Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1843: The Truth About Eating Keto for Muscle Growth, Ways to Get Back Into the Gym When Suffering From Depression, Hitting PRs When Cutting & More

Episode Date: June 24, 2022

In this episode of Quah (Q & A) Sal, A dam & Justin coach four Pump Heads via Zoom. Mind Pump Fit Tip: Sometimes the best workout for muscle and strength are HEAVY singles and doubles. (2:33) How kid...s are so in tune with things. (15:02) Every once in a while, your genetics come out. (20:05) When studies confirm old wisdom. (25:38) Grass-fed versus grain-fed beef and why Butcher Box is so beneficial. (33:35) Is American cheese real cheese? (36:51) #Quah question #1 - What are your guys' thoughts on the keto diet for muscle growth? (38:56) #Quah question #2 - How do you get yourself back into lifting when depression has taken over? (46:45) #Quah question #3 - I’m 6 weeks into my summer cut, and I just hit a squat PR. How does this happen? (51:51) #Quah question #4 - What still surprises you guys about each other even after all these years of knowing each other so well and working together? (54:59) Related Links/Products Mentioned Visit Butcher Box for this month’s exclusive Mind Pump offer! Father’s Day Special: Free Shipping on all apparel and equipment for $150.00 or more 6/10-6/24 June Promotion: Shredded Summer Bundle or MAPS HIIT 50% off! **Promo code JUNE50 at checkout** Dinosaur Training: Lost Secrets of Strength and Development Ancestral Diets: The Importance of Traditional First Nations Food Comparison of Traditional Indigenous Diet and Modern Industrial Diets and Their Link to Ascorbate Requirement and Status Mind Pump #1815: Improving Fat Loss, Muscle Gain And Fitness With Continuous Glucose Monitors Visit NutriSense for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code MINDPUMP at checkout** What is American cheese made of? Visit LivON Labs for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! The Keto Diet is Making People Fat – Mind Pump Blog Should I Consider A Ketogenic Diet As A Bodybuilder? - Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump #1792: The Secrets Of Happy People With Arthur C. Brooks Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Pavel Tsatsouline (@strongfirst)  Instagram Mikhaila Peterson (@mikhailapeterson)  Instagram Arthur Brooks (@arthurcbrooks)  Instagram

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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, pop, mind, pop with your hosts. Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews. You just found the world's number one fitness health and entertainment podcast. This is Mind Pump, right? In today's episode, we answered listeners' questions
Starting point is 00:00:20 after 34-minute introductory conversation, where we talk about our lives, current events, studies, fitness, and much more. By the way, you can check the show notes and fast forward to your favorite part if you just want to listen to a certain segment of this particular episode. Also, if you want to ask a question that we may possibly pick an answer on episodes like this one, go to Instagram, go to the Mind Pump Media Instagram page, and each Sunday we post a quay meme. That's where you would post your question if we pick it. We'll highlight
Starting point is 00:00:50 you and answer your question. Now this episode is brought to you by one of our sponsors. Butcherbox. So butcherbox takes the best grass fed meats, heritage pork, wild caught fish, and delivers it right to your door. So eliminates the middleman, it's inexpensive as a result, but it's very high quality. In fact, in today's episode, we talk about how much better we feel when we eat lots of grass-fed meat versus the conventional stuff.
Starting point is 00:01:16 Also, right now, if you sign up, you get bacon for life plus $10 off. So, and that's for the life of your subscription. So you'll get bacon thrown in forever, which is incredible, especially because bacon's price is going through the roof right now, isn't it? Anyway, go check this company out. Go to butcherbox.com-flour-slash-minepump.
Starting point is 00:01:35 Once again, butcherbox.com-flour-slash-minepump. Also, all month long, we're running a sale on a workout program bundle and on a workout program, an individual workout program. So here's the bundle. It's called the Shredded Summer Bundle. It includes multiple workout programs that you follow one after another.
Starting point is 00:01:52 The first one is Maps Esthetic. The second one is Maps Hit. Then there's Maps Prime and the Intuitive Nutrition Guide. Okay, so that bundle is discounted normally. And then we took an additional 50% off for this particular sale. Now, if you just wanna do one program and you want one that's short, intense, really good for fat loss in a short period of time, try high intensity interval training.
Starting point is 00:02:14 The program is Maps hit. So Maps hit, high intensity interval training is also 50% off. Again, it's only happening in the month of June. So if you're interested, go to mapsfitinistproducts.com and then use the code June50 for the 50% off discount. All right, here comes the show. Sometimes the best workout for muscle and strength are heavy singles and doubles. Okay, so what does that look like? Literally, pick a weight that's probably moderately heavy, not your max, and do a set of one rep,
Starting point is 00:02:45 rest for two to three minutes, and then repeat that, try to keep it high volume, but few exercises. In other words, three or four exercises, five to eight sets each. You know, I like to communicate that because a lot of people have no idea, they think that's just a pure power lifting workout.
Starting point is 00:03:00 But if you don't train that way, do like a four week cycle of that watch the gains Explore did you know that I I never did that until we all got together? Yeah, I remember what it did to your back No, never we never did I drop below five reps ever and even that was Very infrequent so like that was really just to interrupt my other phases of training and then to go back to more hypertrophy and supersetting. Like, I never did singles, doubles, or triples
Starting point is 00:03:28 until we all got together. Because I was never that strength focused. Yeah. And it blew my mind with a difference I made in my physique. This was literally my favorite thing to do with my female clients. Because it was just so drastically different than anything.
Starting point is 00:03:41 Most of them have ever done before. And it was like to see the progress and the strength gains, you know, from when we would start doing that versus like all the high rep, high volume stuff, it was like a dramatic difference. Yeah, you know what the challenge is, it's that it feels so different from traditional workouts. In other words, you do this, you know, six sets of two reps on the bench press. And you, again, you don't go to, you don't max out. So you do this six sets of two reps
Starting point is 00:04:06 on the bench press. And again, you don't go to max out. So you're not maxing out two reps, but it's a heavy, you know, challenging two reps. You don't get a pump. It doesn't burn. You don't sweat. It's a completely different experience.
Starting point is 00:04:17 Yeah, so you're like, is this really doing anything? Like what's, you know, what am I doing? I didn't do this until, or I didn't practice the style of training until I read dinosaur training, I think it's called, which is an old school strength book, and the guy in there advocated so much for doing this, and I had done five and six reps,
Starting point is 00:04:35 so never sets of like one or two, and I started doing this and my strength exploded, and I got some incredible gains from doing it, because it was so different, and so forth. Well, you're not maxing out, but you are now moving a weight that's heavier than you probably ever really moved if you didn't do singles double triples before. Yes. Because if I did a weight that I can move five to six times, it was never as heavy as what I would be working with for singles double triples.
Starting point is 00:05:04 So even though it wasn't technically my max, it was much higher than a weight that I would choose to do three to four sets at, you know, five reps plus. So for me, that was, it was such a shock to my system. This also, I attribute this to, you know, to Justin's point, I think this is what shaped Katrina's body the most since we were. Because she had never trained that way. And I remember getting her really excited about getting strong on the deadlift. I think she would got all whipped like 275,
Starting point is 00:05:31 just pretty legit for someone who didn't deadlift ever. And it was always a bit like a- Yeah, but she's not heavy, she's small. Yeah, so she got up that, and I swear the amount of muscle that she put, especially on her butt and her glutes, was the biggest leap in our relationship that I ever saw or make, I'd tribute to that. Yeah, and on her butt and her glutes, was the biggest leap in our relationship that I ever saw or make, I'd tribute to that.
Starting point is 00:05:46 Yeah, and another key to this is, you know, your traditional string training workouts typically will consist of like two or three exercises, per body part, you're hitting different angles. With something like this, you do less exercises, but more sets. That's the best way to do this. So if I'm doing chess, for example,
Starting point is 00:06:03 rather than doing bench press and claim press flies, I'm doing like seven sets of just bench press. And I'm doing like one or two reps with like two, three minute rest in between. So it's a different. It's different. Yeah, you just feel so strong doing this because you're fully recovered. And those like rest periods are a little bit more extended. And so it's, I know this is like a mental challenge for a lot of people too that want to shift into the style of training because it just feels like I should be doing something in between.
Starting point is 00:06:32 But really what you need to think more is like, well, I guess I could have probably loaded it a bit more. Like it's so much more of a mental game to be able to generate that much more force in that shorter period of time. So it's not like fatigue is pretty much not part of this. This is all about generating force. Yeah, so to give an example of the kind of weight that you would use in relation to what your actual max is,
Starting point is 00:06:56 I don't know what my max is, but I'm gonna estimate, cause today I did box squats. And I went up to about 405. I think I probably could have gone up to 435 or something like that, 440 for a max, but I stayed at 405. And that's what I did for one, okay. With the bench press, I think today I went up to 2.95.
Starting point is 00:07:13 My max is probably around 315, 320. So just give you an example, you're not going to your max, you're actually going 20, 30, 40 pounds lower than that or if you're not quite as strong, maybe 10 pounds, you know, lighter. And really, it's heavy and challenging, or if you're not quite as strong, maybe 10 pounds, you know, lighter. And really, it's heavy and challenging, but you want to really feel the connection, you want to feel the force. And what's interesting about this is, let's say you do, and I'm just letting people know what this feels like, because you'll experience this, when you do,
Starting point is 00:07:36 let's say six sets of a squat, as you work up to the weight, you're going to do a single four, the second or third or fourth time you do the single without weight you actually feel stronger, which is kind of weird. So like I did, you know, a rep with two na five, I feel real heavy, then I knew the second one, I'd actually feel stronger. This is your CNS adapting and your skill with the lift,
Starting point is 00:07:57 improving within the workout, and that is really, really good for muscle definition and of course strength. So I always liked like a protocol where I would be, I would choose a weight that I would be doing like three and then as I kept going in the sets, I would drop to two and then drop down a weight to get a feel of like where my, where my, like not quite max is but getting as close as I could. So I put on a weight. So if I'm dead lifting, I put a weight on there like, okay, I'm pretty sure I can get this, you know, at least two or three times
Starting point is 00:08:25 And then I if I could get it three, I'd get three Add a little bit more weight see if I can still get three maybe I'll get two Then I had a little bit more weight and then then I've got my single weight and I do singles for another two or three sets like That training that way for a training block, you know, so for a phase And then going back. Oh going back to like five by five or like hyperperfect. 1812. Oh, what?
Starting point is 00:08:48 That's where, to me, that's where you really know, so one, like if you, if you're really pushing strength levels in that block and trying to get stronger and then you go back to kind of how you probably traditionally train, what do you really see? It's like your amplitude increased. Yeah, right? Like the ability to produce more force is just, you stretch that out now
Starting point is 00:09:06 because you've trained it to do that. Now, it's like you have more access to more muscle fibers you didn't before, which is a fun feeling. But again, I want to hammer this point because someone might go try this and might be like, I feel like I'm wasting my time. I'm not getting a pump. I'm not sweating. There's no burn, you're not supposed to feel any of that. It's a very different feeling. What it feels like is you're practicing maximizing your force and you're practicing the skill of the lift. That's what it should feel like.
Starting point is 00:09:35 So it should feel like you're getting more in the groove, you're getting tighter, you're generating more force. So it's a different feel. But if you don't train this way, you will see very rapid gains in strength and then muscle. The muscle follows a strength. So first you'll see the strength go up a little bit and then you'll start to look in the mirror and be like, huh, the other thing too, and this is anecdote. So I have zero studies support this, but you know bodybuilders and strength athletes have speculated on this for a long time.
Starting point is 00:10:01 Training this way creates a very dense hard look to the muscle. It's like that. Like Pavel, the kettlebell guy. He talks about this a little bit where the muscle looks really dense and hard. So it's a bit of a different feel and a different look.
Starting point is 00:10:19 I know Arnold used to do this in his early days of training because he would say the same thing. He would give him a denser look to his physique. So it's really interesting. It's a lot of fun. And if you don't do this, do it for like four weeks. Watch what happens. I think part of the reason why people don't do it
Starting point is 00:10:32 is maybe they try it and then they experience what you're saying where they doesn't feel it. I don't get this pump, I don't get a sweat. Then I think the other thing, which is probably why I avoided it for so long, is I just didn't identify as a power lifter. I was so focused on aesthetics and how my body looked that I thought like, why would I don't care? I don't really care if I could lift 10 or 15 more pounds.
Starting point is 00:10:54 I like care about as high look, so why would I train that way? And I was really missing out on all the benefits of like the point I was making that, even if you just run it for a block or phase of three to four weeks of training that way, and then return back to the training that you kind of love to do, I saw huge carry over into that and didn't realize how much I was missing by not
Starting point is 00:11:15 training that way simply because I didn't identify as a power lifter. So I think a lot of people, they see who live singles and doubles and triples. It's always the power. You never see that in the gym. Yeah, you don't see you don't see the the petite little girl doing that You don't see you don't see the cross-fitter guy doing that you don't see you don't see these typical athletes Training that way. It's the power lifter And so you go I'm not really a power lifter I don't want to look that way or I'm not interested in that so you avoid it
Starting point is 00:11:42 But it has tremendous value. Oh huge huge, huge value, huge physique value. And it was one of my secret weapons. I think you said this, Justin, with your female clients. It was a secret weapon, because nobody ever trains that way. Look, I tell you what, you add 15 to 50 pounds on a compound lift. You're going to look different, okay? It doesn't just happen.
Starting point is 00:12:01 You're going to look different and you're going to have some muscle. There's a direct relationship. Now you can get stuck here and stay in here all the time, in which case now you're straight powerlifting. But if you do it, I suggest people try it for four, five, six weeks, see what happens. Go back to the other way of training, and you hit the nail on the head, Adam.
Starting point is 00:12:19 You go back to hypertrophy training, and it's like, boom, oh my gosh, what's happened? I noticed like, and I don't know this is like the CNS benefit that I got from it, but the control of weight when I went to other, like, it reminded me of, you know, I've told this story before. I think you guys have shared similar stories of when I was really young and lifting out, I was lifting with these older guys that were like these big buff, like power lifter, bodybuilder type dudes and they love the go super heavy.
Starting point is 00:12:48 And I remember like the first time that they made me squat, like like and for me back then, like two plates was unheard of. Like I can barely squat a plate back, back this far back, right? And I remember them sticking two plates on my back. I'm like, I can barely do one plate. There's no way, like I can, he's like, I just want you to feel the weight. And just getting on there and he would make me un-racquit
Starting point is 00:13:06 and just stand there. And just let my body adapt to not, the verbiage that he used back then, I don't think he was communicating it the same way. We were probably today when you talk about what your central nervous system is having to do to adapt and figure that out. But I think there's something there that,
Starting point is 00:13:21 when you go and you lift close to your max low like that and you get good at generating all that force like Justin loves to talk about, you then go back to this five or 10 or 15 rep and I just had this different control the way. It now seems so easy to control this five or eight rep set where maybe before I would fill myself a little unstable at first and kind of adapting to get used to it where I'm now I've trained in a block where I'm lifting singles doubles and triples, I'm lifting significantly more weight than what I'm now doing when I'm doing eight reps so that just the control of the weight seems so easy. Look, there's more than this, but to simplify, there's two
Starting point is 00:14:00 things that are lifting the weight. There's your muscles and then there's the command center, the central nervous system. That's telling your muscles what to do the central nervous system can fire harder It could fire more efficiently It could make make your muscles perform better and your muscles can get bigger and that'll also make them perform better They're all connected So if you want to see what an extreme on one end looks like, you look at an Olympic lifter. You have 185 pound, you know, male Olympic champion, who's lifting weights that a 280 pound bodybuilder could only dream of lifting. How is that possible when he's 185 pounds? His central nervous system fires with incredible power, effectiveness and efficiency. And then on the flip
Starting point is 00:14:41 side of the other extreme, you have a body builder who learns how to maximize the muscle, so the muscles are big. Now, is there value in both? You better believe it. If you can do both and train both very well, you'll develop this very balanced, strong, incredible physique that will last you your whole life, not just focusing on one or the other.
Starting point is 00:15:01 Anyway, I wanna talk about something really interesting that I've been observing at home. You know, I was talking to Doug about this and Doug said, you know, how kids are so like, in tune to things, because they don't necessarily have words or things that get in the way. So let me tell you guys, you know, little kids are what kind of kids we're talking about.
Starting point is 00:15:20 Little kids, little kids. So before we even knew, this is a while back, before we even knew Jessica was pregnant, my baby son, Aralius, would go up to her, was going up to her tummy, he'd lift her shirt and he'd hug her, and then he'd make this little voice, where he'd go, oh, I did, I did.
Starting point is 00:15:37 He does that whenever he plays with like, stuffed animals or whatever, and we like, what's he doing? So weird, and he'd like, squeeze her stomach and hug it, and then we found out she was pregnant, we're like, this is he doing? So weird. And he'd like, squeeze her stomach and hug it. And then we found out she was pregnant. We're like, this is so weird. He still does this.
Starting point is 00:15:48 He goes up to her, belly lifts her shirt. And he, you could tell he's like playing with a baby. So freaking weird. I mean, he's a year and a half years old. It's like he knows something's in there. So strange. Well, don't you believe, I mean, I brought this up when Max was really young and I was going through all this
Starting point is 00:16:06 I Mean I believe that and we've seen examples of this like an adult right? So if you're an adult who like was born deaf Right or you can't see yet other senses are heightened You're more in tune to them right? Yeah, those other senses become very heightened because you become attendant, the body adapts, like, oh, you no longer have your sight, so then also you're hearing your smell, those things get super heightened for that person. So you think as a baby when you haven't developed
Starting point is 00:16:35 like the ability to communicate as well, even their sight isn't all the way there, they're relying on other senses to feel the smell, like the energy. And they don't have the doubt, like they don't have the voices that says, ah, that's silly. Yeah, you don't even know anybody.
Starting point is 00:16:47 Yeah, they have to go fully off into it. So I totally believe, that's why I think the way we are as parents around them at that young of an age is so, so much more impactful than I think we even communicate and talk about because we just assume like, oh, they're not fully developed yet and they're not, they can't communicate
Starting point is 00:17:04 and they're never gonna remember what mom and dad we're saying or doing. It's like, I don't believe that. Maybe they'll never be able to communicate it and say it, but I think it's being downloaded and I think that their senses are extremely heightened and they pick up, I mean, I notice it just the other, like, the last night the warriors are playing.
Starting point is 00:17:21 And Katrina and I are like, our energy was so hyped because of the game. And I could tell that Max wasn't sure how to read it. Because we're not like that normally. We're very even kill most of the time. It's not like mom and dad yelling at the screen and like getting all into a bolt of us.
Starting point is 00:17:38 And you could tell he was trying to fill us out. Like he'd walk over and he would tell Katrina, stop. Stop. This is new thing right now. That's his new thing. I don't know where he learned this. There's the funniest thing ever though. We'll be talking, Katrina we'll be talking
Starting point is 00:17:52 and he'll come walk over and stop. We'll be tickling him and play with him, stop. So what is he doing with you guys on your phone? He goes like, no. Yeah, he's hilarious right now. So this is one of the new tendencies that. But I mean, I noticed that last night and I met a comment to Katrina,
Starting point is 00:18:09 I was like, oh wow, I wonder if he thinks that like we're angry or mad because we're yelling at the screen and stuff like that because we're just not like that. And I could see it change his behavior and him trying to piece it together and figure out what it is. So I totally think that.
Starting point is 00:18:23 They just have a different consciousness. They're just experiencing. Jessica said something to me, interesting a long time ago, she said, don't tell them that's a flower. Just let them experience it. And I thought about that. I'm like, what do you mean by that?
Starting point is 00:18:36 She goes, because once you say what it is and you name it, then you create this expectation or rather they experience it. They don't know what it is, have them look at it and observe it and you can even do this to yourself. You could look at something and try to eliminate your preconceived understanding of notions and just experience the thing.
Starting point is 00:18:55 It's a very strange, if you've ever, and it's really hard to do, I've been able to do it a few times. It's a very weird, sometimes a little scary feeling. You wanna snap back into it. Well, I remember when we were going through the speech therapist with Max, and one of the things that they teach you to do
Starting point is 00:19:08 is to kind of along the lines of what you're saying right now. A bad habit that we have as parents is, when you have a kid that's that young that's developing, is they see a flower, and you tell them right away, versus allowing them to try and piece it together first, right? So, you know, you always want to have that pause. So, like, when I'm reading a book to him for the first time, and I want him to figure it out, is you want to wait versus always giving them the answer.
Starting point is 00:19:34 Like, oh, that's like, there's a video I posted a while back of Max and you, of, on my story of, he has all these Mario carts and there's like all the characters, you know, Yoshi, Luigi, Mario, and like instead of me telling him who they all are, I let and then I let him be challenged and you can see he's getting frustrated that he can't remember, but I know he knows it's been said before and so really giving them that time to allow that to make that connection and then communicate versus just telling them all the time. And here's how it is. Yes. Yes. It's interesting to hear because like I'm at the point now where I'm you know putting
Starting point is 00:20:11 the kids to bed and then with Everett I'm making him read for me. So it's like the role had kind of flipped and I want to see like how he thinks about it. I want to see like you know like the way he pronounces certain words and like if he struggles with the bigger words or if he doesn't and so and he's actually doing really good in terms of like his verbal fluency and like how he understands things. And to the point where he's actually like, he's starting to mess with me a bit.
Starting point is 00:20:41 And so we're like reading the story and I'm like, okay, that's how you pronounce it. Sometimes I'll help him out. And so we're like reading the story and I'm like, okay, yeah, that's how you print it. Sometimes I'll help him out. And then he's like kind of going through with his finger just kind of like reading it and whatever. And so he'll keep reading and then he starts to block out words. And he's starting to figure out ways of like sort of like omitting certain things so they look totally inappropriate.
Starting point is 00:21:01 Oh, God, that's your son. Yeah, that is your son, bro. I was like, oh my God he's figured on his own figured this out right. So we're reading like a whole just you know fun facts about dogs and whatever and so there was this one dog I think it was called like the SX Spaniel and so he just like omits the first part and the last part and he's just like right here And he's kind of looking at me like seeing if I see it and he starts laughing. It said sex spa What
Starting point is 00:21:35 He just knows their words every here. Proper. He doesn't really know it Everyone's every once in a while your genetics come out This means but I was dying I was on the floor I my genetics. I think you know what this means, but I was dying. I was on the floor. I love that. You know what else is really cool? This was a big, like, I didn't do this with my older kids because I just didn't understand.
Starting point is 00:21:54 Like when you're trying to clean up the kitchen and you're trying to hurry so that you can then play with your kid versus integrating him. Yeah, so it's like, it's like, my youngest, he's like trying to help and I'm moving that away so I can go fast so we can go play. And then, you know, Jessica's like, well, that is play. Like, have him help you. So it'll take much longer, but that's then part of the play. Like, oh my God, like, I can't believe I was like hurry up. Not only that, I think I was talking to Trina that because I said he puts
Starting point is 00:22:21 away the dishes and stuff, and it's all part of the game. Yeah, I also think also think that I mean not only is it become like play and fun for them, but you're also setting the table for the future that that's a normal behavior now to help mom out. Contribute. You help mom out with making the dinner. You help like you know how good that is for them to feel like they are a part. Yes, yeah, it makes it makes a huge difference because they feel like they're contributing and helping out. We did this.
Starting point is 00:22:48 I'm doing this right now. I'm getting them ready because he's going to have a baby sister. I did this with my oldest when his sister was born. If you see him now, there's not a shred of envy or jealousy from my oldest with his sister because he was so, we made sure he was involved. I'm doing that with the Relias too. And I bought him like this. I think it's called a squish mullo.
Starting point is 00:23:09 It's like these stuffies that, you know, I don't know, the kids love them. So now that's his baby. I got him a stroller. I put it in there. He gives the baby a walk. I have him change the baby's diaper. He's like, so that when his sister's born,
Starting point is 00:23:21 he's gonna be super involved. But it's funny because he's totally embraced this, right? So the other day who's running with his Squish Mallow, and he bails hard, and you're like, worried about him, and he gets up and he goes, my baby. And the way he says it is so fun. My baby.
Starting point is 00:23:36 He was like, it's my baby. Do you have the pinchers? Yeah, I have my baby. My baby. My baby. It's the way he says it. I'm cracking that. Where are you guys at right now with his sleep training? How's that been? Oh, he baby. That's the way he says it. I'm cracking that up.
Starting point is 00:23:46 Where are you guys at right now with his sleep training? How's that been now? Oh, he sleeps good. Yeah, so you guys have a routine now and does he sleep at night? Yeah, no, there's no more. I mean, he's still a light sleeper in the morning, so around 5am, 6am, that's like, you gotta be careful if you're making noise, so wake up and that's it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:24:03 You won't go back down, but no, he goes to bed or goes to sleep super easy now. Sleeps most of the night unless of course you're not feeling good or something like that, but it's way better. Thank God. I hope this next one doesn't have the same challenges. Because that was such a hole. I mean, you guys are it's not bad. I mean, what he's barely over a year.
Starting point is 00:24:21 So you guys got that you got that done by a year. So I mean, but there was a period there. Well, I remember I remember you guys having a really hard time with the sleep for a while there, but I mean, that's kind of normal for everybody to kind of take a little bit of time to figure it out till one. Well, you know what I noticed?
Starting point is 00:24:34 It's like either your kid has challenges of sleeping or they have challenges with eating or something like one of those common ones. So really, this was sleep. Food never an issue. I've seen parents where we'll have friends and they're like, oh our kid goes right to sleep, but oh my God, trying to feed them,
Starting point is 00:24:49 it's the hardest thing in the world. So I mean, pick your poison. You know what I mean? Yeah, yeah, yeah, we're gonna have to, I mean, I feel like the sleep training thing never stops, I think you're always, I mean, hopefully. You get regressions constantly. Yeah, yeah, up until like five.
Starting point is 00:24:59 Yeah, you feel like you're, oh yeah, the things are going great. And that's like, oh, right now we're in the middle of having to break him again because we went on that run from like October of last year till now before we did the surgery of him just being sick. And so when he's sick, like I'm totally flexible with him like coming in, the guys feels terrible,
Starting point is 00:25:17 he can't breathe, like so when we would put him down, he'd wake up around like midnight or one and then he'd come in the room and then he would climb in the bed. But now he's feeling much better and we're back on the recovery, but then he's been trained so well to like just come in there all time. And so having to re-break that of like, okay, stay in your bed, dude. Let's get back to bed.
Starting point is 00:25:36 So we're working on that again right now. Dude, I read this article on a study. And you know, these studies just keep confirming old wisdom, but it was a study done on, what are they, they're not Native Americans, they're in Canada, what do they call them, they have another term from New it. Not, not, not, there's a like traditional, I don't remember what, what they're, but it's the, it was, it's the natives of Canada, okay, and there was a study that was done on the best type of diet for them, because their rate of diabetes and obesity was even higher than the, you know, Europeans that came in, you know, to Canada or whatnot. So, and you see that here in the US as well.
Starting point is 00:26:17 And in the study, okay, here's one of those Duh studies, they found that the traditional diet was absolutely best for them. In other words, eating the way that their ancestors ate produced the best outcomes. And I think that this is indigenous peoples, thank you. The first nations, yes. So this is true, this is true somewhat true across the board generally, I should say,
Starting point is 00:26:42 because there's always individual variances, but traditional diets work best for most people. And the question is why? Why is that? Because our bodies didn't evolve in a vacuum. We co-evolved with our environment. We evolved to the point where the foods that were available, that we ate in the way we prepared them, is what are the people that survived and procreated, that was what was best for them.
Starting point is 00:27:06 So if you're ever like curious or confused as to what the best diet is for you, a great way to start is to go with it, you know, what they would call ancestral or traditional type of diet, it works for, generally speaking, it works best for most people. I mean, is in this where you start like kind of factoring in some of those epigenetic
Starting point is 00:27:26 variables where it's like, whatever your potential to unlock and express like based off of like your past history, you may have like a certain intolerances or certain things that you may find like intolerances or certain things that you may find based off of what your gene pool had, like previous to you. 100%. Absolutely. This is why I don't like though when they take from a very specific blue zone,
Starting point is 00:27:55 and then whatever diet that they're running in there, and try and make the case and argument that that's the diet for everybody. We had somebody on our YouTube channel, like a couple, I don't maybe a month ago, or a week ago, I was kind of going back and forward with them because they're, you know, with some vegan advocate and they live down in Lolo Limo or Lolo Lindo. What's the Lolo Lindo? Lolo Lindo. And what's the seventh day adventist? Yeah, and I think they're, I think they're all, are they vegan? Is that what the vegetarian? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:20 So and it's part of their religion, so they're really strict about it. But there's other things that they're also part of the religion, so they're really strict about it. But there's other things that they're also part of the religion that have to do with health as well. So there's a lot of people. Yeah, community and their walkers out by sun. Like there's a lot, that's what I'm saying. Like, and so because they, this person was arguing with me back and forth and like, I live here, I know.
Starting point is 00:28:38 You know, it's like, okay, dude, I'm like, whatever, you just keep believing that. They keep drinking the cool aid. That for you, for that group for that that area Like that has worked really really well for those people that doesn't necessarily mean the rest of the world are gonna get the same results as that That community did for the because that probably goes back like hundreds of years Also also what it is people are looking at the wrong things. They're looking at the diet and saying it's the lack of meat That's not what it is if you look at traditional diets across the world,
Starting point is 00:29:06 and you look at long living peoples across the world, there's commonalities among them. Now, some of them are higher protein, higher fat, some of them are higher carbohydrate, but here's the commonalities. They're all whole food-based. None of them are heavily processed food-based. Number two, none of them overeat.
Starting point is 00:29:24 So whether it's a traditional diet that is lots of goat cheese and goat meat and goat milk and berries, or it's a diet that's high in tubers and certain starches and fruit and fish, what you find is whole natural foods, they don't overeat, and there's some form of daily activity, and then there's community. Those are the things that they all have in common.
Starting point is 00:29:48 So when I say about traditional diet, that's where you should start. Then if you want to get into the details and say, oh, I do better with carbs, I do better protein, I do better with fats, you know, I do better with meat or fish, that's totally fine. But that's what you find,
Starting point is 00:30:01 you won't find are any traditional diets that are high in packaged processed foods or that are high super high in calories Right, that's that that's well. There's what what is there seven or eight blue zones in the world? Yeah, and I don't think any of them are that like it's far as identical. Yeah identical as far as their diet Their diets are all over the pool. No, the longest living men in the world are in Sardinia This is an island off the coast of Italy. Okay, so I have family of insardinia So I have a little bit of insight in how they eat. If you live on the coast, you eat a lot of fish.
Starting point is 00:30:29 You live in the hills and the mountains, you eat a lot of products from goat and pork, okay? In fact, the old school, there were people that lived in the mountains, and they didn't even know how to swim, okay? But they were active every single day. It was whole natural foods, and they didn't overeat They didn't overeat, you know, it was like one it was like one larger meal and then like really small
Starting point is 00:30:51 Meals in the morning and that was pretty much it Do you ever think we're gonna be able to really pinpoint this to the individual in terms of like I do tying in ancestry.com with like, you know, your your whole nutritional profile and then kind of linking tracing back like what's worked in the past within You know your own specific environment now and all that. I agree with Adam. I think CGM is one step towards that. Yeah Whereas CGM you see your individual Blood glucose response, okay, which can be very different from person to person. It's really interesting. Like, there's people that we've observed have a glucose response that's high to like avocado, like a bunch of fat, like what the hell.
Starting point is 00:31:34 Obviously, they have some kind of intolerance, it's an immune response. So CGM is the first step. And then I think the next step will be monitoring other reactionary factors like inflammatory markers and stuff like that. But CGM is pretty damn good. And with NutriSense, which is what a company we invested in, you actually work with a dietician that helps kind of pinpoint. That's about as individualized as it can get right now.
Starting point is 00:31:57 I don't know anything else that gets more individualized. Yeah, that's pretty specific to the individual, which is cool to see that. I mean, we all had hopes for that with CGM being more of like a mainstream thing because before that, it was like medical and you had to go through your doctor to kind of receive one. No, well, it's moving that way right now. I forgot what the statistics were on the amount of people that use glucose monitors and where it was just a year or two ago, where it's at now and where they project it and in the next year or two.
Starting point is 00:32:25 So it's making its way to mainstream. Could you imagine if we had this tool, a strainer? Yeah. Oh, I know, I would have ran laps with this. It'd have been awesome. Well, imagine if you could show your client and say, hey, look, your glucose spike here. Like, why didn't anything?
Starting point is 00:32:39 Well, yeah, but something stressful happened. Oh, yeah, I got an argument with my daughter. Or, oh, my God, this lack of sleep is causing that. And say, look, when something stressful happened. Oh, yeah, I got an argument with my daughter. Or, oh my God, this lack of sleep is causing that. And say, look, when it drops after the peak, do you remember how you felt at that time? Oh my God, I was cravings or I felt irritable. So they start to connect. I can't get more individualized in that.
Starting point is 00:32:56 We used to just base it off of reporting how you feel and stuff, which, you know, through that process is you can get really good too, but it's not as objective. Well, you see the number, the data, and it's right there. So, I mean, I've identified for myself that the best foods, and I know a lot of people like this too, the best foods for me are typically meats, red meats.
Starting point is 00:33:16 I do really, really well. Same, yeah. Really well with red meats. I do better with red meat than I do with chicken, and I do good with chicken, and even better than fish. When I eat a diet that's higher in either ground beef or bison, I just, or just of course steaks, I just feel so absolutely bad.
Starting point is 00:33:33 You say that, but I actually, for me personally, I feel I do better with white meats and fishes. And then if I do red meat, I can actually tell a difference. So last night we actually had lettuce wraps from five five guys and even though it was a lettuce wrap I didn't have I didn't have the gluten stuff like that I still the the cheese and the meat the combination of two of those I'm a totally up still and but I do that now if I were to do that with like grass fed beef It don't get the same feeling wow
Starting point is 00:34:00 So I noticed a difference between even if you have the cheese So I that's so what I haven't teased out yet is between even if you have the cheese. So that's so what I haven't teased out yet is to see if it's more the red meat that I'm getting from them that's not grass fed or it's the combination of both that and the cheese or the cheese. I don't think it's a cheese because I'll have dairy and other aspects of my diet and it by itself is not enough. I feel like it's the combo that insults it enough to where I get this in front of a story response. So I get really bloated from it. Like that's a light meal for me to have
Starting point is 00:34:28 two burgers in a lettuce wrap. It's not a lot of calories, but afterwards I literally feel like I'm super bloated. Now it goes away by morning time, so I'm fine, but the initial response, I feel that way. And it sucks because I love it and it going down and it's easy and convenient. It's one of Katrina's favorite meals.
Starting point is 00:34:44 She doesn't get that reaction to it. If I go have like our grass-fed beef, I don't feel that way. So the majority of the meat that I eat is from butcher box. So it's all grass-fed. But I also noticed that if I go off that and I eat a lot of, I don't know, conventional red meat, that it doesn't feel quite as,
Starting point is 00:35:01 it's got to be the fatty acid profile is what I would point to, because that's the biggest difference. I think it's the combo, because maybe that by itself doesn't, but with the cheese also, because cheese by itself does, I have cheese on all kinds of stuff, and it doesn't bother me the same way. Like, what are the favorite dishes we do, shredded cheese,
Starting point is 00:35:18 avocado, rice, and like, make like almost like a burrito bowl, or homemade burrito bowl, I crushed that all the time. No problems. Katrina makes this healthy kind of lasagna pasta dish that we make that's got cheese all over it. That's a problem. Because it's not grass fed. So it's gonna be higher in the omega sixes.
Starting point is 00:35:36 Obviously saturated fat cheese. Very high in saturated fat in omega sixes. They use the plastic cheese though. That's like the American. Like it's the, to me, that's not even real cheese. Like let's be honest. So that's what it could be, right the, to me, that's not even real cheese. Like, let's be honest. So that's what it could be, right? Like I'm getting that kind of crappy fake cheese, I'm getting that the highest quality of
Starting point is 00:35:50 beef and the combo of both of them. And if it's a crazy storm, if I have it on a bun, if I have it on a bun, like, for a gluten on top of it. Yeah, yeah. Then it's just, it sucks that I get that reaction that way. Have you guys tried the, they have this pack, I don't know if there are, if it's available anymore, but it's like a, it's like a supressata,
Starting point is 00:36:10 you know, capicola, mortadella type deal from Butcherbox. So it's got like the, the Italian deli meats, but they're all minimally processed, no nitrates. No. Oh, bro, it's, I mean, I love that. I grew up eating that kind of stuff. Where my, my family would smuggle it from Italy. You literally had to smuggle it by the way. I don't want to bring a shircudery stuff.
Starting point is 00:36:29 That's what I mean. I'm actually talking about, yeah. Yeah, yeah. Oh, it's so good, dude. I'm a big shircudery, yeah. Yeah, it is. What's your box, has that? I've ordered it now two or three times.
Starting point is 00:36:38 I don't know if it's still available. So now you can do add-ons. You can do an add-on and it'll give you the sliced, you know, like a tie-in style charcuterie type deli meat and it's really freaking good. Oh, while the dog just pulled out. See, American cheese isn't even considered to be real cheese. It's called a pasteurized cheese product. Huh.
Starting point is 00:36:58 Isn't that funny? Yeah, that is funny. A pasteurized. Of course it's called American cheese, yeah. And it's the only American. It's the only one percent real cheese. So 49 of that should fake. If it says cheese product in real, dude, then you know, I remember one time. I wonder if that's say, so I wonder if that's an FDA thing. Like the
Starting point is 00:37:14 fact that it's 51, they can call it cheese. If it was 49 and flip the other way, they're 100% right. But they can't call it cheese. They can call it a cheese product. Like it has to be 70% I remember one time buying candy for, it was for Easter and there was this chocolate bunny and it was like inexpensive or whatever and I looked at it and it said chocolate flavored candy. And I'm like, wait a minute. What's the difference between chocolate?
Starting point is 00:37:39 This would actually be flavored candy. It's like wax, like. I didn't buy it. That's probably what it was, yeah, probably like a wax, right? I didn't buy it. I was like, I get the one that says chocolate. Yeah. Not the chocolate flavor, but.
Starting point is 00:37:50 Oh, wow. Oh, wow. Hey, check this out. Look, there's a lot of companies out there that sell vitamins and nutrients, but the problem is you don't absorb them well. Okay. Enter a company we work with called Live On Labs. They use liposomal technology now to kind of
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Starting point is 00:38:26 only liposomal glutathione will raise glutathione levels in your blood. So this company LiveOnLabs does this with all their nutrients. And right now, you can actually get lipoglutathione for free when you bundle it with B-complex and vitamin C. It's just a promotion they're running right now.
Starting point is 00:38:43 So go check this company out. Go to liveonlabs.com, that's L-I-V-O-N-L-A- and vitamin C. It's just a promotion, the running right now. So go check this company out. Go to liveonlabs.com, that's L-I-V-O-N-L-A-B-S.com, forward slash MP for that offer. All right, here comes the rest of the show. The first question is from Danny H. Z. What are your guys' thoughts on the keto diet for muscle growth? Sucks, unless you're a buck O-5.
Starting point is 00:39:04 That's right. Next question, very good. That a buck oh five that's right next question very good I mean it's kind of true though you know what it's kind of true and there's general I mean we can answer this generally but then of course yeah on an individual basis that's just my opinion there's definitely there's definitely cases where this good idea generally speaking it's really hard to gain size and strength on a ketogenic diet just because it's it's so hard to gain size and strength on a ketogenic diet, just because it's so hard to eat the right amount of calories. Yeah, calories are so low in this diet.
Starting point is 00:39:31 It's just, and you think, you wouldn't think so, right? Cause keto is high in fat, fat, high in calories, but it's so satiating, it's really hard to eat the bulk this way, and that makes it tough. And then carbohydrates are also great for performance. So studies are pretty clear on this. If for maximal strength, carbohydrates give you better strength. Now ketogenic diets for like long, stamina, endurance can be pretty good,
Starting point is 00:39:53 but for strength, that's so great. But I had challenges with this just because I couldn't eat enough. It was just so filling. I was like, I can't eat another avocado. Like I can't eat more. Where it makes sense. And I'll steal what I'm sure you would say anyways, is that if you're somebody who,
Starting point is 00:40:08 if you don't eat the ketogenic diet, like you have issues, right? So if you have all kinds of autoimmune issues and your guts all messed up, and the only way you feel good, is by eating a ketogenic diet. It's been go. Then it is the best diet for you to build muscle on.
Starting point is 00:40:23 Because you're healthy now. If you were falling, yes. If you were falling the ketogenic diet because you find that it helps keep you better about eating lesser calories and you are your friends doing it. And so you want to try it too. And it's worked well for losing body fat. And now you're asking, is this a good diet for me to try and build muscle on? I would say absolutely not. That was, so when I went through it years ago on the podcast, when it was just getting really popular, for shits and giggles, we all decided to do it, right?
Starting point is 00:40:56 Let's just see how we feel, we'll go through it, not any of us felt that we needed to or had to. I think Sal was feeling good on it, and that was kind of what put out at all of us to like, okay, let's give it a whirl and see how we all feel. I was in the height of competing at that time and was eating close to 5,000, 4,500 to 5,000 calories or so give or take. And it was really tough just to hit my maintenance for that. So much less if I had to build or just so say she. Yeah, and what I found was in order to hit my
Starting point is 00:41:28 calorie intake from my side. And that's why I made the joke of a fewer 105 pounds maybe, okay. But if you for in order for me to hit 4,000 plus calories, I found myself eating tons of macadamia nuts, butter, avocado, just there was a handful of foods I was eating a lot. Super limited. Yeah, I was very limited on my choices to fill those calories up. And I remember thinking to myself, like, this can't be ideal for me to be consuming this much of the same foods just so I could hit the calorie intake.
Starting point is 00:41:57 I wonder if this question was spurred because of like Dom Diagostino, right? Because he did deadlift. Yeah. I remember from like being in a fasted state or even like going through the ketogenic because of like Dom Diagostino, right? Because he did deadlift. I remember from like being in a fasted state or even like going through the ketogenic diet quite a bit and he's a really strong guy. And it's like, I think we just have this sort of, again, like looking at somebody else
Starting point is 00:42:17 and thinking that that might work for you individually, it definitely is, the variances are crazy. Yeah, so I mean, I've had on and off gut health issues and a ketogenic style diet in the past has been good for my gut health issues. Carbohydrates tend to aggravate them. So in the past, when this would happen, I would eliminate carbohydrates that increase my fat
Starting point is 00:42:39 and take, keep my protein intake high. And it would improve my health and that's what made it a good diet for me for strength and for muscle, because the other option was to feel, inflamed and bloated and have gut issues, right? So if it makes you healthier, it's gonna work for you. Now, today, my gut issues right now are all but nonexistent.
Starting point is 00:42:58 So now I eat carbohydrates, because it works better for me, I'm stronger, and I feel better, but I will say this, I do notice a difference in my mental clarity between the two. If I wanna be mentally sharp, if I get my body to run off of ketones, I do feel very sharp,
Starting point is 00:43:13 and I've heard people talk about this. I don't think this is true for everybody though, but for me personally, even now, I know that if I'm gonna be on a podcast, or I'm gonna do something where I wanna be really, really sharp, I'll avoid carbohydrates for two or three days. I'm how a ketones. Yeah, does the same for me It does a mental clarity. This is another question to that highlights why I'm so annoyed by
Starting point is 00:43:34 diets in general though, too like Okay, so let's let's take you for example There's very few people that I know that are like What is Makayla Peterson? There's very few people that I know that are like, what is Michaela Peterson, right? That where she was like just everything affected her and the only thing that didn't make her feel terrible was just meat, right?
Starting point is 00:43:55 Very few clients I've ever met are like that. Super rare. A lot of clients I've met, there's specific carbohydrates that they're doing, primarily things like gluten and sugars and stuff like that that tend to upset them, but things like rice, sweet potato, yams, I've yet to meet a client that can't digest that and doesn't feel good eating that. So why follow a diet as specific as like the carnivore, the keto diet, if those things
Starting point is 00:44:22 don't make you feel bad, why not run a keto-ish or carnivore-ish diet where you eat primarily meat, but then you allow yourself to have these things like rice, sweet potato, yams, maybe some vegetables that don't bother you, yeah, or fruit, right? That doesn't bother you, that really will complement those energy levels,
Starting point is 00:44:43 will help complement building muscle. Like, this idea that we, if we decide that we're going to go keto, or we're going to go carnivore, that we have to like, follow the guidelines. Like, I have to be so strict about it. It's like, well, maybe what it is that makes you feel so good about following that diet was certain things that you eliminated. That's what, in my experience, whether it be a client that swears by being vegan, a client that swears by being keto or swears by being carnivore or swears by being paleo, it's not the fucking diet. It's what they got rid of in their diet
Starting point is 00:45:14 that was previous. And so instead of falling in love with these diets and saying, oh, I need to follow this diet, maybe look into what was it you were eating before that didn't make you feel well, keep that out the fucking diet, but then start to introduce some of these other foods that have tremendous value for you. Yeah, and also it changes as you get older, as the context of your life changes. I know, for example, for me, and for a lot of people I've worked with, a ketogenic style diet is very satiating. Okay. That might make it a good option for cutting.
Starting point is 00:45:47 It is for me, if I'm trying to get leaner, then I tend to go higher fat, lower carbohydrate with my lower calorie, just because it's easier for me to deal with hunger. And so I have less of the hunger, less of the cravings as a result. Also, I said earlier, mental sharpness, it's on a different level when I eat ketogenic.
Starting point is 00:46:04 So I'll modify it depending on, when I need, mental sharpness, it's on a different level when acutogenic. So I'll modify it depending on when I need that kind of stuff or if I'm feeling kind of down or tired, I made that way. Or if I want to go on a strength cycle, I want to start adding muscle. That's when I'll throw the carbohydrates in. So this is where it's really good to know yourself, know what works for you, and then always stay open because things can change. Your body can change, your reactions to food changes. And this is what allows you because if your diet is rigid, your lifestyle is not the same, your lifestyle is not rigid. So if everything stayed exactly
Starting point is 00:46:33 the same all the time, you never aged, you slept the exact same, all your stress was the same, everything was identical. Yeah, well then you had your diet that works, you stick to that. But things change. It only makes sense that your diet should change along with it. Next question is from DeCali 84. How do you get yourself back into lifting when depression has taken over? This is discipline. This is where discipline kicks in. So, you're not going to have your best workouts, you're not going to have your kick-ass fun workouts. What you're going to do is you're just going to do it and just go through the motions.
Starting point is 00:47:05 And it's way better than not doing it. And I've gone through periods of this where, you know, I went through a really, really tough period years ago in my life and there was a lot of really challenging things that happened and my workouts sucked, but I showed up and I literally went through the motions and it was, it really helped a lot. And you know, Arthur Brooks is an expert on happiness and I always turn to him for stuff like this and he says, you know, when you're feeling really down,
Starting point is 00:47:30 oftentimes the things you don't want to do is exactly what you need to do. So like when you're depressed, you want to be alone, you don't want to talk to anyone. He's like, that's when you should probably go to a friend, be around people. Yeah, you know, or go outside. I really don't want to go outside.
Starting point is 00:47:42 It was just, you know, just kind of do it, go through the motions. So that's the discipline part. What you don't want to go outside. It was just kind of do it, go through the motions. So that's the discipline part. What you don't want to do is allow your feelings necessarily to dictate what you do and what you don't do in terms of taking care of yourself because when you feel down, you get this feedback loop where I feel down, I don't want to work out,
Starting point is 00:47:59 I don't want to move, not working out, not moving makes me feel worse. And then you kind of goes down. And this is especially important to start getting rid of that pressure in terms of having to be so effective and productive in the gym and crush your workouts. I know this is still something that a lot of people struggle with in terms of like, is it even worth my time to go,
Starting point is 00:48:22 even if it's like the shortened amount of time or I just don't feel like I have that kind of energy to really get after it. Well, just moving in general, but also like just going through those exercises that maybe a lower weight will help to start at least stimulating that and pull that momentum back up so you can build upon that again.
Starting point is 00:48:45 So I like what you said, and I don't necessarily disagree with cell, but I think one of the things, and I've been through this before, that used to hang me up, and I think where is people have this idea that, you know, oh, you just got to discipline yourself and you just have to get through it, and that's the best thing for you. But that seems like such an overwhelming task when you're in that space, when you're in that space, when you're depressed, when you don't want to move, you don't do anything, an hour workout sometimes sounds really hard. So the strategy that I have for myself employed is, okay, I'm not going to say that I have to do this hour workout and follow all of my
Starting point is 00:49:20 maps and a ball of routine. I'm just going to go there and maybe I'm just going to do, maybe well, do is I'll set the bar really low. I'm just going to do a ball of routine. I'm just gonna go there. And maybe I'm just gonna do, maybe while I'll do is I'll set the bar really low. I'm just gonna do a set of squats. One, one set of, and what you'll find out is if you set that bar really low, and that's not a waste of your time, that's better than what you were potentially to do, which is gonna sit on the couch and feel sorry for yourself.
Starting point is 00:49:38 So all I'm gonna do is I'm gonna get up, I'm gonna go over there and I'm just gonna do one set, one set, I can do anybody can do one set of something, right? So I'm gonna give myself this really bit. And what ends do one set one set. I can do anybody could do one set or something Right, so I'm gonna give myself this really bit and what ends up happening is go like I can do another one I'm still here. Yeah, I'm here already the bar the way it's other I could do one more win Even if you just did one well that is you're right and that's why and you gotta have you gonna be okay with that We we look at it as like it has me this kind of all or nothing thing where it's like
Starting point is 00:50:01 Oh, either I'm sitting on the couch doing nothing or it's like, oh, I gotta really push myself and get in the gym, it's like, no, you don't. Go in there and just go do one set and give yourself that freedom to potentially just go do one set, so you know what, I'm just not feeling tired. That's exactly what I did. So, I mean, to get more specific,
Starting point is 00:50:16 and I had somebody tell me this once for writing content, because I remember, if I'm really in the mood, I can write so much content. If I'm not in the mood, it's really challenging and I told a friend of mine who they were a writer and they said, well, here's what you do. Every day, if you have a big project, every day schedule, whatever it is,
Starting point is 00:50:32 30 minutes or an hour. And the only thing you're doing is you're sitting in front of your computer and do nothing else. If you write, you're right, if you don't, you don't, but you got that hour to sit there. And I did that and it was so effective. Now, there was sometimes, right, just sat there
Starting point is 00:50:44 and that was the deal I made myself. I'm just gonna sit here and not do anything else. Sometimes you just stare at the screen. Right, but usually, and usually I would write at least a sentence or a paragraph. So, that's exactly what I do with my workouts, is I showed up, and I'll give you some examples of my workouts to look like.
Starting point is 00:50:58 I, which, and this was, I mean, it was a really hard time. I had somebody really close to me that was slowly dying, and I was going through divorces, was all within the course of like a two, three-year period. I showed up to my gym and I said, okay, from, I don't remember what the time was, but it's like from, you know, 12-the-one, is my workout time.
Starting point is 00:51:14 And I'd sit down and I'd sit on the bench and I'd look at the clock and sometimes I'd go do a set of squats, other times I would just stretch. Sometimes I'd do three or four exercises, but I would do something and I was there and I showed up and it Kept me afloat. It really did keep that's what I mean by go through the motions It's like you just that's the discipline part as you show up and you say okay I'm gonna try and do something even if it's the smallest thing
Starting point is 00:51:39 But you're but one thing you have to understand is it's not gonna be your PR kick ass If that's your mindset and you think well these are what my workouts have to look like, then you're going to be disappointed. You're not going to want to do anything. Next question is from James Errors 95. I'm six weeks into my summer cut and I just hit a squat PR. How does this happen? This is happening before.
Starting point is 00:52:02 And that's happening to me too. Yeah, this is when your workout programming is so damn good that you get better at the lift, your skill improves, your CNS fires better, and you actually are able to lift more. A lot of strength is a skill, a lot of it. It's not just the size of your muscles, but the skill of the lift and the technique
Starting point is 00:52:23 and the continual practice of it. Yes, yes, so this is happening before we're all going to cut. And because my programming is so dialed, I'll see my strength. This is, by the way, this is like the best place to be on a cut. If you get stronger on a cut, you are really moving in the right direction. I actually experienced this quite a bit when I was competing because I attribute obviously good programming because I had to be during that time and just consistent. I never in my entire lifting career had been so consistent and did just highlights what you're saying that it's such a skill, especially with things like squatting and deadlifting and
Starting point is 00:52:56 never in my life had I strong months and months and months of not missing and being shown up and shown up regardless of my calories were up or my calories were down. And so many times I would be in a cut getting ready for a show, but because of the consistency, the great programming, not missing any days, I would see like, oh my God, I just hit a squat PR. Oh my God, I just hit a dead lip PR. That's crazy, I'm in a calorie deficit.
Starting point is 00:53:18 How is that possible? But it does, it highlights how much those movements are a skill and that if you are just consistent as shit with those things, how much that can start to build up. Yeah, I haven't had that quite as much. I mean, one thing I didn't notice though was as I cut down a bit, my stamina was substantially better in the left too. So if I was doing a few wraps, I was able to feel stronger in that regard in terms of getting through them like super easy.
Starting point is 00:53:49 Yeah, I would say it's not common. If this happens to you, man, everything is working really well. You do see this though when the cut improves someone's health. So I would see this with clients, but they're more like beginners, right? Where they're cutting and their health is improving. And they don and they haven't been lifting weights for five or 10 years. So it's like they've only been working out for a year or six months and then diet is really improving their health.
Starting point is 00:54:14 And then you would see this strength come up through the roof because their health was a lot better. But if you've been dialed for five or six years or 10 years and you train really well and then you cut your calories You can expect to at least not get stronger. So I don't want people to take the wrong thing away from this and be like Oh my workout program is phenomenal, but I have seen it happen for sure. Yeah, like I said, it's happened to me But it's not you know 95% of time if I cut my calories my strength my goal is to keep my strength the same Usually I see it go down.
Starting point is 00:54:45 So that's the more common thing. But if you're one of those people, your strength goes up on a cut, like you are, this is amazing. Like you should, you should bask in the glory of your workout program because it's amazing at that point. Next question is from Kirsten Kamura. What still surprises you guys about each other, even after all these years of knowing each other so well and working together? Oh, man. I'm going to change the question because I don't think, well, maybe you guys said, I don't think anything surprises me anymore with these guys.
Starting point is 00:55:16 I've been, we've all been together now for eight years plus. So I would say what continues to impress me because I'm still impressed, but nothing surprises me. I feel like I think we've built a brotherhood and a bond and a consistency with each other for so long now. At least that's how I feel about you guys. Like when I think about- I don't like you guys that much. I can't remember the last time someone did something
Starting point is 00:55:42 I was like, wow, I was really surprised, so I'll do that. It's like I feel like I know you all so last time someone did something. I was like, wow, I was really surprised. So I'll do that. I feel like I know you also well. That's true. But I'm continually impressed with what everybody individually does. So I would say- That's a good way to say it, because I can agree with that. I think what's interesting is just when I think I figured
Starting point is 00:56:01 one of you guys out, what I mean by that is, oh, these are the challenges that they have. And I mean by that is, like, oh, you know, these are the challenges that they have. And this is the thing that they like or whatever. Everybody's so growth-minded that what I expect now is the unexpected. So now I expect the unexpected. I expect that someone's gonna act in a way
Starting point is 00:56:19 that is evolved from where they were yesterday. And that constantly happens. And what's cool about that is, and this is, I think one of the, one of the, my favorite things about working on this team is that it pushes me to do the same thing. Because otherwise, I'm left in the dust. Everybody else keeps rising up.
Starting point is 00:56:37 I'm a less than the dust if I don't do that for myself. And that's fun for me at least. I enjoy that. I think for me, yeah, it's just noticing those elevations within you guys and then seeing that and being like, oh wow, like, Sal's on a new level, Adam's on a new level, Doug's really like killing it.
Starting point is 00:56:56 And like for certain aspects of whatever we're handling within the business or just like the thought process now that goes into some of our content, you just start to see like just where we used to be and like what the struggles used to consist of and then all of a sudden now that's not even an issue. It's not even something we're even talking about or or trying to figure out each individual person is figuring out their own way of elevating their process. Well, I'll go around and I'll be specific for the audience so they know, because I do have things for you guys.
Starting point is 00:57:28 Like, one of the things that continues to, Jesus Christ was my, so you're getting crying right now? Yeah. I think that, you wish. Oh, it's the emotional one. You wish I could get emotional. I'll tell you something. Maybe I will, maybe I will,
Starting point is 00:57:43 when I get going here. One of the things that continues to impress me with Sal, right? So it doesn't matter what is going on in his personal life, he could be dealing with some crazy shit behind the scenes that nobody knows about, whether it be someone in his family. We, him and I could have just got into like a crazy fucking heated argument, he has had the ability to like turn it on immediately. I mean, we rely heavily on him to be the voice of the brand.
Starting point is 00:58:10 He does the most interviews. He gets on big shows and he has, it doesn't matter what's going on. His ability to turn it on and be professional and elevate us every single time is the consistency is unreal. And I think that it highlights the professionalism and talent to be able to do that. Like if you're feeling it and you're in the mood and you love what you do,
Starting point is 00:58:35 like it's easy to go out there and do it. But I think what separates, and I feel like this is like in sports too, like the greats have the ability to have a shit storm going on in their life and then still be able to show up and perform at the highest level. So that continues to not not surprised by it anymore. So that's why it doesn't surprise me because we've been doing this for so long and there's been so many of those
Starting point is 00:58:57 situations where I'm like, God damn dude, he just went from like yelling with me to like all of a sudden, hey, I'm sell the stuff. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,'s definitely know. No, no, no, no, no. It's like, he's awesome. That's really, really good to be able to do that. That's just good. Right, and I've seen that so many times now that I'm never surprised, but I'm continually impressed by it. Justin has this ability to no matter what, critics say about him or think that what he needs to do, like he allows to, he shuts down all the noise
Starting point is 00:59:25 about everybody else and continues to focus on himself and his personal growth and doesn't get distracted by that stuff. He's continued to take on so much responsibility that doesn't get a lot of knowledge, get acknowledgment because it's not like Sal where he's on the forefront and the voice and talking about. There's so much that has to happen behind the scenes.
Starting point is 00:59:45 He's got to be the most secure, one of the most secure people I know. That's right. And then also to share this platform with two motor mouths like myself and Sal, and to not allow that to affect his ego. Behind the scenes, I've talked about our team. This is a perfect time to talk about this too, because the Warriors just won the championship. I talk about how our team has that similar chemistry of you have, and I would think of us as like the three core players
Starting point is 01:00:09 and the Warriors and why they work so well is that none of them feel like they have to be the superstar. But yet all of them are true superstars. And Justin I think is the glue to that. He embodies that the most, has the ability to bring as much to the table as the other guys, but doesn't need the same attention from it, the same accolades from it. And so, again, doesn't surprise me because I've known this guy for 15 years. It's why we were so
Starting point is 01:00:35 good together back in the days. Similar to him and that, Doug is like this. So, hands down, nobody, I think, outworks, nobody outworks Doug. And he does, and they're, in fact, if you were to probably ask the other guys, everything Doug does, I guarantee they would miss at least 75% of actually what he does. He's probably true.
Starting point is 01:00:59 And he does, and he just does it. I think he just searches Google sometimes. For us, when we ask him. He does, he he just does it. I think he just searches Google sometimes. For us when we ask him. He does, he does it so consistently and doesn't complain about it, doesn't bitch about it. He takes a lot of the stress and pressure of the ugliest part and the unfun part of the business. The parts that the other three guys definitely do not like to do, don't want to do, but is necessary to scale something to this size.
Starting point is 01:01:26 And it's not been for a stretch or he's hot for a while and then he's off and then he turns it on a little bit. He has been fucking consistent day in and day out for eight years and doesn't need anybody to pump his tires and tell him he's great. And again, it doesn't surprise me because I've been with him for eight years. So I know that he's just going to show up every single day. And so, but it continues to impress me because I have my moments like I get hot and cold. Like we can talk to me about Moody. I have moments where I'm on fire. I'm hitting on all cylinders. I feel like I'm managing all these things and
Starting point is 01:02:03 other times I'm like, fuck them overwhelmed. And I'm like, I'm feeling sorry for cylinders, I feel like I'm managing all these things and the other times I'm like fuck them overwhelmed and I'm like feeling sorry for myself. I feel like Doug is never like that. I feel like he handles more than anybody handles and he never needs anything about it. It doesn't need anybody to tell him that he's doing a great job and he's just consistent. Yeah, I agree with you. Doug is a master splinter, like with an injured girl. No, I swear to God, you know, you know, many times I've looked back to how, it's like, like, what, like, how Doug reacted to some of the crazy stupid shit that we've done
Starting point is 01:02:29 or wanted to do, and he's so ninja about it, he allows us to think that, or feel like we're the ones that are doing it. When in reality, he's guiding us, and I only see it when I look back, I never see it in the moment. Like, how many times we've done something, and Doug's like, yeah, let's, okay, we'll go with that. That's fine.
Starting point is 01:02:44 And then what about this? And what about that? And then afterwards we've done something and Doug's like, yeah, let's, okay, we'll go with that. That's fine. And then what about this? And what about that? And then afterwards I'm like, God damn it, Doug totally moved that in the right direction. But I, and you know why this is so, so, like Ninja, because the three of us do not like to be told what to do. So the way he does it is so brilliant that, like I said, I can't tell until I look back. So, and then I said that about you Justin
Starting point is 01:03:05 Just I've never met someone to secure with themselves as you which is pretty cool because you let people be Who they are because when you're around someone that's really secure and you don't feel like you have to be anything but Adam Adam can see business trends and identify talent like Like a psychic. It's really interesting like Like he'll see things in the business cycle, he'll see things in people. He's the all watching eye. And he'll see talent and put things together like genius. And it's really, really interesting.
Starting point is 01:03:36 He manages the business side of things and everybody else doesn't just let him do it. We're all happy that he does it because he's the best at it. So, no, it's pretty cool. It's a cool team to work with. And what's cool now is we're developing a team outside of what you guys see here on the show. That is really, I mean, we have a YouTube team now that we're all excited about. That's putting the show together
Starting point is 01:03:55 on YouTube. And you'll notice that the show continues to improve on YouTube. And that's a largely result of this team that we're kind of putting together. So, but you know what, you know, it's really cool about this. And I like to go as a tariff. kind of putting together. So, but you know what, you know what's really cool about this? And I like to go as a tariff. So here I go. So everybody, everybody get ready, selling the gas of tariff. Well, you know what it is, is that the,
Starting point is 01:04:13 everybody is believes in the bigger purpose and what we're doing. So we have fun, we joke around, we talk about the business, but it all boils down to all of us really believe in what we're trying to do, and that has saved us a lot, because there's many times we've turned down opportunities and money, because it didn't jive with the bigger purpose, and on its surface,
Starting point is 01:04:37 you would say, stupid decision, you just turned down $50,000, you just turned down this big opportunity, and all of us, and even though we toy with the idea it always boils down to doesn't feel right That's not that's not you know in line with what we're trying to do and then it works out and then it works out And I worked out the way it's supposed to so well, I think I think you know sound I voice our pain I really want to hear what Doug and Justin have to say about that I think this is a really cool question to ask the two of you what you think I'm sure the audience cares about you guys think actually This is a really cool question to ask the two of you what you think.
Starting point is 01:05:03 I'm sure the audience cares more about what you guys think actually. The observers. Exactly, because I do observers. I feel like you guys are the ultimate observers and it's not what I'm talking about. I'm constantly giving our opinions all the time. So I believe the audience probably gives two shits
Starting point is 01:05:17 with salad, I think. And actually, probably we like to hear from the two of you. The differences with you guys, but there's also so many similarities. It's kind of crazy. And again, that's the thing where sometimes there's a bit of a clash, but honestly, look at you two guys more as the push and the pull. And I think that Adam is amazing at keeping us really focused on growth and really like
Starting point is 01:05:40 driving us further than I think we would go collectively on our own. I just really think that you are the best fitted for driving and steering us further than I would have thought we'd ever be. So I think that's, it's just been an amazing to see, you know, how you've been leading our team. I definitely give you a lot of credit for that. And like everything else you do behind the scenes with,, I don't know how many people you manage, you manage to fucking everybody. And you don't get a lot of credit for that and I wanna make sure you're highlighted for that.
Starting point is 01:06:14 And Sal is just a machine. I've never seen somebody like, so just on the spot just has like this fire hose of content right ago. Yeah. Like I don't know how you do it. I know that like there's a lot of things in there that you know, you've banked over the years, but just your ability to communicate has made me better.
Starting point is 01:06:39 Like I picked up a lot of that from you. And that's been my biggest weakness. So most of my, most of my ability now to communicate and talk through opinions and arguments and just conveying information has been, you know, a part of like how you communicate. It's really been helpful for me. And then just also to just keeping us grounded. So I think you probably do the best job of keeping us grounded on the mission, like the integrity
Starting point is 01:07:10 piece, like always just kind of filtering through whatever we're doing. It's like, is this really who we are? You know, is this this what we're about? And I think that that's probably, you know, the biggest role here is you definitely embody that. And then with Doug, it's, again, it's just, it's rocks all of Doug. Doug is the guy that's just like, man, you don't even have to think that Doug is, is Doug doing something? He's Doug's doing something right now. And we were asking for questions.
Starting point is 01:07:43 He's like doing some financials. He's doing, you know, he's talking to our accountant. He's like, you know, Doug is again, to his ability to work and just stay consistent and just, you know, press. Like I haven't seen somebody work on that level before. And I think it's amazing, you know, and we were, again, we'd be dead without Doug. Let's be honest, he just, he does so many things. So definitely want to give you credit for that. And also just like your attitude, I think is, is definitely what keeps us.
Starting point is 01:08:17 And I'm trying to be in that kind of mentality of keeping it chill and like kind of bringing it back and calming us down sometimes, because we get so hyped up. But Doug is definitely Zen and we need you to always be Zen, Doug. I don't know how you're Zen when you're dealing with, I hate financials. That would drive me insane. I would be constantly raising smiles too long time.
Starting point is 01:08:40 So but yeah, honestly, it's really cool to just see everybody in their roles just, you know, increasing their abilities and developing to a level I've never seen. So it's called grin and bear it. I love what we do, but I hate half the things I do. Okay, but I do it because I love it. But, you know, going back to you guys, I mean, Adam, I mean, you know, echoing what Justin said, you are the CEO of the company because you are the best at that. You see the big picture. Again, you're touching all types of things.
Starting point is 01:09:15 I mean, you oftentimes bring up things like, have we monetized YouTube clips yet? And it's like, you have your finger on the pulse of so many different things in the company. And I also want to say that you have incredible negotiating skills. I have listened to Adam on the phone with partners and he does not budge. You know, I'm the type of guy who crumble under most of these circumstances. Like, okay, yeah, we'll give you more of this. So we'll do that.
Starting point is 01:09:41 No, Adam doesn't do that. You'll get you the best deal. You'll get you the best deal. So if you ever need anything negotiated, ask Adam. this, we'll do that. No, Adam doesn't do that. You'll get you the best deal. You'll get you the best deal. So if you ever need anything negotiated, ask Adam. That all the sponsors are not going to call them anymore. Yeah, we're still having potential ones. You're like, oh, we're going to deal with that
Starting point is 01:09:55 with a fucking boy. Yeah, it's true. And as far as Sal is concerned, one of the things that always doesn't necessarily surprise me anymore, but every time it happens, I really enjoy it is that you're super empathetic. And so when somebody is having a challenge, you're just touching base with people and doing things that are very thoughtful, things I don't think about doing. Sometimes I just get caught up in my own world, I don't think about other people to be honest.
Starting point is 01:10:27 I was a solo entrepreneur for so many years, I guess kind of thought of my own thing, but you're really good at seeing people, getting the pulse on people, and really checking in with them, and being very empathetic. Now, Justin, again, extremely creative guy, I bring this up every time, but he's always
Starting point is 01:10:46 shocking me with some of the things he comes up ideal-wise, with just like a Z-biotics commercials, for example, super creative stuff, and your delivery on these things is just always improved. And that includes, you know, with the show, just watching you grow with the show. I mean, you get definitely the gold star for that. You've come from a guy that was not really excited to be in front of a microphone. It was not your thing, and now you've made it your thing,
Starting point is 01:11:17 which is absolutely fantastic. And because of that, the level of the show has gone to the next level, because it was just Adam and Sal. It'd be very informative. It would be fun, but not quite as nothing nothing surprising though, right? That's how I feel. I feel like I feel like that we we've been together long enough now that that's everybody's character. I mean, it really it really really has and maybe the first couple years together There was a little bit of surprise like on those things, but I think that we know each other so well now But it does continue to impress me because it you know eight years of doing something and to consistently show up and
Starting point is 01:11:59 Be that and then to the point that Sal is making is growth on top of that So it's like continue to improve But I can always count on that. And I think Justin said it best too is just like, if I'm not growing level up, I know the other guy. We're all doing that so much that I always feel that pressure to be pushing myself because I know my partners are. And so I'll never let off the throttle because the best thing is that you hear about this
Starting point is 01:12:23 whole time like a band or a group and then you know One or two of them get the big ego thing. No, there's no question about that at all here at all Like I know it's like do or die So this whole thing could burn down someone could do something stupid We're all going down with the ship. So I just want people to know we're uncancellable in that in that particular way You take one of us down. We're all gonna hold on together and we're gonna sync with the shit, but we'll be back. So, it's a good time. It's a good time.
Starting point is 01:12:48 Look, if you like our information, head over to MindPumpFree.com and check out our guides. We have guides that can help you with almost any health or fitness goal. You can also find all of us on social media. So Justin is on Instagram at MindPump. Justin, Adam is on Instagram at MindPump.atom, and you can find me on Twitter at MindPump.cell.
Starting point is 01:13:03 Thank you for listening to MindPump. If your goal is to build and shape your body, dramatically improve your health and energy and maximize your overall performance, check out our discounted RGB Superbundle at Mind Pump Media dot com. The RGB Superbundle includes maps and a ballad, maps performance and maps aesthetic. 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 Adam and Justin as your own personal trainer's butt at a fraction of the price. and the best way to get a job is to get a job.
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