you were to keep doing what you're doing or if you take the equivalent of that in any other
area of life where it's like every day the person's putting in hard work, they're doing everything that they should be doing, they're improving. And even if they'd never
thought about where this might land them in the future, they never even really conceived of a
clear goal of like standing on that stage or getting that business award or buying the house
or whatever, they would still get there. You know what I mean? Like it just comes down to do all the
right things. At least I think maybe that's not 100% correct,
but I think that's more accurate than inaccurate.
By just doing the right things,
that is the future kind of takes care of itself.
Whereas if you flip that around
and somebody is very much into like,
oh, you know, they have to try to manifest.
They have to really focus every day on their goals
and write them down and look at their dream board
and the universe will just reward them. it just doesn't work like that like you have to focus on
the present as well you know you can't just dream about the future and you know just get stuck there
and forget about what's happening now like you have to make sure you're doing everything right
now so your future will be brightest well you know I think a lot of people might get stuck in the future maybe instead of the present.
Yeah, yeah.
And still it's obviously like you mentioned, it's great to have goals and passion.
And there's a reason if you have a strong goal, something that you really want in five years and you have a plan, a good plan to reach there,
then that's obviously good, you know?
Yeah.
Yeah, I agree.
Well, I really appreciate
you taking the time, Thor.
This has been a fun interview.
Honestly, I've really enjoyed it.
Is there anything as we wrap up here
that you want to let everybody know about?
Any new and exciting things
or really anything
that you want to let everybody know about?
Maybe two things.
I want people to know that L Legion supplements are the best supplements.
And then second, I want to let people know that I'm competing
at the World Supplement Competition the 13th of June till 16th
in Florida, Brattenton.
If you guys are there, come support.
I would love to see you all.
I'm starting to go to my YouTube channel soon.
I've been not great with it because
i'm even though people might not think english is my second language sometimes i get sighed behind
the camera or interviews and everything like that because my english is not 100 frustrated when
you're talking to a camera or saying something you can't find the right words when you're trying to
explain something or saying something and that can be frustrating but my English is obviously getting better each year like with everything you know
I'm always trying to improve myself in every way I can so yeah I'm stuck with my YouTube channel
again so check that out guys and thanks so much for the surprise thanks for listening peace and
love awesome thanks Thor I really appreciate it thank you man it was great talking to you man
hey there it is Mike again I hope you enjoyed this episode and found it interesting and helpful Great talking to you, man. listening from. This not only convinces people that they should check the show out, it also increases its search visibility and thus helps more people find their way to me and learn how
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