Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2763: Eat as Much as You Want, but Don't Get Fat (JUST follow these 2 rules)

Episode Date: January 2, 2026

In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer four Pump Head questions drawn from last Sunday's Quah post on the @mindpumpmedia Instagram page.   Mind Pump Fit Tip: Eat as Much as You ...Want, but Don't Get Fat (JUST follow these 2 rules). (2:28) The disturbing "Doll mom" trend. (25:03) Has masculinity always been more fragile than femininity? (31:10) The practice of writing down failures and revisiting later what you learned from them. (32:25) Fun Facts with Justin: Toad mutation. (39:06) Mystery Our Place unboxing. (40:55) The value of getting a full-body scan. (45:20) The impact of higher doses of creatine. (51:51) Glycerol for better pumps. (54:26) #Quah question #1 – I want to build muscle but also start BJJ this year as a 41-year-old. Is it possible? If so, how should I program? (57:24) #Quah question #2 – What are some recommended movements and/or routines for joint instability? (1:00:22) #Quah question #3 – At what age did you realize you no longer needed to hit PRs? (1:02:27) #Quah question #4 – What are some helpful tips to stay focused and motivated? (1:08:02) Related Links/Products Mentioned Visit Our Place for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code MINDPUMP at checkout to receive 10% off sitewide. 100-day trial with free shipping and returns. ** Visit Organifi for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code MINDPUMP at checkout for 20% off** MAPS 15 Symmetry 50% off! ** Code DECEMBER50 at checkout. ** Mind Pump Store Mind Pump #2450: The Smartest Way to Use Protein to Burn Fat & Build Muscle Mind Pump #2437: What Happens to Your Body When You Quit Ultra-Processed Foods for 30 Days Doll mom earns $200K a year playing with fake babies The Happiness Professor: THIS Will ACTUALLY Make You Happier Visit Troscriptions for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code MINDPUMP for 10% off your first order. ** Z Press to take Your Shoulder Development to the Next Level – Mind Pump TV Justin's Road to 315 Push Press Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Paul Chek (@paul.chek) 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 Pump. Mind Pump with your hosts. Sal DeStefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews. You just found the most downloaded fitness, health, and entertainment podcast in history. This is Mind Pump. In today's episode, we answered listeners questions, four of them at the end of the episode. But we started with an intro.
Starting point is 00:00:27 Today it was 55 minutes long. in the intro we talk about muscle gain, fat loss, fitness, health, longevity, always a good time. By the way, if you want to write in a question that we may pick for a future episode, go to Instagram at Mind Pump Media. Now, this episode is brought to you by some sponsors. The first one is our place. This is amazing cookware that is forever chemical free. A lot of cookware has forever chemical, stuff that's not good for you.
Starting point is 00:00:54 Our place is forever chemical free, and it's super easy to clean. and you can get a 100-day trial with free shipping and returns. In other words, try it out for 100 days. Return it if you don't like it. Just go to From Ourplace.com. Use the code Mind Puppet checkout. That'll give you 10% off. This episode is also brought to by Organify.
Starting point is 00:01:14 Today we talked about their creatine cherry chews. So Organify makes great supplements, including their cherry chews. These are cratine candies, essentially, except they're not candy. They're full of creatine. They're good for you. They also have tart cherry in them, so it's anti-inflammatory. This will help you reap the benefits of creatine. And I know you know all about creatine because everybody does.
Starting point is 00:01:35 It's awesome stuff. Anyway, go check them out, get a discount. Go to organify.com forward slash mind pump. That's or g-a-n-fi.com forward slash mind pump. Use the code mine pump. Get 20% off. We also have a sale going on with a new program. Okay.
Starting point is 00:01:50 Maps 15 symmetry. This is Maps Symmetry, but the 15-minute-a-day version. So just 15 minutes a day and you're following a strength training program designed to balance your body out to give you the symmetry that looks so darn good. And again, it's half off. So if you're interested, you go to 15 symmetry.com. Use the code December 50 for the 50% off discount. All right, real quick, if you love us like we love you, why not show up by rocking one of our shirts, hats, mugs, or training gear over at mindpumpstore.com. I'm talking right now, hit pause, head on over to mindpumpstore.com.
Starting point is 00:02:25 That's it. Enjoy the rest of the show. There's just two rules that if you follow them, you can eat as much as you want and you won't get fat. In fact, here's the magic to it. Those you that need to gain will gain doing this, and those you that need to get leaner will get leaner doing this. Both of you eat as much as you want.
Starting point is 00:02:46 I'm serious. Is that a challenge? The two rules that will make this happen for the vast majority of you. Let's get to it. I feel like my hook was better. I don't remember what I told you, but it was better. I forgot. I was like, I know I told you a better.
Starting point is 00:02:58 As much as you want, don't get fat. Yeah, that's what it was. I think that's what it was. You know, as much as you want and don't get fat. I think is what you said. Yeah, that's what it was. Yes. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:03:06 So you know what's, okay, so here's, here's where this is coming from, right? We'll talk to callers all the time, right? So you listen to the podcast, you know, about four people will call in. And typically it's at the end of the episode and we'll coach them and help them. And there's a, you know, there's a, there's a range of people that we'll talk to. But just for argument's sake, you know, you know, People who want to lose weight, people who want to gain weight. We'll just put them on those two categories.
Starting point is 00:03:30 And we often give them different but similar advice. And oftentimes the advice is actually remarkably similar because eating this way, your body will start to tell you what it needs. In other words, if you're somebody that needs to gain, you need to gain muscle, maybe even gain body fat. And it's true, some people do need to gain body fat. Like if you're a woman and you've been just tracking your food for for too long and you're walking around at 14% body fat, can't figure out why you're not getting stronger or why maybe have symptoms of hormone imbalance.
Starting point is 00:04:05 You need to gain a little body fat, right? And then, of course, people who need to lose body fat, if these people follow these same two rules and ate until they were satisfied, when they were hungry, they ate. And of course, in combination with strength training, what's cool about this is the body will, your body will guide you. and you'll build and lose and build and lose. And over time, end up in this really nice place. And what I like about this is their basic, simple, black and white rules. By the way,
Starting point is 00:04:35 doesn't mean they're easy. They're simple, but they're still. Well, I think that's the point to be made here. I just recently had a conversation with a buddy of mine who's not really like into lifting weights. And so he was wanting advice, right?
Starting point is 00:04:47 We're hitting golf balls. And you can tell you was like, you know, I don't want to bug you. because I know this what you do all the time. I'm like, no, go ahead. What is like? And so he starts asking me like about, you know, I've been working out in the garage.
Starting point is 00:04:58 And, and you can tell, you know, he thought I was going to come out with this like elaborate plan and, you know, what to do with his diet and his training and all this with that. And I basically gave him those two basic rules. And, and then I said, just just consistently do that. Target the protein, right. And then if you're just, even though I heard what he was doing in the, in his garage. I'm like, there's so many things I could have him do better. It didn't matter because I'm like, we can tweak that later. He is sending a signal to get stronger and build muscle, even if it's not the best one or there's a better way to do it.
Starting point is 00:05:33 Glad he said that. I'm like, listen, if you just do these things, that will move the needle the most. And why I have distilled it down to those things is I realize that, to your point, they're very simple as far as the advice, but very difficult to do consistently. Yeah, they're still hard. And so, and that will move the needle the most. And so instead of like telling the client or telling my friend, like, well, you could change this, do this exercise. You could also do this.
Starting point is 00:06:01 And then on these days with that and, like, giving him like 10 different things to go do that he's most likely going to fail at a majority of them. And so it's like, let's give him the two biggest things that he can focus on. Show him what change can happen just by keeping consistent with that. And then I can build on that. Let me give the two rules real quick and we'll break them down. but I'll give the two rules real quick since people are probably like, what are you talking about?
Starting point is 00:06:24 So rule one, hit your target body weight in grams of protein, prioritize that, eat it first, and we'll break down why that helps. And then two, eat just whole foods. Just those two things. Now, here's what happens when you do that, okay? So there's this widely believed myth that if you're around food as humans, you're just going to be overweight. If there's food, we're just going to eat it.
Starting point is 00:06:48 We're like eating machines. This is not, this is actually not. true. It's only true in modern societies because we've engineered food so expertly with crazy science. It overrides a lot of our natural signals. It makes you overeat. That's what it's designed to do. It's designed to make you. It actually has drug-like effects on the brain. This is not a natural effect. So it's like hyper novelty and hyper-pallitability is what ends up happening. But if you get rid of that and you avoid processed foods, it's only whole natural foods and you eat protein. Here's what will happen to the vast, now this is not everybody,
Starting point is 00:07:23 but most people, 80 to 85% of everybody, this is what would happen to you. For men, you're going to fall right around somewhere in the vicinity, so give or take, 3%, of about 15% body fat. So what will happen over time. So for men, 15% body fat, of course, you've got to be strength training along with this and be relatively active throughout the day with steps. But 15% is a fit, healthy body fat person. Now, you're not sure. shred it. You don't have a six-pack, but your midsection's flat, you're fit. This is considered an athletic body fat percentage. For women, it's going to be around 20, 21 percent, give or take, three percent or so, up or down, because there's where you get the genetic. Some people are a little higher,
Starting point is 00:08:05 some people are a little lower. But when you hit the protein and avoid heavily processed foods and strength train, your body will, your hunger will go up when it wants to build. When body fat percentage gets above the numbers that I kind of gave, you. you, again, give or take, depending on a person's genetics, you'll eat a little less. This is just naturally what happens. And so you go through these natural periods of building, cutting, building, cutting, by kind of following these rules. And you don't get these drastic quick changes overnight, but they're sustainable.
Starting point is 00:08:38 And they result in this really fit, healthy body. It's not stressful, right? It's not as stressful. Those two rules, although challenging, are not so stressful like macro counting and measuring everything and I can't eat outside of this thing or that thing. If you just follow those two things, it's pretty miraculous. It's always funny to me because it's like we come back full circle to more of these hippie, crunchy ideas that are just very basic and brings you back into that natural harmony
Starting point is 00:09:07 where if you think about it, like most of these foods that are like hyper-concentrated, they're trying to get you to overly taste something to, you know, experience more. of the crunch or something more to really stimulate more of that appetite to kind of get your, your ghrelin to get like, you know, roaring and to get a lot of these other like natural, you know, hormone signals, uh, you know, to basically like force that, uh, to degree where it's like, I'm just going to keep, you know, feeding my face. Whereas these, these whole foods, they're tapered off. They have, uh, they have fiber. They have satiate you. It satiates. It satiates you. It replenishes you.
Starting point is 00:09:52 Same thing with artificial light. It's like, it's crazy to me. It's like all this artificial light is just hijacking our natural rhythms where we wake up with the sun. We go to bed with the sun. And it's like, it's just a natural regulator. And we're telling people all these fucking, like all this advice with all these devices and all these different, it's such bullshit. Like if you just like remove all this stuff and get back to like really basic
Starting point is 00:10:18 things, you'd be doing really well. I actually think the number that Sal said is really conservative. It is. I've seen people get way better shaped just from that. Yeah. Like if I would argue the next layer or thing that I tell people with those
Starting point is 00:10:34 tips that I like, because one of the, if you think about the general pot, one of the, the, the, the pushbacks that the average person gives when you give advice of that, they're like, well, every day, I mean, what about if a glass of wine? Or what if I want? And they, and they're, they're like, do I have to eat like this forever?
Starting point is 00:10:50 I can't have these. It's like, okay, well, here's the thing. I'm not going to tell you you can't have that glass of wine every once in a while. I'm not going to tell you can't go out to dinner with your wife and enjoy whatever. All I'm going to say is do that first and then. That's right. And that tends to actually land where you're saying percentage wise. I think the people that actually take this and go, okay, I'm going to only eat whole foods and hit protein first.
Starting point is 00:11:12 Yep. You're going to get, you're going to get ripped. Fantastic results. And you're straight training. You're going to get incredible. shape. That's right. I think the people that at least have the rule of, hey, I can still have that treat, that dessert, that occasional glass of wine, that thing. So long as I get my strength training in, I do, I hit my protein and take through whole foods first and then allow them.
Starting point is 00:11:35 Because what I have found is giving them that permission takes that pressure of I can't off, right? That psychological game that you're kind of playing allows them to have a little bit of flexibility. the fact that they're still strength training the couple extra hundred additional calories a lot of those end up getting partitioned over to building muscle anyways and so it ends up working out to that percentage you're talking about the people
Starting point is 00:11:58 that actually take that advice like and really stick to it I think get really and those food groups like end up out competing like your palate changes in that direction like over time so it's a totally valid way to do it it's a game just so you know this is not a because again this is I always get
Starting point is 00:12:15 annoyed by the comments around like that were for only beginners. I play this game still. I play this game still. I just did this the other night. Like literally it's late night. I know I'm a little under my protein. I already had dinner and we're, Katrina and I relax and we're watching Christmas movies.
Starting point is 00:12:33 And I'm like, oh man, I'm going to make some popcorn up right now. And I'm like, you know what? I haven't hit my protein yet. And I know I'm like, okay,
Starting point is 00:12:42 so I went down and I had two things of cottage cheese and pineapple. And guess what? After that, I didn't feel like the popcorn anymore. So, and I didn't tell myself, I can't have the popcorn. It's like, you know what? I'm still under my protein. So if I'm still, if I still have an appetite to where I'm craving popcorn, at least go down, go out the cottage cheese first. And then, well, what do you know what happened? If you saved those times that you're going to eat out and maybe not eat the whole natural foods or what, if you saved it for, like, vacations, dinner out with your wife, holidays, you're fine.
Starting point is 00:13:12 You're totally fine. the problem is that becomes the norm. Right. Where every day that becomes a thing. And that's where it's an issue. But if you follow this rule and then, hey, you know, hey, honey, let's go out Friday night. That's our date night. We're going to go out and have dinner.
Starting point is 00:13:25 Okay. Don't stick to the rules that one, you know, that night. Or you're going to take out your kid for their birthday. Flexibility is important. Or it's Christmas dinner or whatever. You know, it's not that big of a deal. Doesn't make it. But what I'm saying here works so well, everybody.
Starting point is 00:13:38 It is literally miraculous if you just did this. You wouldn't have to do anything else. Yeah. And just so people understand, like, I'll use, yes, there are genetic differences, but I'll use myself and Justin as an example because both of us are different genetically when it comes to some of this.
Starting point is 00:13:51 But when him and I eat this way, the difference in body fat percentage between him and I is about 4%. That's it. We're both fit, both lean, both athletic. My body holds a little leaner. His head's a little heavier. Neither one of us is outside of the range of healthy
Starting point is 00:14:05 and it's not stressful. And we're just eating the way that we're talking about. Now, why does high protein work so well? Well, the data shows very clearly when you have two identical calorie diets, one of them is high protein, one gram of protein per pound of target body weight. So that's very high protein. The other one is in the lower range, half or less, okay? Even though they're both identical with calories, if it's a muscle building diet, the higher protein group builds a lot more muscle and gains a lot less body fat. If it's a cutting diet, calorie deficit, the high protein group loses more body fat and preserves more.
Starting point is 00:14:41 more muscle. That's the difference that that protein makes. Now, why the avoidance of heavily processed foods, it's, you have to track if you eat heavily processed foods. If that makes it into your diet on a daily basis, you have to count calories and track. You can't listen to your body. It's impossible because they make you want to eat. They make you overeat. And those food scientists are way smarter than you listening to your body and saying, well, it's naive to think that they're not just sitting and they're obsessing on how to figure out how to get you to buy more product. Look, Doug, look up how many, look up a large bag
Starting point is 00:15:17 of lace potato chips. Confirm how many large potatoes or how many potatoes are in that bag and give me that number. I think it's six. It is four to five or something like that. But it's a great example of, you know, kind of what we're talking about. But, you know, I stumbled upon this as a trainer way later.
Starting point is 00:15:34 Like, way later, you guys, this took me a decade before I really figured this out. and I overheard one of my other trainers in my studio communicating this and the way she explained it and then I thought about it myself and I said, this is interesting. So I would tell my clients, hey, eat as much as you want.
Starting point is 00:15:53 And I even do the high protein part. I was just like just avoid ultra-processed foods. And people started losing weight. It just reminds me when we were talking to Paul Check when I first met him and you talk about a guy who has like the ultimate knowledge and wisdom from so many different directions. and him just like breaking it down.
Starting point is 00:16:12 Like the more you understand and your understanding gets deeper, the more simplistic you really get to. It's like we all get back to these like very simplistic methods that have worked and are the most effective. Totally. What does it say there, Doug? So again, it depends on the size of the bag. It's like a family size bag.
Starting point is 00:16:30 Okay, family size. Why didn't put that in? About four medium potatoes. Okay. So one pound of chips needs four pounds of potatoes. Okay. Okay. Okay, so a family-sized bag? Is that what that is? Well, I'll have to see how big of the family five.
Starting point is 00:16:43 I think a family size is about five. But just, let me just paint the picture everybody. Let's see. You're listening to this right now. And I took five potatoes and I boiled them. And I put them in front of you, plain, boiled. Right in front of you. Good luck. Good luck you in two. Eat all of them right now. I'll give you 30 minutes. You're going to gag after two. With nothing on it, just potatoes. Even salted and buttered up, you'd still have a challenge. You'd still have a tough time.
Starting point is 00:17:05 Yeah, yeah. Now, if I put a family-sized bag of potato chips in front of you and I said, here eat this in 30 minutes, no problem. I can do that after being full. You could have to eat a bunch of food and they eat that whole bag of chips. And by the way, people think calories are what induce satiety. Calories play somewhat of a role, but they're not the main role because the bag of chips has higher calories than the four or five plain potatoes. They're fried in oil. And yet, you want to eat more of them in just total volume and everything.
Starting point is 00:17:34 I mean, that analogy works so well, too, with sugar. That's why I always bring up the sugar cane thing where it's just like, Like, I mean, look at a little bag of sour patch kids, how many calories and how many grams of sugar that is. If you try to eat that in nature the way it is, you wouldn't be able to. You wouldn't even be able to consume that much. Not to mention the amount of dietes. Yeah, the extra calories. If you're, if your strength training consistently two or three days a week, if you're hitting, you know, six to eight thousand steps a day, maybe 8,000 to 10,000 steps a day, just moving, you're not going to be overweight eating steak, rice, fruit, vegetables, potatoes, like chicken, fish.
Starting point is 00:18:08 is not going to happen. No. It's just not going to happen. Now, I know there's those outliers out there that can make anything happen. But the vast majority of people, if that's all you did, you guys, and here's the challenge. This message in the health and fitness space got twisted a while ago. It used to be in health and fitness, you avoided, quote-unquote, unhealthy foods. Like, well, why are you eating that? That's unhealthy. Eat that. It's healthy. It's healthy. And then the message came out that, well, and I learned this message, uh, it, this, The foods aren't making you overweight. It's that you're eating too many calories.
Starting point is 00:18:41 So what it did is it made all food go into one category. And it's just you're overeating. And I remember learning this, my first certification. I remember my instructor. I'm a young kid getting certified for the first time. And they said, it's just calories. You can eat. Can you gain body fat on a healthy diet?
Starting point is 00:18:56 Yes, if you eat too much. I remember thinking like, I thought it was mind-blowing. Oh, it's just calories. But then as you train people, we realize that's actually quite rare. Difficult. There are foods that are healthy and unhealthy. theoretically it's possible, but I have never seen it. If you've been listening to us long enough,
Starting point is 00:19:12 you know, we came out early on on if it fits your macros. For that reason. Really popular when we first started the podcast. There was pages dedicated to people that were on social media posting about, you know, all the junk food they were eating, but they were still lean with abs and everything like that.
Starting point is 00:19:30 And it's just all of us had already at that time, obviously, been trainers for a long time and thought this is a terrible message to send. to the general pot because you introduce all these foods and you, you know, like Salo, as I just say, you're playing the game on hard mode. Like, why would you do that to yourself? It's like, it's a way better strategy to say, hey, I can, I can eat whatever I want when I'm hungry. So long as I eat from these food groups, which whole foods, there is a huge group of food. You're not saying you can't have fruit, you can't have vegetables, can't have meat, can't
Starting point is 00:19:58 have high fat meat. You can have all kinds of things in that. Just eat whole foods and you'll be okay, especially if you target protein first. And it's just a much better strategy. Not to mention too. I mean, I remember first time in my life, like how much it changed my palate eating this way. I had been processed food, fast food eater. At this point, it was a majority of my life and grew up on all that stuff and didn't realize how much it had changed the way I felt about fruit and vegetables.
Starting point is 00:20:32 Like just it didn't, I didn't think they taste it. that good until I went eating nothing but whole foods. And then those things, it changed how desirable and how good they were. So the best example that I, one example, not the best, but one example I could give is like the comparison of pornography to, you know, regular normal sexual intercourse with, let's say, your spouse, okay? Pornography, you see young men having things like erected out of dysfunction because of the way pornography is the novelty, the stimulus, the way that it shapes.
Starting point is 00:21:04 and changes the brain, suddenly regular person in front of you now, it can't, these guys can't get an erection. With processed foods, it shapes your brain. Because of the way it hits the brain with dopamine and all these chemical signals, your brain starts to morph and model itself this way so that when you go eat normal food, it just doesn't do anything for you. In fact, it tastes bland and boring, and I need that excitement from that heavily engineered food. But once you move away from it, your brain will mold itself in the other way as well.
Starting point is 00:21:38 You can get it back. And I experience that firsthand. And it has made, Katrina and I were so funny, we were just, yeah, this was yesterday. We were driving. We're taking like a back road. And then at the corner of it was a Carl's Jr. in our town. And I'm like, you know, it's so crazy to think. Like, I've never been to, we live in the town we live in now. We've lived here now for a little over four years where we're at. And I'm like, I've never been to. And I'm like, I've never been to any of the fast food restaurants. None of them. I've never been to the McDonald's,
Starting point is 00:22:07 never been to talk about. And yet at one point in my life, when her and I first met, that was still, that was at the tail end of me getting rid of like that in my life. It was just a part, even as a trainer,
Starting point is 00:22:17 I still found a way to still be fit and active and do all things, but have those types of foods in there. And a lot of that had to do with, I grew up on processed foods. I crave that I wanted that. And regular whole foods
Starting point is 00:22:30 were very bland for me in all food categories. and it wasn't until I eliminated that for a long enough period of time in my life, did all of a sudden fruit and vegetables and just meat and just plain, those things all of a sudden became. And now it's like it's not even a thought. It's not like I have to think about not going there. My body doesn't want that.
Starting point is 00:22:52 My body wants the whole foods. In fact, eating some of those ultra-processed foods right now would feel overwhelming. Terrible. You have to condition yourself. I remember after it was, it was, gone for a while, us trying like, you know, we should, let's see how, and just feeling awful from it and going like, wow, I had conditioned myself for so long that that tasted normal. That was, and so for the audience, it's listening, that you absolutely can change that.
Starting point is 00:23:20 You can change that through consistently eating the whole foods. And then all of a sudden, it makes all those things so much more desirable. And when there's so much more desirable, it's that much. It's, yeah, that's why it's, that's why that decision last night. to pass up like something, let's say, like popcorn and butter and something salty like that, and go have cottage cheese and pineapple. It wasn't that hard of a decision. Ask me to do that when I'm 25, when I'm eating junk food, can't, all these things.
Starting point is 00:23:46 It's like, chill. Yeah, it doesn't, it's like I couldn't even imagine myself doing that. So it is an exciting thing for somebody, if you're listening and you're like, man, I just don't like any of those foods. You can change that. So just so people know, when I would work with people, uh, there is it with, with, So I want to set people up. So if you're listening to this and you're like, okay, I'm going to make this, I want to make this step. The first 30 days is difficult.
Starting point is 00:24:12 The first week is the hardest because you literally go through withdrawal. So as your brain starts to remodel itself, it's not getting the same stimulation because you're not eating the fast food, processed food, you know, box type stuff. There is a withdrawal period. So it will feel kind of difficult. After 30 days, it gets significantly easier. can maintain it for 90 days, it's easy in comparison. So I just want to encourage people, if you're going to try this, get through that first 30 days, and you're going to see it just gets easier and easier and easier. Yeah, I think, I think 30 is the, whole 30 model themselves
Starting point is 00:24:47 after that day. Yeah, yeah, I think 30 is really the, is the mark. It's like four weeks. Yeah. I think after that, it's like, it just gets easier and easier and easier. And then there, and I think 60 to 90 days is a good, a good guess when I'd say when I was like craving the healthy food. Totally. I got to tell you, I got to share something so disturbing with you guys. Have you heard of these new, these people on social media?
Starting point is 00:25:12 They're calling themselves doll moms. Doll mom? Doll moms. Is this worse than like the pageant moms? Dude. Sounds like it's the same thing. This is so bad, dude. It makes me so sad.
Starting point is 00:25:22 So Doug, you can look this up and I don't know if you can find a YouTube video on this. So these are women, typically single, in middle-aged and they buy these life-like toddler dolls and they treat them like real children. This is depressing.
Starting point is 00:25:41 And they document themselves. Like, oh, they go in the bedroom and wake up my kid and then they dress them and they feed them and then they play with them. Is this to prepare them for maybe adopting or having, is there like, or is this just a, this is it? So what I think is worse than that.
Starting point is 00:25:59 Makes me so sad. What's worse than that is that there's enough people that would follow and watch that. Yeah. Yeah. It's one thing if maybe you do something like that, which I think is. I think people are watching because they're sad maybe or they think it's disturbing. But you should hear these women talking who are these doll moms and how they walk through their day. And it's, uh,
Starting point is 00:26:21 how do you think about that like in terms of robots and companions like for women. That's, that's the direction. Like a little kid, um, robot. That's the direction. I was going because we've talked a lot on this podcast about... You talk about the sex robot. That's where our male brain goes. Because we know what's going to happen there, right?
Starting point is 00:26:40 What an interesting thing. I didn't think about that. I never... You said what a point of our male brain. It's where we went obviously to the... Well, so I'm sure there's going to be women that are going to have sex robots too, blah, blah. But it's going to be a male market, right? With... But there will be a female market for children.
Starting point is 00:26:56 Companionship and... Compendionship. Little little children robots. Wow. or realistic. Really? I guarantee it. I guarantee it. This is so interesting to me.
Starting point is 00:27:07 I didn't know this. How did you come across this, bro? There was some news articles. What are you watching to see this? No, it was on my feed on X and people were talking about this, these, and they're meeting, they're making communities where they have their, they help Doug Google. I think he found people. He's trying to connect to Doug.
Starting point is 00:27:24 He's pushing buttons. There's a lot of buttons. I don't want to, with his beard, I don't want to mess with it. I know. He'll bite you with that here. He does a little more intimidation. You know, he's a little more edge. Off air, Doug told us he gets more respect.
Starting point is 00:27:37 Yeah. That's what he's sad. Yeah, I wasn't getting any respect before. That's still not here. That's why I back. I take that back. Are you able to find him, Doug? Well, this is a YouTube short, and for some reason it's not casting.
Starting point is 00:27:51 No worries. No worries. But it's really sad. We can imagine it. Yeah, they show this mom. I don't really see the sadness. You know, I wake up in the morning and then I go wake up, you know, whatever. Does it have like a big following cell?
Starting point is 00:28:02 There's a lot of these moms that are coming together. I mean, it's the internet, so, you know, you can find anybody. But they're moms or they're not moms. They're not moms. They call themselves doll moms. And they buy these really, these hyper-realistic. So they're dolls. They're make-believe.
Starting point is 00:28:17 Like, they're pretending. Yeah, dude. It makes me really sad. Yeah. But that's exactly where I went, uh, is I thought, man, we're going to have these realistic AI robots. Uh-huh. And I bet you there's going to be,
Starting point is 00:28:28 So what I'm curious about- feeling a biological urge. Of course. Yeah. So what I'm, what I'm curious about is like how big is the following? Because if it's some novel, random weird thing that you found that's like a one-off,
Starting point is 00:28:39 there's one of everything on the internet. Sure. But if it's got like a following, yeah. Where there's like, you know, hundreds of thousands or a million people following and watching and into it is, is,
Starting point is 00:28:50 makes your case for sure. Yeah. That's a viable thing that will have. I mean, I guess it's a, so, So here's a twist to that. Is it if you have somebody who is depressed and sad and now,
Starting point is 00:29:08 and that helps that. That's what they're going to sell it. Of course. That's the same way they're going to sell sex robots. Of course. So, well, yeah. They will. Companion.
Starting point is 00:29:17 I mean, they'll use it to sell it however they want. So how do you go? Look at her. Okay. See, she goes in the morning, takes out her little fake doll. She goes and gets her dressed. ready, like treats it like it's a real child. Posts this like every day.
Starting point is 00:29:33 Yeah, dude. Look, she's got another one in there. It's a little older looking. And it's just, it breaks my heart, dude. You know, I would love to just give this woman a hug and just makes me so sad. It goes to show, too. I don't know. Like, I had brought up a long time ago.
Starting point is 00:29:49 I was surprised. What in the world? Yeah, dude. Like, the different algorithms we all have, you know? Yeah. It's just, it's so. it's so vast yeah well she's even got like tons of bottles and everything this is so what are people are looking at you know because there was one like there's these mormon moms that i told you about that
Starting point is 00:30:11 that got it got like distorted but they're like influencers just showing how they mother their children how they discipline all this just and people i understand because it's like you kind of want to you know look and see how people are handling certain issues and whatnot but it Like, this is like a whole other layer. We think she gets maternity leave? That's terrible. You think she could. Dude, hey, I mean, emotional support dogs have made on, you know.
Starting point is 00:30:43 It's an athlete alive, though. I know. You imagine going over someone's house and they've got realistic dolls. They yell at you. Yeah. How long do you stay. Hey, hey, hey. Do you just do your Italian voice?
Starting point is 00:30:55 A complete, like, 180. Baby sleeping. Dude, how fast? Fast would you get out of the house? I'd be like, oh, hi. Oh, that's your kid? Okay. Anyways, I hear my mom calling. I'm out of here. Yeah. Yeah. See, she's got several kids, several dolls, I should say. I know, it's really sad. Along these lines, I heard a quote yesterday from this, this expert. I thought it was brilliant. She said that masculinity has always been more fragile than femininity. So don't, don't interrupt me yet. She didn't mean it in the sense of like how people think.
Starting point is 00:31:27 What you say? Yeah, I know. Proof. It hurt my feelings. No, what she said was that she was making the case that girls, you know, girls grow up into women. And how do you determine if a girl becomes a woman? She becomes fertile, typically. That's like the right of passage. Boys, the way you become a man is by adopting responsibility.
Starting point is 00:31:50 This is how you have to become a man. Otherwise, you never become a man. So a boy who grows up with no real responsibility. Or the Peter Panor sent me. That's right. That's where that's. And she said, that's why it's so fragile is because throughout all of history, there's been rights of passage and responsibility that has taken boys and turned them
Starting point is 00:32:09 into men. And when you eliminate those, that's just that you just don't. You just don't ever go out. We need our elders. We need, you know, that's what I don't like about Western societies. We kind of push away a lot of like old wisdom. Yep. And it's, we need that more than ever is like the old wisdom to come in.
Starting point is 00:32:25 You know, speaking of wisdom, I, man, I saw an Arthur book's, clip today that I've listened to so much of his stuff and I always share him with him. It's rare that I come across something that I haven't already consumed to his and it was totally new. He was talking to Rich Roll, which now makes me want to go back and listen to that episode because I thought I'd listened to everything that he said. And he gave this rule, he's in his, Harvard class where he teaches happiness, right? He gave them this task of all the time, like every time, to write down all the times you've been disappointed frustrated or like a failure a failure a struggle in your life when those when those things happen right
Starting point is 00:33:03 to actually to list them to write them down and when you write them down to leave two lines so two spaces underneath it and then he goes then you come back in 30 days and you you write down on the first line what you learned yeah from that mistake and then you go i think he said 30 or 60 days out from that and then you come back and then you write what good came of that mistake or failure. And he goes, if you keep this habit up of doing this every time you have these mistakes and failures in your life, before long, you have this, you know, book of all these things that you've been through that's not only a list of failures, but also what you learn from
Starting point is 00:33:42 them. And then the good thing that actually came from that. And he goes, it will reframe as, and if you, once you, you'll train the brain to, okay, now this huge tragic thing happens in my life for a mistake. And almost this ability to go, oh, well, some. growth is going to happen from this and something good will come from this versus dwelling on, oh, my God, this was tragic. It was a horrible mistake. Oh, this sucks. Oh, poor me. It's like, if you train yourself, I'm like, what a, what a great, great idea to put a practice in like that
Starting point is 00:34:15 because they're, you know, I talk a lot to like myself. I have my, my, my, my younger cousin over and he's quite a bit younger than me and kind of mentoring him and sharing us with that. And it's like, you know, there's a lot of things that I've learned just trial by fire. And it's like, I don't, I don't have a lot of these like cool. I wish somebody would have given that to me, like as a, like a task. Like, I just can imagine how fast that would have developed that skill. Like I've, I've learned to do that skill. I've talked about the self-awareness of me reflecting on the days or I'd look at the highs and lows and lean more into that. It's like, man, what a cool exercise to teach like our kids is like, hey, like, right at the time. Right at
Starting point is 00:34:56 down. You know what I'm saying? It happened. And then we'll revisit this in 30 days. We'll talk about what you learn from, you know? You know what it points to? So you guys have heard of post-traumatic stress. There's post-traumatic growth. So they're both real. So post-traumatic stress, especially disorder, is you have something terrible happen, something traumatic, small T, big T. And the negative byproduct. And then it causes this negatives, right? Yeah, fear response, anxiety, and never want to do that again, and everyone or whatever. Post-traumatic growth is same similar trauma, same trauma, but afterwards it's growth.
Starting point is 00:35:33 It's something different, something got better, something, you know, change. So a good example would be, you know, you go through a divorce and you could come out and be like, I'll never get married again. Never will I go through that again. That would be like the stress response. Like never again, never going to partner with anyone, never going to, whatever. A growth side of that might be, boy, I know what mistakes happened there. I know what I did wrong.
Starting point is 00:35:54 I know what happened. but there's so much value in finding a mate and a partner. And so now I'm a different person and I know who to look for this time type of deal. That's just one similar example. But post-traudic growth is a real thing. And that's what he's pointing to. He's literally taking all your failures and showing you how they make you grow. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:36:13 Which in a sense is your best teacher anyways is failure. Of course. This is one of those things. And it's hard to always stress, especially the kids. But I think this would be a great practice because then it's like they can come back revisit, oh, that was really tough. Wow, this did teach me something. And I can learn and also a positive thing happened as a result, you know, to reframe it. So that way they can look for that earlier as they go along. I mean, I couldn't help but think about that when Max gets to that age
Starting point is 00:36:40 where we can kind of start to do something like this. I mean, I think within five failures, I'm picking up on that lesson. Yeah. I mean, literally four or five in a row of seeing, oh, Same thing. I learned this from this. Especially the same subject. Yeah, it's what I'm saying. So it's like, that's so cool.
Starting point is 00:36:59 It took me a really long time. One of the things I was sharing with my cousin is like, I started to realize and attach this through years of all these failures, mistakes and stuff and hardships is that the harder it was, the better it was on the other side. So like little hiccups in my life, little setbacks was like, oh, the other side of it,
Starting point is 00:37:18 there was growth. I learned something and it was better. but it was actually the more traumatic, the heart of the thing, the better the win was on the other side. And so that really helped reframe when I was going through. Especially if it was something that I considered, this is a tough, this is a really tough thing. It was like, okay, well, if I really feel this deep in me, this is tough and this is hard. And I'm in that, that means, man, when I get through this, the other side is so much better. Then maybe that little struggle I had last week that was like, oh, that was a bummer or hard, but it wasn't that hard.
Starting point is 00:37:50 Like it's like the harder the thing, the better it is on the other side. But again, that was something that I didn't document and figure just enough repetition. It was like, okay, it's starting to click now where I think an exercise like that is incredible. If you don't do that, then what you remember is the hard thing. Yep. You don't remember the thing I learned. Maybe you did learn something and grow, but you might not even be that aware. You didn't attach it to that.
Starting point is 00:38:11 That's right. And so the story, because the stories we tell ourselves are created a narrative. And if the story is, this terrible thing happened and that's it. well, that's the story. Right. But if the story is this terrible thing happened, man, here's what I learned from it. Oh, here's how I'm a better person because of it. Now the story is more complete and different.
Starting point is 00:38:31 Now we have a different narrative that you can live your life by. But it has to be, I definitely think it's a practice. I don't think it's a natural, unless you just, I mean, I don't think it's a natural thing. I think you have to work on it for sure. No, I agree. That's what I can't help but think, like, man, if someone had taught me that tool, like, valuable. Maybe a decade I save. Maybe a decade of learning the long way.
Starting point is 00:38:56 You know what I'm saying? So I just love that. I just, he's got so much valuable, great stuff. And that was a new one that I hadn't heard him ever saying. I'm like, I'm so going to implement that with my son. I'm still going to punch this in. So I ran across this image that freaked me out. And it was a frog that had this like mutation. I've never seen in my life.
Starting point is 00:39:16 I had to like cross-check this a bunch of different. websites and articles and scientific articles about it because I was like, there's no way this is real. I'm still unsure. I'm pretty sure it's real, but the mutation causes the eyes to be inside its mouth. What? Yeah. And that's real? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:39:34 And it's real. I've never heard of that. Can you imagine seeing that? Like in nature, like a frog just, you know, on a lily pad and all of a sudden just opens his mouth and it's. Doesn't that, it feels like a, it feels like beetle juice or something. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:39:48 Yeah. Oh, wow, that's wild. Isn't that weird? That's weird, dude. Is there any other animal that does that? Like, I was thinking about that. It's a developmental anomaly, often called a macro mutation. I mean, obviously, they have a name for it.
Starting point is 00:40:03 It happens enough that they've seen it enough times. I think it's real, but I do never, yeah. You know there's a fish that has, like, human-looking teeth? Have you seen this fish? Oh, I've heard about this. Yeah. Like, if you, like, you'll catch it. It's got, like, teeth, bro.
Starting point is 00:40:18 Like, like, you know, like a person. Like a person. Like molars. Fish with human-like teeth. Look at the, look at the picture of this. Ew. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:26 It's got, it's, oh, look it. Oh, my God. That's freaky. That's hilarious. Yeah, dude. It's called, what's called the sheephead? Yes, sheep's head. Where do you catch that kind of fish?
Starting point is 00:40:37 Dude, I want to, I want to tax it through me that thing. Oh, my God. Make it into the new bass. Remember those bass ones you hang on? Where are they found? They're obviously, look at that. Look at that. Look at all the TV.
Starting point is 00:40:49 they have in there. That would scare the hell out of me. That really does look human. That is freaky. That's scary. Oh my gosh. That's so funny. Doug, I'm going to ask you, now you look this up, where's it, where's it in Florida? Of course. Is it Florida? Yeah, it says Florida. Hey, you know what, you know, we're doing different today? Well, that's what I was going to ask him.
Starting point is 00:41:06 Oh, you are. He's got that big mystery box. We haven't done an unboxing. From our place. In a long time. These were always fun back to do. Damn. It's a big box. You might have to come around for that.
Starting point is 00:41:16 Did you pre-cut it? Oh, he's ripping. He's doing it, beard style. Yeah. So they sent us, what do they send us from our place? Okay, there's two boxes. I pulled my mic here, two boxes inside of the one box. Okay. All right, all right.
Starting point is 00:41:31 I probably should have prepared to it. No, no, that's good. No, this is a part of the excitement? The mystery? Yeah, yeah. Now, is this for us to take, Doug? Is this us? Of course.
Starting point is 00:41:40 Do we have this? All right. Okay. My wife loves their stuff. Dude, our place is the best. So I call dibs. I know. All right, I got a box.
Starting point is 00:41:48 All right. and pans and we got that air fryers. Amazing. We have a whole set at home. I'm going to replace everything with it. And maybe we can get to the, you can explain the how it feels better than, like to clean than Teflon,
Starting point is 00:42:02 but it's not Teflon that's on there. Like what is that, I don't know, that how they do that. But they know they don't use any of the, yeah, no chemical. No forever chemicals. But the cleaning on them is,
Starting point is 00:42:13 is incredible. Oh yeah, I have that pan. Yep. Yeah, I did too. It's a cast iron. What is that? Seram, what is that on the... It's almost like a ceramic on it,
Starting point is 00:42:21 but it's super easy to clean. Super easy to clean it, but it's cast iron. I use that. I have that again. And it comes with a lid and a wooden spoon. And the wooden spoon, by the way, is designed to rest. So it's a hole.
Starting point is 00:42:33 And there's a little peg on the handle. And yeah, so when you're cooking, you can just set your spoon like that. Oh, that's cool. And you don't lose it. So that's pretty cool. Dude, by the way, cast iron pans are so heavy. Remember cartoons when they blast someone in the head with those?
Starting point is 00:42:47 You would kill someone. Remember we were talking about postomatic stress? I have a little bit with the wooden spoon. Me too. I was like that kind of like, yeah, kept it in my mom's purse and she's just like, my mom used to hang it. He used to hang in the kitchen. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:03 Yeah, I used to hang in the kitchen. So your mom weren't even Italian and you got hit with a spoon, huh? Oh, yeah, yeah. Yeah, my mom thought she was like, I don't think you brought back in the 80s, you didn't have to be Italian to get people. Yeah, yeah. I don't know why you think of my mom's redhead, so that explains everything.
Starting point is 00:43:15 But just the spoon part of it. So that's the, okay, this. This is actually a non-stick pan. So the cast iron is a ceramic pan, I believe, and this has the non-stick surface on it. So I have that one and the cast iron. I have a smaller version of this one. Me too. I know you want that big one.
Starting point is 00:43:32 We're going to have to arm wrestle for me. Well, I think either me or Doug, because I think Dean Douglas wants to cook. So you guys don't, you guys get vetoed out on this one. I mean, my wife cooks, but she'd appreciate it. It's super lightweight, too. Is it? Yeah, the cast iron obviously is very heavy. So what is, what is that, though, it's better?
Starting point is 00:43:48 It's like easier to, if you ever clean, the reason why everyone loves Teflon is because how easy it is a clean, right? Those are easier to clean than a Teflon pan is. They don't scratch. They don't scratch. Yeah, I mean, they're super durable. They're super durable. I wouldn't use steel tools on it. No, no, no, no, no, no.
Starting point is 00:44:04 You don't use steel tools. It's more durable than Teflon. It's crazy. And it's not Teflon. I don't know exactly what it is. By the way, the forever chemicals, they've already connected them to hormone disruption, cancers, heart disease. developmental issues with children. They've now connected them to MS.
Starting point is 00:44:24 Dude. Multiple sclerosis. Yeah, they're not good. Yes. And they're called forever chemicals because they're very hard to get rid of. They just build up in your system. Now, one of the best ways, I mean, let's just say somebody is like they did for a long time. Now you're making the switch over to things like our place.
Starting point is 00:44:44 Would you say one of the best things would be regular sonnet? on an exercise. Yeah, well, of course, everybody listening to this podcast does exercise, right? Sona helps accelerate it. I was going to say, I would think sauna would be something that would be like one of the better things. And I told you guys what I learned about Sillium Husk, right? Yeah. It's a great way to get rid of microplastics.
Starting point is 00:45:00 Yes, me and Courtney have both been taking it for that specific reason because I'm like paranoid. It's in my brain. Yeah, so. Anything in my brain? I'm like, I can't handle it. Why is so worried about your brain all the time? Because I'm the one that's hit it the most. Yeah, you have.
Starting point is 00:45:14 But we've been working with you for 10 years. How did you have not become done? Hey, you talked to him how nervous he is. I'm working on it. I know we're all a little bit. Oh, our MRI? Yeah, yeah. Oh, I'm nervous.
Starting point is 00:45:23 What do you call those? It's not a traditional MRI. That was like a super, super MRI. Yeah, it's a full body MRI. And they looked at every organ. It's preventative. Your arteries, your spine. It's preventative.
Starting point is 00:45:36 They can find cancers way before you'd have symptoms. They could find issues way before you'd have symptoms. And they looked at the brain, too. So you're worried what they're going to find? I don't, you know, like, I'm not. Like, I'm not even a hypochondriac or anything. Like, I just, I'm very dismissive of that stuff. But, you know, when you're actually putting me in a freaking tube and they're scanning me everywhere.
Starting point is 00:45:56 How did you guys all do? I think there's something that we didn't really talk about how everybody did. You know, well, let me touch on this first, Justin. Your brain's fine. It's your esophagus, bro. That's what we got to look at. Well, yeah. I mean, that's too.
Starting point is 00:46:07 Yeah, the one thing you're avoiding. We'll see. God, dude. He's what even avoided it like crazy. Well, I knew I was going to do a scan. So I was like, I'm going to. I'm not going to go doctor and have him, like, shoved things on my throat.
Starting point is 00:46:18 Oh, no thanks. Not a gem. Well, and there they, stuff like that should pop up for him too, though. Yeah, they'll look at it at. Yeah. They'll, they'll, they'll, if there's, I don't know how much they can see in the esophagus with that. I don't know. There was a form in the beginning that, like, kind of highlighted that area, so hopefully, don't give me some feedback.
Starting point is 00:46:34 Bro, laying down still for a 50-minute MRI is not that easy. And strapped in. Not that easy. I don't know if that's strapped in. She straight, like, strapped this thing. I didn't. get strapped. I was fine.
Starting point is 00:46:46 Oh, wow. They laid something on top of me. You fit nice. She's like, yeah, you can move around you. You guys look like, uh, you guys look like, you guys look like, you're sleeping in a coffin. She's like, you know, just don't do too many back flips in there. So, the rest of those big guys, she's like, listen, don't move. Couple phone boots.
Starting point is 00:47:03 Yeah, you move one inch. You can cut your arm off. She's like, I'm going to put these things. She tells Doug. They didn't put the thing on you with the straps around it so your arms didn't come out. They didn't lock you in? I didn't get strapped down. per se. They had something on top of me, but not like...
Starting point is 00:47:17 She strapped it on both sides. Because my arms wanted to come out. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Oh, I see. You were so big. His lats were too big, yeah. Anyway. I was getting a bit numb for sure, but yeah.
Starting point is 00:47:31 You know, right when she had finished everything like, and she's like, are you okay? And I'm like, I got to scratch my face. Oh, yeah. And so she undid one side. Yeah, it's like, knee, yeah. So she undid one side for the whole last time. The whole last time I like, like, okay, I think I'm good. All right, let's go, you know.
Starting point is 00:47:44 Dude, just gonna do a little bit of this. But they let you watch TV. That, that part was cool. That helped a lot. I wasn't, so I haven't done a full MRI that way. I've done, they did MRIs on, I think, my leg before. I'm trying to think, but I've never been. Like full body.
Starting point is 00:47:59 Yeah, full body like that. And so she's like, are you claustrophobic? And I'm like, I don't know. We'll find out. We'll find out. But the fact that you could, that it felt like I was watching through a tunnel this, the movie. It's fine. Plus, they'll offer you, they offer you a volume if you need it.
Starting point is 00:48:14 So, which I was kind of like, I should have lied. She's like, do you need a value? I joked with her. I'm like, well, save it. If you want to give it to you. Oh, dude, you know what I was thinking the whole time? If you get paranoid or anxious, they'll give you a sedative. But like, Avatar, I was thinking the whole time, you know, how they put in one of those.
Starting point is 00:48:32 It was like the same machine. Yeah. I felt like. What did everybody watch? Maybe I could be a movie. I watched the first episode of Stranger Things. Yeah, I saw Stranger Things. Oh, you both did.
Starting point is 00:48:41 Well, he said, he mentioned it. And I was like, yeah, might as well. Would you watch. That new George Clooney movie. I forget the name of it. Something Kelly. Oh, was that any good? It was pretty good, actually.
Starting point is 00:48:53 That was Adam Sandler. Yeah, I ended up watching it at home the rest of it. So I watched Jay Kelly, David Letterman's interview of Adam Sandler, and then he talked about that. And Katrina and it's a sad movie, honestly. Oh, really? It's about this guy. It's based on a true story. Oh, is it?
Starting point is 00:49:07 And he's like the agent of like an actor or something like that? Yeah, an aging movie star. He has some kids, but he's been on the road so. much. He didn't really develop a relationship with his children. I mean, would you watch it again or recommend it? I wouldn't watch it again, no. I mean, recommending it, I think if you want a sentimental type of movie,
Starting point is 00:49:24 one that makes you kind of sad, then it's a good one for that. Yeah, yeah. I just felt, I've felt sad because seriously, I mean, you know, having this all this fame and adoration yet no relationship with your kids and all the regrets. And he's, he's with a lot of people, but he's very alone.
Starting point is 00:49:42 I mean, I think that's a very real story. Yeah. Yeah. I think it's a very real story. I have a friend who did one of those full body scans, and they saw, I can't remember what it was, something in her spine, nothing to worry about. But now that she knows, she can monitor it. And so now that she monitors it,
Starting point is 00:49:57 but she would have never known how she knows. Yeah, I have this weird, I'm excited and nervous feeling about it. Yeah, like, what if it's something that just now is just going to make me stressed out? Yeah, yeah. We're going to keep an eye on this one thing right here, Salmon. Yeah. Cool. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:50:10 Wish you didn't tell me. No, I'm super. But everyone that I've talked to, this, like, it's like the, this is like really cool technology, like the fact that they can see things. Well, here's where I see the huge value, because I have experience with cancer. I've had some family members with it. And there's a lot of cancers that are terminal mainly because they started way earlier. You just, you don't feel symptoms until it's stage four.
Starting point is 00:50:35 You know, if you have stomach cancer, you're not going to notice anything until it's like, you know, stage three, stage four, pancreatic cancer, ovarian cancer. There's a lot of cancers that by the time you get symptoms and they find it, they're like, oh, it's spread. Yeah. But if you see it early, very treatable. It's just, you just don't feel anything at those points. So a scan like this would catch all of those things. And they're not expensive.
Starting point is 00:50:59 I think it's like. Well, for what we, for what did they do? Well, ours, the ones we did was four. No, no, no. It was $5. No, no, no, no. Well, it was four. It was.
Starting point is 00:51:07 It was. What we did was a $4,900 one. Oh, it was. Yes, yeah, yeah, yeah. No, I looked. I looked. But I think you can use an H. health savings account, right?
Starting point is 00:51:14 Yeah, I'm sure you can. So if people have that, they can use that for... I'm sure. I believe we're gonna... So when we get our tests, I believe we're having them come on and talk to us all. No, I don't want my test revealed on the show. Oh, yeah, no, we're definitely gonna talk about you.
Starting point is 00:51:25 What if they find something? That was part of the deal. What a terrible episode? That was part of the deal. That's exactly what we're doing. What are you talking about? On air? Well, maybe we start a Patreon and help you all.
Starting point is 00:51:34 Why is it me? Because most likely... Because you're stressed it up. They're like, there was way too many. peptides and chemicals in here for us to see anything through this. That sucks, bro. Stop scaring me. Justin, we talked about your brain earlier.
Starting point is 00:51:53 I got to ask you, have you been consistent with trying to hit the higher limits of creatine, the 10, 15, 20 grams a day? Have you been trying that? Yeah, I have. I haven't been successful. I haven't been successful. No, I did do, you know, the higher doses that I had to spread. spread it out throughout the day, like five milligrams apiece.
Starting point is 00:52:17 Five grams a piece. That's what I mean. Yeah, grams. Obviously, it's not working. Yeah, but I can have to double it up more,
Starting point is 00:52:23 bro. Yeah. No, but it does, it does make an impact and it's, I do feel the difference when I'm doing that. I did it for like two weeks and then I just, I fell off a bit.
Starting point is 00:52:33 Yeah, the data on it's pretty, pretty rad, dude. I think the issue is taking it, um, is people can't do 15 grams all at once. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:52:41 I definitely had like stomach cramp and like kind of tightness. But if you eat five grams with breakfast, lunch, and dinner, you're hitting the right around what you're, what they're showing is effective for the brain. And I like that like organifies. Did you get up to 20 or what did you get to? I'm trying to get between 10 to 15 a day. Okay. But the cherry chews from organifier are good for that because they taste good.
Starting point is 00:53:01 And it's like, oh, yeah. Lunch, you eat a few of those. So much better way to do it. And then the tart cherry in there, I am noticing some anti-inflammatory effects from it. That's what tart cherry does. So it's got anti-inflammatory. Had you ever, had you, because I think you, I remember when they first brought those to us, and you got all excited like, oh, had you taken that by itself before?
Starting point is 00:53:18 Yes, tart cherry. There's very few things that you'll take that you'll see, you'll feel a significant difference in inflammation. That's natural. One of them is omega-3s. So for a lot of people, if you take high EPA fish oil at relatively high doses, you'll notice a reduction in inflammation. Another one's bromelin on an empty stomach. It's got really powerful anti-inflammatory right. It's a lot.
Starting point is 00:53:41 And then tart cherries the other one. What about turmeric? Tumric, yes, but turmeric has got this kind of systemic effect. And, you know, I've noticed some turmeric, but it's not like pronounced. Like tart cherry, bromlin, fish oil, do it for a week. And you'll notice, it's like you're taking ibuprofen. Interesting. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:53:58 It's got a really, really power. It's like what I tell my parents, my dad, I have him take it regularly because he's got lots of, you know, aches and pains. Huge difference. Oh, interesting. Oh, okay. But, yeah, but it's got that in their cherry chews. It's got both.
Starting point is 00:54:09 Is there anywhere where that's foul? in nature where you would like cherry. Oh, so it's already naturally so if you ate cherries you would get you would you get it certain type of cherries you'd have to eat a lot of them. Oh, okay. Yeah, to get this. It's concentrated. Probably a real tart ones.
Starting point is 00:54:23 It's just different. He's on fire, dude. Hey, I got a new, I got something that I found might make a difference for the pump. Glissoral. What? Have you guys ever used glycerol before you work out? Is that, is it? Is there nitro glycerol? Isn't it like in gummies and things like that?
Starting point is 00:54:41 glycerol, it's an osmolite. So it draws fluid into your tissues. And you'll see some performance changes and improvements. And I was hearing reports of, you know, body blows have used glycerol on and off for better pumps. And so I started experimenting with it. And I'll, I'll let you guys know as I continue messing with it because there's so many things that affect the pump. But so far, I think, I noticed a difference from taking it. Wow. Justin's still stuck in. You heard of a Nargum? Yeah, yeah, I knew Stuck-a. Which one? Nar or Guar?
Starting point is 00:55:13 Gwar. Okay. I'm just trying to like list off random, like, ingredients that are in every something. He's like, takes them and pulls them apart. He's like, if you guys ever heard of this? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:55:23 Yeah. It was like listed in the thousands of other. What are you taking it like massive? Yeah. These are compounds that draw fluid in. So creatine would be. Consider an osmaline. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:55:36 Glycine is another one. I think I'm saying it right. Is it osmalite, Doug? Am I saying it right? Look the term up. Sure. And it just makes something. Yeah, I think you did. It sounds like a superhero group.
Starting point is 00:55:44 I thought there was somebody from Lord of the Rings. It sounds like the Osmolites. It sounds like something you'd read in the Old Testament. The men of knights and the Osmalites. That's it. Worshiping the pagan gods. Is that right? Yes.
Starting point is 00:55:57 So, Osmolites. Small organic molecules cells used to manage water, balance, and survive stress. There you go. Oh, wow. There you go. So glycerol. You have a shot. By itself?
Starting point is 00:56:08 Yeah. Take it 30 minutes before you work out. water. Interesting. And it's like crazy pumps. Like I drank way more water because, yeah, I work out early in the morning. Sometimes I just... Are you taking it in a powder or in a pill form?
Starting point is 00:56:18 No, it's in like a powder. Is it tasteless? Yeah. Because I'm trying to think like mixing that with like element or something like that. So it's like just throw it in there with it. Yeah. Okay. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:56:29 Okay. Take that my xylitol. Troscriptions has some pretty amazing products. One of them is just blue. This is methylin blue. I know you've heard of methyl. and blue. This will wake you up. It's not really a stimulant, but it gets your brain firing in all cylinders. It enhances mitochondrial function, gives you energy anti-inflammatory. It's pretty amazing
Starting point is 00:56:54 stuff. Everybody's trying it out. Well, Troscriptions is the best brand for methyl and blue. In fact, you put it between your gums and it absorbs so fast. Fifteen minutes later, you feel it. You can also just swallow it if you want it to take a little longer. Anyway, go check them out. We have a discount for you. Go to troscriptions.com forward slash mind pump. That's T-R-O-S-C-R-I-P-T-I-O-N-S dot com forward slash mind pump. The code mind pump will get you 10% off. All right.
Starting point is 00:57:25 Here comes the show. First question is from Brad Barber. I want to build muscle but also start BJJ this year as a 41-year-old. Is it possible? If so, how should I program? Yeah, it's possible. I mean, but jiu-jitsu is pretty intensive. And if you're just getting started, that's probably going to be about as much stress as your body can handle in the beginning.
Starting point is 00:57:47 But once you get going, if you're doing jiu-jitsu, most people who do it consistently do it two, maybe three days a week, you're looking at one day a week of minimal strength training or like a MAPS 15 protocol. More than that, you're just going to, most people are teetering into overdone. Most jih Tegu classes are a couple hours long, long, warm up and workout. then you're wrestling with men at full speed. Like, it's, it's, it'll, it'll burn you out. You go max intensity in those sessions for sure. It'll burn you out. Well, I mean, listen, the Maps 15 protocol by itself is a great program for someone to build
Starting point is 00:58:22 muscle on and build strength on. And if you are doing something like BJJ, that is obviously a lot more stress. And so I would say that's at the, you're, you're already teetering right there. So, and the average person would think that they can do more or want to do. more and so it's mass 15. I would even say maps 15 when you when you can or on off days like I definitely wouldn't run a mass
Starting point is 00:58:46 15 and then also do a no BJJ class I would be like if you're going two three days a week of BJJ then I would be doing two or three days a week of mass mass 15 exactly and that's a point that's plenty enough of a protocol to still build muscle and then and still get in great shape working a bunch
Starting point is 00:59:02 of mobility though I know this from trying BJJ right away it's like you definitely got to work on hip mobility and ankles. Now, do they do, is that kind of part of the warm-up, I would think, I don't know. It is.
Starting point is 00:59:13 Probably in a good school, yeah. It is. And if you're smart about when you roll with other people, so you have to check your ego out the door, because if you go real hard, especially as a beginner, you don't know how to move your body, injury is really common.
Starting point is 00:59:24 But if you go kind of easy, you tap out quick, tap out easy, don't go full bore all the time, kind of flow, you know. And when I say check your ego, it's because you're going to get your butt kick. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:59:36 And you've got to be okay with that. your body will start to learn and acclimate, you'll build up mobility. But if you go in, they're like, especially as a beginner, like, I need to win.
Starting point is 00:59:44 Yeah. And then they're, tense up and you're going to hurt yourself. Yeah, and you just don't know how to turn. You don't know how to move. You end up spinning in the wrong direction. You have to go with it.
Starting point is 00:59:52 Yeah. Totally. But look, I was in my 20s when I did jujitsu. I was eating good. I was consistent. And when I was doing jujitsu three days a week, consistently,
Starting point is 01:00:02 especially if I did it for. One day a week, three lifts was it. Yeah. And if I did more than that, I would go backwards with my performance. And I didn't start that way. I thought I could just keep lifting and it just was getting burnt out. It wasn't until I scale way down that I started to see my body progress.
Starting point is 01:00:20 And I was in my 20s. I wasn't in my 40s. Next question is from J.D. Williams 1570. What are some recommended movements and or routines for joint instability? So strength training is the best for joint instability. The key is to get stronger and to do it in a controlled manner. So if you feel unstable in your hips, a lunge or a squat with good controlled technique and form is going to build.
Starting point is 01:00:50 So instability comes from weakness. It's weakness. By the way, this can mask. This can look like tightness. A lot of people think tightness is not weakness. No, no. When something's unstable, the CNS tightens the muscles around it to limit.
Starting point is 01:01:04 range of motion to prevent injury. That's what your body's trying to do. So it's really a weakness thing. So as you slowly get stronger, you feel much more stable. Well, and I think, too, just like top of mind in these positions that you're about to place yourself in before the exercise is to really reinforce those positions with isometric tension. And so I would take an extra like five, 10 seconds of me, like really driving that muscle
Starting point is 01:01:30 contraction, you know, solidifying position, anchoring myself into position before I even started moving, just to reinforce that signal that, hey, my joints are secure and everything is accounted for, and now I can actually add load. And, you know, the more you do that, the more naturally you're going to build up that stability. If I had to give a couple of exercises, I think are just generic, but that address what we're talking about right now. It's like, I think of a long stride, lunge and I think of a Z press. So I think lower body, I think of an exercise like long, long strided
Starting point is 01:02:04 walking lunges for the stability, range of motion, control, strength. And then I think of the upper body, I think of a Z press is just with an emphasis on the, you know, stabilize and holding the bar above your head. Like those are great. Those two movements, if performed well and you get strong at them,
Starting point is 01:02:22 you're going to hit a lot of the basis right there in those two movements. Next question is from Morgan B. Peterson. At what age did you realize you no longer needed to hit PRs? You know, this is a cool question. Justin nine are 25, 26. Sal still hasn't figured it out yet. So, no, this is great.
Starting point is 01:02:40 Just discount my YouTube series. Oh, yeah, that's right. I go ahead. Just me. Adam never. Yeah. You know what's, okay, so I have numbers actually for this for myself. So in the deadlift, I saw great progress.
Starting point is 01:02:56 in my body and how I fell, muscle development, up until I hit about 500 pounds. And the closer I got to 500, the more the diminishing returns are past 500. Because I've gotten up to 600 pounds. Past 500, the risk wasn't worth, was not worth the reward. It's like between 5 and 600 pounds, which is 100 pounds on my deadlift, what's the difference in the way my physique looks and feels? It's not. In fact, I hurt a little more at the higher weight.
Starting point is 01:03:23 With squats, once I got up to like three. 50, there was really, really diminishing return. It was around 300. That's so interesting because I totally agree with this. That's right around 500 in the deadlift. Everything beyond that, minimal gains, lots of injury risk. I heard a bunch of times beyond that. And squatting, as long as I'd say 315.
Starting point is 01:03:46 When I'm 315, strong. Like the difference between 3 and 400 with your squad? Yeah. No difference. Except risk of injury. Yes. Yes. And the times I was over 400 were the times
Starting point is 01:03:56 that I'm getting hurt or having chronic issues and so like that, I would say very, very similar numbers. I would say the almost right exact. That's interesting. And it's going to be different from person to person. Some exercises you're more naturally, I guess, strong. Yeah, I was like, 450 on deadlift and I was like, I'm done. But your bench, you got up to 405.
Starting point is 01:04:15 Yeah, got 405. But when did you start to see diminishing returns with your, with your bench? Was it around 350 also? Oh, yeah. Diminishing return wise? Yeah, probably like three, yeah, three. Yeah, 3.50. Yeah, see, I would put myself in 200.
Starting point is 01:04:28 I would say like, 25275. And after that, it wasn't that big. Yeah, 315. I'm like, that's plenty, dude, for me. Yeah. Yeah, it's interesting. It's going to be different from person or person, but we end up finding is at some point,
Starting point is 01:04:40 you get these great returns for every time you gain strength. And then it starts to kind of level out and you just end up hurting more. And then it's just a number on the bar. And so what do you do at that point? Well, that point, it's about technique, form, feel. I get much better resolve. if I do a bench press today, and instead of going up to 300 pounds, staying at 225 and feeling every rep, getting the stretch, getting the squeeze, controlling the weight.
Starting point is 01:05:10 Again, this is going to be different from person to person, but you kind of figure this out. But in the beginning, you know, the context being doing everything right, your good technique, good form, good programming, in the beginning, hitting PR is a great way to see progress. Getting stronger is a great way to see progress. I have such a reverse relationship with this because I was the guy who never did PR lifting for the first, like, 10, 15 years of my life. And then it wasn't really until we all got introduced to where I started like, okay, let me see what I can do, like, strength-wise. And then I reaped a lot of benefits in my 30s of, like, building muscle and built a lot. And then I then I dealt with all the other issues.
Starting point is 01:05:52 So I kind of had all of like up into that point though, I didn't have, when I wasn't chasing PRs, I didn't have a lot of injuries. Now, but you didn't chase PRs, but it wasn't like you didn't pay attention to the weight. You got stronger. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:06:07 Yeah. Yeah. But I wasn't. You weren't focused on it. I was never, I never did anything less than five reps. Yeah. Yeah. So I mean, so, uh, so I could never, when someone asked me how much you bench, how much you squat.
Starting point is 01:06:18 Yeah. My answer would be like, I don't know. I mean, I work out with this weight. And that weight always increased over my, in my 20s. But I never challenged like a single double or triple until literally I started hanging out with you guys. And I did get to reap the benefits late. And I saw, wow, that that, what used like you said, those numbers, my zero to 500 journey, I'd say, you know, that I watched my physique change and build and build and build and build.
Starting point is 01:06:44 And then after that, it was like kind of diminishing returns. And but I was also now a little addicted to seeing how strong I could get. and then now here comes all the stuff. And so it's like trying to figure that out for somebody who's going. It's like there's some obvious benefits to training that way, getting, lifting heavy and pushing those limits. But then there comes a point where the return is not worth the school. It's so funny.
Starting point is 01:07:07 You start to learn yourself. Like for the last, I'd say two and a half months. I've never made ever. Well, I have in the past, but this is really consistent. I've consistently made a target to hit 220 grams or protein at least every single day, okay, always. Before that, I was probably falling around 160 to 170. Still high, but not 220. I've noticed incredible gains in the gym, but here's what happens. If I get stronger, stronger, stronger, if I don't slow the reps down and just
Starting point is 01:07:36 feel the weight, you know, feel it and make it harder, if I just add weight to, I start to hurt. Yeah. I start to hurt. So now I know my weight is. Yeah. I know if my, like my incline, I know if I go above 225, I'm just like, I'm not as connected to it. Not as connected. So if I feel stronger, I just make the weight feel heavier. Yeah. Rather than trying to add weight to far. I've noticed that too because I think there's a momentum component to that, you know, and you're just, just trying to explode through it instead of feeling it.
Starting point is 01:08:00 I've had to learn how to do that. Next question is from JJVW bug. What are some helpful tips to stay focused and motivated? Have fun. I mean, this is the number one thing. Well, I mean, I would correct this first. Stay focused is good, but and motivated is you're not going to be motivated all time. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:08:20 There's a discipline component. And so I think part of the things that you need to reframe or tell yourself is like, I'm not going to be motivated all the time, but I go to the gym this many times a week. And then the next layer to that that I'd add that it's helped me through this process is giving myself permission that I might just do a lift. But I'm a guy who goes to the gym this many times, right? So telling yourself, I go to the gym at this time or these days, whatever. And then totally realizing or recognizing that there's going to be a lot of those.
Starting point is 01:08:50 days, I'm not motivated. And so when those days come, you go like, oh, man, I just, I do not feel like going to the gym today and I got this. But you know what? I'm going to go. And you know what? Maybe I'll just do two or three sets of squats. Or maybe sometimes I even said things like, I'll just go there and walk on the treadmill and listen to my audio book. And so I've allowed myself this permission of I show up or I just go there or I do movement or I do something. And a lot of times what happens is I get motivated. The music starts going in my ears or whatever. And then it's like, you know what? I think I will go to that squat. can go hit something.
Starting point is 01:09:21 Or maybe I say I'm just going to squat after that squat goes. Now I've got a little bit of a pump. I'm sweating a little bit. Now I'm like, you know what? I want to finish this workout. And so that would be my big advice to this is, one, stop thinking you're going to be motivated all time because that's setting yourself up for failure. And then two, give yourself permission that sometimes it looks like an hour walk on the treadmill.
Starting point is 01:09:41 Sometimes it looks like a set of squats and that's it and be okay with that. Yeah, no, that's great advice. I think generally that's 100% true. The part, the place I was going, if you, when you, you meet people who've been very consistent with their workouts, like really consistent, you know, 15, 20, 30 years, they all have one thing in common, and that's that they, yes, they're disciplined, but they also love the workout. They love what they're doing. And so I like to encourage people, you know, because on the show, we often talk about effective workout programming,
Starting point is 01:10:10 and this is what works and do it this way. And it's all true. But the most important thing is that you're consistent, so long as you're not hurting yourself and doing something that's inappropriate, And so if there's something you like and it's fun and it's not the perfect routine, but you enjoy doing it, that's probably going to be better for you because it's going to help develop this relationship with fitness where you always do it. Like some of the healthiest people I've ever known in fitness, these were members of gyms that I managed that were just consistent. They always seemed happy.
Starting point is 01:10:43 They would come in. These were people that just loved, they just loved to move. And they would strength train. sometimes they would do cardio. Other times I wouldn't see them. They'd come back. Where were you? Oh, I did this hiking, you know, trip or I go surfing.
Starting point is 01:10:58 Like, that's the key to longevity with this is to really learn how to enjoy it and enjoy the process. And then you won't, you know, want to stop doing that. But that means, A, learn how to enjoy it. And B, also don't think that because I have to do this perfect routine, I can't do this other thing I enjoy. Go ahead and do the thing that you. that you enjoy. I've never just, you know, discourage someone who says, hey, I like salsa dancing. Can I do that as part of my workout?
Starting point is 01:11:24 Yeah. Yeah, have fun. Do it. Cha-cha away, buddy. Totally. Look, if you like the show, come find us on Instagram. We'll see you. It's at Mind Pump Media. Thank you for listening to Mind Pump. If your goal is to build and shape your body, dramatically improve your health and energy, and maximize your overall performance,
Starting point is 01:11:40 check out our discounted RGB Superbundle at Mind Pumpmedia.com. The RGB Superbundle includes Maps Anabolic, Maths 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 and over 200 videos, the RGB Superbundle is like having Sal Adam and Justin as your own personal trainers, but at a fraction of the price.
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