Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Mark Bell on Finding His Calling and Becoming the “Meathead Millionaire”
Episode Date: June 30, 2021In this episode, I interview Mark Bell, also known as the "Meathead Millionaire” who invented the Sling Shot. In case you’re not familiar with Mark, he’s not only a successful entrepreneur, and ...inventor, but he’s a world ranked powerlifter (top 10 all-time with a total of 2,628 pounds), and the owner of Super Training Products Inc. He’s also the host of his own podcast (Mark Bell’s Power Project, on which I was recently a guest), and has a popular Youtube channel. For this interview, we originally planned to chat about powerlifting, but the conversation naturally diverted into a veritable bevy of other topics, which I think you’ll find interesting. Specifically, we talk about . . . Natty expectations, the power of steroids, and the best way to compete without drugs Testosterone levels and what happens once you start taking exogenous T How Mark likes to learn (it's not reading!) Finding your natural gifts and interests, developing them, and becoming "world class" Changing your mindset (why it's harder to be stagnant than to say no to short-term pleasures) And more . . . So if you want to hear from the mind of a very successful entrepreneur who also knows a thing or two about lifting some of the heaviest objects humans can lift, you’re going to love this podcast! Timestamps: 38:45 - How do you prefer to learn? Mentioned on the Show: Mike Matthews on Mark Bell's Power Project Podcast: youtu.be/LTmk6ZYwSRU Mark Bell's Instagram: www.instagram.com/marksmellybell/?hl=en Mark Bell’s Personal YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCT4h7JebxFzSplk6zn0tAdA Mark Bell Super Training Gym YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/supertraining06 Mark Bell’s Slingshot & Other products: https://markbellslingshot.com/ Shop Legion Supplements Here: https://buylegion.com/mike Want free workout and meal plans? Download my science-based diet and training templates for men and women: https://legionathletics.com/text-sign-up/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, lovely listener. Welcome to Muscle for Life. I'm your host, Mike Matthews. Thank you
for joining me today to hear an interview I did with Mark Bell, who's also known as the
Meathead Millionaire. And Mark is the guy who invented the slingshot, if you have heard of
that training aid or maybe even used it. More popular with powerlifters than everyday weightlifters or lifestyle bodybuilders like me. And Mark, though, is not only a successful
entrepreneur and inventor, he is also a world-ranked powerlifter. He's in the top 10 all-time totals
with a total of 2,628 pounds. That is a lot of weight. And Mark is also the owner of Super Training
Products. And he is the host of his own podcast, Mark Bell's Power Project. And he recently had me
on the show as a guest, which I was thankful for. It is strangely hard to get on other fitness
podcasts. Maybe it's me. But regardless, if you want to hear the
interview he did with me, you can go find it over on his podcast, Mark Bell's Power Project,
and also on his YouTube channel because he does video in addition to audio.
And in this interview, I actually originally wanted to talk to Mark about powerlifting,
just kind of a powerlifting 101 episode, because I
haven't spoken much about that. I've produced some content over the years on certain powerlifting
programs like Wendler's 531 and Starting Strength. If you want to call that a powerlifting program,
it kind of is. But I have not done much in the way of the overarching principles of powerlifting and how it differs from
bodybuilding or hypertrophy training or just kind of everyday fitness training. And so that's why I
reached out to Mark. And then the conversation kind of just diverted into other things, which
I usually just go with. If the conversation is interesting, then I scrap my
original plan and just do it live, as Bill O'Reilly famously said. And so in this interview,
Mark and I talk about natty expectations, the power of steroids, the best way to compete in
powerlifting without drugs. We talk about how Mark likes to learn and it's not reading. He
specifically does not like to read. And Mark also shares his story of how he found something that
he liked enough to dedicate himself to and to stick with long enough to figure out how to
create a career around. And that of course was weightlifting and powerlifting. And I really
liked Mark's journey because there are quite a
few educational and motivational insights. And I just really liked Mark's mindset. It really
resonated with me. It was one of those conversations that I left a little bit more positive and
energized than when I went into it. And so that's always fun, right? And so I hope that this interview
has the same effect on you.
Also, if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast
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Hey, Mark, welcome to my podcast.
Yeah, thank you for having me on. It was great having you on my
show a couple of weeks back. Yeah, I appreciate that as well. And I'm happy to reciprocate. I
was checking out some of the comments on YouTube and it was funny. There was one with a few upvotes
like, wait, this guy doesn't look anything like his pictures. He doesn't even lift. I always like
those. It's just funny, the optics, right? So if you go and look at my Instagram, of course,
these are all, that's me. Go look at my stories, training every day. I'm not super jacked, but I'm in pretty
good shape for a natural weightlifter, about as good as I'm ever going to be probably. But then
it just depends on lighting and it depends on, you know, I was wearing a baggy shirt and it wasn't
caring to like show that I have a physique. And it's just funny how some people are quick to assume
like, what, this guy's frail. Why would I even care what he says? It's an interesting thing because it's actually one of my goals as I get older. I would
like to not really stick out as much and not really be as, I guess, as big and as jacked.
I think if you look at a lot of celebrities and you look at a lot of the men that women go crazy
over, usually it's the guys that really they don't look like a lot when the men that women go crazy over, usually it's the guys that really,
they don't look like a lot when they got their t-shirt on, they popped their t-shirt off and
they're very muscular. They're very fit. They're in great shape. They're in great health. And so
a lot of the meatheads that are, uh, they're talking trash to you. They're just jealous.
You know, they're jealous that you're in good shape. Oh yeah. I don't take it personally at
all. It doesn't upset me or they didn't go any further than just looking in the video. And again, if you look at, if I would have known it was video,
I would have not for the purpose of trying to look better, but just for making it better for you.
I have, I'm in my basement bedroom, which has good audio. I have an office upstairs. It's like
a better kind of quote unquote YouTube setting. And so from that vantage again, like, you know,
I, I don't have huge traps. I'm not a huge guy. I weigh 195
pounds. I'm six, two. My weight has always been kind of low and you know, I'm, I'm a fit guy,
but yeah. And my point is, I think that's great. I think that's very aesthetic. You know, like
sometimes you see guys that have like big traps and they don't have like wide shoulders or they
just have big arms and they got skinny legs and so on. And I think it's good to, you know, be well
toned kind of throughout your whole body. I think it's good to be well-toned
kind of throughout your whole body. I think it's kind of a better look in terms of looking athletic
and healthy, maybe not in terms of being a jacked meathead. Yeah, exactly. My last comment on that
is, and I've spoken about this to try to give people realistic expectations and particularly
guys, right? Because guys are the ones who generally feel like they're never big enough.
I have not heard from any women over the years who have said, you know, I always am too
small and I've already gained a bunch of muscle. How do I gain more muscle? That's more of a guy
thing. And if we take drugs out of it, if you're going to stay natural, the average guy can gain
maybe 40 pounds of muscle, maybe 45 with average genetics, average anatomy, right? Not like the guy who was jacked at 13 years old
and who has big bones and who was just made to be big and strong, just your normal dude,
which would be me. I have small bones. My body's definitely more made for like endurance than I
could never be a great strength athlete. For example, it just, my body's not made like that.
And so the average dude call it about 40 ish pounds of muscle is what he
has genetically available to him, period, regardless of what he does. Like once he has
gained that amount of muscle, any more muscle gain from that point out is going to be negligible,
like vanishingly small. And when you see then, okay, what does that look like? I mean, it looks
a lot like me. I've probably gained 40 to 45 pounds of muscle since I started training.
And my rate of muscle gain is, is very low. Now. I don't even know if I gain a pound a year at this
point. Maybe it's so little, it's hard to even tell. So the good news though, for most guys is
if that's the kind of look that they want, like you're saying, aesthetic, muscular fit,
more like maybe a fitness model who doesn't look really big for a fitness model as opposed to
a jacked bodybuilder type of look, then that's genetically available to, I would say, all men,
actually, because even a low responder is still going to be able to gain 30 to 35 pounds of
muscle. And if anybody listening, if you picture a pound of muscle, it's like a 16-ounce steak,
and you slap 30 to 40 of those all around your body. That's a lot.
You can go from being a skinny dude to a quote unquote jacked dude by normal people's standards,
or especially normal women's standards. Even research on that point that you made where I
remember one study, they showed women images of guys that ranged from what we would say are like
skinny fat to jacked, right? And jacked were like
kind of bodybuilder jacked. I don't even know, maybe even a little bit beyond what's naturally
possible, but big and very lean. And the majority of women polled preferred in the middle. They
preferred, they call it 10 to 12% body fat and maybe add like about 30 pounds of muscle, maybe
even like 25 to the average guy.
And that is the look that they thought was most attractive. The look that us meatheads thought,
well, we would go for the, for the most jacked and most shredded and be like, oh,
that looks so good. It looks so cool. And that was not the preferred look. The researchers included
some of the commentary from women and a lot of women were like turned off by it.
They were like, oh no, that's way too much.
Yeah.
And it's hard to even look incredibly jacked without the use of a performance enhancing
drugs.
Usually like the guys that are in good shape that are natural, you can kind of only tell
again, if they have their shirt off for something in particular, or if they just get a good
pump in the gym, then you're like, whoa, is that any kind of question?
You're like, is that my arm some shit?
Because you're like, I didn't even really recognize he was abjacked.
It's true.
It's true.
I think it's kind of cool.
I think that's the way that it should be is that you should kind of be like incognito.
And then as soon as it's time to like lift or have less clothes on,
then everyone's like kind of shocked by the way that you look.
Yeah, totally.
I joke, especially with natural bodybuilding. I think a good example of that
is Eric Helms. I don't know him well enough to say, oh, I can guarantee you he's not on anything
and has not been, but I do know him. I'd say that he's something between an acquaintance and a
friend and just looking at his physique and looking at his prep and everything. If I had to bet a lot
of money, I would put it on that he is what he says he is. And if you look at his last competition picks,
I think it's been a while, but the last time he got really lean and he looked great and it's very
impressive. And I understand how much work I haven't done it myself, but I can appreciate
how much work and just suffering that goes into looking like that. But if we're comparing him to
bodybuilders who are even open about drug use, I mean, he looked
good, but not that good.
And I don't mean that as a criticism and he would agree.
And I'm just making that point of that you're making, which is natural just has a, you can
only go so far.
Like you just never really get through to that next level where you are just huge, shredded,
rock hard.
You just don't get there naturally.
Alberto Nunez does a really good job of getting completely shredded. But again,
you know, when he's on stage, you know, he's just not, he doesn't weigh that much. He doesn't have
that much bulk or that much thickness to him. So yeah, it's really, really tough. It's really rare
to see somebody that's big and lean and strong. That's a natural athlete. It's definitely
possible. I don't want to deter anybody from doing all those things, but it takes a lot of patience and even strength, even gaining strength
is very, very difficult unless there's two things that can get you strong really fast.
One of them is to gain weight and the other one is steroids because the two, you know,
they usually work together. Like steroids don't necessarily just automatically make you a lot
stronger, although they can make you stronger. They can assist, but not really a bump necessarily to
like your central nervous system. It might be a bump to your overall, just your whole body,
your whole system in general. And so there might be a small percentage there, but usually what
they do is they take you from 180 to weigh in like 230, you know, and that gain, even if you
did that naturally, you would notice
a huge bump in strength as well. So it's actually really interesting that a lot of the all time
world records in powerlifting have now been broken by many lifters that get tested. And like you
said, I don't know these individuals super well, so I don't know their business. I don't know what
they do and what they don't do, but I would imagine that not all of them, you know, use
performance enhancing drugs because, you know, it's a, it's a big federation that they're in. and what they do and what they don't do. But I would imagine that not all of them use performance
enhancing drugs because it's a big federation that they're in. They get tested pretty regularly.
It seems like the standards are pretty good. But one way they get around that,
not taking performance enhancing drugs is to train very, very smart and just to gain a shit ton of
weight. Interesting. And that's a good segue to what I want to talk to you about, which is
powerlifting and getting strong. But just to follow up on that point,
this is not a topic that I would consider myself an expert on. Steroids, definitely not. I've never
used any. So I only know them abstractly or academically, I guess you could say. For example,
I've written and spoken about Trenbolone and Winstroll and some popular drugs, actually
mostly to deter people
from using them and not taking a moral stance on it, just teaching them, here's what this compound
is. Here's the research that we have on it. Here are the pros, here are the cons. And here's why
I think, unless you're getting paid a lot of money for this, I don't think it's worth doing.
I mean, sure. If Disney comes to you and says, we want you to be the next Captain America,
but you have to gain 30 pounds in the next month. Fine. I actually, I mean, and we're going to pay you millions of dollars. You're gonna become a superstar. I totally understand. Or if you're a professional athlete and the only way to really compete and stay in the game is to use the same types of drugs that everyone else is using. I totally understand. But if we're just talking about being a meathead and getting more jacked that I don't quite understand. And so that's been always my position really on steroids. But as far as testing and federations, I've only
heard, so now I'm speaking secondhand here from people who have been in the game who have,
they don't have great things to say about the protocol. Like what, how it's been described to
me is that it is probably more window dressing and there are very easy ways to get around
these tests. And a lot of people do that. And it's kind of known that that's the thing,
but it's more marketing and PR. I don't know how true that is. I've just heard that from people,
I would say, who are reliable sources. It is a bit odd to me to think that somebody who's natural
in a similar, let's say at a similar body weight is going to beat the numbers of somebody who is
open about their drug use at a similar body weight. And we're talking about elite level
strength athletes. They have the genetics, they have the body. Like you can't say that the natural
guy is just the super freak. Like now they're all super freaks at that high level. What are
your thoughts on that? No, I definitely think from what I've seen and just my understanding of what's
going on in powerlifting in general, and even what I see from the women. Now, that doesn't mean that the women don't take stuff too, but people can get incredibly strong without the use of performance enhancing drugs. really strong that have been drug tested athletes. Jen Thompson comes to mind. She benches like 315
pounds. She's in her forties. She weighs 123 or 132. She competes in those weight classes. You
know, I lifted with her firsthand. Now that doesn't mean I have any clue on what she does
in her, you know, private time or whatever, but you know, these people, they pretty much laugh
about performance enhancing drugs and they seem like they don't know anything about it.
And obviously you could say, Oh,
well that's what somebody would do if they were taking shit. But like,
you know, I hear a lot of behind the scenes stuff,
pretty close friends to a lot of these people.
So I just not buying the fact that they're all lying all the time.
I would understand like if they're like, Oh,
so-and-so got popped and this person was full of shit. Like I would be like,
okay, but the USAPL
slash which feeds into the IPF, which is an international power to think federation.
My understanding is they do a pretty good job. They do their due diligence and it's not just
them doing the screening. They have like a private company that comes in and does it. And so, yeah,
I'm sure there's a million ways around it. I'm sure you could take SARMs and a bunch of other weird things to elicit some strength response. But what happened in power
lifting a couple of years back was that people really started to understand the body and they
understood that you can't just go heavy all the time. You can't just go in the gym. And if you're
a young guy and you get yourself used to that, you kind of can get away with that for a period
of time and you will get stronger. But usually your luck runs out. And a lot of times you run into an injury
or you just get stuck at the same weights for years and sometimes even decades.
And so what happened was probably about eight or 10 years ago, it really wasn't that long ago,
the formation of people starting to implement a lot more frequency into their training.
That changed immensely and that changed powerlifting forever.
I think beforehand, people thought you could really only squat once a week
because people would squat heavy once a week.
They thought you could deadlift once a week because people would implement heavy deadlifts
and they would do them one time per week.
Anytime they did them more than that, they would get kind of zapped out.
Their nervous system would be shot.
Same thing with bench press. But when people started to kind of play around with some
of these other methods and they started to incorporate some of the stuff that was brought
in from the Soviet Union, the old Soviet Union, and from Eastern Bloc training and just from
Olympic lifting in general, where the frequency was a lot higher. But I think initially power
lifters were resistant to implementing that
frequency because the weights that are used in weightlifting are so much significantly less than
the weights that are used in powerlifting. But they're not less because the weightlifters aren't
strong. They're less because the exercise has a tremendous amount of difficulty and a tremendous
skillset to it that doesn't lend itself to you lifting the most amount of weight, such as like
a deadlift. Like if you ask, you know, most amount of weight, such as like a deadlift.
Like if you ask, you know, a bunch of people, you ask a hundred people, have you lifted, you know,
400 pounds, 500 pounds, you'll get a couple of people that say yes, and it won't be in a snatch.
It will be like probably in a deadlift. So the deadlift kind of is something that lends itself
to allow you to lift heavy weights with it. But it's really tough because you have to really pay
attention to how often you lift heavy because your body, but it's really tough because you have to really pay attention
to how often you lift heavy because your body's recovery rate from that can be oftentimes can be
kind of poor. So people started to deadlift maybe two or three times a week. They started to squat
two or three times a week. They started to bench press two or three times a week. And with that
frequency, they had to lower the amount of weight that they use because you can't lift heavy and lift that often.
You'll zap yourself out.
You'll go backwards.
A lot of times, some of the training would only require 60% of your max.
Maybe another training day would be in the 70s.
Maybe by the time you got to the third day, maybe it would go to 80%.
Maybe the next week, it would start back over, but it would start over about 2% to 3% heavier. And you would do that and you'd run that into a
competition and you might even drop out a third day so you could have better recovery because
more of the weights that you're going to be handling are going to be heavier.
So by increasing the frequency, what they did is they skyrocketed the volume. And it turns out
your body can handle that actually pretty damn well.
In addition to that, just kind of on this final part of this is that that seemed to
lend itself pretty well to whether you're on drugs or whether you're not on drugs.
And it's actually kind of an interesting thing in powerlifting.
Most of the guys I know that use performance enhancing drugs, they squat, bench and deadlift
heavy, probably every other week.
People that I know that are natural,
they probably do a heavy bench, squat, or deadlift nearly every week. And on top of that,
they also are benching, squatting, deadlifting multiple times a week. So it's actually interesting to kind of see how that all kind of went down and transpired. And there's different
training from different people, but that's just kind of what I've seen in general. And at the
moment in powerlifting, it's a really interesting time because there's women that are deadlifting 500 pounds. There's
guys that are squatting a thousand pounds. You got Julius Maddox who competes non, you know,
in a non-drug tested federation who benches almost 800 pounds raw now. So.
I have to pull this up on Instagram while you're talking just to see this.
Yeah. There's the lifts are skyrocket. Julius Maddox, you know, powerlifting, a very thankless sport. You know,
I would love to see people get more recognition to see somebody break a record like that. The
record was stuck for a long time at about 715 pounds and he did like 771 or something like
that. You know, that would be the equivalent of somebody breaking the NBA record
for points scored in a game and they score like 145 points and they break Wilt Chamberlain's
record, you know, like no one would ever stop talking about that, you know, but when it comes
to powerlifting, it just, it's not that popular with sports. And also there's a misunderstanding
of people just think you take steroids and you just, you know, you get insanely strong and insanely jacked.
And it does a lot of those things, but steroids that won't give you a, they give you a bump
like kind of one time and it's not in perpetuity.
So it's not like you just continue having gains.
It's the same gains that you would normally get, but they're sped up a bit.
So anybody that, you know, is on the bubble thinking about doing it, but they're sped up a bit. So anybody that was on the bubble thinking about doing it,
thinking they're going to turn themselves into this superhero, it'll give you like a four to
5% bump in probably most of the things you do, which is a lot, but it's not going to be four
or 5% day in and day out. It's just four. You just get to play that card one time.
So if you currently weigh 180, it might help you get to about 220. But all the same things
that you would have to do to get big and to get beyond 220 are all the same things that you would
have to do with or without them. So I guess what I'm saying is they work great. They work fantastic,
but they kind of just give you a hit one time. One thing that they do do is that having higher
testosterone levels in men anyway, is really fucking motivating. And so that they do do is that having higher testosterone levels in men anyway,
is really fucking motivating. And so that is one factor that that is a big factor. And so
as you were discussing earlier, like, Oh, I don't really know, like if someone should take them,
you know, just to kind of be big and jacked, I think that there should be more at play than
just being big and jacked. And I think there should be more at play of just having it be an endeavor
that you try to make money off of or try to get more instagram followers off of i think it should
be more based off of how you feel if you research it and you look into it more and you recognize hey
like a little bit of testosterone will actually make me feel pretty good it will make you feel
pretty good the caveat to that though is that we love to lift. Everybody
listening to this, I'm sure loves fitness, loves to lift, loves exercise. You'll be trapped taking
steroids forever if you take them even just one time. They're not addicting necessarily, but
we love this stuff too much. And if you go in the gym and all of a sudden, you know, 405 starts
feeling light on the deadlift and you're now deadlifting 475, you're going to want to take more and more to do
500.
You know, you're going to get really kind of trapped inside that bubble.
And when you come back off them and 365 feels heavy, you don't get to keep your gains, by
the way, those go flying out the window once you come off them.
So those are all things to consider, you know, consider for people that are kind of thinking about it. And I usually deter people from it just because I think it's a good
idea to starve it off for as long as you can and research it and keep contemplating it and thinking
about it. Because once you do them, you'll probably be like me. You'll probably be a lifer.
Yeah. And I've heard that from many people who are willing to be open and honest about it.
A lot of just personal conversations in the gym. I remember one guy in particular years ago, he was the first guy to make it really clear that he feels so good when he's on that being off just sucks. And he was conflicted because he didn't want to keep, he was taking a lot of stuff. And, you know, he was just saying, of course, his workouts were awesome when he's on, but also his life was just more awesome.
Like he just felt he had higher energy levels and just a better mood, I guess.
And he said he needed less sleep.
He could just go, go, go all day.
And he felt invincible, basically.
He said, basically, he's like, I feel like a superhero, basically, when I'm on this stuff.
And then I come off and it's just like deflating the balloon.
when I'm on this stuff. And then I come off and it's just like deflating the balloon. And so a part of him, he was saying wished he had never done them in the first place because he wouldn't
know what he's missing. And that resonates with me. I mean, for whatever it's worth, if I were
older and I had signs of low testosterone, which really means I had symptoms for anybody wondering,
you can't really, unless the number is way low, like, okay, if you're
45 or 50 years old and you test 400 NDDL, is that low? Well, do you have any symptoms? Do you have
a lower sex drive? And if you have symptoms, then that's something that should be addressed. If not,
then you don't necessarily have to address it just because somebody says that it quote unquote
should be higher. But let's say I was older and I
was experiencing symptoms of low testosterone and I had done everything I could naturally to address
it and it just wasn't working. Then I could understand TRT because to your point, it's now
about quality of life. I'm not doing it just to get bigger biceps. I'm doing it to continue having
a good marriage and to continue being able to pursue goals and feel at least at a normal baseline, not operating at 20% lower capacity simply because my
hormones are... At that point, it'd probably be mostly a genetic thing. If I've addressed
everything that I can in my nutrition and my training and my sleep, and not much you can do
with supplements, but you could try a couple of things, DHEA, if you're a middle-aged dude and environment and
none of that fixed it, then I totally understand TRT. And to your point though, who knows, maybe
I would love it and that would then encourage me to want to try more things. So like you said,
I'm trying to, ideally, I wouldn't, I mean, at some point it probably
would make sense, but I'm hoping that that doesn't make sense until later in my life.
Maybe I can hold off until 60 or 70 years old.
Maybe I'll never need anything.
I don't know.
So long as I can get my penis working and have good workouts and stay motivated generally
and just feel like I have energy and enthusiasm, I'm just disinclined to mess with that.
Absolutely. I think those are all good decisions. And I just always try to advise people just to be very cautious. And it really also depends on some of your goals. I mean,
if you want to be like a professional bodybuilder, it seems like that that would be a route that you
would probably have to go. I guess you could be a professional drug tested bodybuilder,
but then that gets to be a little bit weird because you don't know who's trying to do what.
Yeah. You might be one of the few actual natty people on stage and you're never going to win
anything. So you're really just doing it for your own enjoyment, I guess, at that point.
You can take things really far though, too. I was able to bench press 500 pounds before I ever
took anything. I know a lot of guys that are, I guess I could speak
mainly just for myself because I didn't take anything until I was about 25. I don't really
know what other people do, but I was, I think I was 19 years old and I was playing football.
I benched 225 for 40 reps. I ran a 4.6, 40 yard dash. Like I was able to make myself,
I wasn't a, I wasn't a great athlete. See, but compared to the average kid,
you were kind of a freak. I understand, you know, in the scheme of things, I'm sure you got to a
point where you were now playing against super freaks and you're like, Oh my God. But like,
that's that, that was not me at all. I mean, I was like, you know, I've been, I don't know when
I hit six feet when I was, I don't know, maybe 16. And so when I first started lifting, I've been, I don't know when I hit six feet, when I was, I don't know, maybe 16. And so when I
first started lifting, I was at least six feet, I was 17 when I started lifting and I weighed 155
pounds. I didn't look malnourished, but I was just a skinny kid. I played hockey. And so maybe I had
some leg, something going on there and I had very good cardio and very good endurance, but 225 for
zero. Right, right. Yeah. And that was stuff that I, you know, like I said, I kind
of made myself into that, you know, and I started powerlifting at a very young age. And I remember,
you know, squatting with weight on my back the first time. And I had, you know, I had 45s on
each side of the bar and I was like dying. I remember like, just being like, this can't be
the way that you squat. Like this hurts my neck so bad, you know? And I didn't know how to get the weight on like a shelf, you know, in my upper back. And I didn't have a
shelf to put it on. I didn't have enough muscle there. So when I picked the weight up on my neck,
basically, I was like, this is like super uncomfortable. And I asked my brothers,
I was like, don't they have like a pad for that? And then my brother's like, no,
like you're just, no, like you're not using a pad.
The tampon.
no, like you're just, no, like you're not using a pad, the tampon. Yeah. Like it's completely unacceptable. And so you figure it out. I didn't just start out like crazy strong. I had to,
I had to work at it. I did start off stronger than my friends. I recall a time when I had some
friends over my house and we had some weights in the basement and they started to try to like bench
and move weight around a little bit. They struggled with the bar and they struggled, like they're just benching it, like all lopsided
and stuff.
They didn't know how to do it, you know, keep the bar straight.
And I remember like putting tens on each side and everyone got killed by it.
And I was able to do it pretty easy.
I was already lifting a little bit at the time, but not much.
I just kind of got into it.
And I remember lifting with the 25s on each side.
And I just kind of thought to myself, like, I don't know why, you know, I just am stronger than them, but this is kind of cool. And I didn't
really understand because I was just a kid. I didn't recognize like, oh, well, you weigh a lot
more than these guys. So that's probably a big, your friends are really kind of skinny. And so
that was a big factor, but that made me feel good. And that made me recognize like this thing that
you might have a little bit more natural talent at. This could be something that maybe you can investigate. And if you work hard
at it, who knows where it can get you. And I remember also going from back to that 225,
you know, that 225 is some stupid test. You're doing football for God knows what reason, but
I remember benching 225 for like 11 reps when I first, when I started to test it. And it was probably only about six
months later that I went from doing it 11 reps to doing it for 40 reps. At that time, I already had
some pretty decent strength when it came to doing like the one rep max, but I had no idea how to
transfer it over into anything. And so I trained the bench like three times a week and messed
around with different rep ranges on different days and got there. And so you can kind of turn yourself into
quite the freak, especially if you find what you're gifted at, you know? So for me,
it happened to be lifting, but for somebody else, it might be painting or it might be music, or you
can take yourself pretty damn far. And that's where I would say, don't be skeptical of everybody.
You know, don't really worry about anybody else. Just focus in on yourself. The guy that I do my podcast with, Nsema Inyang,
is fucking jacked as hell. He's a natural athlete. He's a friend of mine. I believe him. I don't have
any reason not to believe him. He's 245, 250. He's probably 7% body fat all the time. I mean,
it's just one of those kicking the balls. He's
like an inch or two taller than me. He's a little bit more jacked than me. You know what I mean?
He's a really good looking guy. And it's just, that's just the way shit is sometimes. All I can
do is be motivated by it. All I can do is say, you know what, that guy is really jacked. And I
think that's really cool. That's really inspirational. I'm going to work on myself
and see if I can be as jacked as him or get close. And for some people, when it comes to making that decision
to do like performance enhancing drugs, I would say some people kind of do need them.
And some people don't. I remember talking to one of my guys at the gym. I said,
the guy was like, Oh, I think this guy's on stuff. I think that guy's on stuff. And I said,
what are your genetics? Like, what does your dad look like?
And what does his dad look like?
And what is your mom?
You know, we started talking about genetics.
I'm like, you're five, seven, you're five, seven.
You weigh one 80.
You couldn't be any more fucking average if you tried, you know, like.
I mean, one 80 with a good body comp at five, seven would be impressive.
I'm just saying.
That's a pretty big dude. I'm just saying that he lifts,
but he didn't, I mean, if he's not very fit. Yeah.
If he has a lot of body fat, then it sounds like he may need to get down to
one 50 to have a more kind of like,
there is no like veins in sight and stuff like that. But my,
my point being is like, and even that guy lifted for years. So yeah,
he did get himself to a point where he looked okay. My point is your genetics suck, dude. You're not six, eight. You're not LeBron
James. You're not Shaquille O'Neal. Like Shaquille O'Neal being, you know, seven feet tall has
nothing to do with anabolic steroids or growth hormone or anything like that. LeBron James being
who he is and who he was going through high school. I mean, who knows what these guys do
later on in their careers. But again, my point being is like, these people have spectacular genetics and don't
just go and say. The super elite. I mean, it's actually probably the equivalent of like winning
the lottery. They won the genetic lottery. Well, it's interesting because if we were all to sit
down and to, you know, draw out a painting of somebody, you know, eating an apple sitting
under a tree, you know, you could take a thousand people you know, eating an apple sitting under a tree,
you know, you could take 1000 people to do that. And you're going to recognize there's a couple
people that are actually can make something that looks like somebody eating an apple under a tree
and everybody else, you can't even tell what the fuck they did at all. And a lot of that,
sometimes there's some training going on there. But a lot of that's just kind of someone's
propensity to be able to conjure that up, to be
able to make that up. And when somebody does something like that, we're not like, Hey man,
like there's gotta be some sort of tricks. Like, did you pop a bunch of psychedelics or something?
You know, what did you do to be able to-
Neotropics as if it were better.
Yeah. What did you do to be able to do that? And it's like, no, I just
happen to be a little bit more advanced in this. And because I was good at it as a kid, I leaned into it a little bit more and I got to be pretty decent
at it. So there it is. Yeah. I knew somebody speaking of drawing. I liked to draw when I
was younger and it was the cousin of my best friend was just incredibly good at drawing,
no formal training. He had just at a young age, exactly what you're saying. He just was like,
kind of good at drawing. So he liked it and he just did more of it. And by the time he was 18,
I would guess, I don't think he pursued it, but I would guess that he was good enough to,
he could have had a career like in comic books. That's kind of the style that he liked to draw,
but you could tell him his name was Brandon. Literally anything like, oh, draw me a pile of
skulls and like put a barbarian on it and like a dragon flying. Like, oh me a pile of skulls and put a barbarian on it and a dragon flying.
Like, oh, okay. And a couple of days later, he has, again, from what I remember, comic book
quality and he wouldn't look at any reference images. It was just impressive. And just to that
point, yeah, some people, they just have their thing. And I've spoken about this because that
can also be kind of discouraging to some people who they have not found their thing or they don't even think they have a thing. And so my take on it is it starts as a curiosity. It doesn't start as a skill. I think that this is what I'm going to, what I'm saying is supported by that research is when you have people who have gotten very good at things, it's often not that they were
way more talented than everybody else, their peers, when they first started, they may have
gotten started younger. They may have showed a little bit more promise and then gotten more
attention. But if we're talking about just self-learned things, it just started as a curiosity,
something that was some element of the activity or the subject, if it's just something to learn about, was appealing to them. And they pursued that and they stuck with it until it became
something they were very interested in. And that then fed into putting more time into it. And then
often they were smart about their practice,
right? So whether they realized it or not, they were employing a form of quote unquote,
deliberate practice where they were very focused and they were pushing themselves to operate on the
limits of their ability. They weren't just sticking with what was comfortable and what
they were good at. They were always striving to get a little bit better. And that is something
that all of us can do. Can all of us become world-class at something? No, we can't. I don't know. I don't know if I can
become world-class at anything, but we don't need to be world. We don't need to be LeBron James or
Shaquille O'Neal to find the satisfaction that we're looking for in being good at things and
being able to accomplish things. And then there's also the commercial reward if we're talking about a career or work, right? You don't have to be one of the best
whatever in the world to make a very good living. You just have to be very good. And I really do
think that everyone can find something that they can get very good at.
I do think that everyone could feel world-class, whether their amount of money they're generating
or whether their performance in the gym or whatever it is, whether their amount of money they're generating or whether their performance
in the gym or whatever it is, whether they're actually producing these world-class results,
really doesn't matter. A lot of things are just found in being successful.
And being successful is as simple as making progress. And making progress,
anyone can make progress in anything. That example I gave of art,
I think a lot of people would say, man, I can't even draw a stick figure. There's that ugly word,
can't. Of course you can draw a stick figure. And how much practice have you, how much drawing have
you done? I often say I can't read very well. I can read and I can read fine and I could work on
it more, but I just, I choose not to read. I've never read a, I never read a book. I'd rather listen to like an audio.
When you say that, do you mean literally?
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, literally. And it's, I just struggled in school and always had a
hard time with reading and reading comprehension and my mind just drifts and stuff like that.
And my mind just drifts and stuff like that.
If you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere,
definitely check out my VIP one-on-one coaching service because my team and I have helped people of all ages and circumstances
lose fat, build muscle, and get into the best shape of their life
faster than they ever thought possible.
And we can do the
same for you. How do you prefer to learn? Do you like to listen then? Or like if you want to,
whatever it is, whether it's a work related thing or just a personal hobby.
Yeah. When it comes to books, I just don't do anything with books. So I don't read them or,
nor do I listen to them. But what I will do is when somebody says, Hey, you know,
this person's a great author or whatever, I will YouTube search them and I'll find them in an
interview and I'll usually listen to them that way. So, you know, kind of this whole thing that
we're talking about right here is, is your interest level is what's paramount with being
able to make progress in the first place and being able to be a success. Because for me, I was not interested
in reading books, right? But I am interested in learning and in learning in a way that I'm more
comfortable with. And so for me, you know, that would be, I would, you know, kind of YouTube
search some of these, some of these people out. But if you look at my powerlifting career,
one of the things that really helped me to become world-class and to be able to lift weights that other people
weren't lifting at the time was to do unconventional things that I thought would propel me forward.
And in my training, I was interested enough to stay in the gym for four hours. I was interested
enough to do a good morning with like 600 pounds. I can't even imagine that. I don't know if I've
ever been over 185.
Yeah. Yeah. It's wild. You know, interested enough to train with bands and chains and to try pressing and pulling off of racks to do partial range of motion work and bench pressing off of
boards. And just, I mean, if you go back and just watch some of the, there's over 500,000
subscribers on Mark Bell's super training YouTube channel. You can check out some of the old videos.
Watch some of those old videos on there, and you'll see stuff on there where you're just like,
these guys are fucking insane.
What's going on here?
Why would anybody do these exercises?
It doesn't make any sense.
Well, it made sense to me because I was interested enough to figure it out.
It's not any different than somebody wanting to do a backflip on their motorcycle or on their BMX
bike. You know, it's, yeah, it seems wild. It seems crazy, but for whatever reason, like that
person is really, really into that. They're really interested in that. And so I think what happens to
us though, is that we see what other people are doing and we think that their interest has to
become our interest. We think that we, that's why
I, you know, kind of in talking about books, I know so many people have stacks books and they
never did anything with them. I'm like, well, it's like they didn't, you know, they read them,
but they didn't use them. I just chose not to read them at all. And I think I can get ahead
faster in some cases because I just didn't waste my time with it at all. They read it,
but they're not applying it. And they're not applying the knowledge that they have learned,
which is a form of wisdom, which is a way to move yourself forward a lot of times.
And so I see people kind of thinking that other people's interests, that they somehow need to
adopt that. They have kind of the fear of missing out on certain things and like,
oh, I got to read that business book. Or, oh, if I want to be an entrepreneur, I better have this crazy morning
routine or I better have this, you know, sleep hygiene, or I need to be this way or that way.
Cause Gary Vee said this, or this guy said that it's like, whoa, man, just slow the fuck down.
What are you interested in? What are you into? And also what are you trying to accomplish?
Right. I mean, and let's try to like work backward and think with cause and effect, right? And so does it matter if you
have a morning routine? It can, but it cannot matter as well. Again, what are you trying to
do? And I mean, I don't know, in many discussions I've had with many people along these lines. It seems like many people, they don't give much
thought into specifically what they're trying to accomplish. They tend to get into motion and start
doing things to your point because an influencer or an expert, somebody said,
this is what you need to do. This is good. And so they just start doing things. And there's
something to be said for that.
I think that's admirable. People who have, I think, a natural kind of dispensation toward action,
that's better than people who never do anything. But without first clarifying, all right, what am
I trying to do? Very specifically, what am I trying to accomplish here? And depending on the
situation, if we're talking about this is a kind of an investing 101 concept, right? When you're getting into an investment,
make sure you have an exit plan. Make sure that you've decided your policy, so to speak,
on like, what are you trying to accomplish here? And when are you going to be getting out? And
that could be if it dips to a certain point, you're going to get out to cut your losses.
If it rises to a certain point, you're going to get out because you think it's overvalued at that point, or maybe you're going
to take some profits out to mitigate your risk. Or in the case of, if I speak personally,
so I have some cryptocurrency, but I got into it a few years ago. I put an amount of money that I
don't care about. And my policy was, my exit plan was, I don't give a shit. I'm going to hold this until Bitcoin is a million dollars a coin or zero.
I don't care either way.
A lot of smart people I respect are saying it's going to go way up.
And if it goes way up, that's cool.
If it goes to zero, I don't care.
But what's hard is if you don't think about the, what am I trying to do?
And also, what are the quit conditions?
At what point do I call this, do I call it a day and just kind of take my cash in my chips, so to speak? And because it's hard, then if you get into, let's say you got your morning routine, and you're doing all these things that people are saying you should do at a point, you start to question, all right, why exactly am I do I should I be doing this? It's harder to then clarify what you're going for. And particularly it's harder
to quit when you're emotionally invested in the process. And so it's just something that has been
useful to me. And that's not to say that, oh, nobody does this and I do this and I'm so good.
Not at all. It's just, this is one of those things that one of these ideas that has just
occurred to me where I'm like, this seems to be a pattern, at least with a lot of the people I've interacted with, very quick to do things, but not much thought, at least not as to what I would do in terms of why am I going to do this?
What am I going for?
And at what point do I say this is not worth it?
You know what I mean?
It's kind of an interesting thing because, you know, in order to think simply, you have to be able to like think less.
And in order to think less, you have to know a lot
because somebody will be like, oh, I don't know. I just did that on instinct. And you're like,
wait, what? Like, how did you just do that on instinct? But if you really investigate it
further, you'll always end up on this same thing. A hundred percent of the time that their level of
interest was really high. And that's how they actually landed on it. Like with my invention
of the slingshot, you know, I tore my pec several times in training.
Several times.
Oh my God.
I didn't know several times.
I knew at least once.
And I wanted to figure out a way to train heavy, you know, and be able to train through
and around these injuries.
And so I just kept playing around with different ideas and concepts and just kind of, you know,
halfway stumbled into it.
And if you were an outsider and you would say, hey, how'd you think of the slingshot?
I would say, I don't know, I hurt myself in the gym.
And somebody would be kind of confused, you know, but it's something that, I mean,
I think about training still to this day.
I think about training pretty much day and night.
You know, I think about training and nutrition and supplementation,
probably much like yourself. It's kind of just on the front of my mind daily.
It's kind of like just a default. If you have kind of your attention, if it's not
focused on something, then it tends to go in that direction.
Absolutely.
That's interesting with the slingshot. That's really like, you know,
necessity is the mother invention. That's a good example of that because it was come up with a solution or dramatically came in kind of before social media became so prevalent. YouTube was still pretty big, but the company's
been around for 11 years now. And so it was just perfect timing. And I didn't have, me and my wife,
we didn't have much financially and stuff like that. And so it really just kind of popped in
there at the perfect time. And then I kind of grew with social
media and then was able to kind of expand outward and then get a good team around me and so forth.
But yeah, it's like one of those things where someone's like, oh, you did this, you started
this business and then that changed everything forever. But in the background was me starting
lifting at 12 years old. Yeah. The overnight success myth.
Right, right, right. So it took me until, just so people know and people that are listening that are
maybe in their 20s and 30s and stuff and don't know what the hell they're doing,
it took me until about 35 or so to really put up points on the scoreboard in terms of
making money financially and having a career, I guess you would even say.
So if you're floating around
out there, don't feel bad about it. Just continue to think and continue to work. Even though I never
had much of a job, I was never a bum. I was always working hard and always trying to figure out ways
to improve myself. I just didn't really know how to make ends meet all that well. That took time.
And correct me if I'm wrong here, but there's an obvious
observation, I guess, that what you ended up becoming very successful in was in line with
something that you just really liked and you had put a lot of time into doing. It wasn't just
working hard. It was also working hard specifically at something you really liked and you were very
interested in it. And it's something that you would be, whether you were making money from it or not, the fact that you can make a living with it and a
good living with it is I'm sure to you, it's like the ultimate in satisfaction. But even if your
career had gone in a very different direction, it wouldn't diminish your interest in the activity.
And so that's also advice I've given people is really try to find that thing, like exactly what you're saying,
that is just very interesting. Again, it starts off a little bit interesting. And because I've
heard from people who will say like, I don't know what I'm, there's nothing I'm really that
interested in. And then I go, okay, so again, what about curious about something that you open up
YouTube and you're going to search to just learn something about something.
What are you searching for and why?
Right.
And so let's start there.
And if you can develop that curiosity into an interest or maybe a passion, I don't really like that word, but I think it's fitting if we're talking about this growth process, if
it can reach that level, then especially now with the internet and e-commerce and for example, how easy it is to get on
Amazon and start selling things.
If you're willing to just educate yourself a little bit, there are so many different
ways to monetize knowledge and interest and quote unquote passion.
And then with that comes some sort of skill.
Usually, usually you're getting good.
Maybe you don't know exactly how to teach other people how to do it, but you're get drawing, right? You're getting really good at drawing. And I've
seen on social media, I've seen people with pretty big followings and they draw like live and they
post videos that are sped up. What's a time-lapse video, I think is the term where you're seeing
how they draw things. And then they go from there to creating tutorials. Okay. Hey, this is how I draw this. And they're making a living drawing. And that's what they
really like to do. And they just applied a little bit of business and marketing to it.
And now they're doing that. And there's no reason why, and this has probably happened many times
already. I just don't follow the drawing space, but I'm sure there are people that are the
equivalent of you in the drawing space where they just always really like drawing.
And it's something they have always thought about and they've always worked on and they've tried so
many different things and they've gotten better and better. And then they got into it and they
started to get a following. And then they came upon something that just has that kind of tipping
point potential and some special utensil of some kind, I don't know. And they're like,
this is something they know about. They know how don't know. And they're like, oh, this is something
they know about. They know how to do it. And they know there's an actual opportunity or problem to
be solved there. They solve it and then they just offer it to the marketplace and it sells like
crazy. And so that opportunity is, I mean, there are so many, again, with where the internet is at
and where e-commerce is at and with how easy it is to educate ourselves about literally anything and particularly business and marketing, I think I would be hard pressed to think of a discipline or an activity that couldn't go the way that you've described and I've just described.
I mean, look at the NFTs.
Look at what artists are doing with NFTs.
It's bizarre.
It's actually bizarre.
You have a trillion dollars of these things out there.
People are paying seven figures for images.
It's actually bizarre.
You have what, like a trillion dollars of these things out there.
People are paying seven figures for images.
If somebody would have told me that that was going to be happening like five years ago,
they're like, okay, there's this blockchain stuff and it's going to get applied to literally digital images you could just download and save.
But no, people want to know that they have the image, that this was the original that
created by the artists and people are going to pay
millions of dollars for that. I'd be like, ah, it's a bit of a stretch. I'm going to say no,
dog. I'm going to not put my money behind that, but here we are. And I'm wrong.
I should, you know, kind of define, you know, what I would consider to be like hard work because
we just hear that thrown around so much. And I actually don't think that there's anything
inherently hard about
the work that you need to put in to be a success. Remember, I talked about my definition of success
is just being able to make progress. There's really nothing that hard about making progress.
What can get to be difficult and what can get to be hard is continued progress over a long period
of time. So if I say hard work, I'm not referring to
you stringing together a couple of days that were focused and that were, you know, you spent a lot
of time doing it. What I'm referring to, what makes things hard is consistency and longevity,
you know, to be able to do something for a long time. But most people, I think if they're being
honest, I think people that are wealthy or
people that are successful, a lot of times they want to talk about how hard they worked and they
want to tell you how strenuous it was for them. And it has to be the same way for you. And I can
just say flat out, there was nothing hard about becoming a multimillionaire. There was nothing
hard about squatting 1,080. There was nothing hard about bench pressing 854 pounds.
The two things that were difficult about it were just my mentality each and every day to do it.
But again, remember, the interest level is really high.
So that's what decreases the difficulty because I actually want to do it.
It's like RPE for life or anything, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's, yes.
Forcing yourself to do something you're not interested in.
And yeah, that's a slog.
But doing things that you are drawn toward, the perception of the effort is way lower, right?
It's strenuous, but it's also really fun and really rewarding because it's something I'm really interested in.
And it's something that I was able to achieve some levels of success by having some progress. So I'm getting kind of pats on the back for it,
you're getting momentum, you're moving forward. And so to talk yourself into getting to the gym,
like it's few and far between that I, things are different now, just because of my schedule and my
interest has shifted quite a bit. So I do have to sometimes talk myself into
going into the gym, but that's something that I never used to have to do. And when it came to
a lot of the other things that I've been through in my life, they haven't necessarily been hard.
The only thing that's made it hard is the mindset and also just the amount of time,
you know? So like somebody, you know, looking like a professional bodybuilder. Yeah, they had workouts that were challenging.
But if you were them, the workouts wouldn't be hard.
I've heard Joe Rogan talk about this before.
And like someone like Elon Musk would say the same thing or The Rock.
You know, you'd say, Rock, I don't understand.
How do you get so much shit done in a day or anybody that we put in high regard in that way?
And they would say, I don't know,
I just do it. But they have exponentially worked their way into that position through the process
of what we utilize in strength training, which is progressive overload. They progressively
got their body used to that stimulus of waking up at 4am and doing cardio and then eating some
breakfast and then going back to the gym and then training and then going and filming a movie and then going like you work your way into those
things. Now, if someone was to randomly follow, and this is a good perspective to have, you could
just go, let's say you just went to a soccer practice with somebody out of nowhere, but you
would get fucking crushed. And it doesn't matter who you are. It doesn't matter if you're Elon Musk, or if you're The Rock, you're going to get your ass
kicked at the soccer practice because you're not used to playing soccer. That would actually be
hard because you're also not interested in it probably. So that would be kind of difficult
to do. And you'd probably be sore for five, six days. But so any one of us, I think we
get kind of mesmerized by this level that we think people
reach, but we're all human. We're all so much similar than we give ourselves credit for.
And if I was just to play a pickup game of basketball with anybody that listens to this,
that's into basketball, I would get killed. I would be sore for three weeks. And some people
that don't train the way that I train or train the way that you train, if
they were to follow you around for the day, they would get their ass kicked.
And so I think having that perspective is really critical because I think it's easy
to kind of think, oh man, all these things are so hard.
I have to implement so many different things.
And it's like, no, just keep looking at the things that you're interested in.
Keep your eyes open. As you mentioned, there's so many different ways of making money. And I
am aware of some people that have made money just off of losing weight. They lost 50 pounds. They
lost a hundred pounds. Now they're super passionate. They're super excited and they
have researched some stuff. They've learned some stuff. They know how to communicate with other
people that also want to lose 50 pounds, you know, and whether it's wrong or right, they're like,
you know, writing programs for people and assisting people and getting people motivated
and fired up. And all that is there for any of us. So it's all just, it's all just sitting there.
And I don't think, you know, trying to make it seem like it has to be hard or has to be this
grind is a great way to think of it. Yeah. All great points. I guess a caveat that stands out to me, and I've spoken about this
stuff previously. So there's the time factor. And you actually did mention that, that I totally
agree with you that similar to the, I would say maybe the quote unquote hard workouts are the
ones that you don't really want to do, which is inevitable for any of us, no matter how into this
stuff you are.
Sometimes you do just kind of force yourself to get in there and do it. And then you're glad you
did it. I've always enjoyed having worked out. I have not enjoyed every workout. And sometimes
it's even just physical, right? Like I didn't get enough sleep. I'm feeling it. I don't want
to use that as an excuse though. I know I can still get a workout and I'm going to do it kind
of thing, but there's that time point. And if you don't enjoy your work and again, I can still get a work out and I'm going to do it kind of thing. But there's that time point. And if you don't enjoy your work, and again, I can speak personally, I'm sure you've experienced
this building businesses and making a lot of money is that you've had to do a lot of things
that you didn't particularly enjoy, right? Work-wise, like there's some of the work that
you did enjoy. Like, I don't know very many business owners, for example, who enjoy financial planning. You do it, but I
just don't know many who really love digging into cashflow projections or managing supply chains.
There are some people who like that. It's just usually not the creator of a business, right?
I don't particularly enjoy that stuff. I don't do it personally. I have somebody who does it,
but I have to be involved in it. And of course I'm involved and I do my best in being involved, but do I enjoy that? Not really. I enjoy doing stuff
like this. I enjoy writing my next book. I enjoy writing articles. I like creative marketing stuff.
That's what I enjoy. So with work though, I think that there is that point that if you can't find
something that allows you to enjoy your work most of the time, then it's going to be
hard to get very far, right? I mean, I think to a lot of the successful people I've known
in terms of making money and multimillionaire and beyond, and one for one, while there were times
they maybe didn't enjoy their work, especially if they were the one building the business and
businesses have ups and downs and whatever, and sometimes they had to do things they didn't enjoy their work, especially if they were the one building the business and businesses have
ups and downs and whatever. And sometimes they had to do things they didn't like doing or whatever,
but on the whole, they actually just enjoyed working. That seems to be just a common
denominator among those people. And I can speak to myself and I'm sure you've experienced this too,
because it takes a lot of time to build, let's say a multimillion dollar business. It just takes a
lot of time, period. And a lot of that business. It just takes a lot of time period.
And a lot of that's going to fall on you. And the time you're putting into that work,
you're saying yes to work and no to everything else you could be doing, right? It's like marrying somebody. You're saying yes to this person and no to everybody else. And so you need to be able
to do that. And if you don't feel strongly about the thing you're saying yes to,
you're always tempted by all the other things you could be doing. And that can be obnoxious.
I mean, I just don't know very many. I probably could think of somebody, but as far as particularly
entrepreneurs, I actually can't think of a single successful entrepreneur who became very successful
that way, who would say, nah, I didn't really like
anything I did and I didn't really like working, but I just had enough discipline to continue for
years and years and years to say no to friends and family and all the entertainment and distractions
and all the ways to have fun so I could just build this business.
One way I've looked at it personally, I agree with so much of what you said there is that I think it's harder to be broke. I think it's
harder to be fat. And those are all things I've experienced before. So when someone says, man,
it must be really hard to eat a carnivore diet. Now there's many choices with nutrition that you
can choose. You don't have to choose the way that I eat, but I primarily eat meat. I'll eat some vegetables, I'll eat some fruit, but that's primarily my diet. And that's
kind of what I chose. And again, kind of going back to interest level, that's what I'm interested
in. So that's not that hard for me to actually pursue or that for me to actually follow.
But I just think if you think about the opposite, you know, oh man, I wouldn't want to work,
you know, 14 hours every day, Monday through Monday.
That might be true that you wouldn't want to do that.
But if it's something that you're interested in, it makes it a lot easier.
And if you're working towards something, then you have things to look forward to because you might just kind of say, yeah, you know what?
I got to kind of do this between the ages of, you know, 25 and 35 for me to be able to turn into anything. And once I do that,
you know, maybe I can kind of shift into doing some different things or, you know, move my time
around a little bit. And that's exactly how it's worked out for me. I feel like, I mean, literally
the heavy lifting is already is done for me because I already did all that and I won't lift.
I already lifted the heaviest weights I'll ever lift.
And in a sense, when it comes to business and it comes to anything else, because I already
did put that work in, even though there'll be struggles, even though there'll be ups,
there'll be downs, there'll be all kinds of different things that will happen because
of how I prepared my mindset over the years.
And because of the skillset that I developed along with my wife, who runs the business with
me as well, everything from here on out will just be that much easier. So while it is very difficult
to not eat Oreo cookies in the middle of the night or difficult to not snack on ice cream,
or might be difficult to not watch movies or things like that for a period of
time. It's more difficult to feel like you're not moving forward. It's more difficult to be depressed
about yourself, to be heavier than you want to be, to have a body that you're not happy with.
I mean, you're always going to be a little unhappy with what you got. That's kind of some human
nature and something that we got to work through as human beings. But
at the same time, it's nice to know and it's reassuring to know like, okay, well, I'm not that
pumped about that or that happy about that, but at least I'm working on it. I am putting in an
effort and I can feel good and I can kind of hang my hat on that.
Yeah. And be able to tell yourself that honestly. It's easy to lie to other people, but it's much harder to lie to yourself.
And so when you say to yourself, I'm working on that, and you actually are working on that up to
your standards of, and we all have different standards. And I think that plays into this as
well. Maybe what I consider working on something you would consider not at all or vice versa or
whatever, but I think that
matters as well. But we've all experienced this personally and we've all seen other people,
I'm sure, go through this. And I mean, I've seen people go through it and then realize they were
just deluding themselves and actually get serious about it. But it's also a hard, and I totally
agree with what you're saying, it's much harder to just feel stuck and stagnant and not moving
toward goals. Because I think that happiness is kind of a fuzzy term, but at least the most happiness I've been
able to find if we're talking about this type of stuff is just making progress toward goals. And
getting there is never, I've already accepted that achieving things is great. And there's maybe some
satisfaction and some like post-coitus glow that comes with it, right? But it quickly great. And there's maybe some satisfaction and some like post-coitus glow
that comes with it, right? But it quickly fades. And where the excitement comes is getting there
and making that progress. And so to your point, when you can honestly say to yourself, oh no,
I am putting in an effort and it is an appropriate effort given what we're talking about. So let's
say that I can speak personally, right? So my primary focus is my work. That's where I put most of my time. And then after that,
we'll just be spending some time with my family. And then after that, for a while, I didn't have
any hobbies and I took up golf again, something that I've been interested in. I don't know. I
was interested in it when I was younger. I never really got into it too much, but I'm willing to give golf maybe three or four hours a week. And in those three or four hours a week, I'm making progress. It's not a lot of progress, but it's progress. And that feels actually just as satisfying as the progress, at least the feeling, maybe the intensity is higher in my work because I'm making progress towards something that's more meaningful. Even just the financial implications, I have a family and it's nice to know that I'm really
putting a future there for them, blah, blah, blah. But the quality of the experience I would
say is the same as the making progress in my work, even though I'm making a lot more progress there
and it means a lot more. So I totally agree with what you're saying. And I think it's just good
information for people to hear from someone who has, you're saying. And I think it's just good information for people to hear from someone
who has, you're speaking from firsthand experience here.
Kind of the last thing, I know that this conversation has been pretty,
like, I guess, serious, right? Like it's not comedic, but don't take yourself too seriously.
Don't take life too seriously. And just know that we all have choices. I mean,
I find it interesting on what my kids choose to do sometimes. And my kids will always choose to don't take life too seriously and and just know that we all have choices i mean you know i find
it interesting on what my kids choose to do sometimes and my kids will always choose to watch
like practical jokers tv show or they'll throw on like spongebob and my kids are you know 16 and 13
but they always pick something fun or funny to watch and i always find that to be really
interesting you know you can drive down the road you can pick a really sad song to listen to and, you know, bawl your eyes out. And sometimes that's a good
emotion to have. Or you can just pick something more upbeat and you can have a blast and you can
have a lot of fun. And I feel like every day we're faced with those choices and you can wake up and
you can just view life as being really fucking fun. That's why you get into this. And that's why
you are seeking out personal development,
because one of the most fun things in the world is to kick a lot of ass.
It doesn't always have to be about winning. It doesn't always have to be about progress.
But for the most part, when you feel like you're ahead of people, and maybe you're not even ahead
of people, but because you're making progress, you feel like you're getting one over on everybody.
And that's a good, that's a, that's my mindset anyway, because I'm kind of competitive that way,
but that's a good feeling for me to have. And so that's what I seek out. And when I find myself
getting too tense with stuff, I really lean into like walking, going to coffee shops,
listening to stuff that's fun or funny. I love what you said about golf.
And I think it's funny how we sometimes just say stuff and we don't even recognize how powerful it
is. But you said that you used to play golf and now you're back at it again. I think that is
really powerful for people. What did you used to do? If you don't know what you want to do now,
what did you used to do? And why don't you do it anymore?
Especially when you were young, just to your point of, I've read a fair amount about creativity
because it's something I'm interested in and it's relevant to my work. And a common theme,
if you read some kind of classic books on creativity, how to be more creative is to
this point of being able to adopt a more childlike, in a sense, attitude toward life.
And when there was a, you know And when we were younger, we would pursue
things and we all did this, that we would spend our time on things that just because we were
interested in it, we didn't have even a quote unquote goal in mind. It was something that we
were just exploring because it was fun to learn new things. And we were just learning about ourself
and learning about the world. So I think that you're right. In some ways, the things that you were interested in when you were younger, before you quote unquote learned how the world works, before you had to worry about making money or the kind of like the practical realities of the society we live in, that can warp, I think, a bit of our personalities. I mean, of course, it helps us develop ourselves.
It's not all negative, but it's very easy to lose that positive element of when we were
younger, when we were just like, hey, what's interesting to me?
I'm not worried about making money.
I'm not worried about being competitive yet per se.
I'm not trying to keep up with the Joneses and have a better car than my neighbors or
whatever kind of stupid shit bougie people get into. I just want to have some fun and I just want to feel excited and get more
engaged with life. And it's kind of hard to have fun when someone shuts your electricity off,
you know? So that's exactly, that's kind of the, you know, you just make sure some of those needs
are met and you kind of make sure you can make a little progress and, and have a little fun with
it. I love it. Well, uh, this was actually not what I planned on talking about. I had a little progress and have a little fun with it. I love it. Well, this was actually not what I
planned on talking about. I had a little simple outline about powerlifting, which I still would
like to talk about, but I think it would make sense to do that maybe in round two, if you're
up for it. Oh, absolutely. And you know, we can talk about powerlifting and nutrition is something
I'm really passionate about. When we talked to you on the show, we had a lot in common there. So
I think there's a lot of ground to cover for us. So this is just the first of hopefully more podcasts with you. Yeah. Yeah. I look forward
to it. And let's just wrap up with where people can find you, find your work. You have a podcast
as well. People, if they liked this discussion, they're probably going to like what you're doing
there. And if you want to tell people about anything else that is kind of new and exciting,
or you want them to know about. Yeah. You know, our podcast is doing great. I'd love for people to check that out. We talk about
fitness type stuff quite often. And so you can check that out. It's Mark Bell's Power Project.
I've been doing that for years, probably have done a few thousand episodes at this point.
It had a different name for a little while, but I really enjoy podcasting. A lot of fun.
I have that long format communication. You want to check out my Instagram. It's
at Mark Smiley Bell. Same thing on Twitter as well. I have two YouTube channels. One is Mark Bell's Super Training Gym.
The other one is just Mark Smelly Bell. You can check all those out. And then I have my products,
the Slingshot, supportive upper body device for bench press, pushups, dips, help get you out of
shoulder and elbow pain. And then in addition to that, we make elbow sleeves,
knee sleeves, and wrist wraps, and just anything to help get you out of pain for your training.
And that's at markbellslingshot.com. We're working on a supplement line, been messing with that for
quite some time, really excited about that. The name of the brand is called Within You.
Those products will be sold on markbellslingshot.com. Initially, we had a launch of a product called the Steak Shake, and that went really well.
And we're just re-upping that product.
It's a blend of protein.
It's collagen, whey, beef protein isolate.
And then we also threw in organ powder.
So there's liver, kidney, heart, spleen.
And we'll have that product probably back in stock probably
about two, three weeks. So I've been working hard to get all these things all together. And as you
know, it's a giant pain in the nutsack. Especially now with the post COVID supply chain fuck show.
Right. Absolutely.
So yeah, I know. I understand, but that's great. That's exciting. I like it. And thanks again for
taking the time and I look forward to the next one. We'll definitely follow it up. Thank you so much. Have a great rest of
your day. Thank you. All right. Well, that's it for this episode. I hope you enjoyed it and found
it interesting and helpful. And if you did, and you don't mind doing me a favor, please do leave
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or if you have questions really relating to anything that you think I could help you with,
definitely send me an email. That is the best way to get ahold of me, mikeatmustfullife.com.
And that's it. Thanks again for listening to this episode. And I hope to hear from you soon.