Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - How Jake Gained 20 Pounds of Muscle on My Bigger Leaner Stronger Program

Episode Date: March 25, 2019

In this interview, I talk with Jake who’s 32 years old and used my Bigger Leaner Stronger program to completely transform his physique. He shares his personal fitness journey, including what he was ...up to before finding me and my work and how it was going, and how things started to change after implementing the advice in my books and articles. The bigger picture looks like this: When Jake first found Bigger Leaner Stronger about six years ago, he was about 16% body fat at about 155 pounds, and today, he’s about 10% at 167 pounds and has added a ton of strength to all of his major lifts. Jake’s transformation wasn’t without struggles, of course. He ran into a number of roadblocks along the way that most of us can relate to, including issues with workout and meal scheduling, hunger and cravings, dietary temptations, and more. And in our chat, Jake shares what has most helped him navigate these barriers skillfully and prevent them from derailing his progress. So, if you like hearing motivational stories about how people have changed their bodies and lives, and if you want to pick up a few tips that may help you along in your personal journey, this episode is for you. 4:12 - What was your diet and fitness like before the Bigger Leaner Stronger program? 8:28 - How tall are you and how much did you weigh before you started the Bigger Leaner Stronger program? 13:07 - How do you eat well while traveling? 26:20 - What are your current numbers? 28:28 - What is your current body fat? 1:01:55 - What did Elon Musk say about feudalism on The Joe Rogan Experience? 1:02:32 - Did Elon Musk have a solution on how to slow down the progress of artificial intelligence?   Mentioned on the Show: MFL Coaching Jake's Book, Marooned 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)
Starting point is 00:00:00 I went from being a guy that was doing the workouts that were on bodybuilding.com and having no idea what a calorie was or what a carbohydrate really was or any of that stuff to being an informed individual. People come to me now all the time asking me for advice on how to lose weight or how to build muscle. Hello, hello, hello. Welcome to the Muscle for Life podcast. I am your host, Michael Matthews. And in this episode, I interview Jake, who is a 32-year-old dude who used my Bigger,
Starting point is 00:00:34 Leaner, Stronger program. He read the book and then did the program to completely transform his physique. And I wanted to get him on the show to share his journey. And in the interview, he talks about what he was up to before finding me and my work and how it was going, and then how things started to change after he read the book and read articles and listened to podcasts and started implementing all the advice. And the bigger picture looks like this. When he first found BLS about six years ago, he was somewhere around 15, 16% body fat and 155 pounds. And he wasn't brand new to weightlifting either. He had been lifting for a bit. I don't remember exactly how much because I'm recording this intro about a week after recording the interview, but he was not a complete newbie.
Starting point is 00:01:27 you, but he was not a complete newbie. And now he's about 9% body fat at close to 170 pounds. And he has also gained a ton of strength. So that's pretty impressive. And a transformation like that, however, is not without its struggles. Jake ran into a number of roadblocks along the way that most of us can relate to, including issues with his workout planning and scheduling, his meal scheduling, dealing with hunger and cravings while cutting and dietary temptations and more. And in this chat, Jake shares what has most helped him navigate these barriers skillfully and prevent them from derailing his progress. So if you like listening to motivational stories about how other people have changed their bodies and lives, and if you like to also glean little tips and tricks that might help you in your own journey,
Starting point is 00:02:12 this episode is for you. This is where I would normally plug a sponsor to pay the bills, but I'm not big on promoting stuff that I don't personally use and believe in. So instead, I'm just going to quickly tell you about something of mine, specifically my one-on-one coaching service. So the long story short here is this is the personal coaching service that I wish I had when I started in the gym many years ago. Every diet and training program that we create for clients is 100% custom. We provide daily workout logs and do weekly accountability calls. Our clients get priority email service and discounts on supplements, and the list goes on and on.
Starting point is 00:02:55 Furthermore, my team and I have also worked with hundreds of people of all ages, circumstances, and needs and goals. So no matter how tricky you might think your situation is, I promise you we can figure out how to get you results. If I have piqued your interest and you want to learn more, then head on over to www.muscleforlife.com forward slash coaching and schedule your free consultation call now. I'll tell you, there's usually a wait list and new slots fill up very quickly. So if you're interested at all, don't wait. Go schedule your call now.
Starting point is 00:03:33 Alrighty, that is enough shameless plugging for now, at least. Let's get to the show. Jake, thanks for taking the time to come on my podcast. Not a problem. Thanks for having me, man. Yeah. So as we were just talking about before we started here, and as is normal with these episodes, is the idea is I just want to have an open-ended, kind of loosely structured
Starting point is 00:03:56 conversation with you about where you were at, mostly fitness-wise, obviously, before finding me in my work. What was working for you?, what was working for you? What was not working for you? How did you find me and my stuff? And how have things gone since then? And maybe if we want to start with appealing kind of just snapshot of before and after, I actually didn't even look. So is this, did you go through the coaching or is this just a straight like bigger, leaner, stronger? No, I never did the coaching. You guys actually didn't start. I don't think you started doing that until I was probably already maybe a couple of years into BLS. I feel like I started doing BLS in the spring of 2014,
Starting point is 00:04:41 I believe it was. Prior to that, the only experience I had had, well, my first experience with weights ever was my senior year of high school. I took a weightlifting course because it was required. And so like prior to that, I had no experience whatsoever. And we did lots of cleans, lots of flat benching and that sort of stuff, running the bleachers. They basically trained us like we were football players. I didn't touch a weight again until 2011. I joined the infamous Planet Fitness. At the time, it seemed like a pretty good deal, like 10 bucks a month or whatever. Did they kick you out for deadlifting? I remember the alarm being on the wall. I always just thought that was a fixture, like something that was like, ha-ha, like the lunk alarm. I went on YouTube at some point and
Starting point is 00:05:20 saw people setting them off at other locations. I was like, oh, wow, it actually is a thing. I just thought it was like, oh, wow, it actually does. It is a thing. I just thought it was like, you know. Yeah, it's an interesting marketing concept. When I first heard about it, it sounded silly to me. I didn't know the whole concept. I think the price is probably one of the big driving points of why it's been successful because it's so cheap. But it's interesting.
Starting point is 00:05:41 I wonder how much all the other stuff has contributed. I guess it can be summarized what it's supposed to be like a quote unquote judgment free type of zone or something, or they like give out pizza and stuff. Yeah. Yeah. I always thought that was the weirdest thing too. And I honestly, I thought it was just brilliant marketing. Like when the first time I heard about that, that like maybe it's once a month or something, they'll bring in bagels or pizza or something. And I'm like, wow. So that's how they keep them coming back. I see. Yeah. That plus the cheap price. I could see just from having worked with a lot of people,
Starting point is 00:06:11 I can understand, especially it seems women can be intimidated in particular in the beginning, getting into a gym and especially if they're not in shape, but the same thing for guys, but probably more so than women because probably just basic inherent psychological differences between men and women. And then inevitably though, women realize once they get rolling that people don't care. I mean, even, even the guys are more into themselves than anybody else. And most of the people in the gym are there for the same reason. They're there to just get better, to get into better shape. They're not there to like snicker about everyone else and judge everyone else around them. But I can see from a psychological perspective, obviously how that marketing angle could be a lure, but I wonder if planet fitness would work
Starting point is 00:06:55 if it were more expensive. You know what I mean? Like how much does all that other stuff really contribute? I don't know. I don't, uh, yeah, I don't think that it would be as much of a thing. Honestly, the price is definitely, I thought was their big selling point. Because that was why I joined and I kind of just joined on my own. And then I found out I realized a bunch of guys that I was in school with at the time were also going there. So like, I would go and meet them there. And so this was 2011. So really, for the first couple of years, I was going to the gym for the first time in my life. I was in like my early 20s, doing lots of cardio, I was going to the gym for the first time in my life. I was in my early 20s doing lots of cardio. I would start off by doing maybe the fastest mile I could pull off and then maybe do 20
Starting point is 00:07:31 minutes of elliptical cardio. And then eventually, I would convince myself to start doing machine work. If you were to ever walk into one of these places, you would see how ridiculous the free weight section is. There's a flat bench, dumbbells that go like maybe 75 pounds, um, a bunch of Smith machines, that sort of stuff, a very minimal setup when it comes to the weights. Like a hotel gym. Basically. Yeah. Like, uh, and with slightly more equipment. So I started doing like machine work, like the lat pull down station, like, Oh, that makes sense. You sit on the thing and you pull
Starting point is 00:08:04 the thing down. So I started making, like, i made some newbie gains with really no idea what i was doing doing just lots of uh like lat pull downs and doing like the row machine i put a little bit of size on like my arms and my shoulders and stuff but otherwise just i'm a very ectomorphic frame i'm really not built like a weightlifter. My body fights me every step of the way. I'm really, really skinny. If I were to quit lifting, I would just be a really skinny guy. Yeah. Before you started lifting, what were your numbers like? How tall were you or are you and what did you weigh? I'm somewhere between 5'11 and 6'. Pretty average height. I probably weighed, I would say, somewhere in the 150s, maybe even 160. That was like me. I'm six, one ish, whatever, probably the, I don't think I grew since I was
Starting point is 00:08:48 18. And when I started lifting, I was 155 pounds. To be fair, my weight has always been strangely low, about 10 pounds. I've always been about 10 pounds lighter than people would probably guess me. But still, even if you give me half that and you say, all right, I was like a, you know, six foot one ish dude, 160 pounds, not alarmingly skinny, but just a skinny dude, you know? Yeah. So I grew up child of the eighties and the nineties, you know, so grew up, you know, watching like Schwarzenegger and Stallone movies and those types of things. And I always wanted, growing up, I was just a skinny guy to the point where I even got made fun of, you know, as a kid. And I was just wanting like bigger arms and just all the things that most guys want. I got into it just really out of pure vanity purposes
Starting point is 00:09:29 at first. And I did put a little bit of size on I basically just toned up, I think is how I would describe it. You know, somewhere in the 150s. Still not a great diet, like not the worst diet, but not really good either. Like I drank beer on the weekends and stuff, but not a binge drinker or anything like that. But you know, just sort of calories are sort of all over the place. And I think probably what kept me somewhat lean was just I've never been a big eater and just sort of only eating out of necessity. I did a lot of the same things I've heard you talk about, you know, you go to the vitamin shop and you just you buy the pre workout and you buy the protein powder and all this stuff that you think is going to change your life.
Starting point is 00:10:03 The testosterone boosters and all that shit. Yeah, yeah. So it took a bunch of that crap. I saw lackluster results, kept at it. And at the time, and in 2012, I was actually a traveling nuclear contractor. So I was traveling around the country, working in nuclear power for a few years. Whenever I got somewhere, I would join a gym, if nothing else, just to stay active and to do stuff. Because when I was in that industry, I was seeing the most obesity I'd ever seen anywhere. I saw some really, really fat, out of shape people in that job. From years, I think of just living on the road, living just not only sedentarily, but also just, I mean, like with a really shit diet. And a lot of these people are alcoholics and just, you know,
Starting point is 00:10:46 eating God knows what every day. So it was during that point that I started doing more research, started trying to figure out what I was doing wrong. And then in the spring of 2014, after a few years of just sort of bullshitting my way through it, I think I discovered you, like I think you had done an interview with like Greg O'Gallagher, one of those guys I saw, it was like, you Greg O'Gallagher, one of those guys. I saw it.
Starting point is 00:11:05 You came up on YouTube. And I remember watching some of those. And then I saw some of your own video. I think you had just started doing your podcast. So I started listening to some of your episodes early on. I saw BLS on Amazon. It was like $12 or something. I was like, well, I mean, if nothing else, it's worth checking out.
Starting point is 00:11:22 And right about that same time, I had the space at my house. So I bought and installed a home gym, one of those, like the bench set that is adjustable with the squat rack thing on the back. I bought that and like a barbell off of a guy on Craigslist, got a few hundred pounds in weights. I read BLS like, I don't know, probably in like a week or two and started immediately just implementing the, not only the nutritional stuff, basically rewiring my brain as to how to lift. Cause it was completely alien to everything I'd done up to that point. You know? Yeah. We were probably in similar. It sounds like my story. It sounds like I'm telling my own story. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, just like so many other people, I guess, you know, like less volume, more compound lifting. I had a
Starting point is 00:12:03 little bit of experience doing deadlifts from years before, um, working out with an old friend of mine. He had taught me how to deadlift, but I was still not very comfortable with it. And the idea of it just like terrified me, but really taking the time to teach myself how to deadlift and squat and how to, um, do bench pressing, like real weight weight that was to me was intimidating because I was training at home. I didn't have a training partner or anything. I had to kind of basically retrain myself on how to work out. So it was an interesting time. But within that time between, I'd say the spring of like 2014 and about the next year, it was like I had just was reborn basically. Like I, my,
Starting point is 00:12:40 my results took off. Uh, your second round of newbie gains almost. Yeah, basically saw very fast results filled out in a big way. And the first year, I think I wasn't even really doing a bulk. I was still just kind of eating like at a maintenance level, trying to stay fairly lean. I lost, actually lost weight, leaned out while gaining some size. The following winter, I believe was when I did my first like real bulk cycle cycle because I was actually still traveling, working on the road during that time. I had to get really creative with my meals. How did you make that work? What were some of the little tips you can share with people who travel? It's a question I get fairly often.
Starting point is 00:13:15 Yeah. Well, it depends. It was gross at one point. I remember I was staying in some hotel rooms and I remember I would go and buy a George Foreman. And you would just maybe cook your chicken breast or whatever. Trying to do that stuff got exhausting. I quit doing this job a few years ago. In the last place that I stayed, what I did was I just stayed in a suite. I found a cool little old school hotel and suites type place that had a kitchenette. Just got asked for a pot and a pan and I would just
Starting point is 00:13:43 go to the store and just cook my own meals. Make like a pot and a pan and I would just go to the store and just kind of just cook my own meals make like a yeah kind of like meal cup like a or some some version of that yeah yeah like maybe buy like rice and like stuff to make vegetables or a salad or whatever and then just buy like some lean proteins to last me for a handful of days and then um protein powder sometimes I'll grab rotisserie chicken because then you don't have to cook it. It's already cooked. If you can just keep it cool. Yeah. I've done that too. And then do that. And then I don't, I'm not a big fan of deli meats, but I've done that too. And then stick to like that and like protein powder, try to keep carbs like easy as I can. I would buy like cliff bars or quest bars just as something else to munch on. The last outage that I did was in
Starting point is 00:14:23 Washington state. And it was actually, it was funny. I was actually at a gold gym. They had a deadlift station and everything. And I actually had the guy come up and this was like during my first bulk. So I was pretty, I was hitting it pretty hard. And, uh, I had the manager actually come over and tell me I was deadlifting too loud. What the fuck are you talking about? What do you have a platform for? Yeah. I was like, is that a goal? And it was like, come on, man. There's one place. And I'm not like some jabroni that's yelling out or anything like that. I think I was just maybe slamming the plates too hard.
Starting point is 00:14:50 It was not the last gym I was told I couldn't deadlift in. I mean, I understand. There's a guy who deadlifts in my gym who makes it a point to always end his sets by just dropping the weight at the top. He doesn't even try to lower it down to maybe his knees. Yeah, that is a little bit unnecessary. I understand. I don't care what gym it is. It's just, yeah, it's just annoying.
Starting point is 00:15:11 Like, dude, come on. And this guy knows better. He's actually pretty strong. What the fuck are you doing? Yeah, yeah. It's pretty obnoxious. And it's those moments where you wish there was like a lunk alarm that would go off because it'd be hilarious to see.
Starting point is 00:15:22 So this was like spring of 2015. Got out of that job. I fulfilled my contract with my company, decided it wasn't for me. I wasn't going to continue doing it. And about that time, I re-enrolled in school. I got my first degree in engineering doing that. So I started going after a second degree. I wanted it to be in health and wellness because that was what I was into with doing all this stuff. So I started going after a bachelor's in health sciences. By the time I enrolled and I started taking these classes, I was just kind of cruising through them because a lot of this information I had sort of already learned from reading all of your books and watching your Q&As.
Starting point is 00:15:57 I was already sort of a nerd kind of cruising through PubMed and other websites that were open to the public. I was reading up on research studies all about nutrition and diet and the workouts and stuff. So within the span of a few years, I went from being a guy that was sort of doing the workouts that were on bodybuilding.com and not having no idea what a calorie was or what a carbohydrate really was or any of that stuff to being an informed individual who people come to me now all the time asking me for advice or on how to lose weight or how to build muscle. And I always tell them unequivocally, I say, well, you could sit down with me and listen
Starting point is 00:16:35 to me ramble for two hours, or I could just tell you to buy this guy's book. I hear that often where it's good for both parties because you don't have to then take your time. I mean, not that you wouldn't mind, but we all have a lot of things that are pulling for our time. So you'd be like, honestly, this is it. Just read this. And then it asks me, let me know if you have any questions, but this is better for me. And then I really just be explaining to you in my own words, what is in this book. And then for you, it's better because of course, inevitably, they're going to get, especially with the new third edition that's coming out when we're done here. I'll, if you want, I'll send you a copy of it. It's almost, it's well, actually on Amazon, I think the paperback now is fully transitioned.
Starting point is 00:17:12 So anybody buying on Amazon now, it still shows the second edition. We're working with Amazon to get the cover updated and the look inside update and whatever, but they're actually going to get the third edition and the digital will be out in the next month or so. Anyways, that in particular, there's just so much information in there. They're going to learn a lot more reading the book than you would even explain to them. You know what I mean? Yeah, exactly. It really is kind of all encompassing. I purchased the first and the second editions. And by this point, I've given both away to just people that like were looking to change their lives with workouts or whatever, or you saw what I was doing and had just a barrage of questions that I say, here, just read this at your own pace. Come to
Starting point is 00:17:50 me if you have questions and I can likely help you out. But I always tell people like, this was my blueprint. This was what got me on the path to where I am now. I still have your copy of, because at one point, at some point I started doing like Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger as well. I started incorporating elements of powerlifting and higher volume sets and that sort of stuff. Yeah, at this point, I'm kind of all over the map with my training, but I still incorporate those same principles. I'm mostly still doing the kind of middle of the road volume, the four to six rep set stuff is still the foundation of my lifting within doing compound lifts. Yeah, same. I mean, it's been the same for me also because I am making some changes. They're
Starting point is 00:18:29 minor changes, but I figured why not? Cause I felt like I can improve on like the 3.0 programming versus the 2.0. So I've been kind of just running something very similar to that, but I'm also, I'm working currently on a second edition of beyond bigger than you're stronger. And I'm going to be tweaking the programming there as well. So I'll be changing my training soon. And it'll be good timing too, because I started cycling my calories again, just so I can be in a surplus more often than not. It just makes a difference in your training, especially if I'm going to be like upping the volume and upping the intensity, just making it a bit more difficult than having the extra calories helps. But if you look around, look at some of the other people I
Starting point is 00:19:06 have in my podcast, look at how a guy like Eric Helms trains, for example. I know he likes a bit more of the higher rep stuff and a bit more higher volume. But if you listen to the principles that he still follows now, about as advanced as he's going to get natural bodybuilder, like who competes, who I actually truly do believe is natural. I don't think there's any evidence of drug use in his case. Or if you listen to even some of the more recent writings and ravings of Lyle, I guess him and some other guy got into something on volume. Israetel, I think, him and Israetel got into something on volume where I guess they agreed and then it diverged into probably quibbling over minor differences of opinion. But it's just 10 to 20 hard sets per week per major muscle group. Like, there you go. That's it. And Lyle was ripping apart some new research from Schoenfeld actually
Starting point is 00:19:56 that suggested that there's just like a linear relationship between volume and muscle growth. And so then 40 heavy sets per major muscle group per week would just be way better than 10 to 20. And Lyle heavily disagrees. And I was listening to an interview where he was explaining why. But anyway, the point is Krieger also recommends 10 to 20 for intermediate, 10 to 20 heavy sets per week. He says you can go a bit higher than that if you're advanced. And how much of a difference that's going to make is probably negligible, honestly. that if you're advanced and how much of a difference that's going to make is probably negligible, honestly. But you have heavy weightlifting, whether we're talking 75 or 85% of one rep max, there's a fundamental. You start getting into the 20, 30 plus rep stuff. I don't
Starting point is 00:20:34 know. You can do it for fun, but you're not going to make much progress if you make that your emphasis. The compound exercises are key, of course. Isolation exercises are useful for multiple reasons, but as a natural weightlifter, we really should be focusing majority of our efforts on compound exercises. That doesn't necessarily mean only the squat deadlift bench press, but there are many other compound exercises, 10 to 20 hard sets per major muscle group per week. Double progression is still a great model. I still use it myself, even if you have some linear progression worked in. So like, this is going to be something I'm working into the second edition of Beyond Bigger, Stronger. I'm going to stick to double progression where you, and for anybody listening,
Starting point is 00:21:12 if you're not familiar with that, it's what I recommend in Bigger, Stronger and Thinner, Stronger. It's that simple system where you're working in a rep range. And when you hit the target rep, whether it's six or eight or 10 or whatever, for a certain number of sets, you add weight to the bar and you work with that new weight until you can hit the rep target and so forth. So that's double progression because you're progressing in your reps and then progressing in your weight. So you can have double progression worked into a training block just like that. And then you can also have linear progression and it doesn't have to be, I actually prefer, and this is what I'm going to be doing with Beyond Bigger, Stronger. I prefer using, when you have double progression like that, using the linear progression to add
Starting point is 00:21:50 volume and volume in the way of just hard sets. So for example, you might be starting your training block with, let's just say a press workout of nine heavy sets. Let's just say that's what it is. Nine or 10 heavy sets in your press workout. workout of nine heavy sets. Let's just say that's what it is. Nine or 10 heavy sets in your press workout. And then in the end of your training block and throughout, you're using double progression. So you're trying to get stronger. You're trying to gain reps, add weight to the bar. Even if it's gaining two reps in a training block, if you're an advanced weightlifter,
Starting point is 00:22:16 sometimes that's all you get. By the end of that training block though, you might be doing an additional three. So let's say it was nine you started with, or it's 10, you might be doing 12 or 13 hard sets in that workout at the end of the training block, deload, start over again. There are the fundamentals really. And that's all we need. Plus maybe a couple other peripheral things to achieve 95% of our genetic potential really, or all, or, you know, as much as we're ever going to achieve so why make it more complicated than it needs to be i've actually referenced that same or if it's not that exact same meta-analysis by schoenfeld i've referenced one of his other ones in like a paper that i wrote when i was in school he's been kind of an authority on sort of debunking the you have to do nothing but heavy lifting in order to gain size and strength. So I sort of am familiar
Starting point is 00:23:05 with his platform there. There's always going to be new, like, I mean, as you're aware, there's always going to be new research going on. There's a new study supposedly debunking what we believe is true. But like you were saying, it's with progressive overload and what we know about sets and volumes and RPE and everything, the foundation is there. And that frequency doesn't matter that much. That's well-established at this point. Training a major muscle group twice a week is maybe a little bit better than once, but if you're hitting your volume, that's going to be the most of what matters. And then also, if you are doing a lot of compound weightlifting, that is probably going to be happening inevitably. Let's say you're doing
Starting point is 00:23:45 some regular benching early in the week. And then later in the week, you're doing some close grip benching because you want to emphasize your triceps some more. Your pecs just got trained twice. That's not just tricep volume, you know? Yeah. And I've come to find this with my training in the last like two years, especially I've kind of noticed that you're doing something similar to that. And I was just kind of branching out on my own, not necessarily after a few years of doing like the, either the four or the five day split of kind of BLS, I started doing my own thing where I was, uh, you know, switching things up. Like maybe today I'll combine like shoulders and triceps and I'll make that my push workout. And then later on in the week, you know, I'll add in like
Starting point is 00:24:23 the training, the lateral deltoids or whatever. And, uh, and I sort of, that's what I'm doing. Yeah. And so like you, you find ways to just sort of work your volume in there. And it also kind of, for me, made it fun again, rather than kind of grueling through the same workout, you know, weekend, week out for years, you can still even be doing the same exercises, but maybe you're just sort of switching them up a little bit and not feel like you're killing yourself in the process. Yeah, totally. That's some of the changes that I made in the 3.0 programming. The workouts are similar, but one, I've changed the names just to actually more accurately reflect. So instead of calling it a back day, call it a pull day because there's a perception that, oh, it's back. Oh,
Starting point is 00:25:04 it's just some body part split. Body part splits are trash. And that's not even true. Actually, body part splits are not trash. You actually do quite well on a, on a pure body part split if it's programmed properly. Oh yeah. I know I did. I can say anecdotally that they absolutely work. Yeah. And now we know a bit more why, honestly, because of the research that has come out in the last four to five years and the good analysis of that research and the practical implications of that research. So I've renamed the workouts to more accurately reflect what they are, but then also kind of redistributed some of the volume for some of the muscle groups, combined things a little bit differently, just based on a lot of
Starting point is 00:25:38 feedback that I've gotten from people over the years and my own experience. So I'm pretty happy with, I feel it's pretty optimal for somebody who is new to this style of training. It's the best I can do for that person right now, basically. Yeah. Yeah. And I've had people try to do the workouts that I do and come to me saying they get quickly burned out or whatever. I say, well, just switch things up. What works for me might not necessarily work for you. And this kind of training can burn the average person out, especially if you're someone that already works a full-time job or you have a wife and kids and you just have lots going on already, you can quickly tire yourself out. So yeah, I think
Starting point is 00:26:12 that switching the workout, tweaking the volume here and there and adding things in, it's not only a way to keep things fun, but also kind of a way to keep the ball rolling, keep progressing in some kind of way. Yeah. And where are you at now physique wise, just for people wondering, so you started just journey and somewhere in the mid one fifties, I guess somewhere around what 14% body fat or so give or take. And then where are you at now? Yeah. So very ectomorphic biotype in the last handful of years, I've done two proper like bulk and cut cycles. The first one where I was bulking, like what I mentioned earlier, when I was still on the road traveling a lot, I was probably on some of those days still more at a maintenance level. My calories were still kind of tapered to
Starting point is 00:26:54 the lower end, like in a slight surplus on those days. Got back home. I remember that first cut, I went pretty hard on it. I was doing fasted training using, I think you would just come out with like Forge. So I was like using Phoenix and Forge trying to quickly burn the fat, which I did. During that time, I was walking around in like the mid 170s and I would cut and maybe get down to like around 170 or like the high 160s. And then the following year I did a full, I went really hard on my bulk, not like in the so-called dirty bulk kind of way. I wasn't eating frozen pizzas for every meal or anything. But I was really going hard on my carbohydrate intake, eating probably 3,500 calories plus a day.
Starting point is 00:27:35 That's good. I mean, standard. Yeah, but training four to five days a week, hitting – I got my highest numbers during that point. And then the following spring slash summer I cut down again got back down to the 170s and during this entire time like this was several years where I was also doing like intermittent fasting most of the time and I was using like a workout app tracking all my calories really watching every little thing that I was doing and these days I haven't tracked a calorie or a macronutrient in probably about two years now. And right now I'm walking around around 165 and I'm probably the leanest and most muscular I've
Starting point is 00:28:11 ever been. And that's just basically eating intuitively and just lifting about four days a week, sometimes five, depending on my schedule. And I'm not tracking anything anymore. I still track my workouts. I use your app for every workout. I haven't actually used like a calorie tracking app in a couple of years. And your body fat is what it looks like around 8% or so. I'd say it's probably about seven, 8%. Yeah. I've got like abdominal veins, lower abdominal veins that I've never had otherwise. I used to have just one that was there. And if maybe I went too hard on a meal or something, it would go away. And like a day or two later, it would come back. But now I've got like a whole bunch of them. And I was like, where did those come from? It was like this
Starting point is 00:28:53 last year, I started just leaning out and people were like, what are you doing differently? I'm like, honestly, I, I kind of cut the desserts at night. I don't have like the late night sweet tooth that I had for a while. I'm like you in that I'm sort of robotic in that I eat pretty much the same meal like every day. I think that tends to help and keep things simple. Yep. Yep. And so if you do that math, that's pretty good. That's like somewhere around 20 pounds of muscle gain. And you came into it with weightlifting experience.
Starting point is 00:29:18 And you could have gained more, obviously, if you would have maybe had another bulk and cut cycle and i understand like there's a point where you just you're happy with your physique and you just like staying lean and you know i've been there for i was surprised actually i was looking back my instagram i was like holy shit i've been maintaining for like five years i think four years something that i'm curious about is so i did that for a while stayed around the same body fat as what you're talking about, where you have some ab veins. And for me, I'm not a very vascular person to get like veins going up into the second set of abs. I need to be very lean. I need to be like photo shoot, ridiculous lean. And that I've tried to maintain. It's just not sustainable,
Starting point is 00:30:00 period. Like it's just not. Yeah. And I think I tried that my first year. The first time I cut, I wanted to get down to that 6%. And I quickly realized, this is just not... I'm not going to be able to enjoy myself very much if I'm doing this. My sleep is going to suck. My lifts are probably not going to be that great. So I'm happy where I'm at now. I'm pretty happy with it. I'm not the most vascular guy either, but I mean, even when I kind of creep up into the higher body fat percentages, like I still have like bicep veins and I've always had really vascular forearms for some reason, even before I was lifting, people were like, what the fuck do you do to make your arms look like that? I'm like, I don't know. It's just genetics, I guess. That's funny. I would trade them for a
Starting point is 00:30:41 set of calves any day of the week. But it's just not happening. You're speaking my language. But yeah, no, I've noticed though, I'll be curious how it is for you. So I stayed pretty lean for quite some time. And I would say probably hovering around 8%. Sometimes I'd go a little bit higher, but I'd say more often I'd go a little bit lower just because I'd be like, oh, just, you know, I'll go to deficit for a month and lose a couple pounds of fat just because it'll look cool. So now this is the first time I mentioned earlier
Starting point is 00:31:10 that I'm cycling my calories, which means that realistically week to week, I'm going to be in a small surplus. It probably is not going to be enough to really notice that much in the way of fat gain, regardless of how long I do it. But this will be the first time because like you for a while I was eating intuitively. I mean, I tend to eat the same things. So I know more or less what I'm eating. Like at any time, someone could ask me how many calories are you eating every day? And I could say, it's around here and then go do it in Excel and be within a couple, at least with within 100, 200 calories, I close enough, you know, but this is the first time in a while that I've deliberately
Starting point is 00:31:45 increased my calories to be in a surplus several days per week. And the reason why I actually did it is, so although I like being lean, I mean, you know how it is. You get lean and you just want to stay that way. It's just that there's a psychological appeal to it. There just is. It is what it is, right? And then there's also, you could say, maybe it could be considered part of my job, although it's not entirely necessary to be maybe as lean as I've generally kind of been. But I've noticed that it was just very hard to make any real progress in my training. And I would make sometimes, there would only be little pockets where, I don't know, everything would align and I would actually be able to get that extra rep or two. And it's just the RPE of it, though. It just was always higher.
Starting point is 00:32:35 Like I just remember thinking back to have a bit higher body fat percentages, maybe 12, 13 percent. And which means that I was also eating quite a bit more food, like my average daily calorie intake at maybe 3000 calories and doing a bit, a bit of, I was a bit extra. I was a bit more active too. I was doing a little bit of extra cardio, but not by much. Whereas to maintain that lower level of body fat, my intake was probably closer to 2700. And I was a little bit less active probably because, I mean, I don't know, also life interjected itself. I had one kid and then I had two kids and then, you know, businesses grow more stress there and more stress in other ways and more financial pressures. And, and my sleep for the last couple of years
Starting point is 00:33:16 has been not as good as it once was. Sometimes it's been bad. Sometimes it's been good. Sometimes it's just been okay. So all of those factors combined to where I was just kind of stuck in the gym. I still enjoyed my workouts because I like working out, but I missed feeling like I could progress. And so the last couple of weeks I've been cycling my calories and it's funny just how big of a difference it makes immediately. It's such bullshit. Drugs are such bullshit in that you can go through all that and and you know you have to especially in our position you have to do everything right in terms of if you're going to stay natural in terms of nutrition sleep training programming or you just take drugs and none of this shit matters you just quote unquote eyeball your macros depending on the
Starting point is 00:34:02 drugs you're taking you just don't need as much sleep period and your training programming is just you destroy yourself as much as you can because you can literally recover from anything and you look twice as good then one day everything breaks and you die from one of many different things like your heart your heart explodes or your body turns into cancer or something. Yeah, I've seen the long list of lifters that have died as a result of steroid use. Like on T-Nation, it is mind-blowing when you see that list of names. I mean, it's shocking. I never thought Rich Piano would be – I always thought he was natural.
Starting point is 00:34:39 Yeah, that's what – I mean, to his credit, he never claimed to be natural. So at least there's that. I mean, it would be hilarious if he did, but at least he was open about it. I loved how open and honest and also how hilarious he was about his drug use. But yeah, I've had people come to me thinking I was on drugs and not that I really even, I don't think I really look like, I don't really have the physique of a guy that would do steroids really, but people could be like, come on, man, tell me the real secret. I'm like, dude, I, my secret is I go at it with a monastic obsession and I hit it hard. And that's really all there is to it. I work my ass off and I guess it shows, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:35:15 There are certainly people that look better, but I work hard for what I've got. Hey, quickly, before we carry on, if you are liking my podcast, would you please help spread the word about it? Because no amount of marketing or advertising gimmicks can match the power of word of mouth. So if you are enjoying this episode and you think of someone else who might enjoy it as well, please do tell them about it. It really helps me. And if you are going to post about it on social media, definitely tag me so I can say thank you. You can find me on Instagram at Muscle for Life Fitness, Twitter at Muscle for Life, and Facebook at Muscle for Life Fitness. I have to say that discovering like your work and it segwaying into, even though it sounds cliche,
Starting point is 00:36:07 turning it into a lifestyle, my work ethic was suddenly informed by a physicality. And that really segwayed into everything else I was doing. Because while I was a student, you were also the first person that introduced me to Amazon's KDP system. And just this past summer, I became a published author as a result. Oh, nice. What's the book? It's called Marooned, M-A-R-O-O-N-E-D. It's on Amazon. It's like a crime noir thriller that I wrote over. I wrote it while I was a student, actually. I was kind of like moonlighting as a writer at night, like when I would get home from work and get done with my schoolwork. I was kind
Starting point is 00:36:42 of doing that in my free time. It started off just as this one thing. Suddenly, it's like, all right, that's 50 pages. Oh, now it's 100 pages. And now it's like, all right, now I've just got this thing inside me and I need to get it out. So I put it out and published it. It's still sales or lackluster or whatever. I think I'm going to take a course that's available online and learn how to better market myself. I'm working on a second one now and create a website and all that stuff and try to see if I can turn it into, if nothing else, just something aside from just a hobby that I enjoy doing. Maybe I can make some kind of supplementary income off of it. Yeah, that's cool. My original interest in writing was fiction and
Starting point is 00:37:18 something I'll do in my next life. I don't want to give it any time right now. I actually was working on a project a bit, but so I was waking up at five to work on it before I go to the gym and it was fine. I was making progress. And at that time I was going to the gym fairly early. So I had about an hour, maybe an hour and a half max to work on it. And I was chipping away, but one, it was to actually get it done. It was just going to runway, because I had such a small amount of time to give it, and that wasn't... I think it was most days. I would usually not work anything else during that time. The runway was very long. And two, when I was looking at it, I was like, okay, so this really is just a hobby. I do believe that if I apply myself to writing stories,
Starting point is 00:38:04 I can eventually get there and do a good job and have some sort of success at it. I don't know if it would be anything relative to maybe the success I've had as a health and fitness author, but that's not even what it'd be about. Like you said, it's more something I just enjoy doing. So who cares one way or the other? way or the other. But two, if I look at, okay, I have kind of like a three to five year plan for all of my fitness stuff and some big milestones that I want to reach. It just made more sense to me to really focus on that because that time is still, I can get a lot of other stuff done in an extra hour, hour and a half per day. And so I put it on hold and I'll pick it up though. Again, I think in the next three to five years, if I can hit some targets that I want to hit, I would then be okay with carving out maybe a bit more time, something closer to probably 15 or 20 hours a week to work on stuff like that, because that's what it's going
Starting point is 00:38:58 to take if I'm going to go anywhere with it. So that's cool. You're doing it though. I like that. Yeah. And you know, the first one, it took me collectively like two years to get through it. So that's cool. You're doing it though. I like that. Yeah. And you know, the first one, it took me collectively like two years to get through it. I started it just as a scene that I started writing the opening scene. I was like, well, just cause it was an idea that I had, cause I had written previous other little things here and there. And I've always enjoyed writing too. And then I just sort of stuck with it and it took me collectively two years to get through it because I was, it was simultaneously while I was in school and working a job and everything. So there were moments where I wouldn't touch it for like maybe weeks or maybe even a couple of months at a time because I literally had too much on my plate already.
Starting point is 00:39:31 So it took a while to get through it. But then once I started winding down on it, I finally just basically had like a month or so of just long days of where I would include it with everything else that I had going on. And I plowed through it. And now that I'm done with school, I can dedicate a bit more time to this next one and also try to figure out the marketing side of things better, which is definitely not my specialty. I've got a lot to learn there. Yeah. You want to get good at that because Amazon is a highly competitive, any niche that you're going to, any genre you're going to write in. If it has any sort of readership, it's going
Starting point is 00:40:07 to be very competitive. And so like, for example, I pulled it up on Amazon, you should get a new cover done. Cause the covers are okay, but people judge books by their cover and the better the cover is, the better it's going to sell. And I'm not familiar with the genre. Like I don't read that these types of books, but you want to make sure also that your cover is in line with genre expectations. So people can immediately, because what you want is you want a person who reads the type of book that this is to see. And also remember on the cover that most people are seeing it just as the thumbnail. So some people make the mistake. This is a mainstream legacy publishers make this mistake where they
Starting point is 00:40:45 make a cover that looks great or looks good in a full size, but looks like shit when you shrink it down to a thumbnail where it's just too much going on. Sometimes you can't even read the author's name or sometimes it's just the design elements look really messy when they get crunched down into a thumbnail. So you have to think with the priority is having a cover that is striking as a thumbnail, because that's how most people are going to see it. The immediate things you could do would be improve the cover, improve your description that you should use that you get a lot more space than that. And you can look at some of the other, I can send you after some people who do this shit really well. It's not that it's complicated. It's just like literally just copy
Starting point is 00:41:24 what these other people are doing. So you can improve the product description and you should start using their advertising platform. Yeah. I've used it a little bit, you know, with lackluster results. There's a guy named Mark Dawson who at this point he offers a, I think it's called like self-publishing formula 101. Yeah. He's, I think he's pretty much become like a millionaire. He's written a ton of books at this point. I think I'm going to take his course. And the cover, I love that cover. But yeah, I actually commissioned an artist who I really admire to do that for me because he's done a lot of album covers that I like. So I had that personally done for me, which was awesome. But I've come to find that, yeah, covers, they really do make or break you.
Starting point is 00:42:02 Yeah. I mean, there are some crazy case studies out there of how big of a difference just changing a cover can make. I mean, it can literally double or triple sales. Yeah. There's a lot going on with the going forward. But I think when I launched the next one, I'm going to go about it because the first one I think it was, I don't know if what your experience was like when you launched BLS initially, but I just kind of put it out into the world, not really expecting to make money on it or anything. It did okay. It made like a little bit of money here and there. But like I said, I mostly did it just because I had enjoyment. But now that I'm like, well, I want to keep going with this. And I want to see what kind of results I can really bring in with it. When the next one launches,
Starting point is 00:42:37 I'm going to go back and fix what's necessary with the first one, as well as the other ones going forward and see what the best way to go about putting them out is. one as well as the other ones going forward and see what the best way to go about putting them out is. Yeah. And you should also study the art of storytelling and read a lot of books on writing fiction, how to tell good stories and how to write good fiction. So you have the more technical stuff, which is how to even, for example, write good dialogue. And then there's the more overarching of how to tell good stories. There's also that it's not just a matter of like writing stuff that you think is cool. You really have to treat it like training. It's like, if you haven't done that, you are in your newbie phase where you're just doing bodybuilding workouts or, you know,
Starting point is 00:43:18 stuff you read in magazines and you think that's cool and you're seeing little changes in your body, but you really don't have any idea what really makes this stuff work and how to really become one of the elites. You know what I mean? And it's odd because I've listened to some of Daw. I mean, I've read probably, I don't even know, maybe 40 books on it. I've read some that you've recommended, like The War of Art, for instance, was a good, was a really big one for me. Reading that was really inspiring. I think I read that in the midst of it. And that was sort of something that kind of helped me get over the hump. Yeah, yeah. And that's a good book just for of helped me get over the hump. Yeah, yeah. And that's a good book just for, I would say, not just for artists and creatives. Yeah, just for living life. But no, I'm talking about books like Robert McKee's story, books about how to tell good stories.
Starting point is 00:44:17 And then you have specifically how to write good fiction. And there's overlap there, but those are different things. Anyway, so there's that as well. If you really want to get into it, you have to assume that if you haven't really educated yourself, you're probably not very good at it. Even if you have, I would apply this to myself as well. When you start out at something, you're not good. You might think you're good. You're not good. And that applies to anything. Don't take that personally. I mean, if you play sports, you know that even if you think like you're hot shit and you think you have a talent for it, and then you actually start playing more and you play with some kids who are actually good and you're like, I'm fucking terrible.
Starting point is 00:44:51 And so it sort of applies to fiction as well. So what you can do then is also improve your writing chops and your storytelling chops. And then because it's self-published, what's cool is, and this is what I would do. And this is what I've done with BLS a number of times is you can always update it whenever you want. You could change the story altogether. It doesn't matter because it's just simply uploading a new file and there you go. And then people who actually have already read it previously would get a free update. You could work on it iteratively like that in addition to working on another, working on a sequel.
Starting point is 00:45:22 Anyway, I'm just kind of rambling at this point. Oh, it's all right. I mean, it's all interesting to me. I agree. It is quite something to know that you can do that. But I agree. People that have liked it or whatever asked me, they said, how do you do this and how do you do this? Well, I tend to just quote Henry Rollins and I say, I don't have talent. I have tenacity. I just kind of run at things and hope that something sticks. I guess I would use it as an example as well. You just kind of work really things and hope that something sticks. I just keep, I guess I would use, use it as an example as well. You, you just kind of work really hard and you put in the time and you get better. That's really what it comes down to. Magic. Basically, basically magic. Basically, I'm just lucky. That's all. Yeah. Well that, and a bit of luck never hurt, but you know,
Starting point is 00:45:58 also just a lot of really hard work. Yeah. Yeah. No, I just, I just find that kind of funny sometimes when, when I get that from some people, Oh, you're so lucky. Not really. It's hard to point to anything where I'd go, Oh fuck, that was really lucky. I could say maybe the timing of publishing BLS and that, but that was deliberate though. That was me looking at the marketplace and honestly wondering why has someone not written this book yet? This is a need that's out there. That's not being fulfilled. Oh, I'll do it. Is that luck though? I don't know. Well, what I've always found interesting about your work and with like BLS and everything is that I'm someone that really does not identify with today's fitness space. I really don't. Like
Starting point is 00:46:36 I'm not into the Instagram influencer thing. I don't follow any, I don't, you know, I'm not into those people. I just sort of see it all as faux pas I just don't buy it but like so reading your material I found interesting and different because like for one it's a book this is like a tangible thing that I have to hold in front of me and read I'm not just like doing some like pdf workout that I bought for 20 bucks off some guy's website or anything it brought forth something that I identify with and that I like reading and that it feels you put together sketches and nutrition plans and all this stuff that tying it all together. It seems like a lot, but really it isn't. It just sort of requires a different kind of dedication that I wasn't used to. But yeah, I don't really identify with much with the fitness space these days.
Starting point is 00:47:21 So I always found your approach to the material sort of refreshing, I guess. Yeah, thanks. I mean, I'd say I self-select for certain types of people and that's just how it comes, what it comes down to. And I don't go after, there are a lot of people who don't really resonate with my approach, particularly on social media, because I don't really care about getting attention or a lot of the influencer stuff is not, I just don't want to do it because I'd feel like it's just not, it's not interesting to me. It would be inauthentic and the potential of increased income from it is just not enough to make me want to override what is seems interesting and actually helpful and what is in line with why I'm doing this. And so that's why I just primarily use it
Starting point is 00:48:06 to share a lot of my educational stuff. It's growing and it's doing well, but is it ever going to do as well as the girl who just flashes her butthole every other picture? No, no, it's not. I'll never have as many, I won't have as many followers and I won't be, I wouldn't be, not that I, I mean, I only promote my own stuff, but I wouldn't be able to earn as much through promotions. I think that's the first key to being a successful influencer is be a female and be shameless. Yeah. Or yeah, if you are a guy, I've found, I guess just not owning a shirt. Eh, that's not enough though. Nah, guys, it's not, it's not enough. It's not enough. Just looking good as a guy is definitely not enough. You can get something of a following, but you have to, you probably, if you're going to, if you really
Starting point is 00:48:50 want to, like, if say you want to break the, you know, the seven figure follower, it's probably mostly about lifestyle. You want, you're going to probably have to recruit, you're going to have to be younger because you have to go after the younger crowd because it's probably the majority of users on, let's say Instagram, I would assume that skews younger. And also the virality seems to be more among younger people. So you have to go after younger people, which means you probably have to be a bit younger yourself. I'm 34. I'm too old. Yeah. I would need to be like 25, 26. Looking good. Yes. I would have to be physique, would have to be good enough. But I think it'd be more about everything else. It'd be about how I live.
Starting point is 00:49:27 So I'd have to have money, which means I'd have to be an inherit or trust fund kid, inherit money because no one at that age, very few people at that age make any real money. Or if they did, if they do now, there are some cases where they started out with showing off shit that like people didn't know that in the beginning, they actually weren't making much money because now they make their money as an influencer. But in the beginning, they had nice things because of mommy and daddy. But you know, oh, look at their apartment, quote unquote. Yeah, but who's paying for it? Look at the Range Rover and the Lamborghini. Yeah, who? Oh, those are daddy's cars actually, or daddy's paying for them. But then it's like a fake it till you make it because that eventually, so you work in that whole lifestyle, right? And then you bring in the hot
Starting point is 00:50:08 girlfriends and the drama and the breakups and all that shit. And eventually you have enough followers where you actually can make a lot of money now. So different paths. If I were doing that, I've said, I don't understand why some of these people don't get smarter about it. Everything should be scripted. Everything should be fake. That's what I would do. If I was going to go all in, like if I was going to be one of these idiots that just show off shit and basically try to attract people who wish they were me. And that's my whole thing is like, I'm such a narcissist. I'm so amazing. Don't you wish you had my life? Everything would be fake. I would treat it like a reality TV show. Take the Kardashians, right? Scripted,
Starting point is 00:50:45 guaranteed the vast majority of, I've seen it here and there, so I don't know. It's probably just the same shit over and over of who's fucking who and who's upset at who and what they're buying. And I'm sure there's like some simple formula when they boil it down where they're like, cool, here's what makes a successful season. It's one part this, one part this, one part this, and we just rinse and repeat. We mix them around, whatever. That's how I would treat it. I would look at my schedule as like a season. Like, okay, what's going to happen? What's going to happen in this season? So I'm going to break up. Hey, okay. A girlfriend, we're going to break up because of this. And then you're going to be posting about it in this way. I would post on it
Starting point is 00:51:21 this way. And then we're going to make up and get back together. You know what I mean? Okay. That's a story arc. What's going to be happening in my business? All right. It's going to be this bullshit or whatever. What's going to happen in my personal life? What kind of trinkets and knickknacks am I going to be buying and showing off? And from the people I've looked at, it doesn't, I don't see anybody where it's obvious. I'm like, oh, this is smart that they're actually doing this. It really does just seem to be random stupidity. So for- Well, it's so repetitive too. It's just the same thing. That's what I'm saying. But that's why that's how else you're going to keep it new. I mean,
Starting point is 00:51:48 even if you are a dude who is a good looking guy and has money one way or the other and has nice things and you don't really work that much and you kind of just shred up and run around, you still tend to do the same shit that you lose that novelty. It's just lazy. I mean, you got to treat it like content. You know, I like to write, I like to research and write and record stuff. So we plan it out and we make sure that we're not just producing the same type of thing or saying the same type of stuff over and over. I would treat the influencer life in the same way where I have to be coming up with constantly new things. And a lot of those are just going to be bullshit because that's the easiest way to do
Starting point is 00:52:25 it. Yeah. It's just not a ball I'd want to roll. It's just, it seems kind of sad at this point to me and I just wouldn't want to do it. I almost feel bad for those that do. It just feels sort of empty to me. Well, of course there was a survey with teenagers. I heard about it, I don't know, maybe six months ago, a year or so where the most common goal that these 14 to 17 year olds had was to be famous. The worst, the worst out of everything you could possibly want to strive for is just fame. It's just, yeah, it's unfortunately, it's just the culture, I guess. Life has become satire in this age that we're living in. So it's, I don't know. The correct term is clown world. We live in a clown world. We really do.
Starting point is 00:53:06 And I mean, look at who's running things. I'm not going to turn it into that discussion, but you know, it's- I think it goes beyond- It's come to this. It's a long time coming. It goes beyond Trump. And I actually like some of the things that he said and done, dislike some of the things he said and done.
Starting point is 00:53:20 And I would say the problem is so much deeper and so much more systemic than him. Who cares? Oh, yeah, it really is. He merely is the product. I think it'd be hard to argue that he is more of a clown than like George Bush Jr., for example. A dude who was a literal clown. So, yeah, no, no, no. It's more just the political class in general. Anybody who thinks that, oh, the problem is the other party within our two-party system is a fucking idiot, actually. You have to be very ignorant or very naive or just very stupid to believe that if one party just took over everything, we would have our utopia, our clown utopia. No, the political class, we have a kakistocracy at this point. We
Starting point is 00:54:06 are governed by the least qualified. And this is not, I'm not talking about Trump now. I'm talking about the political class in general, by the least qualified, the least skilled, the least intelligent people in our society. These are the ones that govern us. People who on the whole, and this is not all of them, there are definitely outstanding people in government, in higher levels of government, but on the whole, many of these people could not cut it in the private sector. They literally could not keep a job. They could not hold a job because they're fucking stupid, incompetent, corrupt, and just broken, dysfunctional people. And that's where we're at now. So the problems of the clown
Starting point is 00:54:46 world, it's not Trump's fault at all. It's really all of our fault. I think, in a way, we people of the West, we are getting the government, we are getting the culture, we're getting the country, we're getting the world that we deserve. And the internet troll in me finds that amusing. We all like seeing people get their just desserts. We all get a kick from schadenfreude. And that's what I see now in the West, where with the imminent collapse of so many things that made the West exceptional, just have to laugh about it and be like, yeah, we're getting what we fucking deserve. Because collectively, we fucking suck. That's it. We used to not suck yeah, we're getting what we fucking deserve because collectively we fucking suck. That's it. We used to not suck. Now we're pretty shitty on the whole and we're getting what
Starting point is 00:55:31 we deserve. So clown world, here we come. Yeah. I am inherently a pessimist, but yeah, I don't know if you find ways to, uh, I guess, like I said, keep the ball rolling. I'm actually not, I'm not, I'm actually an optimistic person, but at the same time, I have a hard time. Like you look at what's going on and this has been a, I mean, I've been interested in this kind of stuff and I don't know, I've been reading and listening, consuming this type of content for, I don't know, 10 plus years now. Like if I weren't doing health and fitness, I'd be doing culture and politics. I would like to believe otherwise. I would love for people to be able to make a case like, no, no, no, Mike, let me break this down for you. I see what you're
Starting point is 00:56:11 saying with all these things. If I were to actually start listing, reading out my litany of things, they'd be like, but have you considered this? Have you considered that? And I've actually intentionally went and looked for that information. I've read some of these books that are the more of the optimist view of the future and have been wholly unconvinced of anything because they focus on things that are just kind of irrelevant in the periphery over there? We're going to be able to put that ember out. It's very specific advances in medical science or in technology or things where it's like, yeah, that's cool. But what happens when our entire economy collapses? Like who fucking cares? Or what happens when all of this devolves into just authoritarianism? Who cares? So it's not that I haven't went and
Starting point is 00:57:07 looked for, okay, what's the counter argument here? Here's my argument. What's the counter argument? I just find it so unconvincing. And for me, it doesn't, I don't even find that depressing or it doesn't discourage me from doing what I'm doing. For me, it's just a matter of facing reality. And that's as I see it. I hope I'm wrong. I honestly do hope I'm wrong. I'm just saying this is what I see. And I'm not willing to pretend like I don't see it. No, I agree. I absolutely agree. And if nothing else, it has been entertaining. You know, the number one thing that I like about Trump, and when I first saw it, I was like, I love that, is how disrespectful he is to the political class. In debates, when he was just straight
Starting point is 00:57:46 ridiculing Jeb, that's one of the first things I was like, I just like this guy. And I don't even care about his policies. I don't care about his platform. I like this and I'm just going to grab some popcorn and watch. Yeah, it was entertaining. And I'm not a supporter, but I come from a family of supporters and we disagree on many things, but we're all good. I'm at a point now where, and whether or not a lot of people think he won't get reelected, he very possibly could. I have no idea. Well, statistically, he will. I mean, defeating an incumbent president is very hard and the left is in such disarray. And that's also going to turn into a clown show, which is going to be great. It'll just be fun to watch. I hope. And also, so you see Trump,
Starting point is 00:58:25 he talks so much shit about all these other politicians, just the political class in general, which is, I'm just like, yes, I just like that. I don't care about anything else. I like that. And he also just shit all over the Republican Party and just actually broke it from what it was, which is also hilarious, right? It was just hilarious to watch. I think there's a fair chance we're going to see that with the Democrats now, which will also be hilarious to watch. No Republican is going to win the nomination over him. Who cares? That's absolutely in the bag. Anyways, this is a very random discussion that I would have expected to have with Sal from Mind Pump. This is the kind of stuff we talk about offline.
Starting point is 00:59:05 And he's like, I told him, I was like, why don't you just come on my podcast and let's just talk about this stuff. And he was like, I don't know, man. I don't know if I'm ready for that. Like, whatever, who cares? Yeah. At this point, it is, I'm not really shaking in my boots anymore. I'm just finding it all really entertaining and hilarious
Starting point is 00:59:21 because it is just outrageous to watch it's a better experience for you it hasn't been boring it has not been boring well this isn't nazi germany but it's a clown show yeah everybody's saying how much they hate the guy and everything i'm like yeah i don't like him either but i mean you gotta i gotta say he is entertaining he's crazy and he is hilarious um but uh i don't. We'll see how it pans out. Yes, sir. The cynic in me has a small bit of optimist, but we'll see how it pans out. Sure.
Starting point is 00:59:51 I mean, nothing is certain. I hope that somehow we – because, again, this goes beyond Trump. I'm talking about the culture. I'm hoping somehow we come through this without a complete collapse. Hopefully, we find a way to come out better without having everything have to fall apart to do that. It's not going to make you necessarily feel good, but you'll be surprised maybe at the parallels. Google Will Durant fall of Rome, and you'll find it's a portion of an audio book. It's like an 11-minute video where he talks about how things were going at the end of the Roman Empire before it really went to shit.
Starting point is 01:00:31 And the parallels are like striking. You would think he's talking about today in every point, like every point he makes, you're like, oh yeah. Oh yeah. Here's yet. Oh yeah. We're there. Yep. We're there. We're there. We're there. So we'll see. Maybe aliens will come save us. I think when I saw Elon Musk admit that he has become a feudalist, I think it was on Joe Rogan. I was like, oh, all right. I didn't watch that. I watched like 20 or 30 minutes of it and found it boring. So I just stopped. It has its highlights. Maybe if you can go through and see if there's somebody in the comments that sort of like tells you what time to click or whatever. There are moments where you're like, oh yeah, because, um, it was very insightful. And then, you know, he, since then I saw him on 60 minutes and he was, cause he's, he's caught a lot of shit for smoking weed and all that stuff on there. And, um, and I know
Starting point is 01:01:14 he's, the guy's caught a lot of flack seeing how his optimism has shifted has kind of had an effect on me. And I'm like, well, I mean, it's, it's obviously had an effect on that guy. I mean, but then again, you see how the hours that he puts into everything that he does. And I mean, I think he's just sort of worn out. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, his, uh, that's what Rogan kept on trying to get at and he didn't have a good answer. And so I was like, all right, this is boring now. But he's like, I don't know, dude, this is what I do. What do I, as if like, we're going to get some self-help advice from, from Elon Musk. I mean, we're not, he's going to be like, I'm sorry, you're not Elon Musk. So don't try this. That's it. What was it? They
Starting point is 01:01:48 said, they said you, uh, it says on your Wikipedia, you're a business magnate. He's like, yeah, I need to change that to a business magnet. I'm a business magnet. Right. So, so what did he say about feudalism? Uh, his general, um, outlook on things was, um, he, I think it was when he said he wouldn't, when he was working within the administration, or maybe it was even before that. I think maybe he went to them saying, we need to slow down the advancements on AI. It's progressing a little too quickly. And frankly, it's scaring a person like me who knows the ins and outs of various industries. basically it was like watching the intro to terminator like he basically said like they didn't listen they told me like thank you we appreciate you coming by that'll be all now and he said they didn't listen to me and hearing him say that and he had a frightened look on his face was like wow did he have a proposed solution like what's the i think i'd have to go back and watch it because i don't want to put him in the pejorative i don't but uh i feel like he did like
Starting point is 01:02:43 like government should regulate it, should step into these companies and tell them what they can and can't do. He doesn't strike me as a guy that would come in with a problem and not offering a solution. So I'm sure that he did. And, but they told him, you know, thank you, but no, thank you. We're, we're just fine with the way things are going. So he was saying like, eh, if we just had a strong man that could just dictate this, this would be better for our species. Yeah. Well, he was, I think the point that he was getting at was that things are just moving too quickly. And this is a guy that created Tesla and SpaceX and everything. And he was, even he was admitting like things are moving too quickly in some industries,
Starting point is 01:03:16 like automation is becoming a little too crazy. Artificial intelligence is becoming a little too crazy and we need to like kind of pull the reins back a little bit on things. Oh, I mean, yeah. I don't even know how, because even if you say government step in and regulate it, that might work to some degree. But at this point, things are so decentralized in terms of technology. I don't even know if that's possible. Even like the legal marijuana industry is like in California is not, it sounds great at first, but they're coming to find that it is i mean it is like a shit show in many ways because the government is basically trying to squeeze out the individual growers and
Starting point is 01:03:51 making it like nearly impossible for them to continue making an income off of it so like some of these people are having to like go back to like growing weed like in the black market what's that standard i mean that's throughout i mean that goes back to the turn of the century where you have people with a lot of money by politicians and then use the apparatus of government to establish monopolies and cartels. Yes, that's how this works. There's a period. Yeah. That's the beauty of the constitution, I guess, is at least those guys were smart enough to see the corruptibility of the human being and try to do something about it to like, at least put like some checks and balances in there to keep things from toppling over. But I'll check out
Starting point is 01:04:30 that room video in the meantime. Will Durant. I mean, if nothing else, you'll appreciate his intelligence and his eloquence. I mean, he's one of my favorite writers, favorite thinkers. He's a historian. He's dead now, but he, um, he won, I want to say a Pulitzer with his wife for a 12-volume history of everything, basically. That was his life's work. And then that then was broken down, not necessarily word for word, but he then spun off of all that research and all that work to create shorter books.
Starting point is 01:04:59 So The Lessons of History is a shorter book of his that I really like. It's the story of philosophy, where he did all this work to write this massive, multi-volume work. And then after that was kind of extracting and letting it percolate. So how would I summarize The History of Philosophy in 150 pages? Or what are the biggest ideas that we have, the most influential, the most impactful ideas that we've come up most influential, the most impactful ideas that we've come up with in our history. You wrote a book on that, who were the biggest movers and shakers in
Starting point is 01:05:30 history, the people who pushed us forward the most, stuff like that. Interesting dude, very, very smart, very, very well-spoken and well-written. One of those people, it's just fun to read his stuff because you're in the presence of this dude is special you know right anyway so um let's wrap up we've been uh i don't even i don't even know how we got here but uh hopefully people we went down a rabbit hole people if people are still listening hopefully they enjoyed it yes you know see what kind of comments this uh brings up yeah don't flee me for the political stuff i don't care it's all oh yeah that's right i the same thing. We can disagree all day long. It's not a big deal. Just don't throw a Molotov cocktail through my window or anything like that. We're still cool. I try to get down the road with people no matter what their political or what their agenda is. And like, you
Starting point is 01:06:17 know, we should all be on the same team. We're all human beings. Yeah. I mean, I agree. I wish it would work like that. I don't think it ever will, but I wish. Yeah. But, uh, but yeah, I had fun, man. This has been great. Like I said, your, uh, your work has really informed my work ethic. I think I meant to say this earlier, but I mean, I went from like, you know, sitting on my ass playing video games and stuff to exercising and having, um, an addiction to endorphins.
Starting point is 01:06:41 And now I'm writing books as a result. That's awesome. Yeah. All right, man. Well, thanks again for taking the time. I really appreciate it. Thank you, Mike. Appreciate it. Hey there, it is Mike again. I hope you enjoyed this episode and found it interesting and helpful. And if you did, and don't mind doing me a favor and want to help me make this the most popular health and fitness podcast on the internet, then please leave a quick review of it
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Starting point is 01:07:44 All right, that's it. Thanks again for listening to this episode and I hope to looking for constructive feedback. So please do reach out. All right, that's it. Thanks again for listening to this episode and I hope to hear from you soon. And lastly, this episode is brought to you by me. Seriously though, I'm not big on promoting stuff that I don't personally use and believe in. So instead, I'm going to just quickly tell you about something of mine,
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