The Sevan Podcast - Aja & Leah Barto | BIRTHFIT #883
Episode Date: April 19, 2023Welcome to this episode of the Sevan Podcast! 3 PLAYING BROTHERS - Kids Video Programming https://app.sugarwod.com/marketplace/3-playing-brothers/daily-practice BIRTHFIT Programs: Prenatal - https...://marketplace.trainheroic.com/workout-plan/program/mathews-program-1621968262?attrib=207017-aff-sevan Postpartum - https://marketplace.trainheroic.com/workout-plan/program/mathews-program-1586459942?attrib=207017-aff-sevan Codes (20% off): Prenatal - SEVAN1 Postpartum - SEVAN2 ------------------------- 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 https://www.vndk8.com/sevan-podcast - OUR OTHER SHIRT https://usekilo.com - OUR WEBSITE PROVIDER 3 PLAYING BROTHERS - Kids Video Programming https://app.sugarwod.com/marketplace/3-playing-brothers/daily-practice ------------------------- Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Bam, we're live.
Why does that not surprise me?
We have two shows scheduled this morning.
Is that really what's going on?
I see what you guys are saying up here.
And of course, Rumble's not working okay but we're here on youtube that's it that's a good start
uh good morning jay hardell um jeffrey birchfield uh maybe uh one has the wrong date the real kevin
how will seve do two shows at once is there uh someone help a brother out? I
should go over and erase that show
if we have two scheduled at once.
That really sucks. I'm excited about
this morning. Coming at the
7.30 mark will be
Asia Bartow and Leah Bartow, his wife
from BirthFit.
The whole baby game kids.
The incredible journey that a woman goes through growing that baby inside of her, giving birth to it, staying healthy the entire time.
Always been a huge, huge, huge, uh, passion of mine. Probably one of my most enjoyable
experiences was watching my wife, uh, do that journey and then i was fortunate enough to
get to see her do it twice and once with twins and uh you know the kids are like six two six-year-olds
and an eight-year-old now and it's kind of like the journey's almost over i mean just the way i've
compartmentalized it right it's all it's fabricated in my mind but it's almost like she's just
completely back to i mean except now she's a mom um and and
i'm stealing these words from the birth fit website that i saw not only did she have kids
but she turned herself into a mom right so two things happen simultaneously which is pretty cool
um but it's like it's it's it's kind of complete i mean she's back to the
she's not breastfeeding obviously anymore, anymore. The kids are six.
I'm sure they'd love to.
And except for the fact that there's three dudes, three other dudes vying for my wife's attention besides me, it's all back to normal.
Everything's back to – everything – this hasn't happened in forever.
Everything's back to normal.
Okay, so we have like 30 minutes before they come on, and I thought I would help you.
Oh, well, here we go.
Jody Lynn.
My mom had six kids and breastfed none of us.
So weird.
I wonder why.
I don't think my mom breastfed me either.
You have to also remember when formula came on the market, they told women that it was better than breastfeeding.
There's a lot of things that it's funny.
Medicine has told a lot of things to people.
Um,
poor George Washington was bled to death by the pharma medical industrial
complex.
Is that,
is that,
is that the way it said,
uh,
Scott Perkins,
Seve,
are you guys
not putting your podcast out on google podcast anymore nothing is out there to go back and
listen to since you got the weak detention from youtube you know what we we um we switched uh
we switched hosting services and i think all of our shit got fucked up oh i felt my back tight and just
reading that scott that sucks i felt my back tight and uh it's i hate switching shit another
thing we used to do is we used to get um free ads on buzzsprout meaning they would just put ads on
there and then i would see like a few dollars trickle into my account from those ads and we switched um podcast hosts hoping that this new
podcast host and i like the guy because it's also a startup don't get me wrong i really like the guy
but i was hoping that it would um make the same amount of money and now they want me to read shit
and the shit they want me to read would make me like all the other fucking poser podcasters out there. And I really, really don't want to do that unless I believe in it.
Like I'm trying to court these birth fit people to be a sponsor because I fucking believe in it.
I love Sarah.
She listens to the show.
I've been a supporter since day one.
Same with Gabe.
I want it to be my family.
Maybe I'm smoking crack.
Maybe I just need to take money from Coca-Cola and let it be.
Just chop my penis off and get a Bud Light sponsorship.
Don't do it.
Stay thirsty, Sevan.
I know.
I just think money is so fucking fun.
Fuck that.
No lame ad reads.
I know, right?
Hello.
My favorite coffee is the fresh roasted beans from Paper Street.
My dear friend Gabe personally roasts.
My dear friend Gabe personally roasts every bean.
You think I just cut my penis off instead?
I saw what you posted on Hiller's podcast yesterday, Jesus Louise.
Go fuck yourself.
Okay.
So I said something about mental illness, getting a tattoo or piercing is a mental illness, and people freaked out.
People freaked out.
So I'm going to explain to you.
I think it's fun that some people freaked out.
And it's good because now I can explain to you the next level, the next level of sevontology. God, I wish I was the first
person to present this. If someone calls you a fat piece of shit and it upsets you or makes you
happy or however it makes you feel, you first, let me go back a second. Let me go back. Let's put
the pause on fat pieces of shit. Here we go. Why do you think you go to the doctor? Why do you think you go to the doctor?
been on that it's been on your gum for a year and so you just want to have it checked out that's that's what a sleeping person says or or let me be even more specific that's what a sleeping person
believes they believe that they have some stomach pain it's been going on for a year it's been
persistent and so they want to go to the doctor that is not why you go to the doctor you go to
the doctor because you have a thought that won't go away you have a bump
on your mouth you have a fucking a pressure in your in your side you have a pain in your foot
and you have thoughts around it why does that hurt why does that hurt why does that hurt
do i have cancer do i have cancer do i have cancer do i have cysts do i have a ulcer do i have ulcer
do i have ulcer and you and you can't tolerate that thought anymore. That thought's freaking you out, and so you react to that thought by making a doctor's appointment.
It has nothing actually to do – there's a – you don't make the appointment because of the pain. You make the appointment because of the thoughts you're having around the pain. Do you understand that?
Because of the pain.
You make the appointment because of the thoughts you're having around the pain.
Do you understand that?
There's nothing wrong with that.
I'm not poo-pooing that.
I'm just sharing the mechanism.
You don't get upset because someone calls you a fat piece of shit.
You get upset because you've started to address, you started to have a little bit of what we call a mental illness.
Someone calls you a fat piece of shit. You have a reaction to it and you start a story. I'm offended. I'm hurt.
And then you react to that. You're just talking to yourself. It's a little bit of mental illness.
You have this, you have this thought, you see someone with a tattoo and you have a thought and you go, God, that would look cool on me. And then you have a whole little dialogue that goes inside with yourself that probably most people aren't even
conscious of. And then instead of watching that, you react to it and you get a tattoo.
You react to it. You don't even want the tattoo. You have to understand that.
to it you don't even want the tattoo you have to understand that you're a thought that you should watch and let go away so you can become one step closer to happiness enlightenment freedom
instead you react to it and you address it and the more of those you address unconsciously
the more you're spending you're basically killing yourself by a thousand paper cuts.
You guys following?
No one can say anything that upsets you.
That's what's worse about even reacting to it.
It's not that someone cuts you off.
It's that someone cuts you off, it upsets you, and then now you have a dialogue inside of yourself and you're reacting to the fact that you're upset and then you respond.
Now you're tarred.
You're tarred not because you responded but because you think it's them who did it you gave your power away same thing with going to the doctor same thing with
getting a tattoo same thing with getting a piercing you're just pushing away thoughts
that maybe you should have watched to free up space for other thoughts deeper thoughts
more meaningful thoughts, stronger thoughts.
Olivia, look at it. Look what a genius she is. I have tats and I didn't get offended. I'm open to hearing other insights. If you don't listen and open your mind, you aren't growing.
I have 35 tattoos. I'm offended. Fair enough.
I bet you I really like most of your tattoos too To be honest I love a tattoo
Eric Rose is in the house, hello
I'm just explaining the mechanism of how this shit works
You don't go to the doctor because you're sick
If you think you
I mean you can say that, it's easy to say
I'm just saying to be truthful to yourself to understand how all of this shit is working.
Just pay attention to yourself. Understand how it's working.
Oh, here we go. Mr. Schweitzer, good morning.
It took me 20 years to pull the trigger on a tattoo, but the reason was to say screw you, corporate world.
Good morning, Mr. Arturian.
Artunian.
Arturian.
Maybe if you're Greek.
Mr. Artunian.
Artunian.
You have...
You have...
You're just a fly.
You're just reacting to shit,
and then you're reacting to your own reactions
that's how action occurs
you've started a little conversation
inside of your own head
no
I won't
you know what you said
I don't remember what you said
to be honest with you
if I could tell you I'd tell you
and I forgive you my son I don't remember what you said, to be honest with you, Jesus. If I could tell you, I'd tell you.
And I forgive you, my son.
I forgive myself for having negative thoughts about you, even better.
You're a good dude. I appreciate your
presence. How's that?
Judy Reed,
I had a C-section, formula fed my
kids, send them to school, private Christian school,
but not homeschooling.
I love hearing your perspective on all this. Oh, and I don't CrossFit it yet.
Three sins. You're banished. Three sins, Judy.
I snatched the 80-pound dumbbell 10 times yesterday, and this morning I could barely get out of bed.
Fucking ridiculous. I need to chill out i don't know why i do that getting older is real i played like five games not even five games i paid i played like five
holes of frisbee golf in front of my house because we have that i have that frisbee i need to film
that for you guys and put it on my ig if i haven't i have a little frisbee golf course just
like right across the street from my house like it's my neighbor's yard because i live out in
the country and uh i was sore from that no i'm getting my broken i don't know if I'm getting yoked. I think I broke myself.
Okay.
So we have... Oh, here we go.
Caller, hi.
What's up, man?
Hey, Jeremy.
Sorry, Jeremy.
One second.
Yeah, Steven, when you get this haircut, keep the facial hair.
Maybe trim it. I trimmed the sides the other day I'm when you get this haircut, keep the facial hair, maybe trim it.
I trimmed the sides the other day, but yeah, I mean, I am going to keep the face.
I don't know what I'm going to do, actually, but I was thinking the same thing, Stephen.
OK, Mr. Jeremy, hi. Good morning.
How's it going?
Just thinking about getting a tattoo. No.
So it kind of goes with what you're talking about here.
And I'm seeing all the responses to what I said.
So I figured, you know what, let me just call in.
And so I'm back to the dating game, right?
After 16 years out of it.
Times are different in a lot of ways.
Anyways, I meet this chick
pretty cool
like really cool funny
she's checking some boxes
but
yesterday
I don't even remember what we were talking about
she dropped the n-word
oh my god
I would love it that's a keeper
then you just
you have to re uh, what's that called? Re, re, uh,
I forget what it's called, but go on.
No, I dropped the R word. I said, Oh,
something was retarded. Oh, and she has a retarded relative.
She has a retarded relative.
No, no. We were talking about something and I said retarded. And she says,
please don't say that word
and I was like why not
it's offensive
and I'm like you know
I didn't say no but I'm thinking like uh oh
we have a red flag ladies and gentlemen
and you know
we're just getting to know each other
so I don't want to get too deep with her
but I'm like
like you say ask questions
so I'm like why is it offensive what do say, ask questions. So I'm like, I'm like, why is it offensive? What do you mean?
I can show you TikTok videos of, of mentally ill people.
And it was, it would make you realize why it's offensive.
And I'm like, what are you talking about? Like, I'm thinking like,
what are you talking about? Like, I know, like, I'm not saying,
I'm not making fun of retards. Yeah. I'm just saying something was retarded.
You should have told her TikTok's
retarded.
I have told her that.
I actually have told her
that because she talks about it
probably every time we talk about it. She's like, oh, it's on TikTok.
And I'm like,
ugh. Yeah. No,
no thanks.
She said some other things.
She hates Trump. She said Biden
is up his game recently. She
said some things that I'm like, oh no. Do I just run?
So I'm asking, someone said in the comments, do I run?
Do I stick it out? Because here's the thing, the person I
am, I like challenges.
I like a good challenge.
So I'm like, maybe I can get this girl to think, you know?
Right.
Instead of react.
What do I run?
What does she think about you, do you think?
Is she like, does she really like you?
Is she like, wow, this guy's really fucking cool?
Yes, a lot.
Then I think that if you um
i don't know i didn't hear anything that makes me think run i because it is a girl and i'm
assuming she has a vagina that kind of transcends that that transcends a lot of shit um sure it
does i mean if you don't hate women i mean for a lot of people they're offended by that
because they hate women they don't realize the power of the vagina
but for those of us who love women
you know I think you just got to be
prepared with shit loads of questions
like hey how did
someone as nice and as cool and as accepting as me
not why do you think we think so differently
I'm not like I'm not bothered by
the word retard I'm not a fan of Joe Biden.
Like maybe you could be like, Hey, does it make you wonder like what it is about
me? I'm a, I'm a black guy and I'm, and I'm, and I'm supposed to like,
not like, don't, don't you have any questions for me?
Maybe you could ask her that question.
I like that. I like that.
Hey, but you know, you know,
I don't know what it's like to date or what these days, but people,
there's so many people.
I had so many male friends who would just sabotage relationships.
Like they actually wouldn't go if they didn't think.
I mean, even as young as 18, if they didn't think they were going to marry a girl or they didn't think it was going to work out, they would stop dating her.
And I just don't think that that's.
I think that's stupid, to be honest with you.
I love that mindset, too.
Like, why give up so quick, you know?
Yeah.
You know, it could turn into something pretty cool, or not,
but at least you saw it through, you know?
James Krikava, Jeremy Run, there's nothing clearer than this.
Do not listen to Sevan.
You're wasting your time.
That could be spent on someone else.
Listen, I don't even think it's possible to waste.
I think that there's no um it's impossible to waste
uh time time is not yours to waste it is uh it exists that's just uh poor thinking
are you enjoying her are you enjoying her i really am she's really cool she's i don't i don't want to
say she's not like most people like she's really cool mature funny got a job you know all this shit you know but i think you should just say
some really naive shit to her like hey i i understand how the word retarded might be
offensive to some people but it's not inherently offensive right because i love words and i and i
and i and i'm i'm mourning the fact that i might have to reduce my palette of words.
My vocabulary is so limited anyway.
I'm just a dumb guy from Milwaukee, and now you've taken one of my words from me.
Yeah, you know what I mean?
I'd say just have fun with it and see if she can hang.
You know what I mean?
Okay.
I dig it. I would double down on soaping, staying clean, getting ready for a BJ.
Soaping, staying clean, getting ready for a BJ.
If she hates drinking, you know, drunks, then I would reduce the drinking by 50%. I personally stick it out.
I like girls.
Me too.
Especially if she can tolerate it.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
How much cooler would Sporty Beth be if she could just roll with all the fat jokes
and stay mentally ill
the least attractive thing is about someone
is someone who runs or is offended
it just screams weakness
yeah 100%
yeah
people can't think
yeah well I appreciate that
I saw the comments
I figured I had to call in and get the
wife's advice.
Yeah, have some fun.
I hear in your voice you're having fun.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
She's fun. She's fun for sure.
And if it gets weird, just put it in her ass.
Okay.
Noted.
All right.
All right, man. I appreciate you. Have a good one.
Bye.
Oh, here we go with James again.
You have a finite amount of time.
Sevan is full of shit.
Fair.
Every minute you waste on her is a minute lost.
Oh, shit.
Fuck.
Damn.
Jeremy, one more thing.
Very important.
Much more important than anything James and I are telling you.
I do like James, though, and are telling you um i do like james
though and i to tell you it's like we're too little uh we're the two angels on your shoulders
olivia has something very important to share with you uh jeremy don't get her pregnant
that's huge i should i should have opened with that right that's like a um please put your
helmet on like before you like you get on a bicycle or something. How do you ride a bike?
Please put your helmet on.
You should have just said that.
Don't get her pregnant.
Yeah.
Okay.
From our Puerto Rican mama, Yanni, I always say if you enter a relationship wondering if you can change a person
that's the wrong way to approach it oh fair okay i like that you should be with a person that you
love most uh of everything i had this yanni i had this i don't know let me propose this as
kind of like a pushback on that i had this friend I have a friend that I've had since the second grade.
And he told me one time that the reason why our friendship has lasted so long.
Is because he chose something very little that he liked about me in the second grade that's never changed.
So. in the second grade that's never changed. So, yeah, you said some dumb shit too, Clive.
You and Jeez Louise, I saw what you said too.
Mother of, hi, Clive, how are you?
There you go, here it is.
There's the dumb shit.
At least Tlander is putting out
quality, concise content. If you say so, if you say so, imagine, imagine me listening, uh, to
anyone talk about any of that. Just imagine, imagine, imagine I played on the super bowl.
I played in the super bowl. Imagine I was, I was, uh, I was one of the players on the Super Bowl I played in the Super Bowl imagine I was I was I was one
of the players on the field at the Super Bowl
I played offense and defense
and now
football's gone it's a hundred
years in the future and I'm listening to two people
talk about the game as if they're there or
anyone talk about the game as if they're
there
and then hearing you guys then respond to
fucking second third
fourth hand accounts
it's like I'm watching three levels of
retardation it's fucking
insane oh look there he is hi Asia
what's up dude
oh he's not ready yet though
it's crazy
it's crazy what i have to what i'm watching
i'll give you guys one bit of insight because it's weird that some of you i know i know a
handful of you know and can keep it in your in the forefront of
your brain about how much i was actually privy to when when andy retired when andy stump quit
crossfit he reached out to me and because we were closely together and he said we were in different
areas but we were closely together and he said hey i'm going to uh resign today will
you come to my resignation and i said sure and so it was me and greg and andy in the room
i i think the resignation meeting i swear to god i think it was three hours long
and so i hear people say stuff like he like that dumb shit waddle says seven's afraid of
confrontation or clive saying it's quality or fucking super fucking super retard a 12 daily
dose is acting like he's getting like people write in the comments that we're getting the facts
shut the fuck up
like like you got someone pour Sprite in your bowl and you're drinking it screaming it's water
it's like shut the fuck up it's just so I so
and I and it's it to be honest with you it's none of
those people's fault it's not like it's not 12 daily doses fault it's not a waddle's fault it's
like if you if you guys you guys want to think that what you're hearing is the gospel fine
but but i but i but like it's so weird.
I've given you guys such fucking deep insight who've listened to fucking even half of the 800 shows I've done.
Like, there can't possibly be anyone who knows more than me.
And I just, from all the little pieces,
I'm not saying I know every fucking piece,
but I was fucking everywhere.
little pieces i'm not saying i know every fucking piece but i was fucking everywhere i did not have a fucking life outside of crossfit 365 days a year 24 hours a day
you could ask anyone and people who know that fucking respect the fuck out of me for it
they gave it all and so i saw all that stuff and and to be completely honest with you i was
flattered that andy asked me to come to his resignation completely flattered and i don't owe it to anyone to share any of that stuff
that happened in that meeting i don't know what to anyone but i'm just giving you guys insight as
the crew that like yeah now i sit here and see people doing shows on it and interviews about it. And, and I, I played in the super bowl.
I don't need anyone to tell me what,
what the hits feel like.
I know what it,
I know what it was like.
Uh,
okay.
It was not a look at Judy standing up for geez Louise.
I know.
And I'm,
and I don't,
I'm not mad at anyone about it.
Every,
I appreciate everyone's perspective on it.
I'm glad everyone's enjoying the drama. And I know some people need to get up on it. And appreciate everyone's perspective on it. I'm glad everyone's enjoying the drama.
I know some people need to get up on it
and so it's cool. But I'm just having my
own little temper tantrum and reaction to it.
Hi.
Hello.
Good morning.
Morning.
Just doing a little house cleaning.
Good to have you guys on great to be here man
man asia uh it's been forever dude we got some history yeah how come i look different and you
don't because i age better than you do yeah definitely you've been taking better care of
yourself too i'm gonna guess you age better and you've been taking better care of yourself i don't
know man i've been keeping up with your instagram i just chase kids around all day dude those those boys will wear you down that's
for sure yeah they will uh leah have we met before maybe in passing at you know back in the day when
you were filming with asia but i don't know if we've specifically met okay and in asia what we
met basically because you were performing at the highest level in CrossFit, right?
Which games did you go to?
11, 12, and 13.
And I guess what stood out most about you is that you were a different size than the rest of the CrossFitters.
Yeah, and I was really good looking too.
Very attractive, good hair.
Long hair.
And how old were you in 2011 when you first went to the CrossFit Games?
Mid-20s, I think.
What, 25?
Yeah, 25 maybe.
And had you and Liam met yet?
Yeah.
And were you married?
No.
No.
We took our time.
Yeah.
Did you guys have kids before you were married?
No, we didn't.
We just got married and had kids quickly.
Yeah. And how old are your kids?
Our son, Kai, he's four. And then our daughter, Ruby, is two.
More on the way?
No, we're done.
No, sir.
No? Two and you're done?
We're done. Yep.
two two and you're done we're done yeah and uh and so you did the games in 2011 12 13 and then why did you stop in in 14 just to be honest i was a little mentally burned out i mean before the
games i did you know 10 to 12 years of highly competitive baseball i played professional
baseball in the in the minor league organization for a
handful of years. So I just got to that point where I was just kind of mentally spent. But I
also had a gym and a business that I was running that I wanted to turn into a full-time thing that
was kind of like a part-time gig in next to my training regimen. And I think it was just time
to move on. Obviously, I was like, wanted to play into my strength. So I was an Olympic weightlifter.
I wanted to really tap into that.
And so I explored that the year after CrossFit and just kind of try to dedicate as much time
as I could to that.
And, um, and then after that, it was kind of just like full-time family, wife, business.
Where, and where did you two meet?
Um, so we both grew up in Houston, kind of knew of each other growing up but didn't officially meet
we both interned with our nfl team here the houston texans um he had just finished playing
pro ball and i had just gotten out of college and that was our first internship so we had just
started crossfitting and walked in the first day and saw each other and it was kind of that like
oh i know you moment yeah oh what do you mean? Oh, just from just from
just around? Yeah, I think from I knew him, we, you know, I had a lot of mutual friends that played
baseball with him up through high school and college. So we kind of I think we were Facebook
friends through college, we very connected growing up kind of in the same circles. And then we since
we had both just started crossfitting. And and you know early 2010 um I think we were on
each other's radars because not everyone was crossfitting in 2010 so it was like oh this
person I know him and he's doing this competitive thing and I'm starting to get into it so it was
just kind of that like we know each other but we don't know each other hey that's uh that's kind
of like I don't know for I can't speak for a girl but that's like a dream come true for a guy like
you sign up for the Peace Corps and like you land in Costa Rica and then the chick who came from like
France is hot you're like oh shit I'm stuck with her for three months this is great
you must have been right you were stoked Asia you're like oh this is good internship
this is good work yes I think we didn't even get through the first day before we decided to start carpooling together to the stadium every morning.
And, you know, we just kind of took off.
Yeah, that was a good idea, not my idea.
Oh, that's great.
And what did you guys do there as interns?
That's a baseball team?
It's a football team.
Oh, a football team.
Houston Texans is a football team like currently today?
It is.
Yeah, I don't know.
Were they the Oilers they were okay yeah the Oilers went to Tennessee Titans and then Houston didn't have
a team for a while and they came and made a team that was the Houston Texans um the reason you
don't know about them is because they're about as good as you not knowing about them okay but
it makes me feel better I'm gonna get tore up in the comments that's okay um it's it's
not nothing reputable that they've really done um I think our biggest player out of here was
JJ Watt probably Andre Johnson so people probably know him but yeah I think we um we both got into
that just kind of that out of college like okay we probably need to do something corporatey
with our lives but also we have this love of fitness and we were kind of in out of college like okay we probably need to do something corporatey with our lives but
also we have this love of fitness and we were kind of in that that territory of like what comes next
in life when you graduate college uh matt ivy uh glad to see these two on here amazing people and
coaches uh hashtag behemoth i know i can't to be honest leah this is not a um a dig at you but it's
crazy that i haven't ever had as on. That's crazy, man.
Matt Ivey is an old member of ours.
What's up, Matt?
Oh, wow.
Small world.
Yeah, small world. And do you own a CrossFit gym now?
It's not a CrossFit gym, but yes, we own a functional fitness gym, yes.
And it's called Behemoth?
Yes, Behemoth gym.
And how long have you had that gym?
2012.
And when did you guys get serious, if you don't mind?
Did you have the gym first, or did you have Leah first?
When did Leah and I get serious?
Yeah.
Leah and I were serious before the gym, so we met in 2011.
10.
Okay.
2010.
Sorry about that.
And, I mean, we were serious from the get go. You know,
we're very carpool day one, carpool day one, loyal and committed people. So it was like when we were
dating, it was just her and I and so that happened two years before we started behemoth. And then
and then you so you started the gym together? No, I started the gym with, um, my brother who him and I both own it to this day.
Yeah.
So I was, I was working in the same realm, um, at other gyms cause they were starting
up and he was like, I can't afford you.
You have a head coaching position somewhere else.
You're doing great there.
Like we'll bring you over when we can.
So, um, I was back and forth a lot, but from the beginning it was kind of grassroots him and his brother building it up from scratch.
And what were you coaching? Were you coaching CrossFit? I was. Yeah. Oh, okay. Okay. So,
okay. And, um, and, and then, so your kids are, uh, four and two it's, so you had your first kid
in 2019. Yeah. End of 18. Yeah. Okay. And, uh, the four-year-old's the boy or the girl the boy
hey is that is that better to have the boy first or the girl first for us definitely the boy because
he was you know just came out of the gates wild and crazy all boy so i feel like it was definitely
when we had the girl she's just a totally different speed. So I feel like that was a pretty good,
you know, cannonball intro into parenthood. We were ready for that next one.
What, what about the fact that like, like this, this, this, yeah, I don't know. I think she's,
she's half Japanese half. I don't know what she is. White girl showed up at tennis and jujitsu
classes with my kids
recently she's five and she talks circles around my eight-year-old like sir like i watch them talk
and he can't he's like she has a bigger vocabulary than him she talks faster she has better eye
contact she has more she gesticulates better and i'm thinking i saw oh my poor boys they're like
if we would have had a if we would have had a girl first they could like
they're just rocks kind of yeah it's weird yeah it's weird i didn't i really didn't realize how
different boys and girls were yeah i'll agree with you there i i kai's cousin he has a girl
cousin who's about nine months older and you would think she's like probably two plus years older
because she'll just run circles around him as well.
And all of those areas, all of those areas, how they dress, like the wash their hands, how they stand.
It's like it's crazy. They don't they don't they don't fidget as much.
They listen better. Yeah, it's nuts.
So but so so I was thinking maybe it would have been better to have a girl first so that she could school the boy up.
That's true. I feel like it depends how you're looking at it. Right.
Because we were,
I feel like we were so in the ringer with him for the first two years until we
had her. It was like, what's going on with him. He's wild. He's crazy.
He has a ton of energy. You know,
he was a little bit slower to talk things like that,
where we were like just racking our We're like, what's going on?
And then she comes, and it's smooth sailing with her.
So I feel like having her allowed us to slow down a little bit,
and then he caught up on everything.
And I feel like right now at four and two, it's awesome.
But I don't know.
If I had her first and I wasn't prepared for what he would bring second,
I feel like I would be crazy right now. So it was kind of like a blessing. Oh, we got a girl. Did you panic when you got,
did you mean to get pregnant the second time? Both of our pregnancies were very planned. Yeah.
Okay. So you weren't, you weren't, you weren't panicking. Like when my wife got pregnant,
second time was panic. Then she found out twins and she had like a 24 hour like meltdown.
Yeah, no, that that's cause for a meltdown.
That's a lot of information.
We we're definitely both planners.
And, you know, Asia is not one to jump into something halfheartedly.
So I would say it took some some conversation and some swaying on my end to be like, we're
doing this.
And when you know, when you're ready, it's happening.
So there was no surprises for us.
Michael, see. Wow, Michael, you look just like me. That's a trip. Good morning, Asia. Good morning,
Asia. My favorite event was the clean and jerk ladder when you tied for the win.
All right. What year was that? 2013. Yeah. So Asia, you weren't keen on kids?
No, you know, I didn't. Me uh, growing up, I never thought myself to be
a father of one that would have kids, but I tell this story a lot. It's like you, you find someone
that you love dearly and then you care equally as much as they care about things. And that's just
kind of the road that we took. And so, um, everything was very intentional when we decided
to do what we decided to do and, uh, state a plan, shall I say? But yeah, I never thought of myself as like, hey, I'm going to have children.
I'm going to have much less two kids down the road.
And now are you tripping?
Are you completely different on that perspective?
I'm very grateful for the kids that we do have.
I mean, anybody that has children, especially small children, they know that they're the greatest blessing, but also the greatest challenge as well. But I think the
conversation on having more children is no longer a conversation I think we're good at too. But
my perspective really hasn't changed much. And I guess I haven't really given that much thought
on going back and being like, hmm, would I be a, you know, am I, am I going to be a, uh, would I be a father or whatnot, but we're just kind of like riding the
wave and enjoying the children and making it, make it work. Yeah. That, and that is huge right
there. Right. To enjoy the children. Yeah. We're just enjoying life with them.
Grandparents in the picture. Yeah. Our littlest one, Ruby, she's with Asia's mom right now at
the house. And, um, they're both of our parents and families live in Houston with us. So, you know,
we get a lot of help and support and we see them often, which is very nice. Um, we try, like we're,
we're definitely parents that like our kids with us rather than not. We don't plan vacations without
our kids at this time in our lives.
Like we, our, our life revolves around what, what will be fun?
What's a fun outing for the kids to do? It's no longer about us.
Like we have to remind ourselves, uh, like we have great grandparents,
send them to their house so we can go out and have dinner without kids because
our whole world just revolves around making them happy and fulfilling their
days. So, um, we're very fortunate to have our family here,
but it definitely, you know,
it's something that we don't take lightheartedly.
We want to be as involved as possible in all of the things.
I didn't know how to word it, but you worded it perfectly.
I'm not interested in really doing anything without my kids.
I did have friends who I remember their their kid was like six months
old six months and they went they went to like south america for two weeks the husband and wife
on a vacation and i i just can't i don't even know how to where to begin on how they did that
how do because i two weeks now would be hard for me. But, but, but I, that being said,
every time I do drop the kids at my mom's house,
every time I drop them off there, I don't want to,
but like as soon as they're out of the car, I'm like, oh,
it's unexpected. Like, holy shit.
You don't realize how turned on your nervous system is until you're in a car
without kids. Right. Like I go out, I'll go out. I have like a,
you know, every other week I have a night out on Tuesdays to go to a class that I go to. And I'm
like, so stoked to go. I have no kids. And then I crash and I'm so tired. And it's this realization
of like, this is the first time my nervous system has just been like, ah, unsettled because I don't
have a kid to worry about. And so it's funny because you think you're like excited to go out
without kids. And then you realize I'm just tanked from always having worry about. And so it's funny because you think you're like excited to go out without kids.
And then you realize I'm just tanked from always having the kids.
And then you're ready to go back and pick them up.
Right.
I'm never dreading it either.
I've never once been like, oh, shit, I shouldn't have dropped them off.
It's always the opposite.
It's like, dude, I should have dropped them off probably yesterday.
Totally, yeah.
And it has nothing to do with them, I guess.
You're right.
You nailed it.
You get to be yourself instead of dad, security officer, life coach, fucking referee.
It's like you just get to be nothing for a second.
And then you're exhausted.
Let's stay focused here.
Asia should have been a football player could have been an
nfl tight end or edge rusher what's that mean edge rusher be like a defensive end maybe okay okay
uh at six foot five you're six five asia i am yes holy cow uh uh salary uh some true mama talk
well thank you i didn't i have a little bit of, oh, no, you're talking about Leah.
And then so what is your relationship with BirthFit?
So I'm their online.
Sorry, sorry, Leah, one more thing.
Are you full-time coaching now still?
No.
So when I had Ruby two years ago, I'm out of the business essentially.
I stay home with the kids for the most part, yeah.
Okay.
And then Asia, you're full-time coaching?
I am. Yes.
Okay. Okay. Sorry. Back to the question. BirthFit.
Yeah.
And I had Lindsay on the show. I don't know if you guys knew.
Did you see that her and Lance are pregnant?
No.
Yeah.
That's awesome.
That's huge.
Wow.
Due end of this year. So super excited for them.
Wow. Awesome. And BirthFit's based out of Texas also.
Yeah. So, I mean, we're, we're all virtual essentially. And Lindsay,
you know, moved here in 20, end of, end of 2018.
She moved here and doula'd my birth. She was my doula at my first birth.
So that was end of 2018, but yeah, where she's in the hill country,
I'm down here. I'm kind of her right hand man, my official title is online programming director, I write a lot of our online programs, oversee them, you know, answer questions, movements, all of those things.
And tell me exactly how you guys met.
Lindsay and I?
Yeah.
tell me exactly how you guys met Lindsay and I yeah um I think it was again Asia and I both knew Lindsay um just from being in the CrossFit world the CrossFit mix I think she had worked on a lot
of people we had a lot of mutual friends things like that so we were always kind of interconnected
in that world um but we I would say I went out for or I did a birth fit coach seminar early in 2017.
And that was when we officially met for the first time.
As a participant?
Yes, I was a participant.
And why did you do it?
You know, it's interesting to me.
I always think about this because I...
Here's why I asked that.
Sorry, sorry. I interrupted a lot. Dave told me to quit saying this because I – Here's why I asked that. Sorry, sorry.
I interrupted a lot.
Dave told me to quit saying sorry because I'm never sorry when I interrupt,
so I apologize for saying sorry when I'm not sorry.
So here you are, a tremendous athlete.
I don't know where you come from,
but obviously you were a tremendous athlete growing up, right?
You were physical.
You moved.
Then you go into Cross crossfit which is the premier
uh you know software for the body in terms of eating and movement who the fuck is how humbled
you have to be to go to like birth fit like why do that you already know fucking everything and
your husband's a fucking one of the fittest men who ever walked planet earth like oh sorry over
here um why uh why do birth fit like what could they offer you guys yeah i think
it was two things selfishly it was for me i always knew i wanted to be a mom and i always had this
feeling like it always just resonated with me even when i knew nothing about birth fit of like that
is so cool to train for birth like knowing what i know doing what I do in the CrossFit realm, whatever competitive realm,
like it always was a big draw to me to be like, that's so cool to train a specific way in
pregnancy. So selfishly, I wanted the information. But I also just had this big desire, like I loved
coaching women, and I loved working with women. And I specifically remember having kind of like,
Asia and I were in his truck one day we're
sitting in our our driveway had just pulled up and I had like a little bit of a a breakdown moment
where I was just like I like love what I do but I'm not fulfilled and the only thing that keeps
coming up for me is babies and we weren't married at the time like you just let that thought go
it's just right let it go wish but it was so's just a thought. Couldn't you just let it go?
Couldn't you just get a tattoo or something? I was like, it wasn't for me. Like I don't,
I wasn't ready to have babies, but I just felt like a calling to, to learn more. So that was just kind of my like, Hey, let's, let's see if this helps. If I learn more to serve these women,
because I've been coaching women forever. And it was like, I'm coaching all these pregnant women, but I'm just kind of like, yeah, this is smart. I can tell you how to train
smart and tell you to trust your body, but I can't really specifically coach you, you know?
So this was kind of this like moment for me to be like, okay, you could definitely be better here.
How old were you when you first started wanting a baby?
I mean, I knew I wanted a baby.
I didn't at that moment.
I didn't want a baby, but it was just babies were coming up for me.
And I think it was a birth fit kind of calling.
But I would say I was in my late 20s, 28, probably.
This thing, my wife and I knew we were never going to have a baby.
100% certain.
We knew we would never get married and we knew we would never have a baby.
We talked about it.
It's a stupid idea.
We're not going to get married.
That's just what tools of the men do.
Babies are ridiculous.
And then at 39, she's like, hey, I was like, what?
She's like, I think she pointed at Greg's wife who was breastfeeding.
She's like, I want one of those.
I'm like, what for?
She's like, I want to experience that.
I want to see what it's like to feed the baby. was like all right and it was literally that was the conversation and then
she was pregnant um and then she had a miscarriage and then she got pregnant again um
but but i think as boys we don't really know what that like why would
i guess we don't we don't really understand i don't understand
what i don't understand the calling like i understand wanting to play frisbee with someone
who's like a little kid or like i understand that like i like doing that stuff but like i
could just call asian me and him could go play frisbee i don't need a kid i remember having the
conversation with because asian was the same he he was like i don't care a kid i remember having the conversation with because asia was the same he
he was like i don't care if we ever get married his parents have been together forever didn't
officially get married till like a year or two ago um but no shit asia your parents just got
married yep that's awesome hey are they happy sorry leah are they happy they got married
my my folks yeah i think their accountant was the one that told them it would be better if they did. I think they legitimately got married for like tax purposes or business purposes.
That's why we got married too.
But I'm so happy I did now.
I feel so comfortable calling her my wife now.
I wonder if you ask your parents that, I'd be curious to hear the answer someday.
My dad has a different opinion than my mom.
My dad, I think, is quite fulfilled.
He's wanted to do that for the longest time.
And he grew up with his parents getting married early on and then spending the lives that
they did together, whereas my mom was the opposite.
And so that's kind of where my perspective is.
I grew up, my parents have been together for 35, 40 years.
And that's the same thing that I told Leah.
I was like, we don't have to get married for me to be eternally committed to you.
But she had a different perspective on that and how she was raised and the family that she was raised in. Yeah. So we just had different perspectives
there. Yeah. My wife and I were on the same page, but once I got married, I was so happy. I was
like, Oh, this is perfect. I'm like, it's weird. I just call her my wife now. It's so weird,
but it feels great. It feels great. Okay. So, um, so um so you have so but women have like some sort
of calling like look at here's trish she's 67 i'm 67 years old and giving birth in june
no she's not she she's not but she thinks she is congratulations trish just play along
that's remarkable yeah remarkable yes congratulationsish. You guys have a different calling than us.
I mean, yeah, it's in our,
I believe that we were put on this earth to do that.
We were nurturers, we're moms,
we're like, it's just, it's in us.
And so, like I said, like I knew forever
I was gonna be a mom.
I didn't know when,
and I wasn't craving it at that moment.
But I know that when Asia told me he,
you know, he didn't want
kids at all. Because like I said, he's all or nothing. He was focused on competing, focused on
the gym. And I was very clear. I was like, I will have kids. So if we're going to do this, we're
either going to do it together, we need to go our separate directions. So he knew it was coming.
But even when we had the official conversation of, let's start trying and we're ready, it was like, you know, he's like, I just envision like we could go on vacation together and spend time just you and I.
And, you know, I'm like, or we could have kids and you're going to be the best dad.
And it's just, yeah, it's it's crazy how I have that in me.
And he's more focused on me.
I'm more focused on building the family.
You know what I think happened?
You said, listen to this. This
is a direct quote from what you said earlier. Asia and I were in his truck. Now listen,
it's part humor, but it's true. You were with a man in a truck and your body knew because biologically women are supposed to have babies.
Oh, I got a man, and he got a truck, and he's really driven.
Like who gives a fuck what it's about?
He's really driven and focused, and I'm going to have a baby with this dude.
These are three important elements.
It's a man.
It's big and strong.
He has a truck, uh he's driven and committed
and focused it's like dude he fucked he did it to himself it's like a country song yeah he's like
he chummed the water of course of course i got someone pregnant i have a truck i'm big and strong
and i'm focused and committed to my job like what yeah so he did it to himself right good job by the way congratulations great catch
great uh i mean it just it's by as soon as you start talking i'm like yeah that's what you guys
are supposed to do that's part of your and don't get me wrong for anyone i'm not poo-pooing women
who don't have babies i'm just saying if you have a ferrari never take in the sixth gear, then did you really have a Ferrari? Well, I guess that is harsh, but, but I, it's kind of, it's kind of is what it is. Okay.
And so, so you went to the birth fit class. Does, does Asia go with you? No, he stays back.
And tell me it's, it's a two, one or two day seminar. And is it only for girls or is it for
boys too? It was a full weekend seminar. It was open to men, but it's a one or two day seminar. And is it only for girls or is it for boys too? It was a full weekend seminar.
It was open to men, but it's going to be 99% women.
And, you know, I went and I learned a ton and it lit me up.
And that's what inspired me to become a doula was like, oh, all this information.
Like, you know, you know, in certain areas of health where you're like, the world is failing us.
They don't teach us these things. Like people need to know whatever the information is. I have to be the one to tell
them. So then you find out how the system is failing women and not just in the fitness world,
but just actually giving birth and recovering postpartum. And it's like, I have this
responsibility to be better, to, to better this for them, to give them this information.
So that kind of lit me up.
I started coaching more.
I became a doula, started attending births and just, you know, kind of got fell in love with birth.
Do you enjoy being at births?
I do. I do.
It's different now with kids.
I pick and choose and it's got to be a great fit.
I do pretty much only birth center or home births. I don, I pick and choose and it's gotta be a great fit. I do pretty much
only birth center or home births. I don't really do hospital births anymore. Um, but I, I feel like
I know that I'm done having kids, but it's so, it never is less amazing watching babies come
into this world. Do you think something like, um, uh, actually uh actually um magical is happening do you think anything like
unexplainable is happening or it just kind of seems like that because the process is so crazy
because it's so it's so like awe-inspiring or do you think that like actually like
i don't know i'm gonna just make this up but like five generations from your family spirits are in
the room too because it's when my three kids were born, it was some weird shit.
Yeah. I mean, birth, I want to say it was just me, but it seemed like there was some other shit
going on. Magical shit. It's a spiritual portal, right? It's the closest like birth and death are
the closest you're going to be to another realm, whatever you believe in. And so I absolutely
believe that there's, you know, other things happening in the room. I think people believe in different things. People get their
source from, from God, from, you know, a crystal in the room. I don't know what it is, but it could
be different for everyone. But I think like so many stars and so many different things have to
align for the birth process to occur that I don't think it's, I don't think it's random.
Yeah. It's crazy that you guys only are able to get pregnant once a month. I guess that's good.
Yeah. Um, and do you work at birth fit also Asia? I don't know, but I have, um, we've hosted
birth fit seminars and our gym space and I've partaken in, um, the seminar when they were
running the seminar
and it's it's powerful knowledge and information to have from a coaching perspective too
the reality of things is like I'm not void of being able to work with women and women on their
pregnancy journey or their postpartum journey like I know where my role is on you know delivering
services or referring out but it's it's information to know. And just being associated with my wife and her, obviously, affiliation with BirthFit has really
widened my perspective and brought me newfound knowledge that I never had originally.
And who goes to the two-day class? Women who were, wow, look at that position right there.
Holy smokes. Yeah, that was a birth i attended
so that's an forward leaning inversion getting the baby to move positions a little bit getting
some pressure off of mom but yeah that's why birth is i don't remember hayley doing that one
you know you've got it someone who is not strong is not going to be able to get in that position
no middle of a contraction no um who who goes to the um seminars uh one month pregnant or
after you've had the kids or who goes to that so the the we're pretty much all online now we
haven't done anything in person in a year or so but it's typically for anyone who wants to work
in person with women so this is chiropractors this is crossfit coaches personal trainers we've had
midwives lactation consultants.
I mean, anyone in the birth realm who wants to be hands on with women in the fitness realm is who we're working towards.
OK, so. So, oh, wow, that was much broader than I thought.
So I was my perspective on it was all jacked up.
I went to a birthing class with my wife.
We went to a hypnobirthing.
I don't even remember what it was.
But it was just cool because it was three hours once a week,
and we just got to sit on a little couch together for three hours once a week for like six weeks.
That was cool.
That's probably the most time me and my wife ever spent together.
But that's for pregnant women birth fit is birth fit is is for anyone whether you're
pregnant or not pregnant or you're basically any if you're a coach and you deal with women at all
you birth fit has something huge for you absolutely and so like yeah our education is going to be more
from the coaching the professional standpoint our programs are going to be for someone in a specific part of that motherhood transition, preconception, prenatal,
postpartum, life, postpartum, things like that. So there's the fitness side and then there's the
education side. I'm scared to click this one here. Are you doing burpees pregnant?
Cause I'm so like opinionated. Click it. Do it. All right, all right here we go uh are you doing burpees
pregnant oh stop oh I I just don't think that I I I just don't think it's necessary to to to do box
jumps and and and um and me personally and get inverted and jump rope when you're pregnant i just
i don't i something the same way i don't think you should drink coffee or wine you get your
caffeine or wine just just me it's just something i think if you have to ask then you probably
you should really think twice okay stop try these instead okay i'm enjoying this a squat
elevated push-up anything else so what does that A squat, elevated push-up, anything else? So what does that mean, elevated squat, elevated push-up?
Oh, as separate movements.
Yeah, like replacing.
Right.
Because some people have even tried to do burpees, right?
They try to stack plates along the side, and then they do the burpees so that the stomach could go between.
But it's just something doesn't –
Why?
Yeah.
And then there's obviously this question, what's your opinion about tia's workout it's hard for
me to have even any opinion about tia because like she's not even human right so it's like i don't
want to i don't want to judge her i don't i don't want to judge her do you want to judge her no you
know we get this question a lot i can't my my dms are filled with people you know, we get this question a lot. I can't, my, my DMS are filled with people,
you know, forwarding me videos of professional athletes working out when they're pregnant,
like, Ooh, can you believe they're doing this? And, you know, I would never throw shade on Tia
in that regard. She is arguably the most dominant female athlete, you know, out there. Um, do I wish
that she could enter a different mindset in pregnancy? I totally do. wish that she could enter a different mindset in pregnancy i totally do i wish she
could experience more of the feminine realm of being in touch with her training for birth versus
training in her sport but modifying for pregnancy i do wish that for her that's very controversial
uh can you give us an example yeah for sure by the way very well said that's very controversial. Can you give us an example? Yeah, for sure. By the way, very well said. That's about as gentle as you could say it. Very well said.
You know, I think we say this a lot in birth that you are in season for birth, right? Because we
work with a lot of athletes. And so we're used to training in season. So if you're taking the
CrossFit games, like you're off season when you're, you know, building up strength, laying
off the Metcon work, and then you get ready for the open, you start laying on the Metcons. And then, you know, as it advances,
your training changes to culminate where if you're a games athlete, it's changing until you get to
game day or games week or whatever it is, right? There's a time for things to be ramped up,
there's back off periods, there's recovery, all of those things. And so birth is this perfect nine, 10
month window where you can train to be in season for birth for the big event. And so taking that
mindset to like one of the things that we say is just because you can doesn't mean that you should
is my training helping me get closer to the birth that I want to accomplish? Or am I stuck in my identity as an
athlete? And so we live in this very masculine minded world like CrossFit, right? It's,
it's measurable, there's, there's percentages, you count your calories, you count your macros, but
nothing, there is no other period in a woman's life that calls her into her feminine,
more than pregnancy, it's calling you in to be engaged with your body,
to be intuitive, to know what you're feeling on a daily basis,
to determine, I'm not going to tell my body what it gets to eat.
I'm not going to tell my body how it has to move.
I'm going to have more of an intuitive approach
of what's appropriate for today.
How am I feeling for today?
There's all these blanket statements, do this,
don't do this. Is what Tia's doing harmful for her baby? No, like her baby's fine in there, but
could it give her further repercussions postpartum? Physically, yes. Like if we're not
respecting the physiological process of how our body is designed to change, there's going to be
more detriment in the postpartum, as well as not getting into that feminine realm that pregnancy
is calling you to. I personally believe, and my opinion is, that's what leads to worse postpartum
mood, anxiety, depression, things like that, because you're so disassociated from
your body. But now you don't even know this body that you're in. And you're just battling this
world of like, I used to be able to tell my body what to do, I used to be able to tell this now I
don't even recognize my body. And you're just so disassociated that it ends up being anxiety,
depression, you know, those kinds of things. So I just think
that pregnancy is this beautiful window of time to train very specifically for birth and allowing
yourself to, for the first time ever, let go of expectations of sport or of other people
and to hone in on this like sacred feminine time with your body and your baby.
And to hone in on this like sacred feminine time with your body and your baby.
Can you give me like a superficial example of that? The one that comes to mind is, and maybe I'm wrong, but I think my wife just stopped doing pull-ups.
She loved pull-ups.
And the second she got pregnant, she stopped doing pull-ups.
I'm like, why did you stop doing pull-ups?
She goes, it just doesn't feel right.
And I think she specifically said around her stomach and her diastasis.
But she's like, hey, this body now is not supposed to hang anymore yeah you feel it you literally are getting
communication from your body if this doesn't feel right and so yeah so like the hanging the swinging
right so your linea alba your abs basically have that tissue in between and we have this
beautiful hormone called relaxin in pregnancy that allows for those tissues
to expand. So your rib cage, everything is widening. And so if you're hanging and swinging
through ranges of motion like that, like the natural process is to separate. But if we're not
respecting the integrity of that tissue, when you're postpartum, it's not just going to come
together and approximate, you're going to have a lot of damage and connective tissue to start healing. So yeah, it's that feeling of like,
hey, hanging, like, I'm just going to hang on the bar for my warm up today, maybe at 10 weeks,
it felt good. But now I'm 17 weeks. And it's like, oh, that doesn't feel right for today. So
what can I do instead? And it's just having that ability to listen to your body, but also stepping away from
like the ego side and being like, this is what's more appropriate for today. If I'm training for
birth and my end goal is this birth that I want, what could I do instead of, you know, swinging
from a bar and doing a pull up? Asia, Leah was saying that it's like um or someone he was saying that it's mostly women who
take the class but it sounds like everyone should be taking it it sounds like every class should be
like 50 50 yeah maybe even more men should be taking it maybe it should be 70 30 maybe men
because because they have no experience yeah well i mean whether you're a coach or a business owner
you you work in the fitness realm you're like I mentioned, you're not going to be void of working with women. And a lot of times the information that's out
there for women on their pregnancy or postpartum journey, there's not a lot of information,
much less accurate information, the way that birth fit is producing theirs. And so I think
it's very valuable, not just from a coaching standpoint, but I think from a supportive
spouse and husband standpoint, I think it's good
to, um, to gain this information and knowledge so that you can support them as best as you can
on that nine, 10 month journey. And then through the delivery as well.
Specifically, sorry, if this is redundant, what you said, but if I'm a coach and a pregnant woman
walks in, or if I have a member and they're like, hey, I'm pregnant, and I think I'm going to take a break from the gym.
If you've done the BirthFit class, you can be like, hey, by the way, I've worked – just so you know, I've worked with 15 other women who have been pregnant.
I also went to the BirthFit class.
Here's a great resource for you.
Go to their Instagram account for starters.
But also still come to the gym.
Don't worry about it.
The gym can still be a place that
you come in and hang out. We're just going to, we're just going to change some of the
demands on your body. Yeah. I think there, I mean, in that sense too, there, there's a lot
of belief breaking as well, because you know, when, when women are going amongst their journey,
there's a lot of information sometimes that's kind of deterring them away from
moving their body lifting weights staying within their fitness routine. But I've seen it firsthand
with my wife and other women that we've created relationships with is the fitness aspect aspect
of their pregnancy journey has led to the most desirable birth experience that they've wanted
versus the opposite. And, you know, Leah and birth fit has kind of coined this phrase and i always go
back to it but it's like birth is the most vigorous and physical like event in your life that you are
training for like why wouldn't you train for it it's the same way as if you sign up for a marathon
in a year you're not going to not run any it's the same thing with the birthing experience like when
you you've seen it too when you birth that baby that's a marathon of an event. Why not get your mind, body and spirit prepared for that event by doing the things that are necessary to get your mind, body and spirit prepared for that event?
it funny like uh i don't know let's say let's say 15 years ago or 10 years ago we would have been telling women um uh hey don't worry it's okay to work out when you're pregnant and now the community
has grown grown so big and we have such a um dedicated and compelled group that now we have
to be like okay there's a group that's i don't want to say gone too far
it's an over simplistic but now we have to bring some of them back okay we we know it's okay to
work out but like like you guys are saying it has to be worked out for this kind of athlete now
it's it's it's crazy right we've come so far from hey you should just be at home watching soap operas
to now like whoa whoa whoa let's take some of this energy and uh bring it back like i
wonder um i want what is what what's is walking a huge component of training for is birth is birth
it like huge uh proponents of walking yeah love walking love walking right because you think i'm
trying to think of all the women that i spent a lot of time in africa and i just it's the image in my head i saw pregnant
women just walking everywhere and shit loads of walking carrying stuff carrying a baby in the back
a bucket of water on the head and in a 10 mile walk in the morning 10 mile walk at night so yeah
so much benefit yeah as as opposed to yeah and that's probably hard for a crossfitter to do
just be like hey i'm toning this down to a five mile walk. Right. There's two realms. Like you said,
we still have doctors that are saying, don't lift above 20 pounds. Don't get your heart rate above
140. But then we have this world of like, don't change anything that you're doing. Go hard so
that, you know, your recovery, like as soon as you have that baby, you're not going to miss out
on next year's competitive season. You know, there's like these two realms. And I think what people forget is like
so much of our physical preparation for birth. I mean, it's important, but birth is a spiritual
event. And if you're not preparing your mind for it, you can't like, I will share this is,
this is anecdotal. This is my experience. I attend a ton of births
out of hospital. And the number one transfer outside, okay, first time births, because they're
longer moms either want rest, or they want pain management, or their strength and conditioning
or CrossFit athletes are a big part of our transfers. And it's because the CrossFit world has done an amazing job at getting comfortable with
discomfort, working through pain, working through discomfort.
You can't out-fitness birth.
And so what we see is we see women who don't have the ability, their inability to let go,
to soften their pelvic floor, to relax, to let these things happen.
They're constantly trying to run
from it to outwork it to outperform it. And birth doesn't work that way. So there's this,
this beautiful kind of relationship of you have to physically be able to endure, but you also have to
mentally be able to soften and surrender. And I think that in the fitness world and the CrossFit world, we get
really good at the physical, but we lose fat. And that's why I go back to like that feminine calling
is like, you have to know how to soften, how to surrender, how to let this overcome you. You can't
run from it. And so I think that's where we're different in birth fit is like you are training
for this birth.
You're not just training because you're pregnant.
Wow, that's a great you said.
That's amazing what you just said.
That is.
But by the way, for people who don't know, when she says transfer, I think what she is referring to is people who start a birth at home and for one reason or another get moved to a hospital.
So and she said the two things were obviously pain management someone just is like fuck i can't take anymore and then
you get in the car and you go and they give you whatever that thing is in your spine or whatever
they inject you with some shit make you numb uh and then the other thing so you're basically saying
you have to be fit enough to do uh uh fran but um there's a point where you have to be fit enough to do Fran, but there's a point where you have to surrender and
you're not going to be doing Fran and rely on just the fact that you did Fran, but you have
to surrender. No more thrusters, metaphorically speaking for you. Correct. Yeah. You've got to
surrender. You've got to be able to say, I'm not running from this. I'm not out toughening it.
Like I'm letting it overcome me. I'm trusting my body's ability. I'm trusting all the training
that I've done to carry me, but I'm letting go at this point.'m trusting my body's ability. I'm trusting all the training that I've done to carry me,
but I'm letting go at this point.
And that's when the body opens up and the baby comes.
But if we don't get to that point,
that's when it takes more intervention
or things could take a turn.
That's why we ended up having a home birth, by the way.
So that was like one of the catalysts.
We so wanted to have a hospital birth.
So it was our goal. Like, fuck no, we're not doing that weirdo shit.
Having a baby at home, that's dangerous. And then while we were in this class, they gave an example and they weren't even trying to talk us into a home birth.
They just gave an example of a woman who was basically dead.
She was she was still and they were keeping her alive because she was pregnant and that she actually birthed the baby vaginally.
Like the body just still pushed the baby out because it goes through all the chemicals that
causes the muscles to sequence in the right order to push a baby out. And when I heard that,
I remember driving home with my wife and being like, holy shit. Basically, she just told us
women have to get out of the way so the baby can come out.
And I was like, I don't that sounded just crazy to me. But at that point, we knew we were not we're not made for a hospital birth. Yeah, there's a time and a place for it.
Absolutely. But low risk births are not need for medical intervention. And you go to the hospital
because you're sick or something's wrong and they fix you,
but there's nothing wrong with you when you're pregnant. Obviously there's outliers, there's
higher risk births and things like that. But even of that, like what is truly high risk versus what
is the hospital and their, you know, overhead liability team deeming as high risk. So, you know,
you've got to weigh those things. It's not for everyone. And I'm not saying that a hospital birth is bad, but I'm just saying that our bodies are made to birth these babies. And
we all, you know, I had two home births and I have people all the time that are like,
I just wish I could do that. And I'm like, you have the same parts as me. You were designed
the same way I am. You could do that. It's a mindset. And it's, you know, it's getting fear
out of the way and trusting innately what you
were created to do. Is Lindsay's the creator of a birth fit? Yeah. She's the founder. Yeah.
And is she a midwife? She's not a midwife. She's a chiropractor, but she's also a doula.
Okay. And, uh, what do you, do you know why she started it? Yeah. So she was, um,
chiropractor body worker in like the Hollywood realm. And she was working on some really high end A-list actors traveling the world with them.
And I would say early, probably like 2012, 2013 ish.
She was working with a female who was pregnant, but was cast for a role, you know, the following year and basically came to
Lindsay and was like, I need to have this baby and be ready for this role and ready to shoot by
this date. What do I do? And Lindsay was like, I don't know, let me do some research. And then
upon researching, she realized there's not much out there. But of everything she could find,
it was it was basically a natural or I would say, a unmedicated vaginal birth is going to yield the quickest recovery and allow for her body to recover postpartum in a manner that she could get back.
So that kind of lady probably hated hearing that. Right. But she did it and she did awesome.
And so that led Lindsay down the rabbit hole of like, why don't, why don't we know this? Like, why isn't this, everyone's told to just go do it this way. Why
don't we know that it can also be done this way? So she started a blog, which turned into,
um, you know, a bigger thing. Then she started having seminars and she hired a staff and here
we are. Yeah. Crazy. It never gets old looking at pregnant women it's fascinating and i want us to go back
to tia one more thing that i i do really enjoy her pregnant videos like as much as like i'm like
what is she doing she like in my mind she shouldn't be doing that i absolutely love watching
her move when she's pregnant it's i'm i'm absolutely mesmerized by the fact that there's a kid in there.
It's incredible.
And that her body is like this.
This is crazy.
That's a baby in there dangling from her midsection.
And research actually shows a healthier, fitter mom yields a healthier, fitter baby.
And so it's like when you watch these pregnant women move like this,
And so it's like when you watch these pregnant women move like this, it's like they're literally impacting like the genes for their children to be better, you know, harder to kill humans, which is phenomenal.
What do you think?
I know this is probably off subject why you thought you came on here, but what do you think about these women who you talk about this this nine ten-month window that is to embrace the feminine,
the opposite of the pickup truck.
And what do you think about how quickly some of these women then are back into the sport?
I don't know if the sport is masking, but like this room,
I mean,
what Annie Thor's daughter did is kind of like,
it's just fucking,
I can't believe it happened. Or,
or there was a girl on Tommy Hackenbrook's team.
I don't know if you remember this Asia,
this black girl,
when she was on the teams,
she's breastfeeding in between the events with a smile on her face.
She was amazing. I forget who she is. She was amazing. What. She's breastfeeding in between the events with a smile on her face. She was amazing.
I forget who she is.
She was amazing.
What do you think about that?
Is that a missed opportunity for those women too?
I mean, I know that's a bit controversial,
but because part of me is like crazy impressed with what Annie's doing.
And part of me is like, man, don't you want to do like,
well, my wife did look so fun.
Just carry a big,
take a baby everywhere with you and feed it for 12 months.
I thought she was or 18 months, whatever she did. Yeah. Do you have thoughts on that? I do. Um, you know,
it's hard when you are a competitive professional athlete and you still have skin in the game. I get
it. Like you are, you are pulled in many directions. My, the thing that I always say is
though these women are like anomalies when it comes to their physical feats, they all go through.
She got on the podium.
I mean, it's incredible.
She got on the podium after she gave birth.
It's like, what?
It's incredible.
It's unheard of.
And I think, first thing, people have to realize that they're not her.
Like, you're not going to do what she did, and very few people ever will.
But they aren't exempt from the trauma and everything that comes with post-birth.
So she also has a pelvic floor and an abdominal wall that's crazy gnarly.
She's done a lot of damage that we all do in birth.
And so she also bleeds for four weeks postpartum.
She also probably has a ton of core pelvic floor dysfunction, pains, things that go on
behind the scenes that people don't see.
So what she did was absolutely phenomenal.
Do I think it's the best thing?
No, I wish women could give it at minimum a year of dedicated rehab and building
back.
But I also respect the fact that she's capable of these things.
She's a competitive athlete.
Her identity is still probably very much athlete and she's torn between
athlete and mom.
She's doing both and she's probably doing great at both.
But if we could encourage that year window,
I think women would be in a much better place.
But yes, it's like, I just like to say out of everything, like no one is exempt from
what happens postpartum from, you know, the bleeding to the incontinence to all the recovery
things.
And so she probably has some, some shit to deal with on the backend, um, that you don't see.
And, you know, I, she's worded it. I've actually seen a comment where she talks about it. She,
she speaks about it very well. She's very aware that things aren't the way that they should be,
but she's working through them. Is she probably more susceptible for like a major injury? Like,
I know she's had a major back injury yes she probably is and I hope that's
not the case but there's a lot of things that she probably has to do on the back end to keep her at
that level that maybe if she took the year off and didn't do that she might even be a stronger
version of that I in when Annie Sakamoto did the same thing I don't remember like how quickly she
came back but I remember she was kind of like the first one that we saw publicly.
It was like,
holy shit.
She had a baby and then got back into just crazy shape.
Yeah.
And Val Val Vobrol.
Right.
Right.
Yeah.
I mean,
it's incredible.
Asia,
what do you think,
what do you think dudes should do?
How,
how do you think dudes can support that?
Your, your wife's a professional athlete.
She's killing it, and she has a baby.
What do we say to them?
They want to get back on the horse?
Well, I think it comes with, you know—
Or even if they don't want to get on the horse, how do we massage it so it's good for them mentally?
don't want to get on the horse how do we massage it so it's like good for them that's a that's a tough conversation that i think depends on the the two people that are
they're having it and experiencing it fortunately on my end it's like my wife is as educated in
what's right for her and we were out of our competitive years to where it really wasn't
a conversation she understood what was necessary for her leading up to the birth and then after
the birth as well but you know this is a really great conversation that we're having
because like optimal health and optimal recovery doesn't always equal optimal performance and if
these women are still very much in their competitive career if we're speaking of crossfit
women athletes that have just given birth like there kind of has to be a trade-off there unless
of course their competitive career is coming to an end or is winding down or birth, like there kind of has to be a trade-off there unless of course their competitive career
is coming to an end or is winding down or is ended.
Like there has to be some sort of trade-off there.
And so from the male's perspective,
it's like you can really only do so much
if your significant other or your wife
is the one who is competing at a high level
or who's doing something specific.
It's a different story if you're average Jane and Joes,
but it's like, you've got to support her where and when you can you got to do the best
that you can to be able to do that but in our in our um situation specifically like i was very much
at the wayside like she was the one that was leading a lot of the decisions she was the one
that was educating me i was getting educated along the process and it feels phenomenal to be like
oh you know what?
I cover these things within our family and our relationship. I don't have to worry about these
things because I'm just going to trust that she has our family's best interest in mind. And a lot
of that came down to not just the pre-birthing period, but the birth experience itself. I'm
going into a room with my wife being who she is,
having the knowledge base that she has. Lindsay, essentially founder of BirthFit, is our doula.
And then our midwife has 2,500 natural births under her belt. I literally just sit back on
this couch and take a nap. Everything is pretty much taken care of. But we had conversations
leading up to that point to get ourselves in the right frame of mind to know what my role was and how I could be most supportive of her in that experience.
And I had very minimal things to do.
But you better believe the things that she wanted and needed from me, I was doing to the best of my ability.
But it was very small and minuscule things in the grand scheme of things.
Even after the baby came out, I felt like, yeah, like my shit was easy.
Yeah. She's just,
I had to just make sure she had a situation where she could feed the baby.
Yeah. I was the dude that ran to Denny's at 2am or 5am to get her a grand slam
breakfast, you know? Yeah, exactly. I'll take that job all day long.
I'll peel a cantaloupe and put a bag of almonds or uh you fill a bag full of almonds no problem yeah
yeah i think i didn't change a diaper with either kid for the first two weeks um asia woke up and
would always do the diaper hand the baby to me i would feed um so yeah he was on denny's like
post-birth but i think talking about like that immediate postpartum window, um, where like all of my meals were prepared.
I, it felt like a spot the second time my birth with Ruby, it felt like a spa at the
house.
Like I had 30 days lined up for him, um, a schedule of what I wanted each day.
And I would wake up and he would take the baby and be like, Hey, these herbs are in
the bath.
There's a cup of tea there for you.
Use this, use this oil. Like I wrote it all out for him. But then when it, the time
came, it was like, he just executed and did it. And I didn't have to think about it. And that was
like, I think so much about postpartum depression and anxiety and all of the mood disorders comes
from feeling a lack of support. And I felt so.. Wow. So that was like that first and I remember
with my first being like, Oh, I could sit on the couch and help fold these clothes. And he was like,
No, like you sit there, you feed the baby, like you don't need to vacuum was just like, I needed
those reminders I needed for him to stand up and be like, No, like, you just do this. This is your
only time to just sit here with the baby on you and soak it all in do what you need to do for the baby yeah the clothes will close we find
not being folded for two months is that what you said asia yeah pretty much i mean support is such
a good word i just hide them i hide them did you fold them absolutely what do you need i'll bring
it to you throw them on the ground kick them kick them under the rug just have piles just have i got this new system pile of underwear polish shirts pile pants what you
need the folding thing so old school asia knows all about that yeah just to follow up on that
point you know support is such a good word because you know we were in a place where i was fortunate
enough to be able to step away from work and the business for a good while but it's like
the reality of things from the the the husband the husband or the partner, the male's perspective is like
in that initial, you know, 30 to 60 days, essentially, maybe even more like you have a
little role in that child's life. And the sense of all that baby wants is milk. It wants to sleep.
It wants to poop. And more times than than not the mom is who is going to be
the most like the best person to be able to deliver on that so my perspective going into it is like
how can i completely like eliminate all things within my schedule completely be as selfless as
possible to support her in that realm and that does come down to you know doing all of the tasks
doing all the laundry cooking all the foods making her feel as supported and as comfortable as possible is honestly
the best thing that like partners can do for their significant others so that they can
not only recover, but they can put 100% of their focus into, you know, getting the child
up and going in those first 30 to 60 days.
I mean, it's a long amount of time.
And in the real world, not everybody has the opportunity to dedicate to that. But just taking that mentality shift on like,
you know what, I'm going to put myself to the side for a moment and focus 100% on, you know,
my wife, my significant other, whatever it is, and help support them and help them get back on
their feet so they can do what's necessary for the child. Leah, this is zero exaggeration.
I'm about to tell you zero exaggeration.
When my wife had the twins, she had them,
we had a small house, 860 square feet,
and she had them in the living room,
which was probably like 15 feet from the front door.
And then our back bedroom was another 15 feet behind that.
She had them in the living room.
And then basically one in the living room, one in the bathroom.
While she was like moving, one just fell out.
And then she retreated to the bedroom, right?
And, you know, the doulas and the midwives are gone.
And I'm cleaning up and my
wife didn't come out past the living room where she gave birth for three months. Now we had a
sliding glass door where this, where light came in, into our bedroom, huge sliding glass door.
She didn't go, she didn't until for three months, she stayed in between the bedroom and the living
room basically, and just fed two babies never once. once and i and we had another kid at that
time so basically for three months and then i really didn't know that kid i mean because that
kid had been feeding for 18 months i mean i knew him you know what i mean i changed three gazillion
diapers but like he was ma and then all of a sudden he was mine right greatest three months of my life
i got him all along and hard that was hard for her right because was like, she had him, she was raising him for 18 months.
Then he's just gone. Basically. She only saw him at night then basically.
I mean, I mean, that's a little exaggeration, but literally,
and I remember the first time after three months she came outside,
I bought a minivan and came home and surprised her with it. A brand new one.
I'm like, do you want to come out and look at it?
And she went to the front door. She's like, Oh, cool.
It was true. It was nuts. Yeah. But She's like, oh, cool. It was nuts.
Yeah, but it's like.
And she was happy.
She never bitched nothing.
It's almost instinctual though, right?
It's like your own little cave.
Like you're protecting the cave
and all of the little cubs are inside
and she has everything that she needs.
And it's just, it's like.
Text me shit to get at Whole Foods.
Go get this.
Yes, yes, ma'am.
It's just instinctual.
I think if you give. It was beautiful, by'am. It's just instinctual. I think if you give yourself-
It was beautiful, by the way.
It was beautiful.
She was so happy.
If you give yourself the ability to slow down, it feels right.
But society doesn't necessarily allow for that.
The first baby, she did try it.
Like, obviously, I think she tried to go for a walk after two weeks,
and she started bleeding.
And she's like, fuck that.
I'm coming back inside and feeding.
And my wife's crazy active. Like, she's a piece of steel her body's crazy i actually
thought was thinking when you guys came on today this morning i have two six-year-olds and an
eight-year-old and i think like she's for whatever normal means you know i think she's like i'd say
as of today what's today uh april 18 2023 Now she's finally back to normal. Took her six years or, you know, after having twins. All right. I think I got my wife. Like, I mean, she's still a mom. I noticed something else you guys have in here. When a baby is born, remember a mother is born too. That's, that's like, I guess we touched on that with like Tia and Annie too.
we touched on that with like Tia and Annie too. Like, are they aware that also a mother is born?
Yeah. You've got a mother, the mother, right? Like it's a, it's a new, new version of you.
It's yeah. There's like talks about baby. It's a baby, two babies, a baby mother and a baby.
Yeah. And you've just given birth to this newest version. And so there's like that morning period because you, there's, there is a brief period where you're almost like grieving or mourning your
former self like you are no you will never be pre-baby again you will never be that pre-baby
person you're still the same person but you're evolved and so I think there is that grieving
period and which leads to a lot of you know tough times moms, because when we're so attached to our former identity,
we can't take claim to our new identity. And so I think so much of that training for birth,
tapping into your feminine, you know, learning to surrender is teaching us what's needed for
early motherhood. And I think if we don't take the time to do that, you're going to be suffering in
between the two.
Yeah. And that's why it's like after six years, I said my wife's back to normal, but I bet you she still doesn't. My wife used to sleep like a rock. Now she's, I can tell she's
a lion in the field, a lioness in the field. And if she, yeah, she's on, she's on. Like if I hear
something at night, she'll be like, did you hear that? And I'll be like, damn, this girl's good. Like, you know what I mean? She's like awake too. She heard that too.
You're never the same. You're always, you're forever different. That's for sure.
Yeah. I never asked my wife if she had any hard times or mourned her old self. I should ask her that. We also, do you think that there's an ideal, do you think it's, do you think there's's an ideal age to have a baby my wife didn't have her first one until she was 39 i don't i mean
if you're looking on medical paper when when the clock strikes midnight and you turn 35 you're
having a geriatric pregnancy and you're old and high risk yeah she was always high risk right but
like is she she's probably
healthier than many 29 year olds. Right. And since we went the midwife route, she wasn't high risk,
but I mean, yeah, right. The medical route, she is high risk, but they looked at her and they're
like, yo girl, you're good. You know, we, if you're looking back, you know, hundreds of years,
women were giving birth at 13 years old and that was prime time. And now it's getting later and
later. Um, I don't think
there's a perfect time. Is it harder to recover? Is it harder just, you know, with hormones and
a cyclical, you know, women are cyclical beings are constantly changing hormones are changing,
we're different every day. Like, I think there's definitely going to be more obstacles a little bit
later on and, you know, replenishing nutrients and things like that, managing hormones.
But I still like, I know women in their forties that are giving birth who are doing a phenomenal job and you'd never know. So I don't know that I would say there's an ideal time. I could say
that certain aspects of things get a little bit tougher probably. Yeah. She had the twins at 43
at home. I'm sure she would have probably,
if she would have had those five years earlier,
she probably would have recovered probably faster.
Yeah.
That being said, if 10 years earlier,
maybe not because she didn't have CrossFit,
which is kind of a trip, right?
Yeah, and just the mental,
like the evolution of who you are as a human
in five or 10 years,
like you're like a different person, you know?
So it's like, would she even mentally have been ready or prepared to care for two twins like that
like well that's the thing we're that's the thing right so up until this point we've been talking
about physical you know in this last couple minutes but mentally i can't imagine i'm 51
i can't imagine having a baby at 31 not i mean i mean uh i I was living at her house rent-free at 31. I was not meant to do – at 34, I was living at her house rent-free.
I can't – that's the part I have trouble getting my head wrapped around. I can't see either of us having a baby in our 20s or 30s.
of us having a baby in our 20s or 30s i guess maybe i would have stepped up but i was still doing that naughty shit in those years i was naughty for a long until i was like
40 doing dumb shit i still do dumb shit once in a while
old habits die hard yeah um and by dumb shit i mean i mean like once you have kids you can't
get so like you can't get so drunk that you can't drive someone to the hospital.
Like you can't you just can't do that anymore.
You have to be like you just can't or or you're a negligent parent.
Like someone gave me these two hits of MDMA like 10 years ago and they're still sitting in my drawer.
I could never take those and enjoy those because like, how the fuck am I supposed to do that?
What if someone falls down and needs to go to the hospital and I'm just rolling?
Right. And you have those like irrational,
but also not irrational like fears in the back of your head. Cause you're like,
and I have these humans to care for.
And I'm happy to have those. I'm glad. I'm glad.
My kids are preventing me from being a drug addict. It's awesome.
I mean, it changes so much though. Like look at, look at our training.
Asia doesn't miss a day of training. I miss a few here and there,
but like our training is now 30,
45 minutes in the garage while one's at school and one's napping. Or, you know, it's like
your, your whole world just changes and you adapt to it. Like, what if we were still living in that
window of like, oh, I need three hours to get in two sessions. Like you just, you can't fully show
up for your kids. I shouldn't say you can't, maybe people are, but I can't
fathom being in that mindset and also trying to care for kids.
Yeah. I don't miss either. And even, but, but even if that means I have to work out at midnight,
I don't miss, I have to sweat. I'm going to do that. I'm going to, and I, and I, and, and, and
kind of like at the point where it becomes like midnight and I haven't worked out yet, I'm going
in there to punish myself because like, Hey, you should have managed that time better you should have like brought some
books into the gym and made them read or watch you or you should have figured out you fucked up
i never blamed them that's stupid i never blamed them for like hey i couldn't work out i have kids
no i didn't i didn't train them right so that I can work out.
I don't know if you know.
I mean, you probably do.
I'm like so ecstatic about having kids.
It's like everything to me.
Like I don't give – like a couple weeks ago, I got kicked off of YouTube or I lost my Instagram account with the blue checkmark,
and people are like, oh, are you sad?
And it's like I can never be sad because in 20 minutes,
I'm going to be at
the skate park you know what I mean and someone's going to be like yo Heidi that's dad and I mean
check this out and I'm going to be like that's me and someone wants me to come watch something
and I'm going to do it it's like uh-huh for me I don't give that's I don't I don't know why but I
got uh rewired um bury my cock in her uh $5. Can Asia talk about his training after transitioning from
CrossFit? No, he can't. That's about be $10. Okay, go ahead, Asia. Yeah, you know, Leah brought a
good point. I was just thinking about this the other day is like perspective, perspectives change
and priorities change. And like, yeah, our, you know, I like to move every single day. You know,
if I'm not kind of like you were, it's by midnight.
If I haven't gotten training and I'm going to train, I prioritize my sleep as much as
I can get nowadays more, more than maybe physical activity.
But, you know, my, my training or my exercise or whatnot looks different.
I basically follow and test out a lot of the training that we do within our gym space.
But that oftentimes is 30 to 45 minutes. And it's in a window where, like Leah had mentioned, my son's at school,
my daughter is sleeping. But there are multiple times where they come down, and they, quote,
unquote, might interrupt our training session. And instead of throwing our hands up and stopping
where we're at, we make the best of it. And there's been times where I know that, you know,
I like to move a little bit more often Leah does. And if this is a session where we're at, we make the best of it. And there's been times where I know that, you know, I like to move a little bit more often Leah does. And if this is a session where we're not even much
into it, and our kids come down, like I'm going to be the one who takes them for a walk so that
she can finish her training session, just knowing how much time and energy each of us are putting
into something. If I miss a day or two or three, much less if I miss a week, the investment that
I've built in my fitness is much greater than what one week void of training would do to me. And so I kind of take
that perspective nowadays within the week to where it's like, you know, if I get if these opportunities
come up with our children, where my kid wants to go play baseball in the back or wants to, you know,
be a knucklehead to me or whatnot, these are going to be much more important experiences for him and
for us as a family, then, you know, me pushing him to the side and going in and sweating, you know,
my ass off for an additional 30 to 45 minutes. So I still take my training seriously. It's just,
there's so much time that I can dedicate to it, but by no means is my training look anything like
it did, you know, a decade ago when I was competing competitively, just because my perspective has changed, my priorities have changed,
and I'm only willing to do so much in that realm to maintain where I'm at
while giving my time, my energy, my attention to other things
that are honestly more important.
Do you have goals, Asia, fitness goals still,
like to set a PR or mile time, or are your goals more like,
hey, if I can work out every day this month
to score my, I believe if I had to say I had goals, they would be more execution based. So
there's things that I want to do. There's things that I want to accomplish within the day's time.
And I'm more of my goal is to check that on off. So if I can get into the gym and move,
or if I can get out and take a 30 minute walk with my family, I'm going to check that box. That's a success for me. Right. And now being like, you know, being a business
owner as well, there's a lot of stuff that revolves around that being a dad, a husband, being a, you
know, the head of the family, there's a lot of stuff that revolves around that. And there are
things that are honestly more important than my own physical health and training. But I think it's
so vital to prioritize that and do that as consistently as you can so that you can build up that, you know, fitness bank account is what I like to call it. Because at times where we get home late from a soccer event, and I have to make dinner for my family versus going to the gym and train, like it's not going to harm me to miss something that's more personal based to focus on things that are more family based.
personal base to focus on things that are more family based.
Go ahead.
I will say, I'll say Asia's very humble though.
I will say he's still extremely fit.
And he does some, you know, I would say training looks different.
If someone's looking for like, what is he doing? Like it doesn't necessarily look like it did when he was competing by any
means. Asia's biggest goal with our gym, which it's evolved now,
but originally when we built our garage gym,
he was like, I have a whole gym of every single thing I could ever want.
Like I only want the most unconventional gnarly things.
Like here's a hundred pound dumbbell and a 30 pound dumbbell.
You got to pick which one you're going to use for the day.
And so I will say that like, he has fun with those kinds of things.
There's a, there's an Instagram account called neighborhood alpha dad. And we always joke that that's asia like the guy in the street you know
barefoot doing weird things like that's him so he still gets he still gets his fitness on it just
looks a lot different i never work out with shoes on either i've even started pushing the sled in
the street um barefoot and like the other day there was some glass out there and i just every
time i stepped on it i just take my hand and like gently wipe it off like fuck shoes that's
baller right there man yeah shoes are fuck dildos um uh wow what is this oh jesus
wow good workout right there wow wow oh my god you are tall. That's a five feet backwards fridge wall.
Because if you guys don't have those in your trailer right now.
Is Rogue selling that fridge now?
It might be.
That is crazy.
I need a small man version of that.
As you say this, I say this with complete pride and zero humility.
I'm just realizing this as talking to you.
One, if my wife and I were working out, we worked out always together,
and then we had one kid and we continued to work out together,
and now we have three kids and we don't work out together, almost never.
If she's working out in the garage, she does a lot of yoga and Pilates now too,
but if she's doing CrossFit in the garage, I will try to go out there and watch her
just because I like watching like engorge with blood. I like watching her squat and
like her shoulders. I just like watching her move. And, um, but I always, I, if, if, if, if I will
never, I will always make, put my wife's working out ahead of mine. Never, ever.
Like if I'm walking towards the fucking garage and she's like, oh, I'm about to get on a salt bike.
I'll be like, cool, no problem.
And for me, like I don't care.
I'll work out with all three boys at home and just me.
She doesn't like that.
Like psychologically, she wants to make sure that one of us isn't working out so they're watching the boys.
Like when she's not around, I'll work out and like fuck the boys.
Like they know like you better be good.
I'll come out there and fucking snap at somebody. But so I let her work out and like fuck the boys like they know like you better be good I'll come out there and fucking snap at somebody but but so so I let her work out I can always I can always work out later it's so important to me I never knew this until you guys were just talking now that my wife
works out so I never put my no and it's so easy what that does is it doesn't make me a nice guy
think of it from the selfish perspective I never have to fight with my wife ever about working out.
It's just such peace of mind with me.
I never have to make a decision.
Like if my wife's like, hey, I'm going to Pilates at 1030.
She always asks me.
My wife's so nice.
I'm going to Pilates at 1030.
Will you be home with the kids?
Even if I had a fucking podcast, I'd move it.
Not a problem.
No problem.
I got it.
Like what the fuck do I care?
Like I don't know. I suggested anyone who can do that. Just like always just give.
Because then all I'm going to do is go to the park with the boys. I can work out there, do something there, throw a Frisbee with them.
Like, and there's always things you can do. Like if you're dead, if you like what I used to do with my baby, I would take the kid out if my wife needed to sleep.
I put on a fucking weight vest and pick the gnarliest fucking hill ever five miles away from my house and carry my fucking kid up the hill and back.
No stroller, no carrier, and when I get excited, I sit my kid down on the sidewalk and we wait.
Like just do your shit.
Just do some shit. A lot of it is, is like I had mentioned belief
breaking because especially in the CrossFit culture, it's like, if it's not hard and it's
not a set duration of time, it's not effective. But as you bring children in this life and you
have more responsibilities that become more important than just your training regimen,
you have to open your mind to these things and say, Hey, something's going to be better than
nothing. You know? Um, even if it's throwing on a weight vest and going things to say, hey, something's going to be better than nothing.
Even if it's throwing on a weight vest and going on a walk or if it's pushing your child in a stroller.
Push your kid up a stroller on the hardest hill ever in your neighborhood. If that's what you desire to do.
It's not to say that even low-level, short-duration, low-intensity style work is going to have a great effect on,
you know, your health and your overall fitness. It's just oftentimes, I think we're in this
societal culture of like, oh, if it's not hard, and it's not leaving me in a pile of my sweat,
tears and blood, it's not effective. And if I can't accomplish that, then I don't want to do
it at all. And it's like, this is a marathon. Our life is a marathon.
It's not a sprint.
So think about what you can do today or tomorrow that's going to affect you years and years down the road.
Says the guy who carries a refrigerator.
And I do want to say this.
Me walking barefoot, this is real, is way different than Asia walking barefoot.
It is significantly more difficult for larger people to walk barefoot because they are
heavier and it puts more pressure on their feet. You have to know that. But if you're embarrassed
to go barefoot, just walk around the block barefoot every day at least once and then make
it two times and start and you'll start building up strength and toughness in your feet. But I
have a friend who's six, five. And when he walks around on my barefoot in my backyard barefoot,
I can see, oh, that's a different for him yeah because he's just a massive man
step for kids you also remember don't project your shit onto them it's nothing for them
they weigh 35 pounds like don't give a they're walking on fire who cares they're walking over
it don't don't worry about kids yeah I was we we did like a family family 5K downtown Houston last year.
And Asia, he had a rucksack.
I had the baby in the back.
And I was pushing a stroller.
And we were running.
And Kai was with us.
And Asia was barefoot running the 5K in downtown Houston.
And you should have seen not just surprise, but how disgusted people were that he would be running.
They were just so taken back.
And it was just really funny.
I would let him go ahead and just watch people's reaction, like shirtless, jacked man that's barefoot.
And it was pretty awesome to witness that.
Long hair.
Looks like he's from a foreign land ready to conquer.
Like what time machine is he coming?
Be the anomaly.
Hey, people do that to my kids all the time because my kids don't wear
shoes unless they're unless it's like sports specific like tennis or skateboarding and people
stare at them constantly yeah but i do not my kids are not allowed to wear shoes in the car
i love it the second you get like if we come back from it take your shoes and socks off
like it just i don't want i don't want their feet in those things yeah i feel like ours wear shoes
so little that they only have they have like a 10-15 minute window that they'll even keep them
on like if we are going in a store and they put them on but we're in the store for more than 10
minutes they're like sitting down taking them off it's just so foreign um my wife's purse is always
full of shoes yep yeah in the back seat of our car there's you know 10 full of shoes. Yeah. Yeah. In the backseat of our car, there's, you know, 10 pairs of shoes because they just get in there and they just dump them.
Yes.
Oh, I can't wait to tell my wife that.
My wife said, why are there always shoes everywhere?
I'm like, because we don't wear shoes.
So you kind of have to have them everywhere just in case.
Ken Walters, my wife had our second at 40.
We've had our second at 40, and the amniocentesis – wow, Sevan.
I can't believe you said that.
Said the baby would be Down syndrome, but God – do you guys know who that is, God?
I know God.
Okay.
Yeah, I'm more like you, Asia.
I'm a little familiar.
But God didn't have that happen.
My wife is also in great shape.
No caffeine for entire pregnancy and never drinks.
Yes, that's awesome.
Yeah, they just assumed that baby would be Down syndrome because she's 40.
What's ambiosynthesis?
Is that the goo in the sack? That's like the baby's swimming pool?
Yeah, that's the amniotic fluid.
Oh. that's like the baby's like his swimming pool yeah that's the amniotic fluid oh so it's got to
be i i'm not sure what the amniocentesis is is that maybe the person who's analyzing that
oh okay i i wonder if they did like a a test where they take some amniotic fluid out and then
they try to come up with things from that.
Ambiosynthesis.
Ambiosynthesis, also called amino, is a prenatal test that takes amniotic fluid from around your baby in the uterus.
Dang, you're smart, Leah.
The fluid is tested to see if your baby has certain health conditions.
A prenatal test is a
medical test you get during pregnancy so they want so they tell you your baby has down syndrome then
you abort the baby and then you you you killed a a baby well i guess you you didn't kill the
down syndrome baby you killed a healthy baby yeah they they say that that's fucked up more often
than not to older moms and i can't i mean really like as a default tarded, I don't know if it was default,
but I would say more often than you would think moms are told that even,
um, you know, my, my theory is always, if you,
if you go looking for something, you'll probably find something,
but there's been many instances where I've had, you know,
friends or those that I've chatted with be told, your baby's going to
have x, there's a percentage that your baby is going to have this or that. And they give them
the opportunity to terminate the pregnancy to make their decisions. And then they have the baby
and the baby's 100% healthy. So yeah, it's, it's one of those things where sometimes it probably is accurate a lot, but it's also, you know, we don't know until the baby's here a lot too.
Or it can be more of a scare tactic and things like that.
So I would say there's a time and a place for it.
And there's definitely things that could probably help rule out.
But it is not unheard of for you to be told that baby is going to have something and then
maybe not have that. I'll tell you an interesting story. I don't know if I'm gonna get, but I think
when, I think when they do that test, they got to take a needle and poke a hole in the sack.
The baby lives it. Now me personally, I wouldn't, there's no way in hell you would do that to my baby's
house inside my you would never you would i would kill you if you put a needle into my wife's stomach
and then into the sack the baby lives in you'd be dead um so um this this friend of mine i'm gonna
screw this story up i should probably this story might not be true but the spirit of what i'm gonna tell you is true they they did that and the baby uh i guess you have something called like a vagus nerve
or some nerve vagus nerve in your neck and um and basically when they tested the mom's the baby that
needle hit the baby in the neck and uh that person to this day um faints like on a uh like on a on a regular basis
and then they went to like some specialists and they're like yeah you have something wrong with
your vagus nerve and then they made all the connections and it was this person's fainted
when they're driving when they see blood when they see needle there's all these things in traffic
when they stress out they fainted it's like that. And somehow they've tied it now to that getting poked when you're a bit.
It's like, dude, are you crazy?
Yeah.
In the bag, the baby lives in.
Where does that make any sense?
I'm sure it's just a regular test.
Yeah.
Like I said, if you go looking, you're probably going to you know, they will find something.
But, you know, I'm sure there's a time and a place for it.
But I don't know that it's something that I would ever be open to.
Even if I was told there's a high chance that this is going to happen.
Like, it's just not, I'm not going to disrupt that environment like that.
Jesus wore sandals.
That's bullshit, by the way.
I'm going to, I don't believe that. Oh, someone says, uh, my Jesus was barefoot. All right, cool. There's a, uh, uh, they actually asked my wife if we were going to keep it. Um, my wife almost slapped a guy. Um, uh, Jay Hartle, uh, you're racist. I worship a brown middle Eastern man. That's fine, but he's barefoot.
I don't care.
I'm just telling you he's barefoot.
That's where I – now she's a beautiful 24-year-old woman,
graduated from college this month, and getting married next September.
Dang.
That is awesome.
Be careful, Sevan.
No medical advice.
Thank you.
You're right.
Please follow all the WHO guidelines.
I support everything that Pfizer and WHO wants me to do.
Okay.
Oh, and Samantha, here we go.
Oh, no.
I might have something controversial.
Just because a baby has Down syndrome doesn't make their life any less valuable.
Agreed.
Yeah.
But I agree, but I have some amendments to it.
I don't know.
Do you have any people with down syndrome in your family?
Nope.
Um,
like further off in the family,
but not immediate.
I worked in a home with mentally disabled adults,
uh,
for five years who lived there.
So the same,
like eight mentally disabled adults for five years.
And I had lived in the driveway of my car.
And there were two people there with down syndrome. It a it's a it's a it is a tough life
it is a tough life to be mentally disabled because they're they're aware they're mentally disabled
and so i just want to tell all of you who just think like they the the number one thing with
mentally disabled people is they want to have intimate relationships and they want to have them with non mentally disabled people.
And they just think about that.
I put you on planet Earth and you're not allowed to.
And there's a whole the whole group of people that you want to be intimate with won't does not want you to be intimate with you.
And if you do find someone who's not mentally disabled, who does want to be intimate with you, that person's fucked up.
That's fair. So so I'm just saying it's hard. I'm just painting the picture. It's, it's a,
it's a brutal, it's a brutal reality. Absolutely. Okay. Back to, back to, um, there's, there's,
uh, you don't, the Instagram account and the website is just a crazy resource, right? Yeah. We have a ton of, ton of information out there. Um, we have blogs all over the place.
Typically you can type something you're curious about, add the word birth fit to it. There's a
blog for it. We've got a big YouTube link. I mean, there's all kinds of things out there for us.
And, and, and you know, what's interesting is, is on one hand it says, are you doing
Kegel's post a partum to strengthen your your your pelvic floor? And then somewhere down here, it's saying, hold on, stand by that you shouldn't be doing Kegels while you're pregnant. And right. And so and so there's a lot of like nuanced, important details like you can keep digging deeper and deeper and deeper.
important details, like you can keep digging deeper and deeper and deeper.
Yeah. We're going to challenge a lot of the things that you've been told your whole life on pregnancy, postpartum, a lot of blanket recommendations. We offend a lot of people.
We ruffle a lot of feathers, but we're honest in our research and the direction that we go
is to just
give people information that they're probably not hearing elsewhere. People do get really, um,
I'm a firm believer that, um, uh, you should have a vaginal birth. You shouldn't bathe your baby
and you should breastfeed. And, um, I think that that basically gives you the, the,
the strongest baby for what the fuck do I know? But I, but that really pisses people off. People
will be like, well, some women can't have vaginal births. And I'll be like, okay. But I also think
that 99% of women who are told they can't have vaginal births can have vaginal births. Yeah.
And what you've been told, I don't have time to breastfeed no no you've you push back you made that choice not to breastfeed
yeah there's a there's a lot of um i'm sure you've seen that all over your pages right
that's like those are the two most common fights right right just because we've learned or we're
saying that this is potentially better and you didn't choose to it doesn't mean you have to be
mad about it or that you're wrong it just just means that here's information, take it for what it's worth.
Right. Right. Um, you know, you, you don't know what you don't know. And I think we can always
do better. So putting this information out there, isn't it like so many people are like, Oh, you're
shaming women and you're shaming this. And it's no we're not we're just putting information out there and you get to choose what you do with it and i wasn't born um vaginally and i and i
didn't breastfeed i wasn't either and and i and i'm very happy with my life and i don't judge my
mom at all for it and i don't give a fuck and i'm very healthy and i'm fucking living a cool ass
life and but i'm just saying that no one has to take offense to it you like if you're a mom
and you had the baby in the hospital okay like it's just um it's like i tell people it's the
same thing like um don't feed your donuts they're horrible for your kids and then all these people
push back it's like well it's okay to have a little no it's not okay to have a little well
i saw you feed your kid a donut well yeah absolutely i'm not perfect i gave him three
donuts today it doesn't mean that i can't know that donuts are bad for your kids right people
are always looking for something but and birth is like that right that's a really contested top like
a hot hot button and no two births are the same no two pregnancies are the same that's why i know
two like no program is going to be perfect for everybody. You have to, you have to be able to
make decisions for yourself. And that's why you can't just trust the system to make decisions
for you because to say, you know, don't lift 20 pounds, don't lift or don't get your heart rate
above 140. Well, what does that mean for the person who's been CrossFitting for 10 years
versus the person who's been sitting on the couch for 10 years?
Right.
That's why we can't judge Tia.
That's why it's so hard to judge Tia.
Yeah.
Middest woman in the world, like homage.
So there's almost like a mindset you should come to birth fit with.
Hey, this is an incredible resource.
There's no intention of us to get you upset.
The intention is just to be a resource.
Take from it what you will.
If you think that doing burpees on these weights is what you absolutely need and you want to pass on the
advice to do this, do it. But don't shove the whole website away because don't throw the baby
out with the bathwater. Don't chop the nose off to spite the face. Right. If you're not being
challenged in your thinking and the way that you're living life, you're not learning, you're not being challenged in your thinking and the way that you're living life, you're not,
you're not learning, you're not growing, you're not, you know, doing anything. So I think being
open to information, but also, you know, it's not like you can be like, oh, we'll just try it out
because people like, well, I'm not pregnant. But I would say like, this isn't just half-assed
information that's being put out there. It's tried and true tested research. Like
we, we do this specifically for pregnancy. We're not just women that are like, Oh, I had a baby
and this worked for me. So by this program, it's like, this is specific for people in this window.
It's not just thrown out there random, uh, things you don't want to hear during pregnancy.
There's something about pregnancy that suddenly makes everyone around, around you don't want to hear during pregnancy. Um, there's something about pregnancy
that suddenly makes everyone around, around you very opinionated and worst of all experts. Yeah.
If you're pregnant, you don't want to be around me. I'm all of those things. When we get together
as a community, a lot of women share how a comment from a friend, relative stranger made while
pregnant made them feel, uh, some of the most common ones we hear are oh you're so big you must be ready to pop i like that one uh uh should you be working out like that i don't like that one so i do that one
too i did that one to tia uh was it was it a planned pregnancy oh yeah i always that's the
first place i go always uh you look exhausted i definitely don't say that okay i agree there
with you guys definitely don't say that that's a dou agree there with you guys. Definitely don't say that. That's a douche move.
Let me tell you about my neighbor's traumatic birth.
Oh, another douche move.
Wow.
That's like when you ride a motorcycle and everyone's like, dude, I had this friend who just died.
And you're putting on your helmet to get on your bike.
You're like, damn it.
Yeah, let me tell you all the bad stuff.
Some people don't understand that words can stick in someone's mind for a long time.
Oh, that's what my wife will say something to me and I'll bring it up three days later.
And she'll with a big grin, she'll be like, I knew that stuck.
And there can be harm in inexplicable ways.
So before you project your own experience and trauma or opinions towards someone, remember
that it might not be the best for them.
I so beautifully said pregnancy, birth and immediate postpartum are full of unexpected
changes in every
woman so be kind okay here we and i'm going to play this here we go crazy
it really is cool if you're a dude and your chick gets pregnant you should take a gazillion
pictures and just soak it all in and and you really kind of i don't know how you feel like
this but you really want a woman who ideally like will let you be as kind of as intimate with her as you as you possibly can um while she's pregnant
because you it's your own kind of like science experiment you got this thing in the house with
you that's going to make a baby and you want to be able to just like fully examine it and touch it
and like it it's crazy it's so cool it's it's funny. Asia can probably talk about this, but I find that women are so disassociated with themselves postpartum after they've been pregnant, had a baby, whatever.
And I found that, like, and Asia says it too, I think he was, like, the most attracted to me ever after I had a baby when I probably felt the grossest and
felt like I looked the worst. And I remember he said, like, you know, I feel like I've got the
soft tummy and I'm soft and you know, things that I've never been used to. And he's at one time,
he was like, before you were just like hot girl. He's like, now you're a woman. These are like
postpartum curves. And I'll let him speak to it if he wants. But it was just like that was so helpful for me to hear. But also I see it in births, too, where moms are just I work with women so often they're just so like blah with themselves. But then their husband just saw them give birth and like think they're the most beautiful, magical human beings ever. So I think that's so cool how it's just designed like that.
So I think that's so cool how it's just designed like that.
It's not fake at all, people.
You have to understand that too.
It's not, no dude is saying, well, right, Asia?
You're not saying that to make her feel better.
No.
You're like, damn, I got this now.
My wife is sexy indeed.
Yeah, it's like, wow.
If anything, I'm not saying that to make her feel good it's just the emotion emotional response and it's how i feel but it's kind of like what what you guys
were saying about not only is a baby born but a mother is born too it's just a different
the different phase of your life too and to see the things to to look back on our journey together
and to see the evolutions of our lives and to see how she's brought children into this world and the thing that she does for our children and me on a daily basis.
The work that she puts into keeping herself where she's currently at, it's sexy, man.
And it's just something that you can't get out of a youthful, fun relationship that we used to have way back in the day.
It's a different evolution.
relationship that we used to have way back in the day. It's just, it's a different evolution.
And I think men that see this on a daily basis with women that they're married to or partners that they have who birth children in this world and have done the things that she's done is,
it's a remarkable thing. And they can likely relate. I'm sure you can relate.
Greg just, Greg Glassman just got his wife pregnant again. And he's like 60 something.
And he called me and he's
like dude and i go what he goes i love her more than ever you know and as she gets bigger and
bigger and he's like dude i just can't i just cannot stop like just admiring her what a fucking
power how she is i just love her so much and it's like dude this is yeah we're all that i i feel
like if some biologically that's just what it's being,
it's just, the men are just, I think that's just a sign of a healthy man.
Like you just can't stop looking at the curves and wanting more and more and more of them.
Yeah.
It's, it's cool.
It's cool.
Yeah.
It's, it's really nice.
I would say to like men, if you're men are always asking, what can I do
postpartum to support my wife? And like those little things go a long way. Just like,
even if she's not accepting herself yet, just hearing it, um, physical touch, like being
reminded that you still think I'm beautiful, sexy, all of the things is, I mean, I think
that was super helpful for me. Does birth do, do any parenting?
We do, we have like a birth prep course so that both you could purchase. Sorry. Yeah. Parenting
coaching, not necessarily parenting, but like birth prep, how to prepare for your birth together
as a team, um, and coming up with your birth preferences, what you guys want, things like
that. So that would be more of like our birth education type thing.
But, but, but so it's in that window. It's like maybe, uh, what,
what about, um, uh, couples that are having trouble getting pregnant?
Does birth fit have resources that like, Hey, you should consider this diet,
these movements, this amount of sleep, like tweaks to the life.
Yeah, we do. We do some preconception work.
We also do consultations
to be a little bit more specific with those people and then we also have a whole program
so our we call it our b community but it's a fitness program we say for women in all seasons
and cycles of their life whether it be preconception maybe it's i had kids 10 years ago
maybe it's i'm trying to train in sync with my cycle. But it's more nervous system based or
nervous system led training. That's going to have a lot of those tidbits. And it's more like you're
still getting your fix of, you know, wide variety, GPP movement index, but it's going to be a little
bit more catered towards the feminine side. Michael, see, my wife, you are a handsome man michael uh my wife has never looked uh as
amazing as she did when she was pregnant in post-pregnancy she would say i'm so uh fat my
response was fat phat yeah my mom my mom take two my wife just took it uh she she takes compliments
good she just sits there whether my wife takes if i say something mean to her or nice to her, it's the same thing.
I bring up the thing about parenting because I've been with my wife so long.
I think I'm 51, and she's – I don't know how old she is, three years younger than me.
We don't – fighting is very – like we basically stopped fighting before we even had kids.
And then when we had kids again, we started fighting again.
And for us, fighting is not bad.
Like we're good at – we are good at fighting.
And fighting like not physically but yelling or some like name-calling or like a shut-up.
Gentle name-calling though. You don't call someone a fat fuck or something that you can't come back from. Be careful, you know what I mean? Or you don't call someone ugly. You're not coming back from that, but just like, hey, dickhead, or just something like that. got to like this name there's rules to fighting um but uh the only thing we fight over is um uh
when um one of us doesn't feel supported with the kid and by that i mean around discipline
so so the kids are um i've asked them three times to take a shower they don't and i go in there and
i grab them by the backs of their neck and i start moving them towards their bedroom and the wife's
like instead of like waiting till i'm done doing that she'll be like don't do that
to them I don't like that and then all of a sudden now like I don't feel supported right yeah that's
it that's the only thing we ever fight like and that's it a hundred percent it's never like we
like I could leave my dirty underwear on her pillow and we still won't fight over it she'll
be like hey don't do that again you know what i mean wet towel on her clothes she's wearing we don't get in a fight
nothing i i put too much salt in the dinner who cares but around that kid thing around not
supporting the other parent when when they're like dealing with the kids interrupting you know
that that's it that's 100 of our issues yeah I would say we're I mean, we don't really fight
either. But I would say that we we've kind of like, we we have a role with our kids and how
they're disciplined. I feel like if it needs to be escalated, I'm definitely the one that's like
Asia, I need you to go handle that. Yeah. And we'll do that too. Sometimes I'm like, yes, see?
Yeah, like, I'm definitely I have my moments. and he's actually good at reading when I'm like nervous
system is here and I'm about to snap. He's the one that's like,
you need to calm down. I'm going to take the,
like he recognizes that and kind of removes the situation because I'm about
to lose it. And I have my moments and.
That's good. Good job, Asia. I do that too. I'd say eight out of 10 times.
I'm really, I support her. Even if what she's doing is wrong, I'll bite the inside of my cheek
and tell her later, dude, you're going to make them pussies. I bite the inside of my cheeks.
I was like, am I interrupting mama now? Yeah. Like I pushed my daughter out of the way the
other day. She did something. I yelled, I kind of pushed it. And he was like, Hey,
you didn't need to push her for that. You know? And it's like, okay, fair. Like I, that was,
that was me taking it out on her. And, and we have the same moments vice versa, but usually if it
needs to be escalated, I'm, I'm more of the nurturer, of course, as the mom, they want to
come, like, he's going to do his thing and then they're going to come to me and I'm going to hug
them and I'm going to, you know, reaffirm why he did what they did, but I'm going to love on them. And so you definitely, we have our roles there.
If my, if my wife disciplines the kids, I wait until she leaves the room and then I taunt them.
I'm like, yeah, she fucked you up. Yeah. I like that. Cause it's so rare. It's so rare. But if
like she picked one of my kids up and carried them out of the room or did something like that
aggressive, like I might do, like just pick them up and remove them as they're carrying away crying. I'd be like, and then she'd turn around and be like, be cool. She's like raising four boys.
Yeah, exactly.
Okay. How often? So are you guys ever going to go back to doing live? I'm a huge
proponent of live stuff. You said you guys haven't done any live seminars in a year or something.
We haven't just because our team is kind of evolving. So we're a four man team,
three of which are pregnant right now. So, Whoa. Yeah. So our lives don't believe in
contraception over there at birth fit. It was all conscious. Okay. Um, I'm done,
but they're still going. So, um um it's a really good time for us
we can reach more people currently when we're online but we do like a huge part of birth fit
and if you've talked to anyone who's ever been to a birth fit thing is the in-person connection
that we cultivate is incredible um so it's not to say that it's where how what do you mean like
after you do the online course, like I can call someone.
So I'm saying when we did the in-person seminars and things like that, um, a lot of our virtual
stuff does have, you know, live calls and things like that with Lindsay and myself so
that we're, you know, we have support calls every month.
They're seeing our faces.
They're in front of us live a lot.
Um, but we do in birth that we love love our in person things this year is just not
not going to be the year for it because you know, they're growing humans.
But I would say that birth fit is definitely we're in front of people all the time. So if
it's not at an in person seminar, it is virtual, but you're seeing us a lot. You're talking to us
a lot like Lindsay and I to us a lot. Like Lindsay
and I are constantly chirping in everyone's ear. We have an online community, our beat community,
where they get specific access to us and calls and guest speakers and things like that.
So if someone signs up for the course, they take the course online,
do they take it all in two days? No, it's a self-paced. It's probably a dozen modules or more.
And there's so much information because in that course,
you're learning everything from how to coach to the physiological process of pregnancy and birth and programming.
And it's just it's a lot.
So it's self-paced.
But what we do is twice a year we have like a spring cohort and a fall cohort.
But what we do is twice a year we have like a spring cohort and a fall cohort.
So if you're going through self-paced, you can meet with us at those times and kind of break things down a bit more.
And that cohort also hangs out.
So I'm guessing it's also – well, maybe that's for coaches.
But for pregnant women, like in that, I noticed my wife made friends with those women who were in our birthing class.
That was like her class. Even though some women were going to give birth sooner our birthing class. That was like her class,
even though some women were going to give birth sooner or later than others, that was like her graduating class. And she stayed in touch with those people through like social media and stuff.
I guess, is there something like that at birth fit too, in the community? Like there's like
classes that graduate like groups of women. We, we have our birth prep online, but we were previously doing, you know, like,
Hey, this is our fall birth prep course. And so you see the same 10 people on there and you're
following each other. They're giving birth around the same time. Um, yeah, I would say like our
community is very familiar with one another. You see a lot of the same people and these,
these could be coaches. They're not even pregnant to people who are pregnant postpartum, you know,
everyone's kind of moving because birth is nothing staying the same, but we have a lot of familiar
faces and things like that, where it's like, oh, so-and-so is pregnant. And then 10 other people
are like, oh my God, I'm so excited because they know who that person is. They've been through the
program or they've seen them in calls. And I would say that for it being virtual right now,
there's a lot of focus on our end on that connection and kind of just feeling that like a community of women that can talk about things that probably they aren't talking about in other circles.
Awesome.
Is there anything else that you feel like needs to be said in this show?
I feel like this won't be the last time that either of you,
hopefully you enjoyed yourself and hopefully we can have you guys on again. I'd like to actually have Lindsay on again too. Is there anything else you think that we should say about birth fit?
You know, I just, I hope, and I think you did a good job drawing attention to this is like,
this isn't just for, Hey, I'm pregnant. I should, I should figure this out. If you're a coach,
if you're, if you're a human being
that's working with or around pregnant women,
postpartum women, women in general,
I think that there's amazing information
that you could benefit from, men included.
But we have programs for anything and everything.
So definitely check it out, kind of find where you fit.
And if you want
more information, like I think there were probably questions on, you know, I forget that in my world,
everyone talks about home birth and, you know, controversial things, but that's not the norm
everywhere. So if you're looking to have more of those conversations, definitely reach out to us
to figure out where you can go to figure out, you know, I want to break away from the system. What are my options?
And, um, you guys are open about that. You guys are open about that as being,
so do you guys have a bias towards like home births and, and, and sort of like, um, uh,
breastfeeding and vaginal births? You guys have a bias towards that?
breastfeeding and vaginal birth? Do you guys have a bias towards that?
I would say we have a positive bias towards what we feel is going to be the absolute best when your goal is optimal recovery and a thriving baby. I would say that I would not tell somebody that
they should not give birth in a hospital if that is where they are comfortable and they have the
information to make that decision wholeheartedly. But I think we're here to basically give the information so that they're not making decisions
driven by fear, that they can make a decision that works best for their family. So we are going
to give a ton of information and then, you know, obviously let you decide. But I would say there
is a positive bias towards what we feel biologically is how,
you know, things were designed to happen.
Okay. Fair enough. I like that. You're good. You're much, you're much more,
you're, you're, you're, you're less confrontational than I am. You have,
you have a, I'm more confrontational.
That's a compliment because I, I don't always have a tight leash on. Maybe when
you have Lindsay on, she'll explore a little bit further in the weeds. Yeah. Well, I got along very
good with her. I just have so much faith in the way we're biologically designed.
Yeah. I mean, I will say that we, we don't shy away
from what we believe and I'm not going to sit here and tell you what to choose, but I'm going to,
I'm going to let you know, you know, the ins and the outs and everything you need to know to make
that decision. And like you said, breastfeeding, like all of the things it's, we're not just going
to stand for, Oh, I just couldn't breastfeed. It's like, no, there's a reason why let's figure
it out because you were, you were designed to breastfeed. Um, so, you know, we're very honest
and we'll put that information out there, but we're also going to let you determine what's
best for your family. And you know, that's you. What about this statement? Uh, every child doesn't
have to have allergies and, uh, ear infections. And, um, what do you think about that?
I'm absolutely a proponent of children not having those things
and kind of getting to the root
of why they're having those things.
Oh, you're so good.
Yes. Yeah, me too.
Okay.
I don't want to get kicked off YouTube again
for seven days.
Asia, any closing remarks from Asia Bartow?
We just had him on here for his star power today.
Yeah, right.
Um, yeah, just following up with what Leah had mentioned about, um, you know, birth fit
as a resource.
I think that's a realm from, from a supporting partner and somebody who was not very knowledgeable
in that realm.
Even to this point, I'm still gaining knowledge, just about being informed. And I think that this is such a solid resource to not just inform
the mother, whether they're involved in fitness or not, but especially this space being very
fitness oriented. Like there's a lot of really, really great resources and information amongst
birth fit. And if anything, it's just being as informed as possible, doing your research,
educating yourself so that you can make the decision that you want. And if anything, it's just being as informed as possible, doing your research, educating
yourself so that you can make the decision that you want and you can be the spouse or the partner
that you desire to. There's not a lot of support and help and information out there, but this is
a great resource to be able to do that. And I'm very grateful for having them to be able to provide
me the experiences that I had with my wife on our childhood journey, our kids journey.
that I had with my wife on our childhood journey, our kids journey. One final thing. I'm 29 years old. I'm 42 pounds overweight and I haven't worked out since I went to high school and I was a
cheerleader. Does birth fit have a place for me? Will I feel out of place there? Will I feel at
home there? Yeah, absolutely. Sorry? Were you reading that from the chat?
No, no, no.
I just made that up.
I'm a 29 year old woman.
I haven't the last time I've been working ever since I graduated from high school.
I was on the cheerleading team and and I and I haven't worked out in nine years and I'm
42 pounds overweight.
You know, I'm five, five, 200 pounds.
And I'm this birth and my boyfriend's been uh ejaculating in me does birth have uh
something for me yes we are a place for all women okay so you don't have to be fit at all
we have we have things for everyone we have programs at every level with limited equipment
with all the equipment with no equipment whatever you need we will find we will find a place for you
yes okay uh how about this one more
thing i'm i'm six weeks pregnant and is it too late for me to start working at moving and get
something from birth fit absolutely not okay you can buy you can you can buy our second trimester
program you can buy our third trimester program it's it's not going to be too late and if you
weren't working out before pregnancy you can still work out during pregnancy.
Awesome.
Yeah.
And I think the last,
the last thing that I want to note too,
I think the beauty of being a four woman team too,
is accessibility.
And that's something that I appreciated on my journey,
getting into just CrossFit in general is like these women are accessible.
So if this is you,
if this is the archetype that you are,
don't feel like you can't reach out to birth and talk to a real human not a bot okay very good all right guys thank you uh we will be in touch
awesome having you on uh please uh tell lindsey and lance uh congratulations and i'm sending my
love and i'm happy for him i'm probably going to get off here and tell my wife she'll be pretty
stoked oh yeah we definitely will thanks for having us on all right talk to you guys soon bye okay bye
i'm if i had to bet i'd bet that asia had to go to the bathroom the last 20 minutes
just because i was doing a p but i'm projecting because i was I started doing a little bit of a pee dance.
Elise, did you change?
Elise Carr-Ridau, is that that?
You think that you took your last name off and I won't say it anymore?
Elise Carr-Ridau.
Excellent episode.
I hope my husband will listen.
Great couple.
Yeah, they're cool as shit.
She's like a real adult.
She reminds me of my wife. My wife's an adult too, kind of.
He was pounding water. Okay, so you think that's a fair assessment?
He had to pee.
A place for real woman.
Watch the trans community try to come after this space.
Oh wait, they already have.
Robbie Myers,
we were hoping to have a home birth with our first child, but my wife
started showing signs of preeclampsia, so we had to go
to the hospital to make sure everything was going to be okay.
Longest 24
hours of our lives. You have the baby now?
Do you have the baby?
Congratulations, by the way.
Here we go. Oh, shit. This has got to be quick. I got to pee so bad. Here we go.
Oh, shit.
It's got to be quick.
I got to pee so bad.
Hello, caller.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I was just calling you back.
You called me earlier.
Oh, Susan, hi.
We were on Google.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yes, yes, Susan.
You got to pee.
Call me afterwards.
What?
Wait, wait.
There was something I was going to ask you to do for me to schedule.
Was it the podcast on Google?
Oh, yes, yes, yes, yes.
What the fuck is going on with our podcast?
Why isn't it on Google?
Yeah, it's on Google now.
I'm not sure why that.
You have to, like, put in each individual ID,
and maybe that just didn't go through to Google or something.
So you fixed it?
It should be up there.
So you fixed it since that person?
Oh, wow.
Look at you.
Yeah.
Yeah, when I stopped at home and ate before I came up here,
when I fixed it.
Yeah, take that, whoever was saying it's not good.
It is not good.
Yeah, and that was Alyssa, not Elise.
Oh, that's not Radao?
Oh, okay.
No, I was a different person.
Okay, what else?
Do you have a schedule?
No, but I'm making a list of douchebags.
Jeez Louise,
Brandon Waddle,
there was one other,
there was
Clive.
Were you mad at him too?
Thank you, Clive.
The D-bag posse.
That's what I'm going to call those guys.
Thank you, G's Louise.
A good podcast to have you the man thank you i appreciate it i dig butter you are not a douche you're good to go
uh what the fuck am i geez louise says what the fuck why am i a douchebag i don't know it's it's
fuck too geez because i can't even remember what you said but i just remember like okay
these guys are all on my shit list they They get it tomorrow. They get it in the ass.
No.
Eric, why?
Geez, Louise is cool.
All right.
I'm a 29 year old girl.
I was on a cheerleading squad and my boyfriend's been ejaculating at me.
Do you have any advice?
Yeah, that's good.
Right.
I'm an ex cheerleader.
I'm an exercise.
I'm 42 pounds overweight.
Oh, you didn't.
You didn't comment on the t landers i thought you were
yesterday on hillar's podcast listen i've told you here's the thing
i just try just trust i don't know if you want to trust me i feel like i've given
susan i feel like i've given them – I feel like they should know that there was no rock that I didn't crawl under or turn over.
And so you just have to –
What do you mean? It's, it's like literally you have to be, you have to be so wise. You have to even know that like I pay, you should even consider that I pay 12 daily doses
of stuff to come on here and commentate and invigorate the show.
That's how, and I, and I give him, I tell him to give money so that other people will
give me money.
I mean, that's, that's how open you should be to shit.
open you should be to shit and
I'm not
unfortunately those examples are dishonesty
but you just can't imagine how much
I
I saw
not
just by proxy
I just saw and people
the thing is people like me
the only people who hated me at HQ were jealous.
I never do anything mean to people.
So just know that.
So you just have to – Brandon Waddle said I'm afraid of confrontation.
No, you don't even know all the dynamics.
I just told you I was at Andy's resignation, just me, him and greg like that should just blow everyone's mind like oh shit
you're afraid of confrontation like like like that should just blow your mind like oh fuck like
i'm not interested in having like an old friend of mine on that in in hashing it out here with
him like that like i'm not interested in yeah there's some really bad shit happened in my
family in my crossfit family yeah i think people forget sometimes like these this is this is
relationships with people you have not just like a tv show they're watching yeah um dynamic
different uh this is what geez louise said uh i right right well said susan uh geez louise says
i think the worst thing i said was that seve would be heartbroken if Glassman showed up on Hill Show.
God, geez Louise, you are a fucking stud for remembering that.
Okay, that is what it was.
You have to also know this.
I would not.
Like, I am so high on myself and so arrogant.
Like, I don't care.
You guys, look what my friends gave me.
Look. Are you pointing at the sign? Yeah. you guys look what my friends gave me look
are you pointing at the sign
yeah
I think I'm the shit
yeah
I'm not
I'm happy for everyone around me
like go get it
I don't think there's anyone who interviews
better than me and I don't think that there's
my group of people cool ass people like geez louise hang out, I love what you guys have done for me.
You guys have no idea the – you've made me such an arrogant fucking douche, and I love it, and I appreciate it.
And I just think I'm so good at what I do.
I don't care if anyone goes anywhere.
Go be interviewed. I honestly think – it's like I told you guys the other day. Someone said to me, hey, do you think Greg Glassman deserves a second chance? And I said there's a presupposition there that he did something wrong. The question is, does the world deserve another chance? Because the world did something wrong to Greg in my mind.
wrong to greg in my mind and so i i i don't know he doesn't why he doesn't he's still on his first chance i also don't think he was canceled i think that he was attacked and decided to sell his
company and if if um i don't think that there's anywhere he he could go on any show he wants the
interview is not going to be as good as the one i do with him or or if in the most humble way i
could say it would be so different so like I don't care about any of that stuff.
Would you say that's fair, Cesar?
Or do you think I'm posturing?
Be honest.
No, I think that's completely fair.
Okay.
I know that's not when I have a fucking,
my best friend standing up for me,
for my character,
doesn't say much about it.
Hey, it's obvious.
The whole entire fucking landscape of podcasts
in this space completely changed.
How many people were doing live shows before we were?
Zero.
How many people have this engagement of this mob of this chat that we see everywhere?
We always see all the regulars that are here.
What do you always use?
You curl the herd there?
Like, yeah.
You guys are fucking welcome.
like yeah you guys are fucking welcome uh and and and we have a wide palette of um of our vocabularies it's i would say it's the largest vocabulary of any podcast out there too which we
don't get credit for we don't you know we were allowed to say words like retard it's the palette
and our vocabulary is massive here and specificity really matters to you when talking about stories.
And why does it matter? Because when you're
being specific, you can tell that
it's the truth. There's a true story
behind it. It's not ambiguous, right?
Did you see that recent Elon
Musk interview with the dude from BBC?
Is that the one where he's... Thank you,
Jesus Louise. I appreciate it, by the way.
And I appreciate you letting me
use you as a piece of content in the show
is that the one where he says
tell me what specifically
he tries to ask the guy specifics
of what was going on at Twitter and the guy
says he can't think of any examples
yeah exactly and the reason
why was because Elon knew
that the ambiguousness of that
statement means that it means nothing.
Everybody's operating from a different definition,
a different sheet of music because they're all nodding and going, yeah,
yeah, there is more hate. Well, then when he says, Hey,
what specifically is hateful?
What are you seeing and what was the increase on it?
And wanted to get into the specifics of what he was talking about.
He couldn't produce anything. Therefore it's just, it's just bullshit.
It's just this cloud of, well, it's harming some communities. People don't agree, but yet you don't have anything
specific. So therefore the problem can actually never be solved.
Right. And so that's the same thing what, um, uh,
Catherine David's daughter did and all those people did out there when they
attacked Greg.
That's right. Because it was just ambiguous.
So if you had a very specific case and you said, and by the way,
and these people found these people file,
these people file,
we're taking legal action
and everything else,
then it would be,
oh shit,
this is something we could point out.
We could all agree that was bad.
But until you have that,
until there's something specific there,
and this doesn't even just go
for the great thing,
this should go for everybody
that watches anything in the media
and as they're formulating
their opinions on stuff,
to say, hey, is this specific?
Can I really point at it
and re-explain exactly what was happening here?
Is it just ambiguous?
Is it just a feeling we're agreeing upon? Because that's not the truth.
That's just a subjective experience.
These people just suck from the, the, uh, the corporate cock.
Yeah. It's all yoga. Well, what are we, I used to call it the yoga babble.
We are the biggest,
the biggest distributors of happiness.
What?
How could you distribute happiness?
It's not,
you can't touch it and feel it.
Aren't they embarrassed?
Aren't you?
Aren't you?
Aren't they embarrassed?
The more and more I think about it,
aren't you embarrassed?
How does anyone still have their black square up
when you know that black square killed black people?
How?
Is no one embarrassed?
How do you still have your out thing up?
Does Katrin David's daughter still have her out up?
Like if we went through her...
I'm out up. Like if we went through her, her.
I'm sure.
What a fucking joke.
Okay.
I don't want to ruin the show.
That was great.
Leah and Asia were great.
Yeah.
It sounded good.
I caught,
I caught the back,
the back half of it there.
Oh,
my hand still,
my hand still smells like penis.
God,
that smells good.
I'm assuming the chocolate one.
Yeah.
I hope.
All right.
All right.
Tomorrow we have Mr. Sean Pastuch coming back on.
I really enjoyed hanging out with him.
I don't know what we're going to talk about, but he's a great dude.
We'll have fun talking.
He's a wise man. he's an open man and
there's nothing better than that yeah that's pretty good okay i will i absolutely love them
too love them yeah they were great they're great asia's body's crazy fucking nuts all right uh i
will um talk to you guys uh tomorrow maybe tonight you never know you never know okay bye