Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Scott Carney on “Hijacking” Stress to Overcome Fear and Push Your Limits
Episode Date: April 13, 2020Scott Carney is an interesting guy doing fascinating things. I first had him on the podcast to discuss his New York Times Bestseller What Doesn’t Kill Us, which took an investigative look at “hack...ing” our bodies and using the environment to stimulate our biology. Specifically, Scott went on a journey with biohacking legend Wim Hof, using special breathing techniques to push the limits of strength and endurance, submerging himself in ice water and climbing a freezing mountain with only a pair of shorts. Scott decided to take what he learned from Wim even further in his newest book, The Wedge, where he explores controlling mind and body to hijack stress and experience life in a whole new way. In this podcast, we discuss . . . - How too much comfort can actually be unhealthy - Developing unstoppable grit - Using kettlebell tossing to enter a flow state - Creating new neural symbols to change your experience of sensations - And so much more . . . Let’s dig in! 4:47 - What is The Wedge and why did you write it? 7:44 - Is there a spiritual or paranormal component to how you respond? 9:42 - Can you change the way your body instinctively reacts? 14:14 - How do you change the way your body instinctively reacts? 18:52 - Does controlling comfort enhance other aspects in your life? 27:34 - Can change your emotional response to danger? 37:24 - Are there other interesting techniques that you discuss in your book? 48:44 - What do you mean when you say there is a spiritual element to your practice? --- Mentioned on The Show: Scott’s Carney's New Book - The Wedge: https://www.scottcarney.com/the-wedge Scott Carney’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sgcarney/ Scott Carney’s Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/scottcarneyauthor/ Scott Carney’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/sgcarney Books by Mike Matthews: https://legionathletics.com/products/books/ --- 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.legionathletics.com/signup/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, fellow Earthlings. I'm Mike Matthews. This is Muscle Life. Welcome to a new episode.
And this one is an interview with Scott Carney, who is a neat guy who makes a living doing neat
things and then writing about them. So I first had Scott on the podcast some time ago to discuss
his New York Times bestselling book, What Doesn't Kill Us,
which was an investigation into the world of Wim Hof. You've probably heard of this guy. So he's
the guy who uses breathing techniques and cold exposure to do some extraordinary things, to
climb mountains in his underwear, for example, submerge himself into ice water for extended periods of time,
and even willingly exert control over his immune system.
And so Scott had set out, I believe if I remember correctly,
he said it was a commission from Playboy,
and he set out to debunk Wim Hof and show how this guy was just a charlatan and in the end
though Carney actually became an advocate of Wim Hof's and like a protege of his and spent years
practicing Wim's ways and eventually climbed a mountain with Wim in his underwear so that was
what doesn't kill us and then when that journey was over, Scott decided to take what he
had learned from that and to also explore some of the questions that that whole experience raised
for him. And that journey culminated in his newest book, which is called The Wedge. And in this book, Scott explores controlling your mind
and your body to hijack stress, the stress response, and use that to push your limits
and to experience life in a whole new way. And that's what we talk about in this podcast,
including why too much comfort is unhealthy and harmful. Scott's thoughts
on developing an unstoppable mindset, developing that level of grit and resilience. Scott talks
about a fascinating kettlebell tossing routine that he says is one of the best ways to enter a flow state. We talk about what that means.
We also talk about how you can create new neural symbols to change your experience
of different sensations and more. Now, before we get to the show, if you like what I'm doing here
on the podcast and elsewhere, and if you want to help me help more people get into the
best shape of their lives, please consider picking up one of my best selling health and fitness
books. I have bigger, leaner, stronger for men, thinner, leaner, stronger for women.
I have a flexible dieting cookbook called the shredded chef, as well as a 100% practical hands-on blueprint for personal
transformation called The Little Black Book of Workout Motivation. These books have sold well
over a million copies and have helped thousands of people build their best body ever. And you can
find them on all major online retailers like Amazon, Audible, iTunes, Kobo, and Google Play,
as well as in select Barnes & Noble stores. So again, that's Bigger Leaner Stronger for men,
Thinner Leaner Stronger for women, The Shredded Chef, and The Little Black Book of Workout
Motivation. Oh, and I should also mention that you can get any of my audio books for free when you sign up for an audible account
which is the perfect way to make those little pockets of downtime like commuting meal prepping
dog walking and cleaning a bit more interesting entertaining and productive and if you want to
take audible up on that offer and get one of my audiobooks for free,
just go to legionathletics.com slash audible and it'll forward you over and then you can
sign up for your account.
Scott Carney's back.
Hey, man.
Hey, how you doing?
Great.
It's been nice catching up offline.
It's been a couple of years.
Last time for people listening, we talked about Scott's previous book, What Doesn't Kill Us. That's it. Yeah. That was a couple of years last time for people listening, we talked about Scott's previous book, What Doesn't Kill Us.
That's it.
Yeah.
That was a couple of years ago.
And now he has a new book coming out called The Wedge.
So here we are.
Scott's an interesting dude doing interesting things.
So I thought it made sense to bring him back and talk about this new book and some of the
key concepts in it.
Yeah.
Thank you so much for having me on again.
It's such a weird time we're living in right now. And I'm really excited to sort of add my two cents into it with The Wedge.
You've been up to interesting things. I remember when I was talking to you after our previous
interview and I asked what's next for you and it was this project. It sounds out there, right?
So why this book and why the title? What is The Wedge?
So let me actually go back a little bit to the last book because they really do speak to each other.
So in What Doesn't Kill Us, that started when I met this sort of madman slash prophet named Wim Hof.
You've probably seen him around.
He is the guy who spends more time in ice water than anyone else on Earth.
You know, he has developed this method by putting yourself
under controlled stress. And with him, it's ice water and it's a breathing technique whereby he
gains control of the automatic functioning of his body. And initially, I went out to meet him
at his training center in Poland in 2011, when he was pretty much unknown on the global circuit.
And I was on a commission from Playboy magazine and I thought that what he was doing was gonna get people killed
and he was a charlatan guru with this fake method to put people in ice and
they were all gonna freeze to death so I wanted to go out there and debunk him as
this fake but instead what happened is I was the first real journalist to cover
him and in a matter of probably about six days, I went from
a complete skeptic to somebody who was climbing up mountains in my underwear in two degree Fahrenheit
weather and realizing that we have this internal strength that all of us can access if we expose
ourselves to uncomfortable conditions. And, you know, the culmination of that book is
me climbing up Mount Kilimanjaro after about six, seven years of studying his method with him in a
bathing suit. It's negative 30 degrees outside. You know, my skin is just bare to the environment.
And yet I persevere and I make it up this mountain. You know, it's been this epic journey.
That book was like a New York Times bestseller. And I get emails every day from people saying
that it changed their lives.
It made them realize that they could connect with the environment and change the way they work.
It was a wild ride.
But at the end of it, at the top of Kilimanjaro, I'm thinking, well, I can expose myself to ice water.
I can control my reactions to ice water.
I can do this breathing technique that sort of really gets me deep into sort of a breathing meditation.
But what else is there?
What can I reduce out of my experience with Wim Hof to further the field and apply a general
principle that affects everything? You know, I wanted something really big. And so I spent the
next three years exploring this concept called the wedge, which is the fundamental principle
of just about everything that you do. Anytime that your mind interacts
with your body, there's sort of a conversation between the stimulus, that hard thing that you're
up against, whatever that is, and your mind saying, oh, I can do this or I can't do this.
And how do we dig deep into that and create space between that stimulus and your response
so that you have choice in how you respond. And that's what the
wedge is all about. It makes me think of resilience to use kind of a trendy term or grit, right?
Being able to persevere despite hardship. I'm remembering you were telling me at the end of
our last interview that you also were kind of curious to explore if there was a possibility of,
I guess a term could be a spiritual component or maybe a
metanormal or paranormal component to all of this? Yeah, it's definitely not paranormal. It is
absolutely a part of the life process. Like this is not Prada coming down from heaven that you sort
of like qigong your way into some sort of superpower. It's an evolutionary power that
every sort of biological creature has to respond to environmental stress in different ways.
But there is a spiritual component to it as well.
You know, you mentioned grit.
And Americans fucking love grit.
Like the idea that you're in a parched desert and you're just going to fucking go across that desert and you're going to do it because you're going to express your will on that desert and push your way through.
Alexander the Great did it.
I want to do it too.
That's the thing that we love.
And push your way through it. Alexander the Great did it.
I want to do it too.
That's the thing that we love.
And while I think that there is a place for grit, and that is something that you absolutely
do want to explore in your body and your abilities, I am much, much, much more interested in the
idea of flow.
These are two actually diametrically opposed physical and mental processes.
And sensations.
Right.
It's like, I want to focus on the
sensations you feel and how you can use those to accentuate your experience in the environment,
accentuate your feelings of stress so that things happen naturally versus expressing your will on
something, which is ultimately often sort of self-destructive. Like, I mean, you were a big
weightlifter, right? And you know that if you lift something that's too big, you can do it, right?
You could do it at the expense of part of your body as you do it.
And that's the wrong way to do it, right?
Essentially, what you want to do is find ways to use those sensations, pay attention to
those sensations, and then push yourself into a new place because of it.
It's more about cooperation than it is about expressing your will and force.
So let's get down to specifics of, okay, how most people respond to normal, stressful situations, and how do they change that? And what are they trying to change it into according to what you
have discovered and what you talk about in the book?
One of the main concepts that I found by actually going to Stanford University and meeting with
Dr. Andrew Huberman, as well as some neuroscientists at Wayne State University.
The first question that I want to know is how do you experience stress in the first place?
What is stress? Because, you know, for me, something that might be stressful for you is
just a walk in the park. And I like to think about like the experience of like a soldier
who had just come back from Afghanistan, who had a really rough time in Afghanistan. It comes back
and watches a fireworks display in the States. And now this is a sort of a more stereotypical
soldier. I don't know if this is necessarily a real one, but let's use this concept for a second.
The fireworks display goes off and one person sitting in the audience loves it. And it's just
this ecstatic experience of community and watching these explosions.
And for the soldier who associates those noises with trauma, that could spike PTSD.
Now, the issue is not with the fireworks.
It's with the human response.
So how do we encode those responses in our body in the first place?
And how can we take advantage of them?
And it comes down to the nervous system.
And this is something that if you think about the brain, where it is sitting in like this ball of fluid in your skull, it can't sense the world
directly. All of those sensations that you have ever had in your life first come through your
peripheral nervous system. It comes from your fingers and your eyes and your nose and these
ways. And it transfers through chemical and physical pathways into your brain and gets
translated into sensation and emotion and whatnot.
And I had to really do a deep dive into this.
And it's this concept that I call neural symbols.
Now, when you experience something for the very first time, and I'm going to use the
example of ice water because I think people can really envision that very easily.
When you first jump into ice water, that cold hits your skin, right?
And it travels through all of your
skin pathways into your spinal cord and up into the lowest area of your brainstem, which is the
limbic system of your lizard brain. And your brain receives that signal as just data. It doesn't have
any meaning as it comes in. And there's a volume button. It's a loud signal. And I like to think
of the limbic system as something like a library of all other sensations that you've ever had. In charge of this library is
a limbic librarian. Let's imagine some sort of nerd sensing the world from this sort of data
port. The information comes in and the librarian looks at this signal of ice water and is like,
if you've never felt it before, if you've never been in ice water before, it looks at this thing
and is like, hey, that's a novel sensation.
It's really loud, but I have no idea what it means.
So the limbic librarian kicks that sensation up to another part of your nervous system
called the paralimbic system, which is only about a centimeter away.
And the paralimbic system picks this up and says, oh, well, what does this sensation mean?
The librarian kicked it to me.
And so it attaches your current
emotional state to that sensation and then kicks it back down to the librarian. And the librarian
says, cool, the current emotional state, which is in ice water, it's unmitigated horror, right?
You've never felt this before. It's just this terrible thing. And it says ice water means
unmitigated terror and horror. And it files it in a way in the limbic library, and that's how you respond to that ice
water. Now, here's the real magic with the neural symbols is that the next time you feel ice water,
you get into that thing, the limbic librarian does not kick it up to the paralimbic system.
It says, look, I've already experienced this. It pulls that book off the shelf,
and it pulls off also your previous emotional state off the shelf. And it says, okay, ice water, unmitigated terror, no need to do any more work.
And what this means is that every single one of us, no matter what we're feeling, is we're
feeling past emotions and sensations.
No matter what, you're looking at the past.
And what I'm trying to do with the wedge is create new neural symbols so that we take
control of that process and attach
whatever emotion we want to those sensations. Because ultimately, all of cognition emerges
first through this sensory system. Everything you've ever done, these are the bits and bytes,
like in a computer, of everything that you experience, including complex thought. Like,
if you're contemplating right now, it's like, why am I listening to this guy talk random stuff on a podcast right now? That was enabled because of
neural symbols, because all of the grammar, the very base of the human consciousness is built
on this process. How do you do that though? So somebody who has taken an ice cold shower before,
probably many people listening, I've been doing it for a while, not because there's anything really
in the way of health benefits. Even if I'm up there, I'll get up to like a few minutes in the
shower. Yeah, it's super cold water. I live in Virginia, winter. I can't pretend that that's
the same though as take research on how winter swimming can impact the immune system. Those are
people who are out there for a while though. It's a bit different than me taking a cold shower. I
just do it because it wakes me up in the morning. And I think there's maybe a little bit of
psychological value to doing something that I don't particularly want to do at seven
in the morning or whatever. And it's become a habit. And I wrote about it and I recorded a
podcast. So I'm sure a fair amount of people listening have tried cold exposure and never
really got used to it. I remember one of the guys who worked with me, he would hyperventilate.
That initial, that sheer kind of terror response seems to be almost hardwired.
But what you're saying is that it's not necessarily, and you can change that. And if you can
change that with something as raw as exposing your body to something that is very uncomfortable,
that you could do the same thing with a lot of other situations in your life that you instinctively
are just repulsed by,
but then you can learn how to turn that into, would you say, going back to the term flow,
which I assume you're using it in the Cheekson-Mahaly sense, or is that something that needs to be
clarified? It's very related to him. And I'm very glad that you've pronounced his name because I
can't do it because it's spelled crazy. I was like, huh, that's how it's pronounced. Yeah.
It's very similar to that. So with What Doesn't Kill Us, the amazing thing about that whole journey with Wim Hof is that I dunk myself
in ice water and I don't freeze. I actually get warmer. I actually hijack thermogenic properties
in the body and shift my heating response from shivering, which is the natural response, to
burning fat in water. You can actually master your biology and master the unconscious
biology that you have by simply relaxing in that environment and forcing your body to do something
else. So there are actually huge benefits. Even when you're doing your cold shower in Virginia,
there are huge benefits, even if it's just for a minute in that shower, because with the first
experience you have in it, that cold water goes on your back and it's horrible, right? It's like,
you tense up.
But what you're supposed to do, most people eventually will do is you relax in that environment.
And when you do that, you switch from your fight or flight responses, what they call
the sympathetic nervous system to the parasympathetic nervous system, which is your rest and digest.
And by doing that one switch, you actually alter your entire experience of being in there
where you go from what could be panic.
You mentioned this guy is hyperventilating to someone who is resilient to a stress that
is standard coming from that faucet.
And when you do that, you don't only master.
I mean, who cares if you can fucking stay in a cold bath for a while?
Like that doesn't matter.
What does matter is what that does and how that rewires your nervous system how it rewires the way you fundamentally respond to every stress that's out
there and ice water is one way and i love the ice water stuff i've done that for 10 years now but
you could also do this with heat you can do this with sex you could do this with sleep you can do
this with psychedelic experiences i mean you can really go out there and find anything that causes a sensation externally,
then modulate the way that sensation affects you,
because that is where you have choice.
You have choice in how you feel something.
And then when you have choice in how you feel something,
you also learn that you have control
over the automatic parts of your body
that you didn't think you had control over.
That's an interesting thought. I hadn't thought about it that way. And a couple of comments. One
is from the beginning of doing the cold shower routine, I always was pretty relaxed. And so
I only remember shivering a couple of times. And again, I live in Virginia. In the summer,
the water's not that cold, to be honest. But in the winter, it is cold. It is ice water. And now,
yes, I get in and I'm like,
for the first second, it's like, uh, uh, that's my response. But then I just kind of get into
my routine. I time it in the beginning. I don't time it now. I just do it until I actually don't
really feel the temperature of the water anymore. It just kind of feels like a shower. And then I'm
like, okay, that's enough. That makes me think of what you were saying with, if you can kind of
hijack the process that usually runs on automatic.
And that was kind of, I guess, my basic theory in the beginning when I looked into the research on,
okay, could this have explicit health benefits? I came away thinking, no, almost certainly not.
It's not enough exposure, but there could be psychological benefits. I didn't take it further.
I didn't do the breathing. I didn't try to like tap into anything deeper than just, hey, I can become comfortable being uncomfortable. I do think there's value in that because that does seem to be a transferable skill, which brings me to my next question for you is, so if I'm hearing you right, the idea that if through different methods, if you can learn to control a very fundamental process, again, that normally runs on automatic,
that that can then touch and enhance many different aspects of your life where you
experience things. Is the common denominator here discomfort in any form? So it's anything
that's powerful and sends a signal that's strong into your nervous system. And discomfort is one
that I think that many Americans just fundamentally don't have much control over, you know.
Or are very, very averse to, right? Like avoid at all costs.
Right. You know, we are so epically comfortable right now. If you think about where our ancestors
came from, you know, 300,000 years ago. You don't have to go that far back, man. Just go back a
couple hundred years. Totally. Ironically, take someone who is in the 50th percentile of income. They live better now than kings did just
a few hundred years ago, all things considered. Absolutely. But our nervous systems are
fundamentally the same as they were before. And here's the thing that's super important,
is if we lived in a time where there were constant variations in temperature and various stress
levels and, you know, actual threats, not like worrying about my 401k right now in an economic
downturn, but I'm worried that that knight is going to chop my head off or that lion is going
to come and chase me down. We're dealing with those threats that we have now are declining 401k
with that archaic body. So that means you look at your 401k dropping, you release cortisol,
you release adrenaline, you release adrenaline,
you release your fight or flight response,
but you're sitting at your desk.
Watching a big lion go down.
Right. And what does that mean?
Like, yeah, that's a threat, but it's like a remote threat. Whereas our bodies were actually meant to respond.
When that lion ran at you,
you don't look at the graph of your declining life to respond, right?
You fucking run or fight the lion or you probably get eaten, let's be honest.
But your body was primed to respond. And now when we sit and we watch that
declining line and we release that cortisol, we release that other stuff, that energy that that
produces turns inward and wreaks havoc on your body. And this is why the Wim Hof Method and
actually all of these techniques that I'm looking at have this unexpected benefit, not only for
anxiety, but actually autoimmune illnesses, things like
arthritis and Crohn's disease, lupus and anything else along those lines, because a lot of those
things are caused by sort of a haywire relationship between the environment and your body. So we're
giving you correct, or at least more correct stimulus so that you have that physical output
that you can take control of these automatic things. You know, one thing that we often talk about in this world about human health, right,
is that there's two pillars of human health.
There's the way you move your body and the stuff that you put in your body.
And there's this general idea out there that if you eat the right things and you move the right ways,
you're going to get to some combination of good health.
What I propose in What Doesn't Kill Us and more so in The Wedge
is that there's this third pillar that we just don't fucking pay attention to, which is the
environment, the way stress affects you, and the way that you also have to respond to that. Because
you could have the best six pack in the world, but if you can't go outside and handle a small
temperature change, then you're pretty fucked up, right? Actually. I used to give one of the guys
who works with me shit about that. So when I started doing the cold showers, he's this big,
strong dude, right? A big beard, but he is such a pussy with cold weather. I mean, if it's under
70 degrees, he's coming as if it's going to be a blizzard. He comes in with the full jacket and
sweatpants, right? And so I was giving him shit over and over, like to do the little cold shower thing with me. He tried one time and he came to work late that day. He was like, dude,
it was awful. I sat in there for 20 minutes after with just blistering hot water. Something's wrong
here, dude. This is not natural. You are made for more than this. Come on, man. I mean, that's the
scary thing about comfort. He's that kind of person. He likes to be comfortable. I mean,
we all do. Even a fucking caveman wants to be comfortable. If you drop somebody from 300,000 years ago,
brought them into our world, they'll be like, yeah, I love the thermostat. Fuck you guys.
They're just going to sit by the air conditioner all summer and sit by the heater all winter. And
that's going to be it. Their life is made. Because no one wants to do that stuff,
but we need to. And that's the thing. And that's but we need to and that's the thing and that's why
we try to improve ourselves that's why we try to go out there and do things there's a whole type
of training out there that you can get into so i want to talk about kettlebells with you guys
because i think that's something that's a very physical thing now obviously i go into a lot of
different places in the book but i found this kettlebell workout that to me
spoke to something a lot deeper than just getting good muscles, right?
I don't know what could be deeper than that, but I'm listening.
I've seen your photos. I know your six packs have six packs, but go with me here. So I am not a mega
super athlete, but I was walking out of a lab at Stanford talking about the way neural symbols
will get wired together.
And he tried to put me into a virtual reality simulator where I was swimming with virtual
sharks to trigger my fear response so that I could try to take control of fear. The problem
is that I'm not actually scared of virtual sharks. So I was like swimming with these things. I'm like,
oh yeah, there's a great white coming at me and I don't care. So I left the Huberman lab a little
bit let down because I wanted to be a little scared
because you need to have a stress that you believe in
in order to have something to control
because otherwise, what are you pressing up against?
Diving in a cage might be a bit freaky
and I'm not an easily spooked person,
but I could imagine that being a bit disconcerting.
Oh yeah, sure.
That's a real shark.
I was with first troll shark.
If that didn't work, you could have hopped in a cage and see how that hit your heart rate.
I 100% agree with you. But, you know, I didn't have a cage available. So I was walking out of
Huberman's lab and I get this phone call. Actually, it was a text message from my friend,
Tony, who was like, dude, you got to go meet my friend, Michael Castro Giovanni,
who can put you into an instantaneous flow state with kettlebells. And when I got that message, I was like, that sounds lame.
Because honestly, I'm not a kettlebell guy.
I don't even really like gyms.
There's things that I love doing.
I love hiking.
I love biking.
But like, I'm not a weightlifter or anything like that.
And I saw kettlebells.
I was like, totally turned off by it.
But I had this feeling that I might as well see what he's talking about.
So I meet Michael.
So I go up from Palo Alto to San Francisco and I meet him on this hill. And Michael is like a gorilla, right? Like he is this just really big
dude. You know, if he was angry at you, you'd be scared. You know, I'm not built that way.
And he's standing across from me with a kettlebell, which if you think about it,
when you're facing another dude and he's got essentially a weapon in his hand, a cannonball,
this thing that could fucking kill you. And he says, I'm going to throw this at you. It should spark a little bit of fear
in you. It should. That is the correct response because he's like, I'm going to throw it at you.
You're going to catch it and you're going to throw it back.
His one weird trick. I love it.
Right. And so there's this sense of danger, even though I know he doesn't actually want to kill me
and he takes it between his legs. You know, it goes back. We're looking at each other's eyes. And this is sort of like, you know,
somewhat of an aggressive stance between people. He lifts it up, goes up to like chest height with
it, puts it back between his legs, and he does this three times. And on the third time, you go
from looking at each other's eyes to the bell, and it flies through the air. And I'm, you know,
my asshole fucking puckers up. And I'm like, oh, here it comes. And I grab the kettlebell.
It goes between my legs and I then pass it back.
And all of a sudden, this potentially confrontational moment turns from something that's sort of
fear-based into a dance between two people.
Because when you're throwing a piece of iron between two people, no one can be the winner,
right?
Usually, we're competitive against each
other. We try to best people. But if you try to win with kettlebells, it's going to land on
someone's foot. It's going to break someone's knee. It's going to be a bad thing. So instead,
you're both mutually visually tethered to this kettlebell as it flies through space.
And because there is this threat, there's always going to be a threat of that kettlebell hurting
you. You maintain absolute focus on that object. And because you're in focus onto a threat, there's always going to be a threat of that kettlebell hurting you. You maintain absolute focus on that object. And because you're in focus onto a threat, you enter into a flow
state where both of your movements are coordinated automatic because of that threat. And it is
honestly a magical and almost spiritual experience. And when Michael Castor Giovanni throws this
kettlebell, he says to you, I love you. He says to you, you throw this kettlebell with love. You don't throw it with competitiveness, betterness,
anything like that, because you can infuse those physical motions and those sensations of fear.
You can give it whatever emotional valiance you want on top of it. Remember these neural symbols
that I was talking about before? The neural symbol that's initially created is fear of being in confrontation to then being in cooperation with
somebody. And it becomes a way to develop trust with another human. It is an amazing exercise.
And from there is the idea that if you've broken that negative kind of automatic response by doing
something like this that allows you to associate a different
emotional response to physical danger. I'm assuming this is not something that you're saying,
oh, you need to do this every day to maintain, or is that what you're saying? Are you saying if you
do it just even one time, it can allow you to kind of break through. And then in other situations
where you might perceive some sort of danger that
because you had this experience, you're now able to respond to it in a more positive or productive
way than you would otherwise? Sure. Absolutely. I do throw kettlebells regularly with people.
And I find that it's a great way to build physical communication between people that
fosters a trust between anyone. Probably could be a good workout too.
Are you doing kettlebell swings essentially, but you're throwing them?
You're throwing like three or 4,000 pounds in like 15 minutes.
If you got a 50 pound bell, that is not easy work.
Which makes it more fun.
I mean, that's more fun than just doing swings by yourself.
So much more fun, right?
And then you start freestyling.
Like it's not just like a two-handed pass with your leg.
You're throwing with one hand.
You're going behind your back. Google kettlebell partner passing, and you'll see it's almost like
a dance. It's crazy to think of it that way because we don't usually think of workouts as
dances. That sounds sort of like less cool in a way, but I tell you, it makes it so much more
fun, so much more fulfilling. And Michael, who's been doing this for years and years and years,
says he finds the most interesting kettlebell partner passing when it's between couples, when it's two people
who've been dating for a long time or married or whatever.
And he says, I can see their whole relationship play out in how they throw those kettlebells.
And honestly, it's hard to do it with your partner because all of these unspoken things,
you know, think about any relationship that you've ever been in.
And there's areas that you don't want to talk about because you know it's just
not worth it you just don't want to like talk about this whole side of things
whatever that might be and then all of a sudden you're literally throwing
something that could break their foot and your trust issues come out in that
moment and then as you continue with the practice you learn to both trust each
other again without ever using any words. It is amazing.
Get fit and functional bodies and relationships. That's a good twofer. This reminds me of something
you were just talking about a little bit ago, that there was a time when we were exposed to
mortal danger multiple times per day. That was normal living. And we evolved in that type of environment. And now our modern world is
drastically different, but evolution moves very slowly. So we're still working with this old
hardware and old software that has been calibrated to this time in the past and certainly has not
caught up yet. So do you think it's just healthy to expose ourselves to take calculated risks
almost or expose ourselves to danger without
doing it recklessly because then we just die and that would be kind of silly.
Right. Yeah. You're not chasing death, but you are chasing that sort of limit where something
goes from stress to danger. And you want to be able to push yourself right into that place where
something could cause you damage so that you have the maximum range of
physical, emotional movement. You know, as you said, you have to be responsible. But if we are
just so comfortable all the time, we are constantly narrowing the band of where we can be comfortable,
right? If you think about temperature, the 1890s in your house, it was 55 degrees, you know,
with your wood-burning stove or whatever. Now the average
temperature is 72 degrees in a house. I've given my wife shit when I've dropped the temperature to
68 or 69. It's so cool. It's so cool. I've brought this point. I was like, you know,
it's really not. She's 105 pounds or something and I'm 200 pounds. So there's a difference there,
but you're completely right in that if comfort is taken
too far, it actually becomes unhealthy, right?
If it's pursued too much to the exclusion of anything else, especially discomfort, it
is unhealthy, right?
And what is comfort anyway?
Is it a thing like you have comfortable or is it really just a response to uncomfortable,
right?
I'm not even sure there is something that is like absolute homeostasis where you're
comfortable everywhere.
Are you in a flotation tank?
Is that the ideal human state where everything is taken care of by a perfect environment?
That's not human anymore.
The calories are just fed into your mouth because you have to taste them still.
You don't want it to just go right into your blood because that's extra comfort.
You know, you got to get the fat and the sugar and the salt.
The whole point of being alive is to explore and act in the
environment with as much range as possible and as needed. Like, honestly, not everyone needs to
climb up Kilimanjaro in their bathing suit, right? That's a little extreme. But you do want to be
able to say, look, if I need to go do something, I can do it. And the problem with comfort is that
as you proceed to some sort of Aristotelian ideal
of comfort, you narrow your range constantly. So, we want to be able to push back against those
borders. It's just like with weightlifting. If you never do any physical exercise, you're going to
get weak. That is the nature of the human body to be like, okay, I'm going to shed muscle because I
don't need it, I don't use it. And then you've narrowed your range of what you can do. Now,
apply that concept to absolutely every sensation you can experience. And now you understand what I'm talking about
with the wedge. This just occurs to me that there's a bigger picture here too, of contributing
some good genetic material to evolution. And the reason I say this is because, you know,
you look at again, modernity and how easy it is to survive and how many people are alive now who would not be alive
just even a hundred years ago. And that's good in many ways, but there's not as much evolutionary
pressure now as there once was. And that's good in some ways and it's bad in other ways.
And by doing this, what you're talking about, I feel like you can take some pride in that you are willingly
applying that pressure to yourself. Maybe that's going to be part of your legacy that is going to
live beyond you, you know? Well, I don't think that's quite how evolution works. Like if I never
work out and I reproduce or I work out all the time and I reproduce, that shouldn't affect the
genetic profile of the child. It could affect the epigenetic profile, which is the sort of
environmental changes. That would be my response to that though, is it starts somewhere, right?
And correct me if I'm wrong, but what I'm saying is if you have a population of people of declining
fortitude, let's just say, and they keep on reproducing and making themselves more and
more comfortable and weaker and weaker and developing more and more autoimmune issues,
that in time, some of these changes become more and more permanent and more and more autoimmune issues that in time, some of these changes become more and more
permanent and more and more fixed. I don't really want to go down this route because if you really
push that logic, you end up in Nazi eugenics programs. Ironically, the eugenics programs
started here and the Nazis just copied what we were doing. That's absolutely true. Eugenics is
an interesting subject in that you take the Nazi stigma out of it and the concept makes perfect
sense. Now, how it was
implemented, it's starting here in the United States. That's where it goes wonky. I mean,
nature has its own eugenics. Even women being biologically programmed toward hypergamy, like,
yes, that's a eugenic function. I have some thoughts on this, but I think what's more
important, eugenics or evolution, these are things that take place over multiple lifetimes, right?
That has to do with the reproduction, transmission of genes, and then the fitness of the genes in the environment. What I'm saying
is that you have genes right now that you inherited from a legacy of 300,000 years.
And this sort of comfort addiction that we have is really just a short run. And we're really
talking like 100 years, and it's been really bad in the last 100 years. In the last 2,000 years,
it has slowed. And thousands of years before that, we were actually really robust and really could exist in many environments. But what I'm saying
is that you can use a stimulus to unlock your evolutionary resilience that you have already.
We're not really talking about what you're going to pass to future generations. Hopefully,
it's habits. Hopefully, it's ways to interact with the environment and ways to use your sensations
to navigate the world in a way that isn't so complacent. And that's really what I want to do. We're not really talking about
altering genetic lines because when you're talking about that level of thing, you're talking about
altering mutation profiles, which is not really something that I get into at all.
Makes sense. And I think your pitch is a lot more enticing. It's just something I've actually
thought about in other contexts. And I'm like like this actually kind of reminds me of this and my mind goes to there's
also a bigger picture but I totally get what you're saying
hey before we continue if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and
elsewhere and if you want to help me help more people get into the best shape
of their lives
please do consider picking up one of my best selling health and fitness books my most popular
ones are bigger leaner stronger for men thinner leaner stronger for women my flexible dieting
cookbook the shredded chef and my 100 practical hands-on blueprint for personal transformation, the little black book of
workout motivation. Now these books have sold well over 1 million copies and have helped thousands
of people build their best body ever. And you can find them anywhere online where you can buy books
like Amazon, Audible, iTunes, Kobo, and Google Play, as well as in select Barnes & Noble stores.
So again, that is Bigger, Leaner, Stronger for Men, Thinner, Leaner, Stronger for Women,
The Shredded Chef, and The Little Black Book of Workout Motivation. Oh, and one other thing is
you can get any one of those audio books 100% free when you sign up for an Audible account.
And that's a great way to make those
pockets of downtime, like commuting, meal prepping, and cleaning more interesting,
entertaining, and productive. Now, if you want to take Audible up on that offer and get one of my
audio books for free, just go to legionathletics.com slash Audible and sign up for your account.
naturesmalletics.com slash audible and sign up for your account.
Are there any other interesting techniques that you talk about in the book? So like the kettlebell,
the partner swinging, that's great because that's something that people can do right away and they can get a good workout from it and get an experience of this flow state in overcoming
this fear response to danger. Is there another example? Well, throughout the book, I'm looking at ways to generate a larger library of neural symbols that we have by putting ourselves in stimulus. So I
look at roughly 10 different sensations that you can create to change your literal experience of
the world. Then you apply a new emotional value to it. So at one point, I go into float tanks and I
see how float tanks, by radically reducing the stimulus from the external world, you can turn to look inwards.
And it turns out that is an amazing thing to do to counter anxiety, depression, and PTSD.
Like the psychological benefits are amazing.
I also end up learning how to stay in a sauna for a crazy amount of time.
I did this five-hour sauna in Latvia with my wife and two
shamans. They call them pirtniks, which is, you know, think about like the druids in England,
but the Latvian version of that. And these people are so fascinating because you're in this sauna
and right as that point where I feel claustrophobic, I want to get out of that room,
like it's just too intense for me, they take cold water and they just pour it on my feet.
And it brings me right below my red line so that I can stay in longer. And over the course of
four or five hours, they're doing these like weird shamanic rituals where they're adding
different sensations into my sensation profile by giving me a food, which has a very interesting
flavor profile, sort of like a bread made out of pine needles, which is super weird taste, right? But then they rub pine needles on my body as I'm in this very hot area. And I start to experience
synesthesia, which is the blending of senses so that I smell sound and I feel taste. And it's this
totally bizarre experience. But what they're trying to do is confuse the way that I sense
the environment to create entirely new ground-up
neural symbols. And we get out of it and like the world is brighter and fresher and cleaner
than I had ever experienced it before. At the end of the book, I go down to Peru. Maybe you've heard
of ayahuasca. I do three ceremonies of ayahuasca with a shaman where the ceremony isn't just about
the psychedelic that you're taking, but it's about creating space and sounds, smells, and touches,
and all of these things at once,
so that you can facilitate a really profound psychological and physiological change.
You know, the whole journey with the wedge,
it sort of cracks open a way to think about your body in space in entirely different ways.
And I guess the human experience in entirely
different ways. Let's just talk about the general types of stimuli. I have a pretty
narrow range of stimuli. My life is pretty boring. That's funny when people ask me,
they're like, oh, you can never do any vlogging or behind the scenes of Mike's life. I'm like,
it's not very interesting, guys. Like I wake up, I go in my sauna, I read, I go and work out,
I go and work all day for, I don't know, however many hours. I go home. I eat some food. I eat the same food every day because it's
healthy in the way that I want to eat. Put my kids to bed. Sometimes I go to sleep. Rinse,
repeat. Like that's it. It's a healthy routine, but it just makes me think of how
narrow that experience is. And a lot of people have their own version of that.
This is the exact opposite of that. Yeah. I'm a big opposite of that yeah i'm a big fan of routines
and i'm a big fan of breaking routines you know you have to have routines if you're going to be
a high producer minimally right and i do a lot of the same things every day but i also will find
moments to have radically different experiences so that i can taste a lot of the world like one
of the things i talk about in the book a lot is our nervous systems, ultimately anxiety, stress, these sort of negative feelings that we have boil down to evolution. It boils down to the fundamental
stress point of evolution, which is death, right? You know, you have the fight or flight response
because you're fighting or flighting something that will kill you. And that turns into a sensation
that you experience as a human, right? Those experiences are supposed to move you to action.
But ultimately, everything you ever feel, the thing that forges those binary neural symbols is that pressure of death, you know,
whether it's fear or even something like love. Because love, connecting with somebody who is
very close to you, fosters community, right? It fosters something that helps you survive
and thrive in the world. In this way, like everything out there comes down to that
experience of being alive, the attempt to prolong the ability to have experiences in the world, to push death a little bit further out.
And one of the really interesting insights that I've had for a long time is that death is the most important teacher we will ever have.
Because no matter what, none of us are going to live forever.
Like death is freaking coming.
And I will promise you that if life were a song, it ends in a minor key because death is going to suck. And if we know,
and if we've truly inhabited the knowledge that we have lost this game of life, that no matter what,
we're coming up against that hard limit and it's fucking over, then what does that say about what
you should be doing right now? Should you try to insulate yourself? Should you try to like protect yourself so that moment doesn't come? Or do you say, well, I know it's
coming. I know I've lost. So that gives me freedom to have as many experiences as I can, to cram as
many experiences as I can into my life so that when that comes, I will at least say that I have
done much. I have tried things. I have experienced things because we know at the end of the day,
it's a lost cause. It's going to happen. And whatever happens after you die,
we don't really have any say in what that is. Like, I don't know, heaven, hell, Buddhist,
rebirth, whatever. That is not for us to decide. That is for whatever the fundamental mechanics
of the universe are. But we have this moment, this life right now to take risks, to go out there and
try to become more rather than becoming less.
I love it. And it speaks to one of the things that I don't like about, I would say,
the fitness industry or fitness culture. And what turned me off initially,
almost made me not want to get into the industry and just stick with publishing. I want to do a publishing company. And that is the aesthetic obsession with the body,
the kind of narcissistic side of it, right? Of wanting to look a certain way, but taking it too
far where it just becomes unhealthy. But then there's also just the
obsession over caring for the body. And as opposed to using it more as a tool that we can experience
life with and that we can use fitness to help us better experience life. But if we get too
wrapped up with taking care of the tool and forget to live life. Like for example, if somebody is restricting
their social life because they're just too afraid of eating extra calories, let's say that it's not
because they have some kind of competition coming up, although this would be the type of person to
do that, but there's no real good reason for it. They're just worried about something related to
their workouts or related to their abs or whatever that that doesn't resonate with me at all.
And that's not something that I would recommend. It's just not a mindset. It's not a healthy
mindset. Amelia Earhart, I think it was, she quipped that she always would think with her
stick forward, right? So the metaphor of like, you know, the throttle is always forward and
we're always moving ahead and we're willing to take risks and we're willing
to figure out things and overcome obstacles and change plans. And I totally agree with that
mentality and that approach to living. Yeah. We want to be flexible. We want to be able to respond
to situations. We want to be able to thrive in situations. And at the end of the day, if we fail
at whatever we're doing, we can pick ourselves back up and we need to know that failure is part of it. Like not everything
we do can work out. Amelia Earhart's a great example. She died, right? But she's also a legend
because of what she did in her life. And I'd rather be a legend than somebody who had an extra
10 years on the end of his life. Other people may make different decisions and that's totally fine.
But you also said something about the six-pack life, right? I'm going to get my core to look
as awesome as possible. And like that is somehow a value that is important in and of itself. And
I think that if you're working out for your six-pack, then that's the fucking problem.
Like no one fucking needs a six-pack. If you do want a six-pack, you want your abs to be able to
let you do things that you couldn't do normally. Like I want to be able to go on big hikes.
I want to have adventures.
I want to go do things.
And what I look like shouldn't be the thing that affects the experiences.
You know, think about working out.
Like if you're working out just for the aesthetics of the working out, what you're doing is essentially saying, I don't like my body right now and I want it to look better.
And you actually hardwire with neural symbols, anxiety into your
workout. So the workout becomes work rather than fun, rather than something you enjoy doing.
Yeah, absolutely. And that can apply to many brass rings that we can try to reach for, right?
The same type of pathology can afflict people with money and chasing status and material things.
I'll say that when you get a six pack for the first time,
it's pretty cool. You look in the mirror and you're like, oh, that's cool. I like that.
There is some instinctive positive response to it, but it's also just a matter of doing it,
which kind of comes back to more of the frame of reference that you were talking about, which is
it's a goal and it doesn't really have to mean much of anything necessarily. I'd say you probably
even agree that some of the
wild things that you've done in the scheme of things, you did them because you wanted to do
them. And believe it or not, I did them without a six pack. Life can be lived without a six pack.
I did it. I did it. But yes, it's one of those, just my personal experience.
I've seen your photos. I've seen your photos. You do it the first time and you like it. I'm
not going to lie. Trust me.
What you're going to notice, and it's cool to hear from people.
I hear from people all the time who go through this experience where they get in really good
shape for the first time and they do like the aesthetic of it.
That's probably half of it, right?
But then the other half really becomes obvious to them that it's not so much about having
the six pack.
It's more, let's take for example, that a lower level of body fat, unless it's taken
too far, is generally healthier than a high level of body fat unless it's taken too far is
generally healthier than a high level there's a range obviously if you're a guy and you're in the
range where you can start seeing your abs you're in a healthy range and if you came from a very
unhealthy place before it's not just what you see in the mirror right they're like shit i have more
energy i have more self-confidence because let's face it like i look better now and people treat
me differently.
Again, and I hear from people all the time, that's one of those kind of hidden benefits of,
let's say, getting a six pack or getting in really good shape is it does positively impact your life in many other ways. For me, I would say maybe it's also I'm just used to the way I look,
but yeah, sure. There's still a point of vanity of why I'm in the gym lifting weights. I value a lot of the other stuff, at least as much, if not more.
And it is more to the point of what you're saying about how fitness allows me to more
engage with the various people in my life that matter to me and the activities that
matter to me and to be able to more richly experience the experiences that I do have,
even though right now I'm very much in a routine. But anyway, I'm just sticking up for us six pack full.
That's a group that definitely needs defense these days.
Us people who are still watching our calories.
And maybe I just need to break free of it all and stop caring.
No, we need to put you on the pot belly.
The fit to fat to fit thing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I don't think I would make it too far, dude. I'd be like fit to maybe a little bit fatter and then like go back to fit.
Absolutely. Fitness is important. I've never been unfit. And I think that there is a balance. I just
think living in balance is the most important thing overall. And it's how you interact in the
world, which I care about much less than aesthetics. I understand that.
My last question for you is you had mentioned there was a spiritual element to all of this.
What does that mean?
So it's realizing that one, we're not as important as we think we are.
When you get into a flow state, when you're really connected, when I got up to the top
of Mount Kilimanjaro, my realization was that, and I know it sounds cheesy.
So just like, forgive me a little bit of this cheesiness is that I thought was that, and I know it sounds cheesy, so just like forgive me
a little bit of this cheesiness, is that I thought to myself, I am not on the mountain. I am the
mountain. Like a Zen cone kind of thing. Absolutely. And I was living that. And even as I said it,
I was like, I'm going to think this is cheesy later. But at the moment I'm on this thing and
I realized that the way I'd gotten up to this top, this very difficult physical feet, remember
negative 30 and my nipples are out in the world, right?
I'm doing a physical feet, which is crazy.
And I get up there and I realized that I didn't get up there by fighting the sensations, by
fighting the mountain.
I got up there by letting those sensations flow through me, by letting myself connect
to that environment.
And I realized at the top, Alan Watts, I begin the book with a quote where he
asks this very, very big question, which is, who would you be without the sun? Who would you be
without that large ball of exothermic reactions happening, you know, way off in space? Who would
you be without that? And if you take that not as a silly statement, but actually as a serious
question, the sun has allowed everything to occur
around you. It allowed the earth to form. It allowed history to happen. It provided energy
for the plants. It allowed you to exist in the first place. And to think that we are at all
separate from those processes of nature is absolute hubris because we are the products
of our own personal genetics. We are the products of our own personal genetics. We are the products of our own personal histories. We are
the sum of every interaction with every other person. When I speak with you on this podcast,
I'm a very different person than who I speak with my wife on this afternoon or with my mother or
with my best friend. We are our contexts. Who we are is about being part of what is essentially a
super organism of this planet. And when you really think about that,
it's a profoundly moving thing.
You realize that my own personal triumphs and whatever,
I can experience the world as me, but I am also you.
Whether you like it or not, you have listened to me
and those words have had some sort of impact on you.
Whether it is, I hate this guy, he's stupid,
or this guy's amazing and I believe everything he says.
Somewhere between that, you cannot deny that me saying something has had some sort of impact on
you. It has changed you in some fundamental way, positive, negative, doesn't matter. It's the fact
that we are all connected and everything you do also affects the people around you. And that
trickles out as sort of like waves in a pond where people are throwing rocks into this pond.
Every action is a rock and those ripples go out everywhere.
And that's going to echo into the ages, though, too.
That comes back to the point of what I was bringing up.
And this maybe is a word that's unpalatable to people.
But then if you have an awareness of that, there's almost a responsibility that comes
with that in terms of how you act and realizing that the ramifications are a lot more extensive than maybe how the
average person thinks about their life and their existence.
Yes.
And you know what the key, the core interface between all of those things is your sensations.
Because I know that I'm experiencing you and we are all sort of like one thing, but the
litmus, the definition of our borders of our consciousness are our sensations of that consciousness, of those stress points.
And as we learn to expand our stress levels, how we respond to the environment, how we respond to things outside of us, it actually expands who we are as people.
It makes us bigger, makes our consciousness more, you could say, important, more impactful, more human.
And that also then affects the collective
consciousness as well to one small degree. And that matters. People don't vote. Say,
what does one vote matter? No, it does matter because collectively, if you have enough people
to think that way, oh, that matters now. If you think the other way, then that matters. So you
need to do your part. It doesn't have to be voting or giving money to politicians. Same thing. One of
the guys who works with me, he's a fan of Bernie Sanders, right? And he voted for him and he's a busy guy.
So he mostly is just working, but he really likes what Bernie's doing. And I asked like,
have you ever given money to him? No. That's the number one thing politicians need. They need money,
right? And he's like, oh, well, you know, what does my $50 matter? I'm like, no, it absolutely
matters because how many other people think that way? And then he misses out on, who knows, it could be tens of millions of dollars of funding.
So it's more a matter of acting in the way that you know is right and contributing to
this collective movement in this case.
And I do agree with what you're saying about us being all connected in ways that we still
don't understand.
It's interesting to study the history of mass movements.
And there might be something to the more people taking certain
actions. It could be invisible. It could be unspoken. But the more people are doing things
or thinking in certain ways, the more contagious that behavior becomes, whether good or bad. So
my comments on agreeing with what you're saying, I think it's interesting to think about.
Absolutely. Well, thank you so much for having me on. This has been a lot of fun. And I suggest
that anyone who is out there is interested in learning more. Obviously, you can get a sample chapter of The Wedge, the first
chapter on my website, scottcarney.com, C-A-R-N-E-Y. And I'm on all the other social media
places. But yeah, go download the first chapter and see if you think that I'm crazy or not,
because actually I need to know. And when does the book come out?
April 13th. Well, Scott, hey, thanks for taking the time. This is a fascinating discussion. I was looking forward to it and you did not disappoint. Great. Well,
thank you so much for having me on. Next book, I'll be back. I like it.
All right. Well, that's it for today's episode. I hope you found it interesting and helpful.
And if you did and you don't mind doing me a favor, could you please leave a quick review for the podcast on iTunes or wherever you are listening from?
Because those reviews not only convince people that they should check out the show, they also increase the search visibility and help more people find their way to me and to the podcast and learn how to build their best body ever as well. And of course,
if you want to be notified when the next episode goes live, then simply subscribe to the podcast
and whatever app you're using to listen, and you will not miss out on any of the new stuff that I
have coming. And last, if you didn't like something about the show, then definitely shoot me an email at mike at muscleforlife.com and share your thoughts.
Let me know how you think I could do this better.
I read every email myself, and I'm always looking for constructive feedback.
All right.
Thanks again for listening to this episode, and I hope to hear from you soon.