Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1273: How to Stay Consistent With Your At-home Workouts, Ways to Maintain & Improve Mobility While Sheltering in Place, the Truth About Deep Squats & More

Episode Date: April 17, 2020

In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about whether going “ass to grass” on squats has benefits physically or aesthetically, ways to stay disciplined and m...otivated to work out at home, tips for not seizing up and maintaining or improving mobility while sheltering in place, and uncommon stretches that work great for stretching the IT band. How the guys read to their kids. (5:35) Mind Pump recommends Chris D’Elia: No Pain on Netflix. (9:27) Sal makes funny faces. (11:18) Trump doing Trump things. (12:33) The importance of saving your money and how Mind Pump’s purchasing habits have changed. (16:01) Justin’s theory on serial killers. (19:12) How things become hardwired from childhood, becoming self-aware & MORE. (22:05) Generations are remembered by how they handled adversity. (31:45) How “teeny-boppers” are messing with the Netflix algorithm. (34:03) Sleep and COVID-19. (36:05) Blue-light blocking glasses and their value when your kids are home from school. (37:00) NCI and Jason Phillips want to teach you how to build an online coaching business. (39:19) Be mindful and do your research. (41:13) China is censoring COVID-19 research. (43:30) #Quah question #1 – I recently came upon a post where a trainer said you should never go “ass to grass” on squats or even 90 degrees and that it has no benefit physically or aesthetically. What are your thoughts on this claim? (44:35) #Quah question #2 – What are some things I can do to stay disciplined and motivated to work out at home? I have gotten so bad that my husband started calling it #NapsAnywhere. (52:24) #Quah question #3 – I am currently averaging about 3,000 steps during the lockdown. How would you recommend not seizing up and maintaining or improving mobility during this time? (1:01:00) #Quah question #4 – I frequently have issues with tight IT bands, but other than foam rolling I can’t seem to find any relief. Are there any uncommon stretches that work great for stretching them? I have seen some of the traditional stretches and have tried them, but they don’t seem to be very effective. (1:03:33)  Related Links/Products Mentioned April Promotion: MAPS Prime/Prime Pro ½ off! **Code “PRIME50” at checkout** Special Promotion: MAPS Anywhere ½ off!! **Code “WHITE50” at checkout** How To Grow Your Arms - Bicep And Tricep Workout With Sal Di Stefano Chris D'Elia: No Pain | Netflix Official Site Stimulus checks to bear Trump's name in unprecedented move IRS Ordered to Print Trump's Name on Stimulus Checks, Potentially Causing Delivery Delays Mind Pump #1270: Peter Schiff on the Post COVID-19 Economy & How to Thrive Three Identical Strangers Coronavirus Pandemic And Americans Sleep (2020 Data) Visit Felix Gray for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Join the Revolution in Nutrition Coaching – NCI Certifications x Mind Pump Coronavirus Update (Live) - World Meter Coronavirus pandemic | New York City posts sharp spike in COVID-19 deaths after untested victims added China Censors Academic Research on Origins of Covid-19, What Is the Country Trying To Hide? Mind Pump TV - YouTube Mind Pump Webinar How to Perform a 90/90 Hip Stretch (HIP FLEXOR STRETCH) IT Band Syndrome and Knee Pain (HOW TO FIX IT!) Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Peter Schiff (@PeterSchiff) Twitter Jason Phillips (@jasonphillipsisnutrition)  Instagram

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go. MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts. Salta Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews. Welcome to Mind Pump, the number one fitness and health podcast in the world. This is a Q&A episode where we answer questions asked by our audience, but the way we open the episode is we cover current events, we talk about our lives, sometimes asked by our audience. But the way we open the episode is we cover current events. We talk about our lives. Sometimes we mention our sponsors.
Starting point is 00:00:28 Here's what went down in today's episode. We start out by talking about how we read to our kids Justin likes to make up voices and inject poop jokes every once in a while. To us my first. Then we talked about the Chris Dillia comedy special on Netflix, The Guys, hilarious. Then I talked about how I got hammered on YouTube
Starting point is 00:00:50 for making funny faces while I worked out. Thanks everybody. I appreciate that. I mean, you feel a little more self-conscious. I talked about how Trump did a very asshole move and demanded that his name was on this stimulus checks. Narcissism at once. Did we expect any less?
Starting point is 00:01:04 Then we talked about savings and how our purchasing habits might have to change, but it might be a tough pill to swallow, just then brought up Ted Kaczynski and serial killers. You want to lighten the mood a little bit? Yeah. That little gasoline. Then I talked about our generation
Starting point is 00:01:20 and how this situation might define us for future generation. So I think about what we're doing. We talked about how teenagers are messing up the Netflix algorithm. Adam actually referred to them as teeny buffers. He sounds like he's 70 or so. Yeah, it's an old school term. Then I talked about sleep and COVID. I guess a lot of people right now are reporting that they're sleep,
Starting point is 00:01:44 they're having like really vivid, weird dreams, this is apparently natural and normal for people under more stress. Justin talked about how his kids are using his iPads a lot for school, and that led us to talk about blue light blocking glasses and their value. Now if you're on a screen a lot, whether it's TV, iPad or computer, you want to block some
Starting point is 00:02:06 of the damaging blue rays that you're getting from those electronics that can actually cause problems with your eyes, can cause eye strain and some people it causes headaches. Also if you look at electronics right before you go to bed that can disrupt sleep, then you put on really strong blue light blocking glasses. Now Felix Gray is a company that we work with and they make both. They make the daytime blue light blocking glasses for when you're working during the day and then make the ones that are stronger that you wear before bed so that your sleep is more productive and deeper. Okay. And because you listen to Mind Pump, we have a link for you.
Starting point is 00:02:40 We'll hook you up. Go to Felix Gray Glasses.com. That's F-E-L-I-X-G-R-A-Y glasses.com forward slash mind plump and get hooked up with free shipping and free returns. Then we talked about our friend Jason Phillips and NCI certifications and they are doing a $1.99 audio book about how to work on nutrition coaching secrets. In other words, if you're an online coach or thinking about online coaching for $1.99, you get this whole course that's going to help you become a better instructor. Then I talked about New York City reporting the highest amount of deaths that they had in a long time, but that was due to a new way that they're counting. And then we talked about how China is censoring research, shocking.
Starting point is 00:03:27 Then we got into answering the questions. The first question, this person's talking about how some trainers are telling them to not squat below 90 degrees because it's dangerous. So we kind of dispel that myth and talk about when squatting below 90 degrees is appropriate and why it can be better. The next question, this person is having trouble staying disciplined, they're very unmotivated to work out at home, so they want some tips. So we talk about what you can do
Starting point is 00:03:54 if you're like most people falling into a bit of a rut because you can't go to the gym and things are weird right now. The next question, this person's getting very few steps every day, again, this is probably getting very few steps every day. Again, this is probably common for a lot of you. And so they wanted some recommendations on what they can do at home to work on mobility and activity.
Starting point is 00:04:13 And the final question, this person is having issues with their IT band. They're tight and they're causing pain and they can't seem to get any relief. So they want some mobility answers. So we give them to that in that part of the episode. Also, we pointed to a new site that we have a new page called MindPumpWebinar. If you go there, so it's MindPumpWebinar.com, go there, you can sign up and you'll get notified
Starting point is 00:04:39 when Adam's class gets posted. So Adam actually did a whole mobility class that he taught himself and it's free. All you got to do is register at mimepumpwebinar.com. Also all month long, maps prime and maps prime pro are both 50% off. Now both of these programs require no exercise equipment. Both of them work heavily on mobility. Maps prime teaches you how to set up your
Starting point is 00:05:05 priming sessions before your workouts. Maps Prime Pro is all about correctional exercise. Now they can be used individually, but they are also complimentary. Again, no equipment required, and they're both 50% off right now. Here's how you get those programs. Go to mapsfitnessproducts.com,
Starting point is 00:05:23 search for the one you want, and then use the code prime50 for the discount. That's P-R-I-M-E-5-0, no space for the discount. So you do this, Sal, like when your kids were little, you would kind of read them bedtime stories, but then you take over and kind of, you know, add characters to the different people and like make up, like different things, make it funnier or whatever. My kids like aren't cessant about me making it funnier. Really? Yeah, they won't let me just read a story. Like that, that's too boring for them. So I'm just like, I make up all these different characters and try and give them like accents and, you
Starting point is 00:06:01 know, obviously the fart, the poop and, you know, all that kind of stuff. Jokes like home runs. Those are jokes that keep coming. Yeah, keep giving. Yeah, the fart jokes. Now, do you have to, and I'm wondering this is a dad right now, because I've started reading to Max, and this, oh, I've been reading to Max for a long time,
Starting point is 00:06:17 but he's finally paying attention, right? So that was a big milestone for us, just like literally two and a half, three weeks ago. So he's now, so that the routine is this, like we get him ready for his bath, he gets his bath, as soon as he gets out of his bath, Katrina normally bays him, although I've been bathing him lately, she normally bays him and then brings him over
Starting point is 00:06:34 to me after she got him on his PJs, sits him down between my legs, I read him a book, right? And I read it. Oh, that's awesome. Yeah, and I was reading, you know, I was going through like all of his books that he has. He's got a ton of books and I'm going through all of them. And then I find one little blue truck,
Starting point is 00:06:50 which is like, I just keep reading that one because that one's like the, it's the most fun for me to read because I throw the accents and I do characters. Really? Yeah, yeah, yeah, so it's like it, I throw like my redneck accent. It's like a total like,
Starting point is 00:07:02 this is about Trump's. Yeah, see he trips, he trips, he trips. Yeah, it's like my redneck accent. It's like a total like, this is about trips. Yes, he trips too. Troubts, tractor, so. It's like my redneck accent when I do it. And he loves it. And so I just keep reading that one over and over. I try other ones, but you know it's funny too, and I guess I never thought,
Starting point is 00:07:16 I wanna write a children's book now. I have this desire to do it because I feel like, it's gonna be fun. I don't think it's that hard. It's a great market. Yeah, it's not. Yeah, they're not like really deep stories. No, but there's, you gotta be, you gotta have the right,
Starting point is 00:07:29 you gotta hit the right button in order for it to go. Well, yeah, I was just saying some of them are, but I know, I mean, I know you guys have read, give a mouse a cookie. Have you read, give a mouse a cookie? No. Okay, give a mouse a cookie is a famous one. I remember it.
Starting point is 00:07:42 Yeah, yeah, it's a big book, but it's terrible. I mean, it's like, it's a big book, but it's terrible. I mean, it's like, does it rhyme even? And it's, yeah, sometimes the book's about the illustrations, sometimes, yeah, it's like kind of like funny, whatever. Yeah, there was this one about this, this misbehaving koala. And so I was reading it from, you know,
Starting point is 00:07:59 the, there was this guy who's like the dad or whatever. So I was making him this angry old man, you know, like in like always like yelling at the the the Qualif for misbehaving like I just didn't call it right you know like and just making it like all expressive and everything but it's just fun because you take it over and you just change the whole story and the narrative and everything by you know adding a character to it now are you are you are you still reading to your boys or they they read on it? Oh, so you are still reading Well, cuz they again this is all part of the distraction and you know, they want entertainment Yeah, they want entertainment. They want to keep it going from I was upstairs and now I can kind of drag this on This whole going to bed thing like they can like dad, but you read this and so hilarious and it's great You don't like close like alright
Starting point is 00:08:43 Let's do this it's one time. It's good times man. It's good kind of enjoy close. I'm like, all right. All right. Let's do this. It's one time. It's good times, man. It's good time. I enjoy it. I enjoy it. You don't anymore, though. Yours are all. No, I don't read to them, but we do things like,
Starting point is 00:08:52 I'll get it. We have, I'll get a blanket and I'll put it on the ground. And I don't do this when my son is 14, but my daughter will sit on it and I'll just rip her across the floor. Just shh. You know, let's see. Holds on as hard as she can.
Starting point is 00:09:04 Yeah, you're like, Santa Sack thing. Yeah. I'll do that. And then with my son, now, the workouts the floor just shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh shh sh Like, hey, how do you know when a girl like likes you? You know what I mean? Do you know how to do? Do you know how to do? Do you know how to do? Do you know how to do? Do you know how to do? Do you know how to do?
Starting point is 00:09:30 Do you know how to do? Do you know how to do? Do you know how to do? Do you know how to do? Do you know how to do? Do you know how to do? Do you know how to do? Do you know how to do?
Starting point is 00:09:38 Do you know how to do? Do you know how to do? Do you know how to do? Do you know how to do? Do you know how to do? Do you know how to do? Do you know how to do? Do you know how to do? Do you know how to do? Do you know how to do? Do you know how to do? Yes, it is that's San Jose that's San Jose. I didn't know that was the same shirt on he had exact same act And it's the it's the same auditorium. I wonder if it was our sure like a different taping of the same place
Starting point is 00:09:50 I was unless you weren't the same clothes every day. That was what he was I think I thought I thought I heard though I thought I heard him say the city though and I don't know he was making fun of Boulder No, no, but I think did you watch the whole thing most of it? Yeah, I think it's I think at the end They actually tell the city I want to say was like I remember all the jokes, but it was it was a funny Stand-up. Yeah, well he does us a part that is the and I like I like the comedians He doesn't do it out. Obviously as much as
Starting point is 00:10:17 Chappelle. I mean Chappelle is the master. He's the king. Yeah, he is the master at really challenging The way we think right the way society is deciding. Well, you just don't know what direction he's going Right, yeah, you know, that's why he's so great I you don't know if he's supporting your thought or he's fucking shitting on it and then before you realize it He just made fun of everybody. Yeah, he takes everybody for right, which is epic right and so Chris did that In the standup he did out with the whole How do you know somebody wants to see your dick? Oh, I love that one. Yeah, that whole that whole like skit that he did Because he's like let's be honest like how do you know for sure?
Starting point is 00:10:56 Sure, you know saying like you know what for sure without someone actually saying like hey, I want to see your dick And he's like which only happens once or never in your life. Yeah, he goes, one time or never in your life. And it's usually a bum that says that to you. Yeah. Yeah. It's good. Yeah, but you're just saying that just reminded me of that. You're working with me.
Starting point is 00:11:14 Remind me of that. How do we know for sure she really likes me. Well, dude, speaking of funny, so YouTube, of course, is the land of the trolls. We all know this, right? Yeah, yeah. The land of the trolls. Oh, man.
Starting point is 00:11:25 And, you know, I don't care what you put up there. I don't care what video you put up there. There's someone who's going to say something about you in a way that's going to make you be like, oh, right. Yeah. So I did the video, the big arm video. Actually, Eli filmed me doing a workout,
Starting point is 00:11:40 and then I talked about why I pair certain exercises together, and I connected it to a free guide and all that stuff. Great video. Were they challenging your arm size? No, dude. No, nothing like that, bro. Okay. So that's why I'm going to ask you guys.
Starting point is 00:11:52 This is why I'm going to ask you guys because you guys have seen me work out, right? Yeah, yeah. Do I make funny faces when I look? Oh, yeah. Yeah, yeah. I did see that coming. Damn it. Damn it.
Starting point is 00:12:00 I do all that everybody does. Yeah, but still, those are your orgasm faces. Yeah. And this is me. Yes, they are, bro. No, they're not. Yes, they are are your orgasm faces. Yeah. And this is me. Yes, they are, bro. No, they're not. Yes, they are. No, it's not me.
Starting point is 00:12:08 I don't, you can do side by side comparison, like, right? Before you get a nut. I've done surveys on this. Oh, that's what it is, bro. That's why you get, yeah, you just gave it up. No, I don't bite my lip and make this face. You, we're gonna call Jessica on this one. That's terrible.
Starting point is 00:12:21 Wow. Yeah, what's the facing? I don't want to see it, though. They were like, oh, I love cells, lifting face. Oh, he's got the greatest lifting face is ever. I'm like, damn it. I gotta worry about my face looks.
Starting point is 00:12:30 Your O face looks like. Hey, you wanna hear some asshole shit right here? This is the bro. This is, I'm only laughing because if you don't laugh then what are you gonna do, right? This is like some serious, this is why a lot of people don't like Donald Trump right here. It's a great example.
Starting point is 00:12:44 Why don't like him? You know those checks that are going out to people the stimulus checks. Yeah Yeah, I saw this he made them put his name on and this What a That's the most narcissistic thing I've ever heard of my life. Yeah. Oh, I don't know I disagree I think the most narcissistic thing is what he did yesterday or the day before, playing a highlight real of himself at a fucking blind friend. I saw that. Oh my god. That was, I was dying.
Starting point is 00:13:09 It's like, that was when I was at my friend's house and we were reminiscing about high schools and like, which one was better? Like, my, and like, what are you stupid? I'm going to bring out my highlight, Jake, bro. Oh no. Brings out, makes me watch it. I'm like, what am I doing right now? I'm watching your high school highlight film.
Starting point is 00:13:25 Like that was what you did to the news. Well, whenever you bring this stuff up, Doug cringes because, you know, there's, you can't help but divide the audience in half. And that with a half that doesn't like him assumes because we're laughing about it that we're supportive of it. And the truth is, you got to laugh. Well, that's what you do.
Starting point is 00:13:41 I just, I think that people get so, they get their panties in such a bunch that we can't have conversations about stuff like this without laughing about the situation. Well, here's the truth, okay. The truth, I know this about us. We either support or against actions, okay. Not the person.
Starting point is 00:13:58 I know a lot of people are like, no matter what, I love this person. They can do it. It's a massive distinction. So, there's things that he's done that I'm like, No, so there's things that he's done that I'm like, good job, there's things that he's done that I think you're an asshole. Him making the treasury put his name on the subject title
Starting point is 00:14:13 is an ass move. That's like a, imagine this, imagine you're not a Trump supporter, you need the money. Now you're taking a check, you're reminded that he's the president. What are you doing, dude? That's the most narcissistic thing I've ever done. Now, I saw, I read a report, which is why I want to clarify this or have you clarify this, is that,
Starting point is 00:14:31 because I know there's somebody listening right now that is, that's not funny because he did that, because there's articles that support this and Duncan pull this up about him on the check, saw it actually in complex. Yeah, yeah. Complex saw it actually in complex. Yeah, yeah, complex. Complex.
Starting point is 00:14:47 Yeah. Complex wrote up a, wrote up a whole article that because he put his name on it, it's going to stall the stimulus check. It's not. No, no, no, the Treasury said it, everything exactly on time, it didn't stall anything at all.
Starting point is 00:15:01 Well, it's just a follow up because then he tweet like about like, you didn't want to offend anybody who said not my president, so he's not gonna give him a check. No, that was a joke. Yeah, again, this is like information. You know, like you see his little face and like it was tweeted from him, but it's like it sounds like something he really would tweet.
Starting point is 00:15:21 Well, the thing he did about the video that he played where he did his highlight reel, that, is that an asshole thing, that's a politics thing. It was just really. It was a power move. Very smart politics because he has all these live cameras on him. And so now if they turn off, they look like they're hiding something and now he's playing a video about how awesome he is
Starting point is 00:15:38 and about how shitty the media has treated him, which is this narrative that he's using. He was giving himself some positive press. Yeah, and the myths of everybody else like, he hammered him. Yeah, so it was just politics, and politicians do shit like that all the time, but the check thing is just why?
Starting point is 00:15:53 Why? Why are you putting your name on them? It's almost like he wants it people to feel like. It's comical, dude. Yeah, it's his money, which is so, anyway, it's really funny. Which also led me to think about this, is that, you know, this is gonna know, this is gonna be a very difficult thing
Starting point is 00:16:07 to communicate to the country, because once things open back up, and we all, you know, go back to work, and you know, follow precautions, but we have to, we have to go, at some point, and the experts will decide when, at some point, we're gonna go out into the world and have to work, and it's probably gonna be before
Starting point is 00:16:24 everybody's vaccinated. I don't see how anything can survive that long, right? We have to go out and go and work. So that means we're going to be exposed to the virus and all that stuff. And so at some point we're going to be out there, we're going to be working, we're going to be producing. And what are they going to communicate?
Starting point is 00:16:39 Are they going to communicate to people? Hey, look, here's the deal. The reason why so many of you were in such a bad position without working for four weeks is because you didn't have any savings and you had a lot of debt. What we think you should do now is when you go out, go work, be productive, save your money, don't spend too much, but you know what that'll do?
Starting point is 00:16:59 They'll never communicate that. Yeah, because that'll, that'll, that'll, that'll, that'll, that'll, yeah, no, they'll never communicate that. Because that doesn't stimulate the economy. It doesn't make it look like we're buying more things and we have to produce more things. So there's no way.
Starting point is 00:17:10 But that's the right message. It is the right, that's the right long-term message. Well, I mean, that was what Peter Schiff was trying to explain. Yeah. And I think that, and I think you did a good job and then the lot, I think of the last intro that we did of explaining and relating also to fitness and what we do,
Starting point is 00:17:26 that he may not be the best communicator, right? Like he's, I mean, he's, but he said a lot of truths, that fucking sting, and it came off the same way, probably, so the people that didn't like it and were turned off by it, are probably the same people that would be turned off if I was sitting in front of him and I said, hey, listen, you're fat, we need to lose that.
Starting point is 00:17:43 You know what I'm saying? That's a bad way to teleclient. It's like a braces. Yeah, it is. It's not going to help him. Doesn't matter if it's true or not. I'm saying even if it's true, it's a better delivery. That's a very way to do it.
Starting point is 00:17:53 It's a very exactly. It's just not going to be well received by a lot of people. Now, there's some people that are very self-aware. And they're like, yeah, I needed to hear that. I am. I know, and I'm going to work on that, right? So there's definitely a percentage of people that listen to his episode and went, fuck, man.
Starting point is 00:18:04 That was a reality check. That is right. We should have enough in our savings to handle two or three months of not being able to emergency. Right, right. So, shame on me or whatever. There's some self-aware people that I'll take it that way, but then there's a lot of people that will be turned off
Starting point is 00:18:18 by it because it stings. But the truth is, it is the truth. Well, that's what I mean. A better way than to present it. What a, what a, you know, imagine this. Imagine you are the, the, the president or a spokesperson for, you know, and you're trying to tell people what to do. And you know the right, the real true long-term answer is like,
Starting point is 00:18:34 Hey, everybody, go back to work, work hard, be brave, take precautions, and save your money. Save your money because we're so far, you know, everybody, so many people carry so much debt that if something like this happens again, if there's another spike in infections and your town, your city, your state needs to quarantine people, you need to be able to survive without working for a month or two.
Starting point is 00:18:55 But know that if you tell people that and they start doing that, you know, people are gonna buy less products, we're gonna see drops in sales and production and you're gonna start to see this market correction, what a weird, difficult position to be in. You you know that cuz it'll hurt you if everybody does save It'll hurt you politically and it'll look bad So I have an interesting theory this is nothing to do with like COVID and all this kind of stuff like going on right now
Starting point is 00:19:17 This is like about serial killers, okay stay with me. Okay, all right, so We've been watching the unibomber in his own words and I know this is something that's, I guess it's been out since this year, but I just started watching on Netflix and this sparked a conversation with me in Courtney and she's like, I don't know why she's so like just drawn to any kind of murder, mayhem, whatever that's happened. Like, their favorite podcasts are the ones that talk about all the old crazy murders people have done all over the US. And I'm just like, oh, and you're bringing that home and you're wondering why you're not getting great sleep.
Starting point is 00:19:53 But anyway, so Justin, can you dress up as a stereotype? Can you lock it, yeah, I even tried that. Give that a go. But, oh my God. Yeah. I don't know. I don't know. Give that a go. But, oh my god. Yeah. I don't know how happy I would be if she was okay with that. And she would turn it on.
Starting point is 00:20:12 I'd be a little weirded out if she was like, yes. Yeah. How do I explain this, the authorities? Yeah. So anyways, back to my point, basically, we were thinking about what, okay, so in the 70s, there was a lot of syracos that kind of sprung out of nowhere, right? And if you take it back in the 40s, 50s,
Starting point is 00:20:35 like Courtney was actually telling me that back then, infants, they didn't think that infants felt pain. And so they would like perform surgeries and everything without anesthesia and they would just give them mild like muscle relaxants and things like that. And then this was carried on in the medical profession till like the 80s.
Starting point is 00:20:55 So like they would perform operations and things on these like little infants. So why bring that up is because in the documentary with the unibomber, he was talking, the brother, I think, was talking about his conversation with his mom, where his mom was saying, I think he's this way because when he was real little and he was like, infant, got really sick. And so they sent him off to the hospital, but they would
Starting point is 00:21:20 not let the parents come visit and nobody visit and just left them there. And so for like a couple of weeks, and then when they came back and they picked them up and they got reintroduced, he would not look at them in the eye. He was always looking off into the corner, did not want to get touched. Oh, that's fascinating.
Starting point is 00:21:37 Yeah, and so like all this, this kind of behavioral change happened immediately. It used to be like a really happy, you know, lighthearted kid, like, you know, infant was like very smiley and laughing and stuff. So anyways, you know, so our little like personal theory was that like, you know, because they handled this with all these like infants and all that, you know,
Starting point is 00:21:58 who knows, like later on, what kind of human being that created? That's interesting. It's an interesting theory. You know that the Soviets did some pretty crazy experiments that you would never want to replicate because they were just terrible, but they did some where they would take orphans or babies.
Starting point is 00:22:14 Yeah, didn't they do the triplet thing where they separate them and they put one of them through like a shitty household, they put one of them through. They did that here. That was an American study. Oh, really? I can't believe that.
Starting point is 00:22:24 Yeah, I don't remember. No, I thought that was a Soviet code. That was here? They took the, they took the, in the 70s, it was twins or triplets. Triplets, they were triplets. They were triplets, orphans. Yeah. And it was, they put one of them in a wealthy household,
Starting point is 00:22:38 one of them in a middle class household, or one of them in a poor household. That was here? And they didn't even let them know the triplets never knew that they were triplets. And they ended up finding out later on in their late teens that they had brothers that looked exactly, that's on Netflix. That's a show on Netflix.
Starting point is 00:22:54 Yeah, I have seen that. And the three of them, you remember, they were separated from their parents, their orphan, three identical strangers. So really good movies. Super good. They were separated from their real parents as infants and that does
Starting point is 00:23:06 studies show that that does create some issues. So all of them, all three of them had a tendency towards depression, but the one whose parents whose dad was, you know, super overbearing, not very loving, committed suicide. So out of the three, one of them committed suicide, so they could clearly see the influence of. But the Soviets did studies where they would take babies and half of the babies, they would tell nurses, you know, feed them, change their diapers, but don't hold them, don't cuddle with them, don't play with them, and then the other half, they said, you know, do your normal stuff.
Starting point is 00:23:38 What a terrible study. And they found that the half that weren't played with cuddle whatever, they failed to thrive. They grew up with all kinds of issues and disorders. Really terrible. Terrible stuff. So that's what happens is it influences the way your brain and your nervous system develop at that early age.
Starting point is 00:23:54 Well, of course, you know that between the ages of five and seven, the greatest pathways are being cemented at that time. So think about that. At five and seven, you just think because the kid is not, barely having a semi-conversation at that time. So think about that at five and seven, you just think because the kid is not barely having a semi conversation at that point. So a lot of parents don't even think about that. That's what I'm so careful about my words and the things that I say around, even my son now, I try to put that practice in place because when he starts hitting that three, four, five age, I mean, he's just a sponge and they don't know how to interpret or what's right, what's wrong. I mean, it just it a sponge and they don't know how to interpret or what's right, what's
Starting point is 00:24:25 wrong. I mean, it just it's immense that as a pathway and then they react as they get older. I mean, you learn fundamental, like you learn these like hard, wired behaviors. So like, if you learn to like, ignore or cut something out because it's too scary or too frightening, then that can become a behavior. You're having a problem. I remember going through therapy and taking a having a really hard time. I've talked about this once or twice in the show before and I know you guys know this. Like I admit that I'm the worst person to give a gift to.
Starting point is 00:24:53 Like just, I just don't accept gift for like, I'm just terrible at accepting gifts. And it's not because I don't like things. I mean, I like things. I buy things all the time. So why wouldn't I like things from someone else? It's free, right? You are a bit of a gold digger.
Starting point is 00:25:07 I was just kidding. No, but really though, it caused a lot of issues and relationships that I had through my teenage in early 20s and it took a therapy and a lot of self-reflection to kind of unpack and figure that out. And what that is from, it goes all the way back to when I was seven, eight, nine years old.
Starting point is 00:25:25 And, you know, this was seven, eight, nine, ten, where some of the harder years for me as a kid, that was after my, right after my dad's suicide, my mom remarried within a, less than a year, she was already remarried into an abusive relationship. And part of what caused a lot of the turmoil in our house was always money issues. We didn't have, we, we had it for a little bit, then we didn't have it. And also, of course, what would you think are some of the hardest times for a family during the time, anybody who's had a similar childhood could probably relate birthdays and holidays.
Starting point is 00:25:54 Birthdays and holidays where you're supposed to buy cake and buy gifts and buy stuff. Lots of pressure. It would put a lot of pressure on my mom and dad, and then they would turn in these massive fights. And then a lot of times, I didn't get anything or I'd get a check in the mail from my grandmother, from my birthday and my mom would need to use it for food.
Starting point is 00:26:10 So you do that now as a seven, eight, nine year old, I was angry, I was bitter. And then by 10, 11, 12, then it becomes something that it's just, it's this is common, this is normal for me. So then eventually as a kid, you shut that emotion off. To be, I'm not gonna be excited about my birthday who knows about it now. Yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 00:26:26 So then I become numb to receiving anything, because I may not get anything, or I may even get something taken away during that time. And then you fast forward 10, 15 years. Now I'm a grown up, that's just way long gone. I have a beautiful girlfriend at the time, and she wants to shower me with a really nice gift, and I go, oh, cool, thanks.
Starting point is 00:26:43 Yeah, yeah, yeah. And it doesn't matter how much it would, they, cool, thanks. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And it doesn't matter how much. They would probably get obsessed. Oh, totally, totally. Because I can't even, and you know me, right? I'm so, I'm me. I'm 100% me. I can't fake things.
Starting point is 00:26:58 It just, it doesn't go with my integrity and who I am. And so, I would know that it was coming. After a while in my 20s, I would be talking with, and knowing my birthdays coming, I'm gonna get a gift and I'd be thinking about it. I got a fucking, you know. Yeah. Oh my God, this would be like practicing from the mirror.
Starting point is 00:27:16 Oh, I broke this real talk. And I haven't shared this much with people, but I absolutely would have these, you know, when I'm self-aware enough to know there's a problem and I had enough people tell me I'm terrible at it, it caused issues that I would, I'd have like to coach myself up, okay, you're gonna get a gift tomorrow on them and you're gonna like it. You just gotta hug them right away so they don't see you.
Starting point is 00:27:39 And then it happens and it's like the most awkward feeling. It comes out fake, man. Yeah, it's fake. Because I have already trained myself for so many years to be hard about it and to be numb about it. And it can be, you can. Now, are you better when someone gives you a gift, when it's not on your birthday?
Starting point is 00:27:57 Is that change it? Because it's nothing that you're expect, okay, my birthday's coming up, Christmas's coming up. Are they? They did something specifically with you and mine, just randomly. If someone did it on a random day, would you respond differently?
Starting point is 00:28:07 That's a good question. If I go back and I, because Katrina's good at doing stuff like that, she's really good at just randomly, bringing me home like a shirt or something that she found. So let me think about that. I don't, honestly, I'm still shitty. I'm still terrible.
Starting point is 00:28:20 I'm still not good at just getting any, and so this started, this is a trend that I started, like God, this was like 10 plus years ago, both in my family and with clients is, I would tell people, please, if you're gonna get something from my birthday, please get me things like toilet paper, toothpaste, stuff that I know that I'm gonna use,
Starting point is 00:28:41 and I felt why I did that was, because I felt like they didn't feel like they put a lot of thought into it, so they didn't feel like it was really special. It's shit I need anyways. And you don't feel bad about being like. And then I don't feel bad about it. Oh cool, rolls of tape paper, thank you.
Starting point is 00:28:52 So that was like the big joke in my family, that my sister was great about it. Every year for Christmas, I got this, she would be decorative with it. She make a cake at a toilet paper, and she'd wrap it all up. I love my sister, right? So she would do things like that,
Starting point is 00:29:06 because she knew, and it was the truth. That's what I wanted. At that time, I was already making enough money that I could buy the things I wanted for me. So I didn't want people to try and get me something like that. But isn't that weird how it becomes so hard-wired? And even though you're aware of it, it's because it's hard-wired that you just have to,
Starting point is 00:29:24 knowing, being aware of it is the good part, the hard part, changing it almost impossible. It's not going to change. Oh, I'm almost 40 years old and it's still work. It's still hard to shit. To this day. I mean, thank God, you know, and the reason why Katrina and I work and it hasn't ruined our relationship is because I, by 30, I was already so aware of it. So you're in a Warner.
Starting point is 00:29:43 Oh, yeah, you communicated, say, hey listen, and I express what this is who I am, and I am very grateful for anything you get me, and I appreciate the thought, and just, but it's not gonna come across that way. But yeah, exactly. And she does. I remember the very first, it was our first new years,
Starting point is 00:30:00 was the first gift she ever got for me. And we were barely, we'd only been together for a few months, and she bought me a freaking platinum Tiffany's dog tag. I mean, I think probably a $500 necklace and we just started dating her, what do I like that? And she gave it to me and I was like, oh, cool. You know what I said? And she was like traumatized.
Starting point is 00:30:19 What, afterward, she's like, no. She was like, one of the nicest gifts that I've ever got. And I told you, I know. I told you got to do. Like I told you, I know. I told you that's how I'd read. I know, I know. Yeah, for me, it's so hard to ask for help. It's so hard and I couldn't,
Starting point is 00:30:32 and I never understood why. And I think it's because I was the oldest of four. I was always told to be the leader, to help your siblings, to be strong for them, watch out for them in school, do this and that. And so I never learned how to be vulnerable, never learn how to ask for help. And it's till this day, it is so hard.
Starting point is 00:30:52 Like if I'm sad or depressed or whatever, I'm good at with my words, because that's what I've learned. Like you Adam, I've learned, I'm self-aware enough to know that I should verbalize it, but you can't tell otherwise. So Jessica will be like, well I know you're telling me that you're feeling a particular way, but you can't tell, otherwise. So Jessica will be like, well, I know you're telling me that you're feeling
Starting point is 00:31:07 a particular way, but I can't feel it. Doesn't make any sense. She's like, I hear your words. I'm like, listen, trust my words. I'm just now getting good at that. Yeah. I just could bury that shit. Terrible about that.
Starting point is 00:31:18 And it was really as a competitive thing for me. Cause of my brother, you know, it's like he was, he was always like so smart and like, you know, got good grades and like did everything like by the book and all this. And I was always like trying to, you know, carve my own way. And like, you know, I just didn't agree with anything. He was doing it. And so I would try and do like the opposite, you know.
Starting point is 00:31:38 And so it was just like one of those things. I don't want to help. I just want to do my own thing. Oh, you know, it's, uh, to bring this back around to like COVID and what's going on right now, I think this is happening a lot right now because a lot of people are having to be inside of themselves. You know what I'm saying?
Starting point is 00:31:54 Because you're forced. Yeah, you're forced to. And so, and we're seeing two sides of this. We're seeing the unfortunate side, rise of depression, rise of suicide, spousal abuse, child abuse, alcohol consumption. So that's, to me, those are the people that can't handle seeing themselves
Starting point is 00:32:10 or dealing with themselves. That's the num reality. Right, so then they either numb it or they express it in a bad way. And then you have the other half that's happening. So that's the good that's happening right now. And it's gonna be very interesting as a whole, you know, society, how we come out of this situation because I am still getting good stories and conversations
Starting point is 00:32:31 with people that are connected to me, that are talking about what we're talking about right now that, you know, this has caused a lot of self-reflection on the way you communicate to your kids, the way you communicate to your partner. What you took for granted. That's the biggest, what you took for granted, the way you communicate to your kids, the way you communicate to your partner. Well, you took for granted. That's the biggest, what you took for granted, the way you handle your finances, the way you've projected things just for other people, because now none of those people matter, because you're not even seeing them or talking them anymore.
Starting point is 00:32:56 It's all about you and the things that you choose to do. Well, dude, look at generations are often defined by how they handle the toughest things that happened during those generations. Like, you go back with what they often refer to as the greatest generation. This was the generation that that fought in World War II and then came back and then we had an explosion of families. People came back from war and they saw death. They faced it. It was like, oh my gosh, this is terrible.
Starting point is 00:33:25 We dropped nukes on another country. Then the war is over and you have a bunch of people having lots of kids being very productive, valuing family. And that's why it's often, it's not perfect by the way, every generation's got their shit. But that's, and so we're gonna be defined
Starting point is 00:33:43 unless something worse happens, which I don't hope not, right? We're gonna be defined unless something worse happens, which I don't hope not, right? We're gonna be defined by how we emerge out of this and you know what, you know, you're right, you don't grow when you feel comfortable. You never grow when you feel comfortable. You only grow when you're uncomfortable and things are hard. And so this is our opportunity to show
Starting point is 00:34:00 how we come out of it and how we grow. You know, Justin, you brought up Netflix and I have to say this, I've been mean to except I've got a bone to pick with Netflix now. Uh-oh. So you remember I brought this up, I think a while ago, that I noticed that Netflix was ranking the shows, like that are trending, the Trinars, which I thought was...
Starting point is 00:34:20 Top 10 in the country. Right, yeah, I thought this was so brilliant when they released it a couple months ago and I've found some really good movies and shows because of that completely fucked now. Why? The teenagers have fucked the algorithm. Wait, wait, so. Cause like more than 50% it's because of all these,
Starting point is 00:34:36 and this is what I, this is my theory. Because of all these kids are not in school right now, they're all home. So they're all binging TV. So, you know, the adults probably, if you're in your, if you're like R-H, you get to watch a show or maybe two, if you're lucky, unless it's a really weird bing night
Starting point is 00:34:51 or something for you, but on average, you probably only get enough time to probably watch, I wanted to just, but if you're a teenager and you're home with no school right now, you're watching fucking 14 shows in a row, which is screwing the algorithm up. No, I think you're right, dude, because you know that one documentary
Starting point is 00:35:05 you just told me about the other day. I had no idea it was even in there. Yeah. And you know, I guarantee there's a lot of gems and I don't even get presented because these algorithms are like so far from what I actually went to watch. So it's part of number one movie.
Starting point is 00:35:21 And the country like huh? No, the way I'm like, so I've been sucked in like for two or three different of these ranked top five right now trending and it's such a stupid, teeny, bopper fucking show. So like, oh, like, yeah, I like, there's a one right now that it kept popping up in my feed and it's the football one, all American. And actually the preview of it looks really good and it's not horrible one, all American. And it actually, the preview of it looks really good. And it's not horrible or- But they're vampires.
Starting point is 00:35:48 You know, but it's so, it's high school drama. You know, like the, I, you got me to watch it because I was like, oh, a football player and he's all American. It's based on a true story. Okay, this is cool, but it's, the whole show is around high school drama. Oh my gosh.
Starting point is 00:36:01 Yeah, it was, you know what's happening right now because you just maybe think of something. So I've been reading articles. So this has been happening to me. So let me know if you guys have noticed anything. Have you guys noticed that you've been having more vivid dreams that you remember,
Starting point is 00:36:13 or have you noticed any disruptions to your sleep? I've been actually getting a little bit better sleep. Yeah, deeper sleep. Yeah, I don't know. Yeah. Well, I've had sleep for almost nine months Well, yeah, you're talking the wrong crowd. I'm sorry about that. Well anyway Anyway, apparently more and more people are reporting
Starting point is 00:36:32 Challenges with sleep and reporting more vivid type dreams and they're relating it to Stress they're relating it to the fact that things are changing But they're but they're also this is my theory, I think more people, because they're off schedule, are doing like what you're saying at them, or they're watching more movies, more Netflix, and they're watching it all the way up until they go to sleep. I was actually wondering about the statistics for that in terms of screen time, and in terms of like,
Starting point is 00:36:59 everybody watching iPads to the TV, kind of going from phone to like each one of those electronic devices, because I started to see a trend in my own household of when I would get home and like the kids are in the iPads but they're justifying it because they have to do school. And then they, from then, you know, now they wanna do the game after they're done.
Starting point is 00:37:18 I'm like, no, like let's get rid of these. And they only got those because now we're in a situation where they're doing virtual classes, so it makes sense. But then I'm like, oh my God, they need to be wearing their glasses. And this is something that I, I was good about it when they're watching TV,
Starting point is 00:37:36 but I didn't even think to also have them where their glasses, these Felix Gray glasses, when they're on the iPads too, because it was just like, it's probably worse. Yeah, it's probably worse. Yes, I've had worse. Well, my kids time there on there. My kids school actually recommended to all the students
Starting point is 00:37:50 to wear blue light glasses. No way. Yeah, they did. No way. Yeah, it's probably gonna be something. I believe this. I believe that you're, and I think we're already seen it,
Starting point is 00:37:59 because I know that Felix Gray is partnered with Apple and Google and some of these big companies. I think that as more and more research continues to come out about the strain that it puts on your eyes, that it'll be just like safety glasses. You see the way you see when people are doing construction and construction, I mean, how often does someone get their eyes shot out
Starting point is 00:38:17 with a nail gun or something? Very rarely, but enough for them to mandatory make that a thing you have to do. Behaviorally, I can 100% verify that their behavior is different when they're either wearing them and then like transitioning off of them or they're not wearing them and then they're trying, it's like, it's like, they turn to these like chimps.
Starting point is 00:38:35 They're just, yeah, self, I ran a little self experiment, not unknowingly, I have not worn blue light blocking glasses at night, now for probably four, maybe four weeks since all this went down. And to be quite honest, it's because I just forgot. I think everything that's going on right now, I didn't think, grab my blue light blocking glasses when I'm watching late night TV or whatever, right before bed. Two nights ago, totally remembered, I'm like, why am I not wearing these? So I started wearing them huge difference.
Starting point is 00:39:07 Yep. Huge difference in my sleep. And the only reason why I can tell the massive difference is because I went from wearing them to not wearing them to wearing them again. So I think you forget when you're on them consistently that they make that big of an impact. You know, Justin, you speaking of education,
Starting point is 00:39:19 did you guys see what Jason Phillips is doing this month? No, what? So he's got his, and I talked to him when he was building this out. And he didn't, like a month or two ago, he was telling me like, oh, he's building out this whole, like course on how to basically build a coaching business. Which we get questions a lot.
Starting point is 00:39:36 We have a lot of trainers, especially right now because of the time everyone's now home. And if you were a trainer working in a gym, this is obviously a tough time for you. And so we've had a lot of like, you know, virtual coaching questions. And so he was going to put together, I thought originally it was going to be this really expensive like course or webinar, but he's doing it for $1.99 for our wine public centers. What is he teaching? So it's a whole course on him built how to build. It's called coaching secrets, you know,
Starting point is 00:40:02 for how to scale your business as a trainer with virtual coaching. So the business end of his nutritional coaching basically lays out how he scaled from a, you know, in a three month time, from zero to six figures and then from six figures to seven figures, the pathway of smart. Well, yeah, it is smart. I mean, especially if you're like a train, even a trainer that's just focused on fitness to be able to, you know to enhance your offerings and have that
Starting point is 00:40:26 as another addition for revenue. I think especially now, any kind of virtual option is gonna be good. It's smart because what he's doing is he's giving people the opportunity to see how good his stuff is for almost nothing. That's what I said, that was the point I was trying to make
Starting point is 00:40:43 that what I've loved about working with Jason so far is that it's more business. It's good service. It's what I said. That was the point I was trying to make that what I've loved about working with Jason so far is that. It's more business. Yeah, everything is service. It's almost everything he's done has been almost free for mind-pump people. So he's done a ton of great free coaching that's extremely valuable that most people are selling online as e-books. He's done for free.
Starting point is 00:40:58 And then something like this that is of extreme value for $1.99. I mean, at that point, I understand that too, because to me, I want serious people, like not to waste my time or waste the time I'm doing it because he's got a lot of cool stuff that's attached to them too. Right, right. I want to share this before I forget. So there's a site that you can go on.
Starting point is 00:41:16 I think it's called World Health Meter or something like that online. And they actually track and measure the US's in reported infections and death rate. And so they have track and measure the US's and reported infections and death rate. And so they have graphs and stuff, and you can see if the curve is flattening, if it's going down. And it has actually now for a little while now,
Starting point is 00:41:34 look like it's starting to flatten and curve down, right? But today, we got the highest reported number of deaths that we've had ever. So everybody's freaking out. And the news articles literally say, highest number record number. In all of the US, so far in the US, right? And the headlines all say,
Starting point is 00:41:52 highest record number of deaths in a single day. Here's what they don't fucking tell you. It's because New York went back through past days and has added presumed COVID deaths that never tested positive. Oh, shut up. True story. That's dirty.
Starting point is 00:42:08 And it's not that it's dirty, it's the media's dirty. It's that's what they have to do. So if they go back and they say, you know what, these people probably died of COVID even though they never tested positive. Spectative, yeah. And this is over the past, this is all over the past like few days.
Starting point is 00:42:19 Then they take all those numbers, add it to today. So the reason why we're seeing record number of deaths is not because a bunch of new people died. It's because a bunch of people that died before that didn't get counted are getting counted all on one day. Oh my gosh. And it just is the kind of stuff that really infuriates me because I'm going through all these articles and I'm looking at it. And that's what they're saying. They're saying you want to give people hope right now. You know? It's, I don't know. Just be honest, you know, I'm reading all these articles
Starting point is 00:42:48 and they're saying again, record number of deaths in US, deaths spike up after days of flattening and this and that. Then I'm digging deeper, digging deeper, and then I see New York City post-sharp spike in coronavirus deaths after untested victims are added. So that's why we saw a big, and this is what it says here, spike in coronavirus deaths after untested victims are added. So that's why we saw a big, and this is what it says here,
Starting point is 00:43:08 that says they marked a staggering increase of 3,700 deaths, formally, that were now formally attributed to COVID. So it's a 60% spike that came from all those past deaths. So yeah, do your reading everybody, you'll look for yourself, it's not the scary thing that a lot of these headlines are showing necessarily. So more interesting news. Do you guys hear that China is gonna be starting
Starting point is 00:43:33 to censor research around COVID? What? Yeah. So now if you're in China and you're researching COVID, they're gonna censor the information and has to go through them before you can. Now what's the purpose of that? I think they're going to try to, if information makes them look bad, they're probably going to cut it out. They want to make sure that they're Yeah, super, super nice. Shhh! Shhh! Shhh! Queeeeee-claw!
Starting point is 00:44:06 I'm going for everything. Mance-claw! Today's clause brought to you by Max and Obolic! If you're looking to maximize your overall muscle and strength, Math and Obolic is the perfect place to start! With a full 30-day money back guarantee, there is absolutely zero risk! So what is you waiting for?
Starting point is 00:44:24 Go to mindpromidia.com and get started today. It's the motherfucking for. An eagerness landed. Quikwa. First question is from official Bruce Love. I recently came upon a post where a trainer said you should never go astagrass on squats or even 90 degrees and that it has no benefit physically or aesthetically.
Starting point is 00:44:46 What are your thoughts on this claim? We should talk about that one, knucklehead. Is he? He has to be talking about that. I love Absolutes, right? Yeah. Isn't it great? Okay, so this is flat out. Here's the truth. Okay. If you have good mobility, stability, and control, then a larger range of motion, with those things, those prerequisites, right? A larger range of motion, this has been proven,
Starting point is 00:45:11 time and time again, builds more muscle, and it builds more total strength. Fact done, okay? So who should not squat, ask to grasp, who should not squat past 90 degrees? The person who lacks the stability and control to do so. That's the person that should not do that. Or somebody training sports specific.
Starting point is 00:45:30 That's the other. There's two people at UC. Good point. And those are the people that you should see not squatting deeper than 90 degrees. Either one, like you said. Like if it's a specific application to sports. Yeah, a basketball player.
Starting point is 00:45:42 A basketball player training quarter squats makes a lot of sense, because when he springs up to dunk the basketball, he doesn't go past 90 degrees in his squat to shoot up above. So he wants to be, it's a very specific zone, how you generate power and in that sport, it's not all the way down, you know, below 90 degrees. Right. So for, for specific application like that, that makes sense. Or if somebody is, has, has limited range of motion due to either injury or poor mobility, and they can't go beyond that
Starting point is 00:46:11 without their form breaking down tremendously, then absolutely they shouldn't. But that person who absolutely shouldn't should work towards that. Yes. By working on mobility and addressing the reason why they can't go 90. The joint, your joints were designed to do that.
Starting point is 00:46:27 Right. If you've ever done this, a lot of people have experienced this. I did with bicep training. I did it with back training where as a kid, working out, there's a lot of ego, especially as a young male, there's a lot of ego surrounding your lips. And so rather than doing, I'll give you a silly one, right?
Starting point is 00:46:47 Rather than doing like full extension preacher curls, which is a silly exercise, right? But without, I used to stop just short of full extension because I could handle way more weight. And you know, when you're 16, 17 years old, that's all that matters. And so that's how I did curls. Well, when I was 18 years old or so,
Starting point is 00:47:04 I remember talking to a fellow trainer because I first became a trainer. He had amazing arms and he told me, nah bro, go all the way down. Go lighter. Don't worry about how much weight you use. Go all the way down and watch what happens. And I added like a half an inch to my arms
Starting point is 00:47:17 from going just a little bit deeper. I noticed this with my shoulders, noticed this with my back. So if you can't do a full squat because of lack of mobility, don't force yourself to do the full squat, but definitely work on mobility so that you can. This is why our program like Maps Prime Pro, for example. This is why a lot of people are finding a lot of value in it. It's, yes, it does prevent injury, makes things feel better, but the people who are using it consistently, here's what I'm getting from them. I followed your program, Maps Prime Pro, I did it diligently.
Starting point is 00:47:47 Now my squat is below 90 degrees and I can do it with good mobility, and now I've actually built more muscle. My legs look better, my glutes look better because I can maximize the potential of this exercise because of better mobility. I'm getting that or I'm getting people saying that there's no percitis in their hips, like I was suffering for, or people that didn't squat because they had low back issues, and it was all related to the hip complex.
Starting point is 00:48:11 Now they're doing that, so they're back to the hurt when they squat. That's why this message always irritates me, because it's the easier way to cater to what the client wants to hear. You know, they're just catering to, well, you can make gains and you don't have to struggle and go, you know, really work on your mobility
Starting point is 00:48:29 and try and like, press yourself to be better and see if you can, you know, gain more access and ability that your body, you know, has. Like, like, you're not gonna unlock all the potential. You potentially could, you potentially could achieve by going through this laborious process of trying to gain mobility. And you have to do this by doing the arduous types of exercise, like the mobility drills and all these things.
Starting point is 00:48:56 People don't wanna do that, so let's not talk about that. Let's just give you the, you can just go 90, you can get some good gains from this. But now you're limiting your abilities, your long term you're setting yourself up for restriction and movement, which then causes pain and arthritis and all that. So this can just jump off a cliff.
Starting point is 00:49:16 A complete transparency, this was me early on in my career. This is how all of us learned early on. Yeah, early on, when I got my first few certifications, all of them, in fact, trying to remember the first certification that actually even, you know what it was? It was Nesta, it was the first one, and I remember it caused all kinds of shit amongst my trainers and us.
Starting point is 00:49:35 It was the Nesta, it was the first certification that I took that actually advocated for astigrass squatting and working towards that. All the certifications before that, that I had in CSF and ASM IFPA What else did I have? Oh, they didn't even recommend bench pressing down to your chest. They all they all when the elbows Yeah, they all recommended down to 90 degrees and I
Starting point is 00:49:57 Now later on in my career, it's all come full circle for me and I understand why as a certification That is teaching trainers that are gonna teach millions of people while they do it. It's a safety precaution. Yeah, they can standardize it that way. That's right. If we can standardize it and we know that, 99% of the population should be able to at least get down
Starting point is 00:50:16 to 90 degrees safely and at least bring the bench press bar down to 90 degrees safely without injuring their shoulder. This is how we're gonna teach our coaches, because it's safer, safer, you know, for the masses. But the reality is it's not better for the masses. Right. What's better for the masses is for them to recognize that, hey, I don't have good form past 90 degrees because there's a breakdown and I have deficiencies because I've lost good range of motion and my joints that should have that range of motion. And so let's work towards that. And here's the thing, what I didn't know as a young trainer was I was doing more harm than good by shortening everybody's range up for safety reasons
Starting point is 00:50:55 because what all you end up doing is tightening them up more and building more muscle and you for sure lose that range of motion that you would like to gain with them. And what that ends up doing is the body overcompensates when you move and you end up causing chronic pain other places. Now you're, now you get the prositis in the hips, now you get the low back pain, now you get the neck pain going on, now you got the nagging shoulder stuff
Starting point is 00:51:16 because you never addressed the mobility. Here, okay, here's the truth. And it's for some people, I'm sure it's gonna be controversial. Okay. There really are no inherently dangerous exercises. Now, exercises come with risk potential. Some exercises have a higher risk potential because they require more skill.
Starting point is 00:51:40 They require more control. They require better mobility. But there are no real inherently dangerous, traditional resistance training exercises. What makes them dangerous is your inability to do them properly. What makes them dangerous is your lack of control, stability, mobility. But if you do an exercise, and I really don't care what it is, I don't care, I don't care what exercise it is,
Starting point is 00:51:59 pick the craziest looking exercise that actually exists, don't just make something up, but pick the craziest looking exercise if actually exists don't just make something up, but pick the craziest looking exercise if an individual compil- It's a Julie Michaels peek through the window kettlebells. Yeah, now if you, if an extra, if a person can do the movement with good control, good mobility, good stability, that exercise is safe. So this goes for all of them, not just asked to grasp squats. Next question is from year 95, kiddo, what are some things I can do to stay disciplined
Starting point is 00:52:28 and motivated to work out at home? I've gotten so bad that my husband started calling it, naps anywhere. You know, dude, hey, so real talk here, right? So there's a thread in our private forum right now. I'm glad you went to this chat. And you know, someone's like, man, I am, I'm basically people are on their venting how they're just, they're cracking at the seams.
Starting point is 00:52:50 You know, fitness enthusiasts, first off, I'm sure a lot of people are feeling this way. But if you're a fitness enthusiast, you have a wonderful mechanism to deal with stress. You've probably done it for years. It helps you deal with anxiety. You feel healthy, so you can handle things differently. And for a lot of people, it's been taken away
Starting point is 00:53:12 because they can't go to the gym. So now they have to do it at home, totally different environment, very different challenge. Maybe not as motivating for the person. Maybe they're just feel like, oh, this is a bad substitute. So I totally can relate to how difficult it is right now. This, now on the podcast, we've talked many times about the difference between motivation and discipline.
Starting point is 00:53:32 Motivation comes and goes. Circumstances definitely affect it. Sometimes they're internal circumstances. Sometimes they're external circumstances. And when we're motivated, nobody needs to convince us to exercise. Nobody convinces us to eat right. We're just it's easy because we feel it. But sometimes, and all of us go through this, motivation goes away. And this is where discipline comes to play. And discipline is hard. Motivation
Starting point is 00:53:57 is easy. And so my advice to people in this situation is number one, accept that it sucks, accept it. Okay, what's the next step now? I'll tell you what I've been doing. I have an alarm on my phone that goes off every single day, 740 family mobility time. Now why do I set that alarm? Because at 740 at night, many times unmotivated to gather the kids, move the couch and everything,
Starting point is 00:54:24 get on the carpet, we're all gonna do mobility together. I just don't wanna do it. Maybe I'm in the middle of watching TV. I finished writing a blog for the company. I'm whatever, I don't wanna do it. But the alarm goes off and what that alarm does is it reminds me to stay disciplined. So now I have to ignore the call.
Starting point is 00:54:39 So it's one extra thing that reminds me like, okay, and you know what? Sometimes I get up and I'm like, I don't wanna do this, I don't wanna do this, but I do it, I keep doing it, I don't wanna do that. But then I do it, and you know what ends up happening when you do this consistently? It gets easier, it gets easier,
Starting point is 00:54:54 I don't necessarily feel more motivation, it just gets easier to be disciplined when I'm not motivated. So I hate to say that that's the answer because it's not an easy like hack or trick, but it is. That's really the only answer. I'm going to go a different direction with this. Did you see my response on that thread? Okay, so I responded later on that thread that you're talking about. And I went a different direction and everything that South said I agree with. But, and this is totally not favorable for this company. In fact, we haven't really
Starting point is 00:55:27 talked much about this, but if it wasn't for us creating maps anywhere four years ago, we probably would have had to furlough some of our employees. We wouldn't have been able to keep the business operating going. It would have been very challenging for us, but luckily we were blessed. We created a program that literally fit the needs of tons of people in this situation. And so it's helped keep us alive during a time when I think everybody is struggling. Now that being said, what I'm gonna say,
Starting point is 00:55:52 it doesn't support our business whatsoever, but it is what I replied to this person on this forum. I told them that, you know, I too have felt this right now. I love the gym. I like, we have our own little private gym here, and I prefer to go where there's people, lifting and grunting and sweating and music pumping and great physique swapping around.
Starting point is 00:56:12 It just, it helps me stay focused and push through my workouts and it's, the guy was complaining too who wrote this in the forum, you know, that's kind of been his sanctuary and home is home and the two of them blending together is really not making him feel like he's being able to detach from all the home stuff. So I can totally relate to this.
Starting point is 00:56:31 And my response is this, I'm not following any program right now. I'm not following our maps anywhere, although I did a maps anywhere workout the other day, I'm not following our program to a T right now. I'm playing and that's my attitude. One day I might bike ride, one day I may row, one day I may do bench press the entire hour
Starting point is 00:56:52 and just work on my mechanics. One day I'll do an hour of intense mobility work. I might swing the clubs around trying to get good like Justin. I'm not putting this pressure on myself that I can't lose muscle. I gotta make gains. I need to maintain, I mean, maps anywhere,
Starting point is 00:57:06 that's why it was designed. It was designed so you could go and train at home and see fucking results. That's, it's an amazing program. But the reality is, if it's starting to mess with your mental space like this, because you're putting all the pressure around, you know, needing to keep training a certain way
Starting point is 00:57:20 to maintain or to see results, it's like, you know, for me, this is not that time. But this time for me is like, hey, I recognize that I am trapped in my house way more than I've ever been. I recognize that I'm probably not gonna get to go to my sanctuary gym and stuff like that. I'm not gonna worry so much about it, but I do know, smart enough to understand calories
Starting point is 00:57:40 in versus calories out, that I could really easily start to creep up and put a lot of body fat on if I don't stay active and make good choices. So I'm playing right now. I'm playing with no rhyme or reason, with no structure, no real, this is why I'm doing this. I just go where my heart leads me. And sometimes that is, hey, hun,
Starting point is 00:58:00 let's go over and get the bikes out. And let's just go for a two-hour ride on flat ground and just Look at the scenery and shit like that or it might be I'm gonna go down to my garage and just rip the row Or and see what I can get the freaking watts up to or it might be you know what man I've been meaning to get better at those Indian clubs and Justin's so good at it I want to get good at it. He's got great shoulder mobility. I need to do that my shoulders bothering me And so I do that for a whole hour. Like, so. Great, great advice.
Starting point is 00:58:26 Yeah, no that's good. Stop putting so much pressure on yourself that we need to be making gains or we need to be cautious that we might lose muscle right now. Yes, we have the shit, the program for you out there. But right now, you know what? It's, I think your mental health takes the front seat on all this and find things that you just like to do.
Starting point is 00:58:45 Not great because I think a lot of it too is like you get this insecurity, you're not being productive. Like I get this all the time. Oh yeah. You know, if I'm at home and something's not getting accomplished, like so I've been torn between workout or you know, improving something on the house. And it's like, you can't always have that energy. You just can't always have the energy carrying with you because then you start interacting with your kids with your spouse.
Starting point is 00:59:14 And then you get short. And then you get frustrated. And then you get irritated. And all these things kind of stack up on you. And to kind of break free of that for a bit is necessary sometimes. But also having like a foundation you can come back to is how I kind of look at it. So I do have like a solid workout.
Starting point is 00:59:32 I've tried to accomplish at least three times, you know, during the week, but I'm playing as well. I think that's great advice. I'm going outside. I'm grabbing unconventional equipment. I'm taking my kids on hikes, I'm trying to go where I'm allowed, which is really hard for me,
Starting point is 00:59:48 because our family is definitely, this is something I've learned from this whole lockdown thing, we are so much of a family that is on the move, an active and out, like we don't stay at home very often, and so this has completely changed our dynamic, and to try and figure that out, it's a tough thing. And we're all trying to adjust.
Starting point is 01:00:09 And so I can totally feel from where you're coming from in terms of the frustration of it. And I do think, yes, allow yourself to sort of break free sometimes. It'll help your mental state. Well, you know, one of the big problems is we tend to compare ourselves for our best selves. We tend to compare, we're on lockdown, we have no access to a gym, it's a little scary and uncertain right now.
Starting point is 01:00:31 And so now I'm going to compare my activity levels and my diet in this situation to how my activities and diet was, when none of that shit was happening before. So not fair. Totally different. So not fair. You're in a different situation now. It's harder. I think you're probably doing okay all things being considered. Do not compare yourself to yourself at your best when none of this shit was happening. So unfair yourself.
Starting point is 01:00:55 You wouldn't do this with anyone else. Don't do it with yourself. Next question is from OG quarantine. I am currently averaging about 3,000 steps during lockdown. How would you recommend not seizing up and maintaining or improving mobility during this time? Oh man, mobility movements, the best ones that you can do, don't require equipment or a lot of space.
Starting point is 01:01:19 If you have a floor that you can sit on, you have enough space to do most of the good mobility movements. So one way I would recommend doing this is divide your day up into two or three segments and devote 10, 15, 20 minutes if you want to get aggressive at a time on just working on mobility movements. There's a lot of great ones by the way on our YouTube channel, Mind Pump TV. If you just type in mobility, or you type in priming,
Starting point is 01:01:50 you'll see a ray of shoulder and hip and ankle and back mobility movements that you can just practice throughout the day. I got something better for you, even. We've been working on doing this for a while, and actually this quarantine thing gave us the opportunity to do something like this, because I had the time.
Starting point is 01:02:09 Doug and I put together a webinar around mobility. So it's great. I take you through an entire class. It's structured on how you would build a mobility routine to help fight chronic pain. So what movements that I chose to put in this webinar were movements that I think have helped my clients the most over years with things like squat depth,
Starting point is 01:02:33 with hip pain, with low back pain, with just overall mobility, and it's literally a head to toe type of thing, and I take you through the class. So that's gonna be going next week. You can go to the landing page where you can register for the time. It's free, It's completely free. It's about an hour long. You want to slot that time for it, but you can go to the map, the mind pump webinar.com.
Starting point is 01:02:53 So if you go to mind pump webinar.com, you register for it. There'll be a live chat to where you know, Sal, Justin or I will be on there talking to people that have questions or don't know what's going on or what I thought that you can watch but make sure you register on there for one of the times that you're you're available. And it's a full on class that you're teaching. It's a form. You're like literally taking people over. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:03:14 If you ever wanted to see like what it actually feel and experience what a true mobility workout feels like like you definitely take them through to where you're sweating your it's intense Oh, yeah, I think people like underestimate the fact that you can really you know turn that into work All right next question is from unorthodox fitness me I frequently have issues with tight IT bands other than foam rolling. I can't seem to find any relief Are there any uncommon stretches that work great for stretching them? I've seen some of the traditional stretches
Starting point is 01:03:49 and have tried them and they just don't seem to be very effective. You're not fixing the root problem, that's why. So the foam roller is temporarily alleviating pain, even a stretch, like a static stretch, would be a temporary solution for a problem. The reason why your IT bands, the likely, the very likely reason that your IT bands bother you is because you have issues with mobility.
Starting point is 01:04:14 Likely coming from the hips, but it could also come from the ankles and the feet. So the IT band is just under more stress than it needs to be. There's some compensations going on, and so you feel pain in that area. And the only way you're gonna get rid of it permanently is if you solve the actual root cause of the mobility issue in yourself. Now, for me, the most effective movement that I've done for IT, so my IT band used to bother me
Starting point is 01:04:43 up near my hip. That's where I would start to kind of feel issues. And I would feel it after heavy squats. Like I do heavy squats, and then the next day, the IT band next to my hip would kind of bother me. In fact, I could poke it near my hip, and it would tend to even to the touch, and then I'd foam roll it, do that stuff,
Starting point is 01:05:03 and it'd feel better. It just never really went away until I started practicing 90, 90 positions. For me at least, this is just my own personal story. No joke, two or three sessions with practicing the 90, 90 variations significantly took away my IT band, just two or three sessions, because I think I started firing muscles a little bit better than when I went to go squat. I didn't notice the same amount of pain. So I've got two, I'm going to share the two most common things
Starting point is 01:05:33 that I see as far as the root cause with sourcing, with clients, with this, and then also, again, point this person towards the MindPump webinar.com thing that we're doing. So that, the moves that I do in there like this is this is for you. For sure, the most common things I see are hip and foot. And foot is the one that I think that is the tricky one that a lot of people don't realize sometimes ends up causing issue in the IT.
Starting point is 01:06:01 And the reason why that is is is foot flattening is very common. So you pronate, so the foot caves in, when the foot caves in like that, it puts strain and stress on the peronials. The peronials then pull up on the insertion of the IT. And then when you also pronate, it internally rotates the femur. And that is like it winds the IT, it almost twists the IT and then it's getting pulled on from all the way down by the foot And that pulling is where you feel that stress all the way up in the hip or sometimes in the knee
Starting point is 01:06:29 So that's a really common one so addressing your your foot strength control and ankle mobility Which I address that in the webinar so we get into we get into that stuff is something that will help I have a really good YouTube video to where I address the peronials and I address IT. It's one of the better videos we've done on. I think it's called, it's a knee pain, maybe Doug can look it up or Jackie can link it to the show notes. Remember at mindpumppodcast.com, we have all the show notes. So anytime we talk about stuff like this, you can always go there and we'll link all the videos where we talk about this. So that's the, that's that video does all of this. And then the other one is like what Salah is saying is hips.
Starting point is 01:07:07 You know, we, the, the hip is so dynamic. The hip and the shoulder both are like this where we, it just, it can move in all different directions and planes. And unfortunately, as, as we get older, we limit that. We don't do that as much anymore. We move in this kind of sagittal plane forward and backwards all the time, but we don't move laterally and transverse and roll around and play like a kid. And so your
Starting point is 01:07:29 body just says, you're not going to use it. I'm going to lose it. And it stops doing that. But yet, then you go squat or do something heavy and those muscles that were that should be supporting that hip, just their dormant. And they're not strengthened and they're not working properly. And so that ends up putting stress on the ligaments and the joints, and that's where this pain and IT tightness comes from. And so you wanna look at those two areas that dress it, but again, I cover a lot of this.
Starting point is 01:07:54 Yeah, that's those movement repetitive patterns that you need to identify to get to that root. And this is something I'm constantly working on this based off of how much I drive specifically. So where my foot position is affects the kinetic chain all the way up into my hip. And so I do feel, you know, my IT talks to me, you know, my performance talks to me peronials, like it, it's one of those things to you just have to understand how to create better movement patterns and repeat them as much as possible
Starting point is 01:08:25 in order to kind of relieve a lot of this this this tightness this pain that's inevitably going to creep up when you start doing intense the exercises workouts all that's where you're really going to see it come back to to haunt you excellent And you can go to mind pump free calm and download all of our guides and resources Also, you can find your three favorite podcast hosts on Instagram mind pump free dot com and download all of our guides and resources also you can find your three favorite podcast hosts on instagram you can find just in a mind pump justin you can find me at mind pump style and at a mind pump at home come see me on the webinar thank you for listening to mind pump
Starting point is 01:08:57 if your goal is to build shape your body dramatically improve your health and energy and maximize your overall performance check out our discounted RGB Superbundle at MindPumpMedia.com. The RGB Superbundle includes MAPSANabolic, MAPS Performance, and MAPS Esthetic. Nine months of phased, expert exercise programming designed by Sal Adam and Justin to systematically transform the way your body looks, feels and performs. With detailed workout blueprints in over 200 videos, the RGB Superbundle is like having Sal and the Justin as your own personal trainer's butt at a fraction of the price. The RGB Superbundle has a full 30-day money bag guarantee, and you can get it now plus
Starting point is 01:09:43 other valuable free resources at MindPumpMedia.com. If you enjoy this show, please share the love by leaving us a five-star rating and review on iTunes and by introducing MindPump to your friends and family. We thank you for your support and until next time, this is MindPump. This is Mindbomb.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.