The Sevan Podcast - #22 - Josh Goldstein
Episode Date: April 1, 2021The Sevan Podcast EP22 Josh Goldstein & Brian Friend The Sevan Podcast is sponsored by http://www.barbelljobs.com Follow us on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/therealsevanpodcast/ Sevan's Stuff:... https://www.instagram.com/sevanmatossian/?hl=en https://app.sugarwod.com/marketplace/3-playing-brothers Support the show Partners: https://cahormones.com/ - CODE "SEVAN" FOR FREE CONSULTATION https://www.paperstcoffee.com/ - THE COFFEE I DRINK! https://asrx.com/collections/the-real... - OUR TSHIRTS ... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Nice.
Brian, what is the first thing you notice about this wonderful guest, Joshua Goldstein?
Goldstein or Goldstein?
Goldstein.
Well, he's very handsome. Don't lie. Don don't lie what's the first thing you notice don't
lie say it i'm wondering when the last time he cut his hair was damn you're nowhere near where
i'm at i'm like this is the first time i've ever interviewed someone who's not on a an athletic
event with their shirt off well i think pauladino did us a service last week and put one on.
Typically.
I don't think he would wear one either.
Yeah,
totally.
Do you go by far or Josh?
Josh is fine.
Do you know Paul Saladino,
Josh?
Do you know of his work?
Yeah,
I know him.
I've,
I've never met him,
but I've,
you know,
listened to his podcasts and read his material and stuff.
Are you a fan? Some stuff. Yeah. Honestly, him but um i've uh you know listened to his podcasts and read his material and stuff are you
a fan uh some stuff yeah honestly there's not a lot of people out there from where i'm at right
now there's like no one that i follow oh you mean like their exact protocol well not exactly that
it's it's like um i don's, there's no one who's currently
creating content and material that I like look to really for the guidance or information at this
point. Okay. Strictly going off of, uh, well, so there, there's, there's someone who's dead,
uh i mean well so there there's there's someone who's dead who i read his book um but like the the carnivore community as it stands right now doesn't really interest me wow this is awesome
josh uh josh how do you is josh okay or joshua yeah josh is fine um how old are you i'm 30
and you live in i just moved to salt lake city i lived in los angeles for
my entire life before this holy cow okay i didn't know you made that jump is that on your instagram
that you jumped to salt lake city yeah oh sorry i i scoured it back yesterday all the way to
september 26 2012 where your first post was bacon my first post was bacon you have you have two um
serious loves in your life you are it appears to be very very very close with your mom yeah and
with meat yeah well you're forgetting my dog there's a there's a constant theme well yeah
as you get as as it progresses there's a, there's a lot of women, um,
a lot of raw, dead, raw animals.
And, um, up here with me is Brian Friend and Brian and I are, um, friends, acquaintances.
Would you say we're friends, Brian?
Sure.
Okay.
Friends.
Um, we worked together in a, in a previous lifetime of mine that Brian is still in action, and I consider him one of the best analysts ever to analyze.
Not best, not one of, the best ever analyst of the CrossFit Games.
He's just here to, I don't know why he's here.
He's like my blanket.
Anytime I feel insecure, yeah, yeah, yeah.
You just want to see his face, don't you?
Yes, yes.
I mean, he grows a nice beard so
it's good to keep him around i'm a little embarrassed i trimmed it this morning i should
just let it go raw like you should have how do you determine how did you determine this morning
whether you were going to wear your hair up or down um i don't know i pretty much always keep
my hair down unless i need it out of the way.
Um, but if I'm going to be visible anywhere, I always want my hair down because I have really
amazing hair. Yeah. You really do have amazing hair. Did you always know you had amazing hair
because it wasn't in the pictures of you as a young man, your hair is shorter.
Well, so when I was a very young kid, I had like this big curly Jufro thing and I just always hated it. So I knew it was amazing,
but I didn't think it was amazing. Um, so I buzzed my hair for most of high school and college
because when it was even, you know, like that long, I just couldn't control any of it. Um,
so I just, I, uh, I dampened my power to end up the deal with it.
Isn't it amazing what happens to us as we get older?
Honestly, I think that more and more every day.
Here you have this amazing hair as a kid.
Let this be known to anyone.
Most people don't even realize it as young as you do,
but so many things that you don't like as a kid you will love as an adult.
Just be chill, man. Just be chill. Yeah. So I think you could relate to this. My entire life,
the thing I was the most self-conscious of was my nose. Wow. It was, it's front and center. And,
and I think like compared to the rest of my face, it was bigger as a child. I think I've
probably grown into it a little bit, but that was the thing that everyone made fun of me for and i just hated it hated it always until turn sideways
let me see yours yeah but you have really good shape thank you have you have you ever broken
that thing no but i probably have it all fucked like i have deviated septum and stuff from
you know just being a dumb kid and
i don't know because like it's kind of like oh yeah yeah yeah i got some i i jumped into a pool
and hit the bottom and broke mine so i don't breathe so well out of one of my nostrils
yeah my my left nostril is like not much going on in there um how old were you when you realized
you had a big nose do you remember how old you were?
No, I was probably like in elementary school though.
And did it take someone else to tell you or did you spot it first?
That I don't remember.
Cause I didn't know until I was in high school.
I was probably like a sophomore and then the kids made sure that I knew.
I was like, wait, wait, what's going on here?
Where are these no jokes coming from?
And then I had, what did you say?
I said, kids will never let you forget any of that stuff no and and it's and um and you know like i told my mom i was like you know in high school i was like hey mom i want to get a nose job and my mom
said the best thing she could have ever said to me oh yeah sure no problem when you're like in
your late 20s i'll pay for it and i was like okay cool and then by the time I'm in my late 20s, I'm like, what?
Yeah, who is that idiot?
My dad did the same thing to me with a motorcycle. When I was 12, I wanted a motorcycle, and he said, oh, when you're 16, I'll get you one.
And when I was 16, I asked for it again.
He goes, oh, yeah, yeah, sorry, when you're 20, I'll get you one.
And then eventually I just outgrew it.
That's what I tell my kids too.
yeah that's what I think about my kids too um one of the things I find when I go to your Instagram account and there's something about it that I'm that I'm attracted to
there's something that I'm like oh this is all cool oh this all resonates with me even stuff
that like it's I mean there's nothing on there that's so harsh just to say I don't agree with
it but for lack of a better words even stuff that you're doing that I maybe don't agree with it, but for lack of a better words, even stuff that you're doing that I maybe don't agree with, it all resonates with me. I'm like, oh, this is cool.
Like you ate that chicken, and maybe I wouldn't do that, but maybe I would want to do that. I'm
honest with myself saying I want to do that. I want to experiment with myself like that, but
I'm not, and I'm glad he is, and I'm glad I get to watch him experiment. But I saw this video that you made going back and you talked about faith.
And you, I think you started by saying that you talked about faith in the non and not in the
religious sense. And I think that there's something that maybe where you and I align
that a lot of people don't understand. And maybe we don't understand it either,
but we seem more like Forrest Gump.
We just put our head down and run in one direction.
And how we do that is we have this kind of faith.
And I've never really understood it, but it always feels like I'm –
even on the – everything in the whole world around me is shaking.
Everything that I'm standing on seems firm.
And maybe it's – and I can't explain it other than it feels like I'm standing on seems firm and maybe it's something, and I can't explain it other than
it feels like I'm always just on my path running in the direction I'm supposed to be running.
Yeah. I mean, that's something that this last year has kind of really solidified for me is
how strong of, you know, whether you want to use faith or optimism or whatever it is, is I just,
I always feel like, not that I can do no wrong, but that if I, if I put, you know, my effort
forward and I lead with truth and I, and I have faith that things will work out that, you know,
whatever happens will happen. Um, but that I'm not worried about bad things happening.
Um, we, we're in a place right now where people spend a lot of time worrying about all kinds of things.
And then they're, they're, they're arguing with all these people they've never met before.
And there's, it's a very high anxiety type of time, right?
I think, I think on the scope of anxiety, depression, we have more people on the anxiety
side.
And I've just, I've really been able to calm down over the last few years.
And that has allowed me to feel more comfortable speaking my mind and be myself.
And it's, it really manifests itself as this like calm confidence because now I'm not,
I used to worry about what I said, especially online, because when you have people getting mad at you or whatever that is, and now I just don't care because it's not, it
doesn't, it's not consequential to me because it would be worse for me to not speak the truth or
what I believe. Two questions. How did that, what are the origins of being not comfortable
saying certain things online? And then the second part is,
do you know what clicked the transition
to where you were like,
okay, I'm gonna let the floodgates open?
Well, I mean, it probably starts from
before the online world was that relevant.
You know, probably going back to being a kid
and being ridiculed for things, right?
When if you express yourself and people make fun
of you, you're less likely to express yourself. And so starting in like middle school, when kind
of that type of shift of, of children kind of starts to move into that kind of preteen teen
phase, kids start to make fun of each other a lot more. Um, and I got that a lot. Uh, high school
was, you know, I, it was weird because high school was
kind of like amazing and also miserable at the same time. I had a lot of amazing times and it
also was like very messed up for lack of a better term. And so I stopped doing, I stopped being
myself because I just didn't want to deal with all of the hassle.
And it probably wasn't until I got to college that I kind of started to come into my own a
little bit and feel a little bit more confident in who I was and the power that I have. But it
still was a slow journey through there. And things really kind of took off for me like the last year or two.
Um, and that kind of shifted with my diet played a huge part in that. And then also experimenting
with, um, various plant medicines. I saw that, um, mushrooms, right?
Yeah. Mostly mushrooms. Anything else besides mushrooms? I mean,
ayahuasca, um, hop a, uh, some LSD, but I don't know. I, in, in, uh, college, I kind of like,
that's kind of when I had most of my LSD experience and it was mostly just kind of like
fun. It wasn't really purposeful stuff. Um, so it's only been the last few years that all of
that has had purpose. What's the difference between, um,
using plant medicine for fun as opposed to the way you use it now?
Well, I mean, when you use something for fun, you, you put this thing inside of you and then
you expect it to do something to you. And then, but it doesn't require a lot of attentiveness.
You just, you're kind of like, you know, it's like when you drink, you're not thinking,
just assuming you're trying to get drunk, right? You're not kind of thinking like, okay,
so I'm going to do some of this. And then this is kind of what I want to start thinking and
feeling. And this is what I want to start getting into. You just put it in you and then you kind of,
you're along for the ride. When you do
something with intent, like you're very much in the driver's seat, right? It might be powering
the engine, but you're kind of, at least you're, you're trying to guide it somewhere and you're
being very aware of what's happening. So before I do anything now, I, it's not like I, I'm not
trying to dictate what's going to happen because I think people get in this, they get in this, this, they fall in this hole where they try to set an expectation. They're like, okay, now I'm going to uncover this specific thing about me. No, no, no, it doesn't work like that. But you kind of set like a general intention, and you just sort of be present. And it requires a certain stillness.
And, you know, being,
having a certain level of anxiety like doesn't really go along with that.
You kind of have to let go a bit. So you would think like, okay,
if I'm in the driver's seat, like, how do I let go?
And it very much is like, okay, I'm in the driver's seat,
but like also I'm letting Jesus take the wheel. It's like we're both kind of driving this thing together.
And that has allowed me to get to some amazing places.
In my limited experience with doing mushrooms and LSD and things like that,
and it's been more than 20 years,
you just kind of connected this dot for me.
It basically, things seem, seem some things for lack of a
better word seem to move much much much faster and what basically what i heard you just say is
is be to utilize mushrooms or ayahuasca is this is basically to get the most out of it is to
meditate while you're on it and what do i by meditate, since that's such a generic term is to be present, and to be either watching your
thoughts or watching the outside world, but to be present. So even if your mind's noisy,
to be aware of it, if your mind's quiet, be aware of it, but not to not to react.
Yeah, people try, again, people try to force things, right? So they either get in a place
where, you know, people talk like bad trips, okay, they're starting to fear what it is that they're thinking about, they're trying to avoid
things. And if you start running away from something, then it starts, you know, it starts
coming after you, instead of just facing it head on. And, you know, most people, you know, they,
when they, they anticipate some type of event in their life, and it's okay, it's never as bad as
you like think it was going to be. But if never actually do the thing then you never come to that realization
right you just are left with this oh like okay when i get on the stage and have to do the public
speaking it's going to be terrible if you're always like a minute off of getting on the stage
the amount of anxiety you have in your life would just you know it would crumble
eventually you get on the stage and you go, okay, this is fine.
I wonder if you could do it the other way too, if you could just go on a minute early
and not have to deal with that last minute.
Well, I remember being in school and like, when you want to give a presentation, it's
like, just let me go first.
I don't, just let me get over with.
When you did, when you got on the podcast this morning, when did you decide that you weren't going
to wear a shirt?
Or did you not decide?
Sorry, I'm making a presupposition that it was a decision.
So my natural state is me not wearing a shirt, right?
So I have to decide to wear a shirt to do something.
I used to talk about this when I lived in Venice, but I would always have a shirt with me, and I called it my Whole Foods shirt because Whole Foods is the only place I went to that required me to wear a shirt because –
Oh, it's the costume you needed to get in there.
Yeah, because, like, I mean, it's always warm.
I'm walking my dog around town.
I go to the gym.
You know, people, they wait until they're, like, one round into the workout to rip their shirt off.
It's like, why are you even wearing a shirt to start the workout come on um an excuse to rest an excuse
to rest of course well i could just sit there and rest anyways right and and you know another part
of it also could be that it's kind of like when i go to the beach when i was in college i go to
the beach i wouldn't take my shirt off until i had a beer and so because then i would like stop
being insecure about it so it's kind of could be the same way about the workout. You know, you're 50 burpees in and you
don't have time to be insecure shirt off. Right. Maybe, I don't know. Another hypothesis.
You ever consider not shopping at Whole Foods because they required you to wear a shirt?
Uh, yes, but I don't know how else to feed myself at the moment. Um, I'm, I'm currently trying to,
a house to feed myself at the moment. I'm currently trying to learn what I can about farming and hunting and seeing if I can go more of that route so I don't have to go into stores.
Actually, here in Utah. Yeah, was that part of the reason you moved to Utah?
Yeah. I mean, there's a lot of reasons why I moved here. One, I just kind of wanted a
completely different lifestyle surrounded by different people, um, with different values and, um, different landscape. I just wanted to get out
of like really city type life. Um, and so there's also a girl there, you chased a girl there.
I didn't. Okay. I didn't. Um, I'm so like, I'm at the place where I'm like,
didn't. Um, I'm so like, I'm at the place where I'm like, I'm, I'm bringing everything to me in a sense. Um, I just, I need to be in the right environment. So I needed to get out of LA.
Um, I have some amazing friends here who, who own a gym. And so I kinda, I came here specifically
because of their, them and their community. Um, but I also really wanted to get into this. I feel like I'm in this
kind of transitional phase where I need to learn a bunch of things before I kind of want to like
settle down and start a family and stuff. Um, so, so coming here, I, it's really easy to expose
myself to, um, like the farming practices. And, uh, I have a bunch of friends here who hunt and
stuff. So I'm kind of trying to get into that, those things.
That, you know, that experience that you had with the shirt and whole foods,
I think a lot of people are having that experience.
I know I'm having that experience now with a, with mask.
You know, I don't feel like I need to wear a mask in my life,
but in this place that I live, the store is required to wear a mask.
They were usually I can walk around the store without being harassed,
but they will not let me check out unless I put a mask on.
So I have to wrestle with the same, same thought of, am I going to shop in this store or am I
going to try to find food a different way? I quit shopping at Whole Foods because they
made me wear a mask. I mean, like, I just can't, I just, I mean, it's not even myself. I want to
go everywhere with my kids and they make my kids wear a mask and I just can't do it on my kids. I
mean, I'm willing to take one for the team, but there's no fucking way I'm putting them on my
kids. Sorry, Josh, I interrupted. No worries. So what's, what's really interesting about like
this whole mask thing is that, so here in Salt Lake City, um, you know, I just moved here and
so I've been going to Target and Ikea and Walmart. Um, and I have just name dropping now. He's just
showing off Brian. He's just showing off. Yeah, real just showing off, Brian. He's just showing off.
Yeah, real hard. So I've been going to these stores, right? Home Depot. And every single
one of these stores says everyone must wear a mask. It says must or it says required.
And I walk in there with no mask and I'm the only person in there with no mask and no one says
anything and I go check out and nothing happens.
So when you realize that, like what's happening in the world, in our country, whatever, is people just they're following fear.
If everyone just decided not to do the thing, we would be out of this thing tomorrow.
And Brian does that, too, by the way.
He's got some stories of going in without the mask but then they
get them at the checkout counter and they're like we're not gonna sell you this day seven employees
surrounding the register i was at this morning that said sir if you don't have a mask we will
not check you out they weren't saying you can't be in our store without a mask they just refused
to process my order until i put a mask and they didn't have a self-checkout not at this store
no yeah i mean that's it's just such a weird thing because i'm walking around and until I put a mask on. And they didn't have a self-checkout? Not at this store. No.
Yeah, I mean, it's just such a weird thing because I'm walking around and I'm the only one,
like the single, I've never seen another person in store
not wearing one.
And people look at me and they're just kind of like
trying to figure out what's going on,
but nothing happens.
And I just go about living my life.
So everyone wears them thinking that they have to, I mean, the sign says
they do, but like signs say all kinds, like everyone goes over the speed limit every single
day. So clearly people are okay with not following rules, but there's something about like they fear
the shame of other people. But anyone who will look at me for not wearing a mask and think that
I could not care less about
what they think. Um, and actually there's a, there's like a farm front store here that I go,
uh, to get raw milk and they have like amazing meat and organs and stuff. And you know,
their eggs are unwashed and all their animals are unvaccinated and everything. And I walk in there
without a mask and there's sometimes, cause the people that kind of go to a place like that are
a little different. Um, but the people working there were no a lot different a lot
different a lot different but but the people working are still wearing their mask but when
when all the mask customers leave they pull it down because they see that i'm fine not wearing
it and then when i when i go to i'll go to events like my kid's tennis tournament or the skate park or wherever, and everyone will be masked. And when I mean everyone, like 75 to 95% of the people, but my wife and I and my kids won't be masked. And then usually the people who come over to us, yeah, you're right, Josh, they'll pull down their mask. They're like, oh, this is a mass free zone. Yeah, you kind of set the bar. You kind of attract those people who are like, hey.
Josh, when I was, I had finished attending college
and I was in Santa Barbara and I was at a party one night
and I lost my shoes or I left there drunk and didn't have my shoes.
And I didn't wear shoes for two years.
I was barefoot for two years.
And I even took a trip all the way down to Cabo San Lucas.
And after two years of not wearing shoes, I mean, even before then, I came to the same realization that you did.
People would say, why aren't you wearing shoes?
And I would say, that's not the question.
You put your shoes on.
Why did you put your shoes on?
And then they have this whole litany of arguments, right?
They would say, well, what if I step on something sharp?
So I would show them, hey, look, I can put a tack in the bottom of my foot.
Or what if I step on something hot?
I would step on a cigarette and show them, like, dude, I'm two years in.
Like, my sole is perfect.
It looks like the most beautiful leather-soled shoe you'd ever seen in your life.
And it's a tough one for, for people to get their head
wrapped around because they have such a wall against it. They think you have to wear a shirt,
a shirt. They think you have to wear shoes because of some, something that they've made up. And then
when I do put on shoes, when I did put on shoes after two years, I was like, Whoa, these are
amazing. I really appreciate them. They were like armor, right? I felt like a knight, but now the
same thing is happening with masks. People are putting on the mask and then in retrospect telling the story why they have to have it.
And it's like, it's tough.
It's tough to see happen to our brethren, you know, our fellow man.
our brethren, you know, our fellow man. It's, you know, the masks are just like a perfect metaphor for kind of whatever our modern world is, where there's so many things that people have no
idea. They have, they do not realize at all that they do only because they're told that they have
to do this thing. There's so many things about like our daily life and how we view work and laws and all these different kind of
things where like people have this like legitimate like slave mentality would go, oh, these are the
rules. I have to follow them. But where do these rules come from, right? Like how many of these
rules actually are real? Are they enforced? And people just do them because this is what we've
always done. This is what we do. You know, it's like,
I think about going back like pre nine 11, right. When you travel and you go to the airport and,
you know, you, you could just go up right to the gate, like without having a ticket, right. Like
before you had to take your shoes off, like all, all the shoe bomber stuff, like,
and with the, and with the liquids, like there was just a certain thing. And now we just,
we just normalized to, Oh yeah, this is how it is now. But people who were around from like before that,
they go, Oh yeah, it wasn't always like this, but I just,
I feel so bad for all these kids who are going to grow up and they're going to
basically spend their entire lives in masks and they're not going to know
anything different. And I just, the world that,
that like is going to create,
like think about the type of anxiety and
and lack of like human connection that those people are going to have through all of their
developmental years and then those are going to be the people in our society like they're going
to be working jobs and they're going to be holding political office they're going to be voting and
all that kind of stuff but when you talk about it like it's a foregone conclusion like i'm trying to
think about ways that we can prevent that from becoming the reality.
Well, I mean, here's the thing. I'm certainly not doing that and I'm trying to get other people to not do it either. But there are people who carry Purell in their purse before Corona was even a thing. So we might not be doing that. But those people will exist. And we will have to
coexist with them. That's, that's a great way of putting it. You know, you, I can't remember when
it was recently, you put up a post this whole year, I've had this thought, you're alluded to
with your speed limit example of how inconsistent people are, right? They'll have like, I'm going to
do this, this and this and this. But in this scenario, I'm willing to put all those things
aside because it's convenient not to. And you put something up there that I
just can't wrap my head around how, how husbands or fathers are like allowing this to happen where
they won't let them into be with their wives that are giving birth. Like, why are people just
accepting that as okay? Well, I mean, I think of, you know, I'm, I'm single, but I think about how I would feel,
you know, if I had a wife and then if I had a kid on the way and it's like, I'm breaking down
every single one of those doors yet, you're not going to stop me from being with my pregnant wife.
Right. I mean, granted, I'm not taking myself or my wife or my kids to the doctor just about ever.
Um, so I was going to say, don't worry, you're going to be having a home birth. Yeah, no doubt about that. But, but like the people that go like, Oh yeah,
they wouldn't let my husband. And it's like, what do you mean they didn't let him, who stopped him?
Did he just be like, Oh, I guess I can't go in. Or did he like, I mean, I'm talking about like
fighting through people and pushing the door down and be like, I'm going to be in here and you can't tell me otherwise. But, but people are just weak. People don't have the, the, the strength or
the confidence to, to put their foot down and be like, this is unacceptable.
Once you think clearly too, and I know that's really self-serving. My wife and I went to
birthing class and it was three hours once a week for like 13 weeks. And we were going to do the whole doctor birth. We wanted it to be in a hospital. We knew that was the safest way, blah, blah, blah.
But six weeks in, I realized, oh shit, the people who have babies in hospitals are really the brave
ones. They're really the safest place to have your baby. Once you start thinking about each and every
step that you do in the hospital, your baby is much safer with a good midwife at home than in the hospital.
The hospital is a treacherous place to navigate
because there are a lot of people there with a lot of different agendas.
And I don't mean that in a conspiracy theory way.
I just mean that like they have jobs to do
and they want to execute on their jobs, right?
And it's not a – those people who have babies in hospitals
are the brave ones not the people who do home births home births is kind of a i mean it's it's
it's smooth it's smooth what do you think about this statement i thought this popped in my head
before we got on i i saw an article that they're basically saying that all the that the masks that
they've been the hundred million masks they've given kids in school in Quebec are now being recalled because they're toxic and the transit workers were given toxic masks.
And I think I even posted it.
I said anything you do besides changing what you eat to affect your health is going to have unexpected consequences.
Yeah. I mean, I don't, I know that's a little bit of a strong statement, but
no, but I mean, it's completely accurate though. Like I literally don't believe in
anything besides nutrition and the natural elements as far as health goes. Right. So
that might be like sun exposure, you know, barefoot grounding, whatever it is and food.
Like, I don't think that anything else actually provides any benefit whatsoever. And if it provides a benefit, then the
negative consequences are much worse than whatever potential temporary benefit is.
So the problem becomes when the government mandates and supplies masks, vaccines, any type of,
you know, pharmaceutical, anything like that. If there's any single thing wrong with them whatsoever,
then they are fully responsible for that.
But they're not held to that though.
So that's the thing about-
They're like irresponsible people
because the government is just people.
So they're like people who just get a pass.
Yeah, I mean, that's the thing is like,
obviously government is just made up of people
and we know how stupid people are.
But the thing is government, they're not held to their – they're not held liable.
So the thing about – I mean, I think especially what we've seen over this last year, like a major corporation and the government aren't really like separate entities, right?
They're very intertwined.
Money does that.
Money does that money does that,
of course. And but so like, if a if a if a corporation or if a company does something wrong, or you know, their their customers be like, Oh, I you've, you sold us this thing. And it had
they did this bad thing. So now we're not going to buy your thing anymore. Right? Like you can now
like sue them, you can do all different kinds of things. The government isn't held liable to anyone
because they're the ones that regulate themselves it's like oh we did an internal
investigation we didn't find anything right it's just there's no there's no checks and balances
because they they hold all of the all of the cards so if like they have to not mandate things
otherwise everything that they mandate,
it has to have a consequence.
And so if they aren't held liable
for those consequences,
then they're just like,
what's to stop them from just doing anything?
And it's not that they have,
they're not, it's not that
the whole thing about like conspiracy
is not that like there's a bunch of people in a room
like rubbing their hands together.
It's like, how can we just ruin everyone's life?
They think that they're doing the right thing. I agree 100%. I wish there was some evil mastermind. I think we're dealing
with pure benevolent stupidity. Yeah. I mean, most people are just trying to make a buck and
be like, okay, but this will help people. But obviously that's not how things work. And so if they're not held liable for it,
then how are we as, as citizens? What are we supposed to do? I mean, the only thing I can
say is like, I just reject what you like require. So you know, whether it's something in the mask,
or something, the vaccine, like, I just I say, No, I don't know what else to do besides just
refuse to do what they tell me to do.
My day is filled with thinking of funny metaphors and images of what's going on.
And this one image that keeps coming to me is that the government is standing on the edge of a cliff, people who are scared, and telling them, hey, if you jump, we guarantee you'll live another two minutes.
With no – not telling them that, hey, after you're fucking gonna hit the ground or i picture our doctors and our scientists seeing
fish jump out of the water but being so my optic at their vision that they're like oh my god the
lake's dry it's like no these are fish swimming upstream that jumped out of the water as they
swim upstream but there there's this view, there's this lack of...
Foresight.
Yeah, I don't want to use any cheesy hippie words
because I know it turns people off,
but there's this lack of this holistic view.
There's lack of...
Everyone sitting in a living room across from their grandma
concerned she's going to die with no concern about the entire planet.
No concern about their kids.
This view is going to get us in a lot of trouble it's um i i i of course will i do not have a problem with people taking the vaccine there's no way i
will take the vaccine even if i have to like you know like if they do vaccine passports i just
won't go anywhere i'll be chill i'm i'm happy in Santa Cruz, California in the sun and the beach.
Was there any – so you're born in Los Angeles, California.
Yeah.
Both your mom, your dad is Steven Spielberg.
And that one picture you posted of him, it's crazy.
Do you know what I'm talking about?
I think he's in a tuxedo.
He looks just like Steven Spielberg.
It's nuts.
By the way, I get that too if I grow my hair out a little bit.
You can tell your dad.
Does your dad get that?
No.
I mean, maybe he would have when he was younger, but he just gets Albert Einstein.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I can see that in his later.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
He had a mustache for like a good 20 years before Corona sort of made him bring back the beard, which I was really happy about.
And so both your parents are Jewish.
No, my mom's not Jewish.
Your mom is not Jewish.
No.
Did you get the talk when you were a kid, hey, the world's out to get Jews.
You're going to have to hide that.
Or did you get any of that from your parents?
No, I didn't get anything about, I don't know, heritage, background. My family is very much
just like me, my mom, my dad. So my mom's Persian. She was born in Iran. She comes from
the lineage of the royal family. Oh, I can see that in her. She looks like, I can see that in her. Yeah. She looks like a movie family. Um, so, but I can see that in her. She looks like I can see that in her. Yeah.
She looks like a movie star, something like that. Um, but yeah, it's funny cause growing up in LA,
like there's tons of Jews and there's tons of Persians in LA. And I actually didn't really
know much of either growing up. I grew up in Manhattan beach. Um, so it's not as much as
like if you're in the Beverlyly hills area or whatever um but i
never really had much connection to my my background um i didn't have a bar mitzvah um
so i didn't really like think about being jewish or being persian i just thought of being me
and that was about it it is a pretty i believe it's a pretty common theme for
and who might say this so if i'm wrong i apologize but i believe it's a pretty common theme for, and who am I to say this? So if I'm wrong, I apologize.
But I believe it's a pretty common theme for Jewish kids and black kids to be told by their parents at a very young age that, hey, this is a fucking mean world out here.
And there's going to be people who hate you because you're a Jew.
And there's going to be people who hate you because you're black.
And now that I have kids of my own, the insanity, and now that we're in this COVID response crisis, and that's what I call it, a COVID response crisis, because COVID is not the crisis.
It's the response that's created the crisis.
But it's the insanity of telling a kid that and planting those seeds into a child that he has nothing, that he has no ability to control and thinking that will help him and not realizing what that will germinate into.
And it's also very, very race-based.
You're basically demanding your kid be racist when you say that to view the world with different race and color.
Both participants.
And I'm sure other people do it too, but I'm just familiar with – I just know a lot of Jews and a lot of black people who have told me that story.
know a lot of Jews and a lot of black people who've told me that story. And, uh, I'm actually happy to hear your parents did it. Cause I just thought that that was just common, especially for,
for Los Angeles. But my feeling is, is that you should tell kids about the dangers of the world
that they can control, right? So you're three-year-olds by the stove and you're like,
Hey, careful, your hair could catch on fire or, Hey, don't pull the dog's tail, it could bite you.
But you don't tell them, hey, if there's a nuclear bomb drops,
this is what we're going to do.
Like, what?
And I don't believe in instilling fear in kids.
So it's good to hear that you didn't have that.
Yeah, I mean, talking about the state of anxiety
that our modern culture sort of builds,
that's just doing more of it,
right? Like if you think someone's out to get you, then your ability to be responsible and,
you know, self-sufficient is just going to be hindered from a young age where
you are now looking to the external world to kind of dictate what your success and happiness is.
That's why, I mean, I talk about, you know,
always bring a personal responsibility with all of this is that like, look, like there are things
out there that are going to affect you. Like you can take the best care of your health. And if you
live in a super polluted city, like you're going to have problems, but you can still eat the best
diet you can, right? Like there's still so many things in your control. And if you only focus on
the things that are out of your control, you'll never get anywhere. Um, this reminded me of this. What if our parents would have told us
like at the age of two, Hey, Sevan, Hey Josh, just so you know, in another 10 years, you're
going to have a giant nose and people are going to make fun of you. Uh, no, it's okay. You can
save that. Well, I'd rather just find out on my own. I don't need to be stressed for the next 10
years. When I get to high school, everyone's going to be talking about my nose.
Yeah, that'd be a nightmare.
Josh, you mentioned like the ideal diet or something like that.
What's in your current state?
What does an ideal diet look like for you?
So as I've kind of gone through, you know, I was eating paleo like 10 years ago,
whatever, when I started doing CrossFit and, um, kind of everything I did that makes just too much sense to me.
It's like, okay, there are foods that we were supposed to eat that we evolved eating.
And those are going to be the foods that we're most adept to handling.
So my kind of nutrition focus on that really started there.
And that made certain changes over the years, but it kind of still kind of hovered around like, okay, I'm eating foods that are going to be perhaps easily digestible and are going to be somewhat consistent with – obviously, there's very clearly certain processed foods with certain ingredients that we should never eat.
So that was kind of like always in there to some extent.
As I went into like the carnivore thing, the carnivore mindset wasn't that meat's the only food that we can eat.
But the way I looked at it was this is the perfect way to eliminate all the potential problematic foods to see if you have reactions to.
And then find out what it is that you can
handle and then kind of go from there. But as, as I kind of spent more time looking at the,
the carnivore community, like there are people who just go like, you know, years, decades with
just eating meat. And I think you can get by, but it's still like a severely, um, restrictive.
And I kind of look at
carnivore now as like a starvation diet. It's just thinking, what are all the things I can
get rid of and still get by? By the way, that's what Paul said,
the conclusion he came to too. We interviewed him last week.
Yeah. And that's exactly what he said,
right? He said, it's kind of a starvation. When you don't have carbs, you're in starvation mode.
Yeah. Sorry, continue. So he agrees with you on that.
when you don't have carbs, you're in starvation mode. Yeah. Sorry. Continue. So he agrees with you on that. Yeah. And so, but then I started looking more into like, really what, what are
we doing to food that we shouldn't be doing? And then that's where I got into all the raw stuff
where I've started thinking like, okay, so every single animal in the entire world
eats all of their food raw, right? Every carnivore eats their meat raw.
Every herbivore eats their plants raw. Now, granted, herbivores have two, four stomachs
that they can ferment and break down all this food. But I think, you know, we know that a lot
of the foods that herbivores eat, we shouldn't be eating. So we have to process them in all these
ways. But, you know, I had been experimenting with raw meat as far back as like eight years ago. And I just had this like certain fear of bacteria. And then I started eating a little bit more raw meat through the carnivore thing, but just kind of because, you know, I was doing a lot of raw liver and I was like, okay, if all this raw liver is safe, then like, why wouldn't a raw steak be safe either?
is safe, then like, why wouldn't a raw steak be safe either? Um, but then I specifically found this book. Um, and the book is called, we want to live and the diet in it is referred to as the
primal diet, which is like before Mark Sisson ever called his version of paleo primal, there was,
there was this thing. Um, and this guy wrote this book. And it's kind of like a very
specific approach to eating a raw diet. And the big thing about it is, is that like your food
should be living, right? Like when if I kill a deer, right, like the deer itself is dead,
but the food is still alive. It has all of the bacteria, all of the enzymes,
all the nutrients in it are still where they're supposed to be. And so when you cook them,
you destroy all of that or you destroy most of it, right? Like, you know, if you sear it,
you're still getting raw parts on the inside. But when you take meat, meat's generally fairly soft.
And then now you're going to dry it out. You're going to crust it. And these things are a lot harder for your body to digest.
So I just started, I just pretty much like almost overnight switched to eating all my
meat raw.
And I'd already been doing a lot of raw dairy and raw eggs.
So I just kind of kept doing that.
And then I started following just more of his recommendations as I was removing more things that are like modern implementations of food and going back more to something that looks more truly ancestral.
And kind of understanding maybe things that I just wouldn't have thought of that he talks about in the book.
Like, for instance, like I don't need any salt and i also don't drink any water i drink milk and then
i drink celery juice and celery juice is going to have like real living organic water in it that
hasn't been tainted with any type of pipes or chemicals or anything like that right it's just
getting like literally fresh water and you're're also getting all the minerals and the sodium that are already in the celery. So then you don't need to worry about
supplementing with minerals and, you know, salt and these different things that come in like a
rock form, which, I mean, if you think about it, like we're probably not supposed to eat rocks,
right? That doesn't seem like a human thing to do, but we eat all these like tiny little rocks
and we go like, that's for some reason that makes sense so like i wouldn't have thought about
the celery juice if it wasn't for his book um but yeah there's a there's a lot of organs
a lot of fermented foods so like i will purposefully rot my meat um i'll leave liver
in the fridge for two months airing it out and let it turn green and black.
And it smells terrible.
But it's they call it high meat.
It's like an indigenous thing.
They call it high meat because it makes you feel like euphorically high.
And it's basically you're getting more bacteria out of it, which means that the food is more living.
OK, yeah, yeah, yeah. No no it doesn't make sense to me i mean
it may you're making sense but you know like i'm having all these emotional responses that
say you're not making sense but yes you are making sense complete sense let's start somewhere
simple celery juice do you so do you buy celery and make your own celery juice yeah and what's
that look like um so i i have a like you know a big juicer on my
kitchen counter and i go buy a bunch of bundles of celery and uh i just like i run them through
there and i might make like a i don't know a half gallon or so at a time and then i drink it over
the next few days um because you know if i'm thirsty i want to have something um if i'm not
going to drink water it's like i always want to make sure I have celery juice or milk that I can drink.
Someone told me that celery powder has a shitload of nitrates in it.
Are there nitrates in that?
I mean, I'm making this connection that I don't know if I should be.
So if nitrates are naturally occurring in celery, then I would assume that nitrates are in celery juice,
naturally occurring in celery, then I would assume that nitrates are in celery juice,
which I would assume would be adding to the mineral content there. But I don't have a concern either way about whether it has nitrates in it. What about distilled water? Have you ever thought
about distilling your water? No, distilled water would probably be the most terrible thing you
could possibly drink because it is water and literally nothing else and all you're going to be doing is depleting your
body of of minerals and you're going to be dehydrating yourself oh shit i only drink
distilled water but i eat a shitload of greens josh are you familiar with uh couple of communities around the world that I think they call it ionized water?
They usually live at altitude and the water kind of tumbles off of glaciers.
And then they drink from these natural pools.
And they're supposed to be some of the longest living communities in the world.
So I would drink like a natural spring water that was like completely untainted by any type of, you know, industrial anything. Right. So if it's natural spring water, spring water, it's real living organic water. It's going to have minerals in it. It's going to have bacteria in it. It's a real living thing. If you get water from any type of pipe system, like that water has so much crap in
it. And then if you filter it, what you're doing is like, okay, now you're, you're making something
void of stuff. And then now you're inserting other things into it, which is like, again,
like an unnatural process. And so the, whatever you're adding to it is not the way it was,
which means it doesn't have the,
it's up to the humans to try to,
with our understanding,
try to put together something as opposed to just,
Hey,
this water that exists,
that's the way it's supposed to be if you get it from a spring.
So I would absolutely drink natural spring water.
I'll like very rarely get like a Daryl Steiner water because it's,
it's a naturally
sparkling um spring spring water versus if you buy other sparkling water they they carbonate it
as opposed to just being the way that the state is oh that stuff is good and you know what that
stuff i like that stuff because it is the saltiest too it's kind of like got a little
it's really high in calcium okay but like that's just the mineral content that comes from
the water itself but i still very very rarely drink much of it at all i might drink like that
much of it like every couple weeks um and actually i just bought some like two days ago and it was
the first i've even had in like over two weeks and so it's just been um celery juice and and
lots of milk do you use condoms no no but i also don't have i don't have
sex with people i'm not in relationship with right your instagram has a how many pair well
before we talk about girls how many pairs of shorts do you own uh i have no idea is it like more than 20 i mean by shorts i mean also like the banana hammocks also um
i probably have as well that i own i definitely have more but that i would ever wear probably not
20 um so you're like me i have like four underwear that are my favorite and i just try to wear them
all and then wash them as fast as i can. You have your favorites? Well, so for underwear, I only have like one underwear
and I have like 15, 20 pairs of it,
though I don't really wear underwear anymore.
And I haven't really been wearing shorts because it's been cold
because I moved to an entirely different climate.
But I have like a very limited number of things that I wear
and I just cycle through the same ones.
The first time you wore a Speedo, do you remember when that was?
The very, very first time, I was probably a kid.
But the time that as an adult, I decided to wear a Speedo was probably in high school.
And then it just stuck. Was that hard to do? Were you like, Oh shit,
I can't believe I'm doing this.
I mean like, yeah, the first time you're just kind of like, I mean,
I don't know. I was also like that guy at parties in high school.
I just get drunk and get naked and run around the house.
But I was also drunk. Right. So there's a certain,
there's a different state there. Um, but yeah, at a certain point, it's just like, you know,
what's, what's going to happen if I wear a Speedo? Nothing. So, so kind of like the same way you're
experimenting, the way you're experimenting with raw meat. I mean, I think that 99% of dudes would
like to wear Speedos, but they just don't because they don't want to be uncomfortable. They don't want the attention. They don't want to be
the only guy without the mask. But obviously, it's like, it's pretty nice, right? You got your
junk held up and kind of out of the way, and then the rest of you is free. Yeah, I mean, with anything
that you do, if you're going to do something that other people aren't doing, it's going to draw
attention to yourself. And some people are actively trying to avoid drawing attention to themselves.
And I used to,
I used to be like that too.
I just like,
I was shy and anxious and I just would rather be,
you know,
almost to a certain extent,
like invisible,
right.
Which is what you see with people doing right now is they're so happy that
they have math,
but they can just remove themselves from society.
And like,
they're,
they view that as a positive thing.
I like, I mean, I want to interact with as many people as possible.
Like when I lived in Venice and I would walk my dog all around town,
I loved it because I'd be walking around wearing nothing but my short shorts
with my dog and all kinds of people say hi.
They want to talk to the dog.
They say random things to me.
And I just, I enjoy human interaction and connection.
So I want to live a life that promotes that.
But there are people who are trying to shy away from them, I guess.
When did girls start paying attention to you?
Um, I remember I was in high school and, uh, so I told you, I kind of got like made fun
of a lot.
So most of the girls in my school would not give me any attention.
But when I was a sophomore and I was going to parties where there were kids at other schools,
I got a ton of attention from the girls who went to other schools because they weren't privy to the ridicule that I was getting.
And they go, oh, here's this guy.
I'm into him.
Why would I think anything otherwise? So for, for most of, especially like my,
my younger high school years, I was almost only hooking up with girls that went to other schools.
Um, but even then it still took a long time to get over that kind of just like enforced
self-consciousness. So when i was it wasn't
till the end of college that i really started to feel a lot more confident in just like really
aggressively pursuing women and now you're you're in love with women are you still like a pretty
hardcore woman phase i mean there's a lot of girls on your instagram. Well, so where I'm at now is that I'm only interested in marriage.
And so I don't sleep around.
I don't date around.
I only interact with women if I'm trying to, if I think that it can lead to marriage and children.
That's the only place that my head's at now.
So, yeah, I like, I mean, I turn down sex with women because it doesn't have value to me because the only thing that has value to me is marriage and children.
Wow. How did you, like, I never wanted children and I have children. How did you decide at 30 that you want children?
Well, I've wanted children my whole life. Like, I was a little kid and I was just like hopeless romantic and I would, you know, I watched a lot of movies and I just sort of like, I had this idea of, of love from a very young age. And I just kind of, I, I knew where,
where I wanted to go. Um, but then, you know, when you're, when you're young, like,
you know, you can't just be like 15 and like, that doesn't just like happen, especially
if you grow up in somewhere like LA versus, you know, maybe another part of the country. So being kind of like, well,
not being able to get this, like, really deep, intimate relationship type thing from a young age,
it's like, okay, well, I mean, I'm still attracted to women. And I want, I still want the connection.
So you kind of go towards the less meaningful stuff. But you know, I always use sex to get intimacy, which a lot of guys
probably go the other way around. I was, I was trying to get to like the post, not cuddle,
you know, just kind of being there as opposed to getting to the sex. Um, but you know, as I,
you know, through my twenties and I started, um, being with a lot.
And also what if you want to do it again I used to always
trip on that too guys would be like yeah I had sex with her and I wanted her to leave I'm like
wait what what are you going to do in 10 minutes when you want to do it again what do you mean you
wanted her to go away I mean I was certainly in situations where I did something with her that I
wanted to go to leave but then at a certain point was like what was the value in that i wanted her to leave like that that's that's a hollow um empty experience right um but yeah i mean through yeah through my 20s when i started
you know being with more women like i yeah i think at a certain point i probably got a little like
carried away because i realized what i had the ability to do, but there were always the situations where I was very much
interested in, um, you know, the woman I was pursuing. And then it was, it's interesting that
like, they would be the ones who were not interested in the more meaningful, you know,
long-term thing. They were the ones just wanting the like short fling um but again like you know as a human being
like you know you do get lonely and you do want that physical connection and affection um but
yeah it was a couple years back when i i i met this woman online um and uh she lived in another
country and we we i went out to see her and we had an amazing
time together and it didn't work out, but it was like a really, really strong, intimate,
romantic connection.
And that showed me like how, how loving and passionate, not just like sex can be, but
the entire relationship with a woman.
And, you know, we, we weren't going to work out, but it was from that
day, I kind of realized like, oh, okay, I know what I want. Why am I wasting my time doing things
that I don't want? If I know that I want like a deeply loving, intimate relationship, marriage,
children, anything that I know won't lead to that, or I think can't lead to that is a complete waste of my time and energy. So I stopped putting energy to it. Well, I don't know if that's ever what I
wanted. But definitely, I know, my life is full of long term relationships. And man, now I've been
with my wife for over 20 years. And like, I can't emphasize enough that I agree with you. Like every
day, on some level, it does get better
even through the hardest moments. So, I mean, it's like, it's like just having a friend for a long
time, right? You have to have the bad times. You have to have the good times, but shit,
you're putting money in the bank when you stay with someone. So, um, yeah, that's awesome. I
just can't imagine being there at 30. I don't think I found, I, yeah, that's awesome. I just can't imagine being there at 30.
I don't think I found, I, yeah, I think at 30, I was where you were in the twenties.
I was like, holy shit, I could go out hunting.
I don't have to wait.
Well, I mean, don't get me wrong.
Like it, it, like it gets harder because it's getting easier.
Right.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
Um, as I, as I become more of this person and more of this person is just more of myself, right?
I'm more comfortable with myself.
I'm more comfortable being my true expression, being more confident.
I'm getting way more attention than I was when I thought I was getting a lot of attention.
So it's hard to say no because you still have those desires in you and
you go, this person's attractive. I want to do this thing. Um, but it's actually so easy because
I go, that's not what I want. Do you have any friends? Do you have girlfriends who you're,
who you're friends with that you haven't slept with? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And is there that tension there?
Um, I mean, there are certainly some of my friends who there is a certain level of,
of sexual tension with, or there's a certain level of attraction. Um, but if I, if I actually
thought that there was like a future there, then I would have like pursued it. Right. Um,
so I don't think that most of the women that
I'm friends with, I, I'm interested in, in that regard. It's kind of, it's kind of weird. Um,
maybe it's cause I'm 49, but like, you know, probably the first 35 years of my life, I didn't
have any girls who were like, I mean, they were all my friends, but there wasn't up to that point,
you know, there was
always that chance, right? I always thought, okay, yeah, that person can get the dick. But
not once I reached like 35 or 36, it kind of went away. Like I really just enjoy just having women
as friends. It's really bizarre. I mean, I didn't never thought it was bizarre until just now I'm
talking to you because now it seems just like commonplace. And I go to all these places because
I'm with my kids all the time where there's just tons of moms right so that's who i hang out with moms and we talk shit
and i'm now that i think about like oh shit if this was 20 years ago i'd be thinking about how
to get their number and rail them but now i never think that well i mean so i wonder if i'm okay do
i need to eat more raw meat no that that might make your uh your self-control a little harder you know um well so well so when
i was in venice like pretty much all of my friends were women like when i'd hang out with my group of
friends it'd be like me and five girls it looks like it on your instagram looks like yeah time
but so like that's the thing is that like i mean i i i love them all very much and like I have fun with them, but I realized that I was like missing male connection and camaraderie.
And that was a large part why I found this community here in Salt Lake City so amazing is that it's the majority of the people here are men and they're all men that I respect.
And I view them as capable and admirable men.
respect. And I view them as capable and, and admirable men. And I think that that's getting sort of lost in our world is that, I mean, not that like men and women should never interact,
but like men spend most of their time with men and women spend most of their time with women.
And there are, there's development that happens in those places. And, you know, something that
like, you know, I played sports my whole life. And so like, I was always on teams, and then everyone in your sports team is a man. And then as you get older, and like, that doesn't happen anymore. Okay, so I'm going to the gym. And then the gym is very much a mix of the two. And a lot of CrossFit gyms have more women than men.
And there's a certain, there's a certain side of you.
There's certain part of you that isn't being stimulated the same way that if you're not around women and you're around men who are pushing you, right.
There's a certain type of, of men.
There's a certain type of man that I'm, when I'm being around, doesn't, doesn't make me
feel that.
And there's another type of men that I go, um, I respect you.
Like, I feel, I feel comfortable that if shit were to go down,
like we together, we can handle this thing. And there's like, it's a level of competition.
That's very healthy because I go, okay, if I'm around a bunch of capable men,
I don't want to be the least capable one here. And so that is very motivating and very driving to be,
you know, uh, physically and kind of mentally stronger. Um, but I know exactly what
you're talking about. I've never heard it worded like so well, but I know exactly what you're
talking about. There was a guy at my work who could, uh, who, who in one of my jobs who could
beat up anyone and everyone like being around him because we, this job required a lot of drinking
and late night sessions. And if this guy was there, nothing bad could happen. Right. And then I have another
friend who like, um, who's an amazing carpenter and he used to live by me. And it was like, yeah,
I saw, I saw, I, I see exactly what you're saying. Yeah. You want to be around other capable men
because they make you feel more capable. And then on top of that, you don't want to be the
weakest link. So you live up to, you try to live up to your – you want to contribute.
Like if the guy is always bringing over the steak to your house, you want to make sure that fucking like you're contributing something.
That's awesome.
Yeah.
I'm feeling you on that.
I started doing jiu-jitsu in the last year.
And my friends here, a lot of them do jiu-jitsu.
And we have mats at the gym.
And that's the thing is like, okay, I'm around this, I'm around some men who I feel are
more physically capable than I am, but they are literally helping me become more because they're
going to go teach me something. Right. So that is like, we're, we're, we're, we're together. Like
we're, we're a team. And so I want you to be more capable, just like I want myself to be more
capable because if we're the same community, then we, we help each other. And, um, and so I've actually been, I've been getting a bunch of these
guys onto the raw diet stuff. Like I just like, I just like red pilled the shit out of them a
couple of days ago. And so like they, they sat there and went, fuck, am I going to have to eat
raw meat now? Cause once I explained it to them, they go, I have to do this.
And, you know, that that has been a huge part of, you know, I talked about how over the last year, the diet and the plant medicine sort of together kind of came in really because
I mean, we're talking about like the things that are inside of you, right?
Like the food that you eat makes up your cells and it changes your bacteria, which
changes your your personality, your mindset, right?
Then the plant medicine changes your kind of spiritual force.
And all of that together lead to me being whatever this current version of myself is.
And the raw diet has been interesting because
my libido is higher than it's ever been in my entire life.
But because it's this very calm and confident libido, like I don't masturbate, like I don't feel this like
need to then go out and sleep with women to like, release this energy. Because I said, the way I
phrase it is I don't have a sex drive, I have a reproduction drive. I have like, I literally all day just think about like having kids,
but I think about it in it's like sexual nature where it's, I think about finding a woman who I
have a deep intimate connection with. And then I think about the sex with her that creates children.
Like that is what gets me hard. Not like getting off. It's a completely different way that I feel like the idea of sex drive or libido has ever been told to us.
Well, yeah, right?
I mean, for a second, they tell us it's for reproduction, like in the eighth grade, right?
But then something happens.
I mean, could you imagine poor kids today?
I mean, when I was a kid, I used to go home and my friends would come over and we'd look up the word ass in the dictionary now you can go to your parents computer and type in
three dudes and a donkey and probably see the craziest shit in the world you can type in
anything into your google and and and and and your kid will never unsee that ever ever ever ever
they will never fucking unsee that have you seen mr hands no is it a porn uh not quite
oh no i just in your free time google mr hands okay i will um what's the longest you've gone
without ejaculating um maybe like six months holy shit you're not wow that's how old are you no i mean but like like in your
adulthood yeah wow was that hard uh no not at all it's really the easiest thing in the world i have
no desire to masturbate at all i went so you went you've gone six months with no masturbating and no sex. Yeah, I think I'm at...
I think I might be at like...
Shit, I might be longer than that now.
I think I might be like seven months.
I went two months once and I kept these 20-pound dumbbells by the side of my bed.
And any time I got a hard-on, I just jumped up and started doing reps.
And my theory was just to take blood out of the cock.
But wow, seven months.
That's amazing.
And no nocturnal emissions.
No, so this is an interesting thing, right?
I had one when I was like in high school, I remember.
And I remember it so vividly because I woke up like while coming and it was like in high school, I remember. Um, and it's, I remember it so vividly
because I woke up like while coming and it was like a very intense experience. Um, what was his
name? You almost got me there. Um, but I've, I've never had one that I know of in my adult life.
And especially since I've been, you know, not masturbating or ejaculating at all.
I don't think I've had one in my adult life either. It was, it was just when I was a kid.
Yeah. But so here's the thing about like, well, you've never gone that long without ejaculating,
right? So like. Just two months. Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. Don't, don't, don't throw rocks
from your seven months, buddy. Two months, two months. I got to be in the top fucking 95%.
Okay. So, so this is, this is how I understand it from like what I've, what I've read online.
Okay. So like people talk about like your sexual energy will spoil, it'll sit there and it'll
spoil. And so if it spoils, your body will try to get it out. So that's where the nocturnal
emission comes in. So supposedly if you don't have a nocturnal emission, it means that you're
like cycling the energy properly.
So, so people will do various like breathing drills to kind of like bring the energy up
and kind of keep it moving.
Um, and I've like experimented with some of that stuff, but to be honest, I really don't
really do it at all.
Um, I, I like when I was in Venice, we had a, a, a ice bath and sauna deal.
And then we would do these like breathwork classes and go back and forth there.
So I was doing a lot of breathwork then, but I haven't done any in the last couple of months.
But my energy feels like it's doing something amazing right now.
I had a crazy epiphany a couple nights ago.
And I think I'm writing a book now.
It's kind of like one of those things.
And, like, I think I'm writing a book now. Like, it's kind of like one of something right now where, you know, it's,
I think the thing is everything I'm doing, I feel contributes. It's eating in a certain way. It's,
it's doing the plant medicine. It's, it's not ejaculating. Like all of these things are sort
of like creating my current state where like, I've never been happier in my entire life. I've
never been more, more calm and confident and comfortable in my entire life. And
now I feel like this stuff is just like happening. Like it's not, it's at this point,
it's like out of my control. Like we're back to like Jesus take the wheel, but it's, it's me doing
all of this work day in and day out to support that. And then everything kind of just like,
feels like it's flowing. And, um, it, it feels like just magic is happening around me.
Yeah.
For people who are listening, there's also this thing that happens when you don't masturbate or when you do the – what's another example of it?
You gave another example of it you you gave another example but basically it's it's a it's a sort of a form of
hacking meditation because basically what you have to do is you have to be really aware especially
in the beginning and maybe it doesn't sound like you had to josh but i had to so one of the things
you have to do to not masturbate or not have sex is you have to be really really fucking aware
because after like a little bit of while the drop the desire becomes so strong and the excuses to let one fly come in so
hard. Oh, fasting. Fasting is another example. It's sort of a hack on meditation. Like if you're
not sure what meditation is or what it means to watch your mind, try not eating for 16 hours,
but hanging out with food. And you inevitably, if you're not, if you don't have a strong mind,
you'll catch your hand, grab a piece of cantaloupe and start to put it in your mouth and then you'll catch yourself.
And I really like these kinds of practices.
Some people kind of call them like depravity meditation.
I don't like to think of it like that.
I like to think of it more as just self-control and experimenting with your body and not wasting your time, you know, taking advantage of
the fact that we're here on this planet, this is our body and we can try to do these things.
And ironically, I think that there's no better way to experiment with yourself than to stop
doing things, stop wearing a shirt, stop cooking your food, stop masturb masturbating as opposed to this whole society of
people that's just adding shit and it's like hey man the answers aren't out there to keep like you
don't have to go to mars although i think it's really cool don't get me wrong you can go inward
you can start like tearing layers off of yourself um and it sounds like you're doing it hand in hand
you're tearing layers off your personality and you're tearing layers off your personality and you're tearing off your identity and you're
tearing layers off of your attachment to the, to the world's kind of in this healthy tandem.
I think it's really cool and it's inspirational and it's good leadership for the world, by
the way.
Thank you.
Uh, well, so that's the thing, right?
You, you phrase it perfectly.
It's like people are trying to add things to themselves, right?
So it's like, okay, take this supplement, like try this weird device.
Like the biohacking thing is always like, get, buy one of these, by one of these, by one of these.
Your feet hurt by a different pair of shoes. No motherfucker. Take your shoes off.
So, so when it comes to like, when I think about what's happening to me and like who I am now, it's not, I'm not a new person. I'm the person that I always was.
I just started getting out of my own way.
I'm now letting go of all these other things
that I built up to make myself feel safer,
but we're actually holding me back, right?
Like I'm now free, which means that I'm not safe,
but like that's how I'm actually living now.
And that's the true expression.
Brian, I saw you lean in.
Just listening.
Are you going to say something?
Oh, I've got tons of thoughts.
But no, no, that is a very – a lot of the stuff that you talk about is really challenging for people.
And at 30 years old to have already evolved into many of these things is beyond a lot of the stuff that you talk about is is really challenging for people and at 30 years old to have
already like evolved into many of these things is beyond a lot of people in your
age groups you know ability to process um you said something uh on your instagram a few days
ago that i just keep thinking about and i think it might be relevant here. You said to not suffer is to not live, but the goal should be no unnecessary suffering. And I was just curious if that was
an original thought that you had, or if you'd come across that somewhere and how you've been
able to apply that in your own practices. His CrossFit L1 taught him that.
So that suffering idea,
I feel like I got from listening to a lot of Jordan Peterson.
He's actually,
he's been like a,
a decent part of what I've been experiencing because I mean,
his words always resonated with me,
but at first he was just talking about like certain cultural issues.
Right.
And when I realized that like,
okay,
certain things make sense to me,
but then understanding like where that comes from, like why, why are there people who think and act a
certain way versus people who think and act in another way? And like, what is the framework of
that? Like, what is the base of that? And what's interesting is that when I first got into Jordan,
I don't know, maybe like 2016, 2017, whenever he kind of started getting
popular. I remember thinking, I really liked this guy, but he talks about religion too much. This
is stupid. Why does he keep talking about religion? Like he's losing me here. And I think that was
just me like being really ignorant of not understanding that like all of human existence
comes from some type of like belief, right? Like all humans going back as far as we have people had these things that they
believed in. And like religion is, is, uh, it's,
it's inextricable from the human experience to have these ideas and to look to
something outside of ourselves. And when,
outside of ourselves. And when, when I started like really getting away from trying to be someone and trying to just like actually do a little introspection and think about what I actually
felt and what I believed, I realized that, okay, so now I'm looking into something that looks more
like spirituality, right? I wasn't thinking about it. And now that's like making more sense to me.
But it's still very abstract.
And I don't really know like where that comes from or what that means.
And he's the one that really connected to me how much of what we do and what we think
come from these like biblical archetypes, right?
These are all stories that explain the human condition.
And, you know, the idea of like truth and like morality
started to just kind of sit more in my mind.
I started to think about like, what is my guide?
Like I'm clearly living in a certain way.
What is pushing that?
Like what is the map that I'm following?
Cause I'm clearly doing something in a certain way.
So where does this come from?
And it was within the last year that I like,
I wouldn't say I decided,
but that I realized that I believed in God.
And it,
part of that came from listening to one,
his,
one of his,
um,
talk somewhere where someone asked, do you believe in God?
And he said that he didn't feel like, he didn't know if he deserved the ability to say that he believed in God, but that he lived as if he believed in God.
And I realized that that was me from a young age.
Like I used to talk to God at a young age and that that was me from a young age. Like I used to talk to God
at a young age and I used to pray at a young age. And you know, when no one's looking,
you still are thinking about, am I, is this thing that I'm doing, is it wrong?
Because if no one sees then, and no one, no one can judge me, then am I doing something wrong?
But like, you know, God, God, God can still see and God can
still judge me. And if, if that is what, what matters to me, and if that's the way I want to
live my life, then it understands that like, okay, now there's, there's all of this. There's
like thousands of years of God that I can, I can look to as far as like what, what men have discussed of the,
of the concept of God. And, but I'm like, I don't follow a specific religion though. I would say
I'm starting to be like drawn to some like Orthodox Christianity. Like I just, I just got
my first Bible and I'm started, you know, just reading it. And again, I'm not trying to convert
to a religion, but I realized
that there are these, these like, these like axioms, which I just believe in so firmly.
And I realized, oh, that these have already been created thousands of years ago by other men.
And so if something that I think of to be true and to be such a strong guiding force exists
out there, like it permeates through the human existence, then it probably served me
to learn more about it. And that's like where that kind of like life and suffering, life is
suffering sort of comes around is that our goal in life should not be to live the safest, easiest
life possible, because then everything loses its meaning. If you live your entire life in a
plastic bubble, like hooked up to machines,
and you, you know, you're getting your, you know, nutrition, supposedly, whatever,
and you live to be 75 years old, versus if you lived an amazing, adventurous life full of meaning
and love and people and experiences, and, you know, you crash in a helicopter at 50, like,
there's a lot more life in those 50 years than there were in those, those vegetable, you know,
like there's a lot more life in those 50 years than there were in those,
those vegetable, you know, 75 years.
So, and what we see in the world right now is people,
they're valuing safety over everything else.
And I value freedom over everything else.
And so I want to live my life and I want to pursue the things that,
that have value to me and mean something.
Yeah. I love that.
Did you go to college?
Yeah, I went to USC, but I didn't graduate.
And what were you studying there?
So I started studying real estate development, and then I switched to kinesiology when I kind of decided I wanted to be a personal trainer. So I was learning stuff in school, and I had to put answers I knew to be wrong on tests to pass the class.
Like the test is like saturated fat is bad.
So I have to like circle that thing.
And so once I realized that, I just kind of stopped putting any value in it at all.
And then I realized I was just wasting money.
So I also realized, well, anything that I want to do in life is not going to require a degree anyways.
So I dropped out of school and started training people.
Where do you think you learned to articulate your thoughts so well has it always been like that or did you learn
that from your parents or man i don't know um i'm yanking that god shit out that's going on my
instagram sure that was great uh yeah i don't know think like that's, that's certainly been a part of me always. Um, my, my dad is an amazing people person. He was like, he's was in real estate for like 50, 60 years or something. And so he's, he's an amazing salesman. He can just, that's how he is. And my mom is actually like a numbers person. She was a, she was in finance before I was born.
numbers person she was a she was in finance before i was born um they're they're both very artistic but they have very different kind of like my mom is more of a numbers person my dad's more of this
kind of like talking kind of artistic expression person um and i don't know i mean i think i'm like
very much a mix of both of them because like i'm also very numbers and analytical, but I, I like, you know, math was always my,
my best class.
Like I aced the math on the SATs and everything, but I was trying to live my life too robotically.
I was trying to analyze everything and put everything in the numbers.
And that was leading to a lot of anxiety.
Um, and so it was the, the, the numbers were safety.
Cause I went, okay.
I used to always say math is my favorite subject because there's a right answer.
And I want the right answer.
But then, you know, you realize that life doesn't work quite like that.
And I was able to let go of that safety in numbers and more so just kind of follow my, my heart, so to speak. Um,
and yeah, I mean, I, I just like, I've been talking a lot as I've gotten older and more
comfortable. Um, and it's really easy for me to do. When's your birthday? Uh, May 29th. I'm a
Gemini. Ah, that was my next question. What sign are you?
I'm always convinced that I'm going to have a guest who has the exact same birthday as me.
I mean, it's got to happen eventually.
Yeah, I guess.
But every time it takes one more guest, it's like ruining the mystique for me.
Because I fancy myself as being psychic or some shit, but I'm not.
Have you met, when you were in Los Angeles, did you ever come across Ronnie Teasdale?
Oh, do you
not know her background no i didn't see him on your instagram everywhere anywhere well that's
because you he would have been back there actually i don't know i went back there i went back yeah
yeah i don't know if he was ever on my instagram but you didn't see any pictures of me at mean
streets oh maybe i did maybe i did. Maybe I did. I
mean, it takes, I scoured, it took me like two hours to get through the whole thing. So I was
moving pretty fast, but maybe I did. Yeah. I saw you a lot just cause I knew cause of the sign,
but I don't know about mean streets. Okay. Go on. So, uh, mean streets was my first CrossFit gym.
Ronnie was my first shit. Um, I met Ronnie in October october of 2011 um actually one of my friends my best friend in
college my roommate at the time he was like you should come do this prospect thing because i was
always like in the gym working out and i was like i have no idea what that is so i showed up and it
was some like terrible long partner workout thing i had a bunch of pistols and i couldn't do pistols
and i remember like just i mean i didn't have the mobility to do pistols.
And I'm just – it was a nightmare, right?
And Ronnie being the douchebag that he is or maybe that he was.
Ronnie's giving me shit.
Oh, you're breaking my heart.
Every podcast I go on, someone wants to throw rocks at Ronnie.
No, I love Ronnie though.
Okay, good.
Okay, good.
So Ronnie's giving me like shit for how bad my pistols are and like i had
just like squatted the day before it was like yeah my legs are super sore i squatted yesterday
and he goes that's a shitty excuse and i was like fuck this guy this guy's an asshole
i don't i don't want to come back here so i didn't come back for a couple months i think
and i think i came back in like october november or something um and uh yeah i mean because like ronnie's the
one who like told me about paleo um ronnie's ronnie's had a huge huge influence on my life
did he also was he also the one who told you about uh exposing your genitals to sun
um no i don't think i got that from him i mean like i saw him doing that um i don't know if i
got that from somewhere i just always figured if tanning is good tanning naked's good too
or even better um because like that's the way i always look at everything it's like how does this
make sense right i always and that's why the idea of looking at like evolution like how we got here
it's like okay what are we supposed to do like Like a bunch of naked cavemen, right? Like they're going to be getting sun on their
bodies and on their generals, we're going to be barefoot in the dirt and they're going to be
eating raw meat and whatever. And so like, that's probably what we should do too.
Um, and then, so after, after college, I ended up, uh, working at mean streets for a bit,
uh, coaching. And then, I want to, I Mean Streets for a bit, coaching.
Wait a second.
I want to get a little more detail there.
You go to his gym.
He basically says, quit being a pussy.
You go away for two years, and you come back.
Two months.
Sorry.
What brings you back?
By the way, that was the same way I met Dave Castro, by the way, basically.
I was at an L1, and he basically said, have 95 pound bars for to do fran for men and we have 65 pound bars for women and pussies and
i was like fuck this guy but then i ended up loving him to death it's like hey that's on me
if i think i'm a pussy i should have been like okay i'm a woman or a pussy who gives a fuck and
i should have went and did it like he can say what he wants anyway yeah go ahead i don't remember exactly what took me back i think it was because like my friend was going there and
i was thinking like okay all i'm doing for fitness is like doing like bodybuilding whatever and then
you know maybe going for like a run and it was kind of the idea like well that doesn't seem
very functional like this again it was like more of like the caveman thing. It's like, okay, this makes more sense.
Still 2011.
Still 2011.
Yeah.
No, this was 2011.
Was he nice to you when you went back in?
Or was he, I mean, not that he was mean, but was he still always so blunt?
I mean, he was brawny.
He was just brawny.
He'll just challenge your way of thinking.
And that makes some people uncomfortable. It took a long time for me to be comfortable enough with myself to allow myself to be okay with who Ronnie was, right?
Ronnie was always okay with who he was, but I wasn't okay with who I was.
And so that pisses a lot of people off.
It intimidates them.
And, yeah, so he was just bringing out my own, my own self
perceived weakness at the time.
Isn't it amazing.
And now you hang out with him now that you know, and it's like, it's like two matches
probably coming together when I was obviously older when I met Ronnie and probably if I
was in high school, I thought he was weird as shit.
But when I'm around him, I'm always like, Oh, here's, here's a free pass to freedom.
Right.
Cause he's, he's himself. So so fuck it i could do whatever i want i'll wear these fucking stupid
red glasses if i want i'll come out fucking naked like whatever you know what i mean that's the
thing is like you know you're always getting ronnie and you can all and you can always do
you he don't give a shit what you do yeah yeah and it's it's very freeing to be around someone
like that and it's who you know is you're just getting their genuine yeah yeah and it's it's very freeing to be around someone like that and it's
who you know is you're just getting their genuine self um and it makes you more comfortable to be
the same but if you aren't or run away like you were saying right so if you're not comfortable
being yourself then you're going to look at that and you're going to be scared of that and you're
going to reject it for sure right well said um do you do you still stay in contact with them um yeah i mean we uh
we probably like i don't know dm every like once in a while we don't talk like regularly um
actually like so i'm i'm trying to get my own podcast set up like i got my
mic and everything oh nice nice i couldn't i couldn't figure out how to like set it up for
my computer to this point yet like with my camera and everything, I'm just trying to get that figured out.
Ronnie's probably how I want to be my first guest,
just because he's the first person who shifted my life down this line.
He's had a crazy journey too.
He's so different than the Ronnie he was 10 years ago.
He's a pretty fascinating person.
I love his journey. I obviously follow him on Instagram. I like everything he does,
all the, all the different things he tries. I mean, I guess it's maybe why I like you too.
It's like, Hey, I'm getting to watch someone experiment with their body in a way that's like,
not dangerous. You know what I mean? Like some people like watching people doing skydiving or
crazy shit. I just like, like people who are basically on a more severe health journey,
like basically really blazing the path forward.
Like that video you made where you eat the chicken head,
I mean, that's something else.
I mean, that's some great camera shots and up close and you're calm.
And any other time you would have seen someone eating a chicken head,
it would have been like on Fear Factor, right?
And so it's cool to see this.
It's cool. It's cool.
It's really,
it's,
it's,
it's awesome.
I think you're,
you're,
I think you are contributing to humanity in a very,
very,
very,
very positive way.
No,
thanks man.
Josh,
when you were,
when I was watching that video,
it just kept thinking,
have you ever eaten anything?
Any specifically,
any part of an animal that you feel
like your body has rejected um or have you ever just thrown up like you ate a cockroach you're
like oh yeah i mean like you know getting used to eating like liver was like sometimes you're
kind of just like kind of thing um but then like once it's down did you have that experience with it cooked or raw or both um i think i i think i've certainly experienced that raw like because it's the texture a lot of
times which gets people too um especially like the rotten liver because like that thing smells
terrible dude i was i was so impressed when you were you were eating the chicken brain because
you your face never changed
you're like yeah it's kind of like a blueberry like even if you're not opposed to eating it you
still might have like some kind of a just natural response to it but you were just like oh no yeah
just eating this and nothing changed yeah i mean some things taste worse than other things do
um that's definitely for sure the the the thing about the eyes and the brain, they don't really taste like much.
It's just kind of a mushy texture.
Um, like with the, I'll probably like, I need to, cause I'm, I don't have any like
currently rotten liver.
I need to like make some more.
Um, so I probably would to do a video about that.
Show people like how green it is and everything.
But what you, what the trick is you cut it into small bite-sized pieces when you put
it in the jar so that you can just put it in your mouth
and just kind of like, you know,
maybe chew it once or twice and swallow it.
Are you sure the trick isn't to dip it in honey
or peanut butter or enema?
No, Josh.
Or enema.
Josh, that's interesting that you say
you just kind of want to chew it once or twice
because I did a OPEC certification with James Fitzgerald.
And one of the things they talk about is chewing your food like 20 to 50 times per bite.
So does that make sense to you?
Does it make sense that someone would spend a bunch of time chewing their food for some reason before they swallow it?
I mean, I'm reconsidering all the time.
What makes sense to me.
I went to breakfast with OPT before lunch or some shit, and he does that shit.
It would be crazy.
You're sitting across from him.
You're done with your food.
He's on his third bite still chewing his shit up.
Okay, so think about this, right?
If any of you guys have watched a carnivore eat or if you have a dog
and you've ever given it raw meat, it inhales that shit, right?
Inhales.
Think about the animals that chew.
The herbivores are just sitting there and their mouth goes like this.
Right?
Their digestion is a very slow process.
They're sitting there and they're breaking it down.
They're getting the saliva going and they're churning it through their system.
Meat is not like that so i actually chew my food much less than i did before um now because you know it would take me a long time to eat like a you know three four
pounds of steak for dinner right like that that takes a long time um especially if it's not cooked
four pounds no well it takes longer if it's cooked it does it does i just
picture it being chewy as fuck like you're trying to break down bubble gum but that's the thing is
like you know depending on the cut it might be chewier but like if you just swallow it it's not
chewy anymore it's just okay right your your hydrochloric acid is so strong that the meat
just disintegrates um so i'll just do like two bites and then I just swallow it
and I digest it perfectly. There was actually, there was a, like a, I think it was like a German
scientist, like in the twenties who took, uh, two frogs, took a raw frog and a, and a cooked frog.
And he put them each into like a vat of the stomach acid of a carnivorous animal.
And the raw frog in a short period of time like completely disintegrated
to the point where like it's gone right you can't see it and the cooked frog frog had all these like
fragments still floating in it when you cook something you are you're changing its chemical
composition and again there's not a single animal in the entire world that eats cooked food but us
so not like that argument like vegans use like oh we're the
only ones that drink milk or whatever bullshit um but like to think that like we're the only
animals that can't handle bacteria in our system and like raw meat it's just stupid it doesn't
make any sense right and and the and the ones who who can't probably have put themselves
like that by so much protection like i was just i saw i was reading something yesterday about the
virome i don't even know if i'm pronouncing it right are you familiar with this i mean i'm
familiar with the term basically there's 380 trillion viruses living in every human being
and basically eight percent of our our DNA is made from viruses.
And if I heard it correctly, one of the things they were saying is that it was a virus that an animal got that shifted us to mammals.
And it's basically talking about the importance of viruses and that it's not a good idea for us to be vaccinating an entire population
when viruses are kind of like a software update for human beings.
So viruses aren't like living, right? They're not like living. Bacteria are living. Bacteria are
like our organisms, right? They are their own thing. But most of our cells are bacteria.
Viruses are part of our own makeup people like you're not catching a virus the
virus is already in your body your body sends a virus to do work to clean things up um so we have
tons of viruses in us at all times and we have you know trillions of bacteria as well that's
our natural state to live in harmony with bacteria and viruses.
So, you know, one of these, the things that's really concerning to me is that all the kids that have been born this year that are being exposed to nothing because they're just, you
know, they go to the hospital, their mom, they have a birth in a room and they go home
and they haven't left their house.
A close friend of mine, wife finally brought her kid to the gym the other day and it's like
the second place he's been other than on a walk with his mom or at the home and so hey especially
if those kids aren't born vaginally if those kids are not born vaginally and you leave a kid at
fucking home for a year that is not good right yeah because you have crazy capability to build
your immune system in that
first year this is an entire population of people that this has happened to you know most of the
kids that have been born in the last 12 months but josh you'll love this my kids weren't bathed for
months after they were born they were born at home vaginally and people thought we were crazy but we
just didn't bathe them for at least i think my first born a month and my twins probably two or three months yeah i mean that's the way it's i mean we're really not
like baths are supposed to be a very rare thing if you found a course of water right
um we're supposed to be dirty and filled with bacteria all the time so if you have a kid
like go let just go put that kid like face first and face first into the dirt and like let
them play with dog shit like that is all going to make your kid healthier um and guess what my kids
don't get sick yeah so we think of we think of like immune system we're really talking about is
that the bacteria is what makes you you like people always talk about oh gut the gut biome right like and and kind of like the second
brain like is in the gut right the the bacteria are are are you like the your personality will
change based on the bacteria that's in you it's like how would i just it's like talking like that
being calm or anxious or depressed like that is coming from the bacteria that's in your gut that's
that's that's creating your mental state we think like it's just from the bacteria that's in your gut. That's, that's,
that's creating your mental state. We think like it's just up here, but it's in our gut, right?
And that's all bacteria. And there's like, there's no, there's no good or bad bacteria. Our body just is filled with bacteria and it needs a lot of it. We have bacteria that is more
present when our body is dealing with problems. So like candida isn't bad bacteria.
Candida has to come do the work when you've been eating a bunch of processed food and sugar.
So you have more candida to try to, to, to help deal with that. If you kill your, your candida,
you're killing, you're killing your firefighters who are present at the fire and you're just making
yourself weaker. So like, yeah, go, go in the dirt and surround
yourself with bacteria, eat food that is alive, that is uncooked, that is, that is raw, that is
filled with bacteria and you'll be healthy. Well, this whole thing, you know, we've had
denounced sugar, Brian, you heard that he denounced sugar. Well, I said the same thing
in the grocery store today because there was, you know, this one woman, she was telling me
and she was crying.
She was saying three of my family members have died from COVID this year.
And I, you know, can, you know, empathize with her for that, of course.
But ultimately, I left there saying COVID is, I mean, sugar is the problem, not the masks.
That's not the answer.
Stop eating sugar.
You guys will be fine.
And I left the grocery store.
So I'm on board with that.
You said that to someone who had three COVID deaths in their family? I did.
Callous. I mean, honest. But here's the reason. But it's what Josh was talking about earlier is
the reason I actually had this happen to me two days ago as I was in the parking lot,
walking to my car and I had this kind of thing wash over me of, you know, stop being afraid to
walk into the store without a mask. You are totally comfortable with that. And I feel very confident saying to the people there
who confront me, you have nothing to fear from me. You're totally safe around me. And I, and I
can feel like I can say that honestly. And so then I can, I can speak my mind. If I was not speaking
truth, then I wouldn't be confident saying those things. Yeah. It's really easy to, to stand firm in your expression,
your beliefs, when you have full confidence in what you're saying is, is true, right? Like
it becomes a lot easier to live in that way when you believe it fully.
That's why honesty, you can tell when someone's like an honest expression versus someone that's why honesty, you can tell when someone's like an honest expression versus someone that's
lying to you, it feels very different because the, the, the person themselves, the person knows if
they're lying, right. And that's going to come out in everything that they do. But, uh, it's,
so you're, you're a healthy person. You kind of, to some extent, understand how this thing works.
So like, I don't, no one can get me sick that's not a possibility so like yeah go go put me around people who have covid like i'm not going
to get sick that's just not how it works yeah and not only that but you're you're more than willing
to get it and help build herd immunity you're more than willing to take the virus on and build
immunity to protect other people well sure but like. But like that, that's the thing that
was that like, I'm not, I already have, we all already have the virus. We're not getting,
you're not getting the virus. The virus is what your body is using to, to cleanse itself of
whatever toxins are in our food or environment or whatever it is. Um, the, you know, so you bring up like sugar,
right. And I think that sugar causes problems,
but assuming that it's from natural food source,
like fruit or something,
it doesn't cause problems the same way that like a refined sugar.
Oh,
a hundred percent.
We should be clear on that.
Yeah.
I'm just talking about refined carbohydrates and fucking raisin bran.
But,
but,
but I really,
I really do think it's the seed oils
cause just as much if not more damage than the sugar does and that stuff stays in your system
forever because once once you do once you take in that oxidized oil like it hardens in your body
to like it's basically plastic you're eating plastic and then it solidifies in your body and
then it's just stuck in there and that is what really i think that that is what fucks up the
metabolisms and then the sugar becomes really harmful so do you not eat any nuts or seeds
uh no but it's not that i wouldn't eat a nut but i think think actually in the world— They're not a regular part.
If I came to your house, you don't have a bag of macadamia nuts in your closet?
I have zero nuts in my house.
Okay.
I think if you mix—so raw honey is this amazing food.
So I eat probably over 200 grams of sugar a day from raw honey and milk.
grams of sugar a day from raw honey and milk.
I probably eat like a very little amount of fruit once a week,
once a week or something right now, but I eat tons of sugar every day,
but I don't feel like it doesn't feel like sugar.
When you say milk,
you specifically mean raw milk,
right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So raw milk,
raw honey.
Um,
so,
so I like,
I love Brian. Are we going to the store right when this is over and getting raw milk, raw honey. So I love-
Brian, are we going to the store right when this is over and getting raw milk?
I've been researching the best ways to get raw milk all week.
Where do you live?
Chicago area. There's some places I can get it, but it's not that easy.
Go to realmilk.com and getrawmilk.com and you'll find how you can get it. Um,
but yeah, so like I was always like a really big ice cream person. Um, and I would eat like a pint
of ice cream before bed and then it would keep me up, right? Like all the sugar. I make my own
ice cream with raw milk and honey and I can eat a whole quart of it and it has double the sugar
with raw milk and honey and I can eat a whole quart of it and it has double the sugar technically that the ice cream I used to eat does. And I can go right to sleep right afterwards. Like it doesn't
do to your system what sugar does or what we think sugar does. Cause like raw honey is, it's just,
it's enzymes. Like it has sugar, but it's enzymes and what it does to digestion of food. So you mix
raw honey in with raw milk and now your body is going to digestion of food. So you mix raw honey in with
raw milk and now your body is going to digest the milk better. You mix raw honey with nuts. Now
you're, now your body's going to digest the nuts better because you're adding enzymes to all this.
So when I, so what was interesting is that because I do the celery juice and the other day I had some
carrot juice and I think I probably had like 50 grams of sugar maybe from carrot juice.
And I was like, I could feel myself getting almost a jittery from the sugar because that,
that is like sugar, sugar. And it's not, it's not the same composition that milk and honey.
Second guest in a row. Paul said the same thing. He's Hey, he's rethinking honey,
but like he he's added honey to the carnivore diet and seen benefits.
Yeah, for sure.
Really cool. Um, we have to go, I want to finish on one, one thing. If for people out there,
so I want to, let's say I want to try get some raw meat and I want to try eating some raw meat.
What can I, where can I go get a steak or what would you suggest be the first thing I do to try
that? Or would you recommend someone try that?
So I think what people get hung up on is they think that the meat that you eat raw needs to be different than the meat that you eat cooked.
And it's the wrong way of looking at it.
Any meat that you don't want to eat raw, you don't want to eat cooked either.
You should be trying to get the best quality meat that you can get.
you should be trying to get the best quality meat that you can get.
And so if you can get meat from a farm or from a farmer or some place that a farmer's market that sells meat,
that's your best bet.
That being said, I would not –
I think Paul has said this in the past too.
Buying beef or bison from a supermarket or a a whole foods that's grass fed is going to be way
better quality than whatever chicken and pork you can find. So I wouldn't buy, I wouldn't eat raw
chicken or pork that you get from a grocery store, but I also wouldn't eat that chicken or pork
cooked either. Um, so starting with red meat is probably going to be the easiest thing for people to do just like mentally and sourcing.
So try to find like a farm close to you or you can order from Belcampo or White Oak Pastures.
I have a discount code with Belcampo if you order online.
It's Goldstein10.
That way, you know, you're getting very well fed and cared for meat of all kinds.
I've eaten there that chicken that I was eating.
That's a Belcampo chicken.
It just comes in the mail.
Like you go on the website and you order.
They send you a frozen box anywhere in the country.
And what I will say is that some people have a big problem with the texture.
So get some ground meat and make some tartar.
Oh.
So one of my friends who lives by me bought two black Angus calves
and then just let them run around on his property and eat.
And then he had them ground up and turn into steaks and livers and all that stuff
and bones, whatever the guys come out and do it.
And I buy that from him. So that's good enough to go right yeah 100 okay you just you just have to you have
to figure out what a lot because some people can't deal with the texture the mindset of it so i used
to eat a ton of raw ground beef as a kid but my grandmother prepared it in a certain way with like
lemon juice and bulgur and like i forget what she did it's's some Armenian dish. Sure. Yeah. I mean, I honestly,
I just take the ground meat and, uh, and whole eggs and I just mash them together and just eat
it as is. Some people might not be able to handle the, the whites, the egg whites kind of give a
little textural thing, but I mean, you can chop up some onions and cilantro and parsley in there
and kind of do whatever you want. But that's kind
of like the easiest way I think to get used to the texture of it. Awesome. Farb, Josh,
Mr. Goldstein, thank you. Dude, thank you so much for having me on.
You came on with a stranger. Really appreciate it.
Have a good one.