Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2854: The Optimal Sets & Reps at Every Intensity ! Soviet Science Explains
Episode Date: May 9, 2026In this episode the guys break down six training secrets discovered by Soviet Union sports scientists — the methods that made them the most dominant strength athletes in the world before steroids we...re even part of the conversation. They also get into the surprising dopamine-boosting effect of exogenous ketones, a study on how a father's attractiveness influences his daughter's looks more than the mother's, which group of young men is happiest (married dads by a wide margin), and Gen Z data showing 1 in 8 believe scrolling is more pleasurable than sex. Then they answer questions submitted through their Instagram page, coaching callers live on air. MAPS 15 BOGO — https://maps15bogo.com Buy 1 get 1 FREE — limited time Submit a live caller question: https://mplivecaller.com Mind Pump Store: https://mindpumpstore.com Instagram: @mindpumpmedia SPONSORS Ketone IQ — https://ketone.com/MINDPUMP 30% off subscription orders + free gift with second shipment (6-pack, merch & more) — no code needed. Crisp Power — https://www.crisppower.com/mindpump Code: MINDPUMP — 10% off. High protein, high fiber, low carb. Our Place (cookware) — https://fromourplace.com Code: MINDPUMP — 10% off sitewide. 100-day trial with free shipping and returns. Mind Pump Fitness Coaching — https://mindpumpfitnesscoaching.com 1.9 NASM CEUs 0:00 - Intro & sponsors 2:04 - 6 Soviet Union training secrets that built the greatest strength athletes ever 12:52 - Prolev's chart — the exact optimal reps & sets at every intensity level 15:33 - Soviet secret #2: Plyometrics & the depth jump — how power training was born 20:12 - Soviet secret #3: Undulating periodization — why structured deloads beat linear training 23:13 - Soviet secret #4 & 5: Sub-maximal reps & complex contrast methods (PAP) 24:25 - Ketone IQ deep dive — exogenous ketones raise dopamine without stimulants 28:44 - Dad's attractiveness influences daughter's beauty more than mom's (study) 30:38 - Face swap app nostalgia & grocery store facial recognition cameras 32:29 - Amazon TV ads you can add to cart mid-commercial 38:44 - Study: Married dads 22–35 are 2x happier than single childless men 44:47 - Gen Z study: 1 in 8 say scrolling is more pleasurable than sex 52:13 - Crisp Power snack break & Our Place cookware sponsor 55:35 - Caller: Josh (Vermont) — 100lb weight loss, 5 years sober, CrossFit addiction & sobriety 1:08:18 - Caller: Kelly (Massachusetts) — RED-S, under-eating, lost menstrual cycle, needs a reverse diet 1:17:41 - Caller: Ted (Indiana) — Truck driver on a brutal sleep schedule, how to stay healthy on the road 1:28:06 - Caller: Alexandra (Washington) — Hypermobility/EDS, training with joint laxity, and personal training career path 📚 Free Mind Pump Guides: Fat Loss Guide: https://www.mindpumpmedia.com/how-to-lose-fat?htrafficsource=youtube-organic&hcategory=MPSHOW&el=postID Hardgainer Guide: https://www.mindpumpmedia.com/hardgainer-guide?htrafficsource=youtube-organic&hcategory=MPSHOW&el=postID Squat Like a Pro: https://www.mindpumpmedia.com/how-to-squat-like-a-pro?htrafficsource=youtube-organic&hcategory=MPSHOW&el=postID Flat Tummy Guide: https://www.mindpumpmedia.com/flat-tummy-guide?htrafficsource=youtube-organic&hcategory=MPSHOW&el=postID More at: https://www.mindpumpmedia.com/free-resources?htrafficsource=youtube-organic&hcategory=MPSHOW&el=postID Take the guesswork out of your training and follow a proven program designed by Mind Pump. https://www.mindpumpmedia.com/maps-fitness-products?htrafficsource=youtube-organic&hcategory=MPSHOW&el=postID 📱 Other Channels: Mind Pump Clips: https://www.youtube.com/@MindPumpClips Mind Pump TV: https://www.youtube.com/@MindPumpTV Elite Trainer Academy: https://www.youtube.com/@EliteTrainerAcademy
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For decades, the Soviet Union produced the most incredible strength athletes ever.
They crushed everybody.
And today we're going to talk about six training secrets that the Soviet Union scientists discovered.
Some of these you may know, some you may not know, but we're going to break them down.
If you want to train like the best, D ball.
Listen up.
Yeah, it's not animal.
Sterell.
It was not.
D-Ball was American.
Oh,
is that true?
Yeah,
Diana Ball was the American steroid
that the American lifters were using.
Oh.
So what did they use first?
They used their own,
I don't know,
they used their own anabolic,
but the,
the,
perception,
the,
what people thought
that the Soviets were doing
or the East Germans
were doing was using most steroids.
And when the,
you know,
the Soviet Union collapsed,
the Berlin Wall fell,
you know,
the,
the wall came down.
and their scientists started coming over here,
their coaches started coming over here,
and we started learning about what they were doing.
It wasn't the drugs.
It was their training techniques that were superior.
So for people who aren't familiar, right?
So the Soviet Union, this is back when they were,
obviously this was a communist country, it was massive,
and they devoted so much time, energy, and resources
on producing the best athletes,
because the goal was during the Olympics to,
showcase their superiority.
So you had this like huge debate at the time,
which is now largely, you know,
everybody knows which is better.
But back then it was like,
what's better?
Communism or capitalism.
And when the Olympics came around,
it was like,
let's see who wins, right?
And you had the Cold War going on.
Nobody wanted to go to war because everybody had nukes.
So the way that you,
you know,
bragged was we got the best athletes.
And the Soviets took their money,
time and energy.
They took scientists.
And they were the first one.
funds really to view training, diet,
sleep, all of it through a scientific lens.
And of course, it didn't hurt that they told athletes,
you're mine now, you live with us.
Yeah.
Yeah, they had full commitment.
Yeah.
And they came out, I mean, some of the training modalities and techniques and things that
we now kind of understand or take for granted came from the Soviet Union, which is, yeah,
which is pretty cool.
Don't, them and China both like, uh, start this at a really young age with their kids too, right?
Like a lot of the stuff that's built in like public schools.
Yeah.
I was watching a video the other day.
I wish I remember, I wish I would have shared it with you guys.
It was kids that were, I want to say they were only in maybe first or second grade.
And the stability training and coordination stuff that they had the whole classroom doing was like to think you got a whole classroom of kids able to do that as well.
You would never see that.
And there's no way you would get a whole classroom of kids.
Yeah, everybody doing the same movements in sync.
Yes.
It was like uniform.
Yes.
Tight.
Now, these days, we produce the best athletes, generally speaking, unless you
talked about specific sport, but the U.S. tends to win the most gold medals.
But at that time, strength training was never, wasn't viewed, because you had Olympic lifting.
It's an Olympic sport, right?
You have other sports that rely on strength.
But Olympic lifting is like, this is a strength sport.
And strength training didn't have a lot of science behind it.
Like the understanding around strength training was like, well, this is what I do.
This is how I train.
And I'm the best.
So therefore, here's what I think.
And so nobody really took this scientific approach until the Soviet Union did.
And they discovered some pretty interesting things.
So I'll go over one of them.
One of them was their high volume, moderate intensity lifting.
So they performed a majority of their lifts, oftentimes between 50 to 85.
range of one rep max.
And they emphasized volume over maximal effort.
And athletes back then, our strength athletes, like the way they trained was very
linear.
It's like, let's go see how strong we are.
Let's keep trying to get stronger.
Yeah.
The Soviets said, no, let's get you practicing these lifts and keep the intensity.
Perfect movement over, yeah, really overloading their athletes.
Yes.
And what it did is it built incredible strength adaptations, work capacity, minimize burnout.
Were they measuring back then how much the athlete could tap into their strength?
Meaning, like, we have studies that show like the Olympic lifter that can utilize, you know, 90-something percent of their strength capacity.
The average person's only like 65 or 70 percent?
I think that came later.
Did that come later?
Yeah, I think that came later.
But what they did is they just, they treated it like a study.
And they said, let's take these athletes, let's train them this way.
Let's train them this the way.
What are the things we have to consider?
let's start messing with some variables.
And when you look at, like, when you're doing things from a scientific lens,
here's what happens when you don't do that,
is you'll have your outliers and your tendencies to look at the outlier
and say, oh, that's the way to train.
They were treating it like a study.
You take a sample size.
What works the best?
Cool.
Now it's applied to some of our best athletes and see how that works.
And what they found was training at super high intensities often wasn't the best.
the often, the best thing to do was to practice lifts.
Yeah.
That kind of this moderate intensity.
And this is why we communicate this on the show.
This is, I mean, shows the importance of recovery.
Totally.
Yeah.
Well, it's funny that, I mean, this is, you're talking about like the 80s right now, right?
Oh, no.
This, I mean, they started doing this way early.
50s, 60s, 70s is really, really started to take off.
You know, by the 80s, they started to, you know, late, what was it?
When did the, when did the Berlin Wall fall, uh, Berlin Wall fall, 89?
89.
Yeah.
So it was early 80s.
Yeah, yeah.
So, 80s, 80s.
Yeah, late 70s, early 80s, that we understood this science, yet it's so common to see
somebody training to failure all time and pushing the intensity and volume in their workouts.
Yes.
Why?
Why if we saw this for now, for 40 years, we've understood this science, yet we still
tend to go about it the wrong way?
We don't.
The best strength coaches know this.
Yeah.
Find a strength coach.
And they know this.
The problem is the most jacked-looking person gets on a magazine or communicates on social media.
And so we listen to that guy or that girl when the science says something totally different.
The other problem is that the studies that we have are these short studies, 16 weeks.
Soviets were studying these people for years.
How do we keep improving over long periods of time?
You know, like you guys know this as trainers.
You know, I could train someone
If they're well-rested and well-fed,
we could do failure training
and see some pretty cool results
in like six weeks, maybe 12 weeks.
Yeah, yeah.
Train someone for a year,
two years, three years.
The person who practices the lifts
maximizes technique,
trains at like, you know,
60 to 80% intensity all the time, most of the time.
They're the ones that are going to make the best game.
Yeah, this only really resonated with athletes.
I think that's probably why, like,
our culture didn't really adopt it, you know,
quite as frequently.
And two of these, like,
you know, gym influencer, like, you know, bodybuilder type, you know, have a totally different
approach, which I think just totally took over.
Yeah, I mean, because there's obviously studies that support failure training and hypertrophy.
Sure.
And but we've always communicated that on the show of like, you know, that's in the context of this
short window, you know, and it's like at one point that that trick doesn't keep working.
That's right.
And so what it looks like is like, okay, so.
you have the group that, you know, is going to just consistently trade the intensity for volume and practice.
That's going to be this like slow, gradual climb. You see the, in the short four, six weeks, you know, you're going to see that failure training spike here.
But then it's going to have a hard fall off and then plateau where they're just going to keep, you're going to keep going.
So you extend that out.
They're going to extend that out six, eight months a year. And it's not even close.
the person that was constantly, you know,
tilting into over-training and training and failure all time.
When I learned about this stuff,
I applied it to my own training.
This is when I got strength gains I'd never seen before.
And it was because I went from training, you know,
failure, intensity to practice these lifts.
Practice them often.
Don't train at that super high intensity.
And also be smart about when you add weight.
So that's another thing, too.
When a scientist is training you or a coach who's a scientist,
or strength coaches training you,
here's what often happens with the athlete.
I feel good.
Let me push it.
And the strength coach to say, nope, nope, yep.
This is, this is, you got three more weeks of cruising before we push it up.
But I feel great.
I want to push it.
No, no, no.
We got three more weeks of training at this, at this.
Well, it's like you can only pull that lever one time.
That's right.
You know, once you pull that, I'm, you know,
going to failure or max intensity.
It's like, it's done.
Like, so that's where my whole, you know,
the goal is to do as little as possible to elicit the most change from is like,
I want to do as little as possible so I can save these levers that I can pull as I reach these little plateaus throughout this.
If I go all out, right out the gates and I pull all the levers at once, it's like, sure, I might see this great, you know, 30 days, you know, but then after that, it's like done, done.
And you know, it's, by the way, here's your more evidence.
So obviously we have a fitness podcast.
When people call in, there's a bit of a self-selection bias of people who work out and are fitness fanatics, okay?
nine out of ten times, okay, if you listen to our show, nine out of ten times, our advice is to reduce volume, reduce intensity.
Everybody comes back with better results. Why? Because they're doing exactly what you're saying.
They've been pushing, push and push. Overload. Yeah. And so we bring them back, boom, the body
not to mention, too, the other variable that I think we just, we, we need to collect to pay attention to is that a lot of these studies that were done are done on these athletes that are like full-time athletes too.
You know, and that's all they did was eat, train, sleep, and, and, you know, and play with these levers where it's like the average person goes to work, has a kid crying into a problem.
It's even more like competing variables.
Gets out in a fight with their husband, their wife the day before.
Like, there's so many other stress factors that the average person is, is constantly trying to balance while also stretching their capacity to train and push towards these goals.
And you have to factor that in.
Yeah.
They, you know, when you do this right, your workouts are not competition.
Most people treat their workouts like it's the competition.
And this is what the Soviets understood.
They're like, no, we're training for the competition on this date.
The training is not going to be like the competition.
The next one, I was not familiar with this.
Maybe you are, Justin.
Have you ever heard of Perlepin's chart?
Have you ever heard of this?
Preleppin's chart.
So this is by coach Alexander Perlepin.
He analyzed thousands of elite lifters logs.
And I had to go deeper because I'm like, what?
is this. So what he did, I'm going to read here because I was not familiar with this.
So it's a foundational guideline from Soviet sports science for determining optimal sets,
reps, and total volume based on training intensity. So he developed this in 1975. He analyzed all
these training logs. And he produced the best strength and power gains while presuming
technique, bar speed, and recovery. This is what it looks like. This is crazy. Fifty-five to 60%
of one rep max. You did three to six reps per set. The optimal total reps, 24.
So in other words, if you did 55 to 65% and you did six reps,
once you got to 24 reps, you were done.
If you did three reps, basically four sets of six or 50 to 60% or eight sets at three.
Right, right, right.
So the total reps is what you looked at.
You know, that's so low a volume.
Another one.
And at 55 to 65%?
Yeah, look at this one, 70% to 80% of one rep max, three to six reps,
18, 18 optimal total reps.
Doug has a, has a range there between 12 to,
24 but I have the exact number.
80 to 90% of one rep
max, 2 to 4 reps per set,
15 optimal total reps, 90 plus
like you're really pushing it.
1 to 2 reps per set, 7 total
reps.
Only.
7 total reps.
Wow.
So this is a chart that they used
based off of all these training logs
and analyzing them to discover
like what was the optimal,
what was the optimal amount?
What do you think the average gym goers is messing in it?
Like when you look at that.
They go by how much they can do.
They're, they're, they're, they, most of them are probably moving in the 70 to 80 minimum.
Well, I'm gonna say, this is so much more skill driven.
Let me, I'm gonna paint the picture.
If you're a lifter and you're working out with a weight that's, let's say, 60% of, of your one rep max.
Yeah.
Okay.
So let's say your max is, uh, a hundred pounds.
So you're working out with 60 pounds just to make the numbers easy.
Yeah.
And you're doing sets of three to six reps.
Yeah.
Okay.
You're, once you hit about 24 reps total, you're done.
Most people will be like,
I didn't even feel like it worked out.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I didn't feel like it worked out.
Yeah.
That barely will feel like a warm up for a lot of people.
Yeah.
They'll be like, this is easy.
I could do way more.
Like I should be able to push myself more.
Yeah.
So this is why it's so wild.
Yeah.
How it kind of breaks down.
That's cool.
I've never seen that before.
Yeah.
Next up.
Now, one thing that the Soviets did was really cool.
If you do any kind of pliometric training or you try to improve explosive power,
you've got to give the credit to the Soviets.
They're the ones that really figure this out.
And they are the ones that figured out what's called the shock method or depth jumps.
Yep.
So a pliometric, what you do...
He's all in super training that book, NL-SIF.
Yeah, it's perfect.
Yeah.
So what you do with pliometrics is you're trying to maximize the speed at which your muscles can contract with maximal effort.
Okay.
By the way, power is what makes you dangerous in any sport.
Strength is cool.
Power kills.
Like, if you got strength cool.
If you can move quick with strength, you're a key.
you're a killer.
It's really the acceleration.
Yes.
On command.
And the way Plometrics looks is you're trying to train what you want.
So like a simple example of Plyometric would be like,
I'm going to try and jump as high as I can one time.
Then I'm going to wait as long as I need to until I believe or feel.
This is usually minutes.
I'm fully recovered.
Until I feel like I can beat what I did last time.
That's the idea.
I want to be able to beat what I just did last time.
Yeah.
When fatigue sets in, you're done.
You're no longer training for this.
So they did the depth jump where they,
where they figured if someone jumped,
if someone dropped off of a high surface,
went down and then did the explosive jump,
they were going to get higher and got more power,
which is now you see some plan metrics all the time.
Yeah.
It's adding that depth jump,
which is kind of cool.
Oh, yeah.
That's totally used all the time in strength conditioning.
Totally.
I came from yesterday.
I was training,
and a trainer was training a kid,
young athlete on jump boxes.
It took everything.
I mean,
not to say something.
Oh, you saw them?
Yeah.
They're just doing it for fatigue.
Yes, dude.
just like sloppy back and forth like just get tired and then right into that into some knee tucks
and something else and just like this you're like not helping this kid at all when you're doing
that people understand when you're doing it like that it doesn't matter what you do no you're
not you're not jumping in place you are not helping that kid at all at all no what I mean is if you're
doing that in your workouts and you're picking different exercises to do to fatigue like I'm I'm
doing ice skaters and I'm jumping over the bench back and forth and I'm jumping out of a box
I'm getting super tired if if that's what you're doing it has
actually doesn't matter what you do because you're just trying to build endurance you can just jump in
place yeah or run on a treadmill or jump rope or do yeah yeah do jumping jacks so it's going to get you
the same get you the same place that's right it's certainly not helping their vertical you know it's not
doing that or their speed it's like terrible one thing i want to communicate about pliometrics because
there's obviously like strength training there's varying degrees of skill required for how you apply it
Right.
Plometrics is often communicated that, like, this is just for athletes.
But the truth is, if you lose your ability to move fast, to move quickly, you'll lose it.
So the average person should practice some form of pliometrics, however basic, because you will lose your ability.
Yeah.
You'll still encounter it even into, yeah, your 60s, your 70s, your 80s, you know, just to have the ability to stabilize even.
Yeah, they're like, yeah, decelerate.
But yeah, I mean, for the most part, the intention is everything with Pynometrics.
So if you, you know, the approach, like what your outcome is, like even for that depth jump,
like the real reason for it's not to just try and, you know, jump and explode.
It's how quickly can I get back off the ground once I touch.
Yes.
And so that intention and that focus in there is really what helps to trigger a more instant response, you know, from your
muscles to then produce force.
It's pretty wild how quickly you lose that.
That's a skill.
I mean,
I mean,
we're all familiar with,
like,
they talk about how a boxer,
his speed is first to go and then his powers a lot.
Like,
he'll keep his power for a really long time.
It's,
it's another thing when you actually see that happen to yourself.
Like,
I've shared the story of the jumping out of the truck
and it was like such a weird experience.
Dude,
I tore my hamstring because I wanted to go race my daughter in Hawaii.
It wasn't even a competition or anything.
I just took off.
Yeah.
Boom.
Tor hamster.
And you think because you're this fit, strong guy.
I could deadlift 600 pounds.
And you've done that before many times in your life.
You just go like, oh, yeah, I haven't lost that skill.
And you're like, oh, I did.
Yeah.
I didn't lose it.
Because my knees always exploded.
Like, holy shit.
Potential is insane, right?
But now that eccentric, the decelerating component is not there.
Yeah, you're going to have problems.
It's a skill.
All right.
So next up is undulating puritization.
So periodization is where you're,
going through delode weeks or times when you're training at lower intensity.
So they started that.
They're the ones that started that.
It always looked like in the past, like if you looked at our strength athletes in the
60s and 70s, it was linear.
It was like, keep going, keep pushing.
Oh, you need a break because you're burnt out.
All right, take a couple days off, come back.
They had structured purization.
I don't care how good you feel for the next three weeks.
It was planned out.
Yeah, it's it.
Like, this is the schedule.
This is what we're doing.
Doesn't matter to me.
I don't care if you think you can go hard, that's fine.
but we're going to do it this way.
And the results were just.
And I think this is so important for people to understand.
If you wait until you feel like you need a break, it's too late.
Yeah, you're already past.
It's too late.
You want to take the break way before you get to the point where you feel like you're starting.
I mean, it's a great point to talk about how some of the science that goes into maps.
Like we often get asked about why are the phases three weeks or four weeks?
Like when a lot of the research shows that up to like six or eight weeks.
People will see results.
You can squeeze more potential.
Right.
And so the idea is that we are forcing you to change that.
Before you hit that plateau.
Yeah, before you hit that plateau.
It's like, we're aware you could squeeze out maybe another week or two.
Here's one way you could feel this out if you don't want to get all technical.
Because I get it.
Like, people just want to work out.
If you hit a PR and a lift, the following week should be a deloaded week.
So hard to do that.
It's so hard to do that.
Psychologically.
Everybody.
Super hard.
Yeah, when you're, you're so high on that, like, PR.
The last.
The last thing I want to do
The best thing to do is to take a deal load.
That's the last thing I want to do.
I'd rather punch myself in the face.
You have to admit that every time that happens,
there is a party that's just like,
I kind of want to see what next week is.
Yeah, you're like, oh, I definitely.
Yeah, it's 10 more pounds.
Especially if the weight moved up and I'm like,
I could have done a little more.
Yes.
Yeah, it wasn't a grind to get it out.
It was like, oh, wow, that came up.
Nice.
I'm going to be 100% honest.
99.9.9% of the time.
If I hit a PR, I'm trying to another PR the following week.
99.9.9% of the time.
Knowing that that's not what you should do.
Yes.
Yes, dude, because you go into the gym, you feel good.
You just hit a PR.
Let's just want to see what I can do.
Literally, you hit a PR, the next week, go delode.
Yeah.
That's one of the best things you can do.
I think that 3.50s was a lot.
The first time actually did a delode.
Sure.
I got one under the belt.
Yeah, dude.
You know what, though?
That was probably, wouldn't you say, too, though,
one of the best systematic approaches to a PR you'd ever done?
Yep, absolutely.
So, I mean,
Like you were ready for it.
Planned.
Yeah.
That was more planned.
I think before that it was the training that led up to, oh, the feeling of like, well, I'm
going to really get after it because I feel like I can, you know, my strength is there.
Yeah.
Yeah.
To defend you and us in that situation.
Because that's kind of how that normally happens.
Right way it happens now until what you're talking about is, you know, I'm in my
lived here.
Man, I'm feeling good lately.
It's just like, well, today I'm going to run some singles or, you know, triple.
Let's see.
Oh, whoa.
Yeah.
That feels so good.
And then you're like, hmm, maybe next week I'll see.
Yeah.
That's me.
Next up, sub-maximal reps.
So they, you know, they were the ones that were doing like well short of failure, 70%.
70%.
And they'd focus on bar speed and technique.
Bar speed and technique.
Bar speed and technique.
This is really hard.
70% feels easy.
So if you're listening right now and you do 70% of what you can do, you're going to leave your
workout feeling like you waste your time.
This is how they would train most of the time.
And what it allowed for was more volume.
no burnout, more frequency.
It allowed for more work to be able to be done,
and they broke records, you know, training this way.
So it's pretty cool.
And then lastly, you have the complex contrast, contrast methods.
This is where they would pair heavy strength movements with explosive movements.
I think we know this now is called post-activation,
potentiation.
Yeah, which also is a pre-activation.
Yeah, there's pipette pat.
But yeah.
But yeah, I know.
I actually was teaching some kid this the other.
day. Yeah, he was trying to test out.
This is pretty cool. So, like, you do like a heavy single and then you go jump right
afterwards, you'll get higher.
To me, the, which is weird. Which is weird. The coolest ever is to do like a really
heavy deadlift and go do a pull up or something. You feel it. Oh, yeah. It's weird.
Yeah, it's a weird, like, it's a weird feeling the first time you ever, you ever do it.
Like, you can. Yeah, I did that for vertical jump, a test and I did like a heavy squat and
then went over and like just crushed it. Oh, that's awesome.
Speaking of feeling good. So I was looking at. So I was looking at,
up. So we work with ketone IQ. And you guys know I'm consistent. Like I'll use them two or three times
in a day. And I just love the focus that I get with them. And so I went online and I'm like,
do they do exogenous ketones affect neurotransmitters? And the reason why I look this up was because
I'm, you know, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I could be labeled ADD. I have been labeled ADD by a doctor.
But it does, it raises dopamine in the brain. Oh. So it increases dopamine in the brain. So for
people have trouble focusing, maintaining focus or feeling scatterbrained.
It's not caffeine.
It's not a stimulant.
You can take it before bed and go right back to sleep.
But the ketones, the exogenous ketones do put you in ketosis.
You get more dopamine and you get that focus.
Now, is that consistently or does the body eventually adapt to that?
It doesn't.
No, it's consistent.
Wow.
Yeah.
It's not a stimulant response.
I know.
I understand that it's not like...
It's just the way that the brain operates on ketone.
It doesn't affect your CNF.
So I know it's not like that.
But typically when you have something that has an effect like that on the body
where it kicks something like dopamine up,
the body then starts to adapt to that and it no longer responds the same way.
But in this case, it will continue.
That's right.
Wow.
That's right.
It's a dopamine that's part of that.
Focus feeling you get from it.
No wonder why you like it multiple times in a day and you feel an effect
multiple times.
Yeah.
And it's interesting because it's not, I know what it feels like to raise my dopamine
with stimulants.
it's very different.
This feels different.
No, it's not like I take it and I'm like, oh, I'm awake because I just have you.
It just feels like clean fuel.
No, it's just like, I don't know.
I just focus better.
And there's no crash.
No, there's no crash.
It's the dopamine.
And it's cool because I get this feeling for me to ketogenic diet.
Obviously with ketone IQ, you don't have to be in ketogenic diet.
You just, you can eat carbs.
You just take it, boom, you know, within 15, 30 minutes, you're in ketosis.
And you get that effect, which is kind of cool.
Seems like the stuff that tastes the worst works the best.
Yeah.
It doesn't take.
It's not bad at you.
No, they've got better.
It's a huge difference.
You know,
key tones on the original formula they have or is the second?
Have you ever had any other ketones?
It was like jet fuel before that.
Yes.
No,
I'm not going around tasting.
So I've tried a lot of different ketones.
Big ketone taster?
Yeah, no.
You know,
light your breath on fire.
Is there ketone bars?
Listen, I've tried a lot of different ketone supplements for years.
They all taste like you're drinking gasoline.
Yeah.
Like, not even a little like bad.
like really bad.
Yeah.
Their ketone IQ is like...
I mean, I felt like the first formula
was kind of like that.
That's kind of what kept me for,
I'm like, oh.
Their first formula?
This has got to make you feel really good
into that.
Yeah.
Their first formula was better
than everybody else.
But now it's like, it's not bad at all.
Yeah.
But their first formula was still better.
There is something to say, though,
about like a supplement that really works
that like it not tasting very good
that makes you feel like, okay.
It's working.
Well, yeah, because it's like,
because everybody knows the hack is to make something
tastes really good. And so then like,
just like, look at what happened with all the, uh,
the creatine gummies. Like 90% of those
out there are just worthless. Oh, yeah.
Yeah, it's just gummy, gummy,
like toddlers. Yeah, everybody's just
eating a bunch of gummy bears. Yeah, but no, but dude,
they, they take these creatine gummies and they,
they analyze them. Like 90%
to have nothing. Nothing. Yeah, everybody's
out there, everybody's out there.
How embarrassing. Gummy bears.
Still dextrous and that's it.
Dude, how embarrassing your fitness person?
Yeah. You're eating gummy bears
because you think you're taking crate tape.
Yeah.
It's just can't be.
Well, you remember.
One, what's, speaking of that, we haven't talked
out of that guy in forever. Where's he at?
Who? Who's the, who's the, uh, Dr. Integrity?
Oh, no. He's still around.
Is he? Yeah, he's still around. He's still around.
What's he looked like? He's still in the bodybuilding.
For him. I haven't seen him in a long time.
Number one, he was the first one to really promote the gummy bears post-workout, right?
Yes. He's still, he's still all over the place. People love.
Is he still, is he still, is he still with, oh, yeah, he probably has his own
separate. Oh, there he is. Yeah. Yeah. Super cool. Old pictures.
Old school listeners will know exactly who we're talking about.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Is that, is that new stuff of him right there?
Is that like, can you tell if that's, he looks thicker on that left, that left picture
when he's in his lab coat.
I love, my favorite.
He's got a supplement company.
I love doctors that love, there are the photos that wear the lab coats for stuff like this.
I know, I know.
Just put a, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
You know I'm a doctor, right?
Yeah.
Come here.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah, you got your stethoscope on.
Anyway, talking to my stethoscope.
I read a cool study that I sent my daughter.
You guys want to hear it?
Immediately sent it to my daughter.
I was like, why her?
I was like, you're welcome.
So here's what the study shows.
The father's handsomeness.
Hey, I should have tagged it while, man.
I should have sent it to both heard of mom.
The father's handsomeness influences the daughter's beauty more than the mother's
handsomeness or beauty does.
Is it reverse?
Furthermore, daughters of attractive fathers tend to have more feminine facial features.
Weird.
Say that again?
So a girl's...
I don't take on the masculine...
No.
From the father, huh?
If a father's good looking...
Yeah.
His...
Or let's say mother and father
are both...
Whatever, good looking or whatever.
One's not good...
The father, his looks,
influences his daughter's looks more than the mother.
And she looks more feminine.
So it's not like she gets a masculine face.
She has a more feminine
and rated as more beautiful
based on the attractiveness of her father.
Now, does the reverse work for boys with moms?
No idea.
No idea.
He's like, I didn't read that far.
So if I had a daughter should have a more attractive mustache.
How did you?
Is that you're saying?
I can't imagine any of your features being feminine.
That's hard for me to isolate.
Not saying you're not good looking.
You're good looking guy.
But I don't know how that would make anything look feminine.
Yeah, I don't know what that would look like.
Oh, that would be weird.
Remember that app?
I would hope they'd just take my wife's traits.
Yeah, I feel like Sal and I have more feminine-looking traits for sure.
Well, don't include me.
You're more feminine than I have.
The two cheeks, really.
I'll take that.
You got the high cheek bones.
I don't have fat face, bro.
I got the fat face.
There's no high cheek bones.
A little prettiness to it.
There's a little bit of that.
Yeah, a little bit.
Remember that app that you can take a picture yourself and then it would take your face
and it would make it into a girl or if you could take me into a guy.
Remember that app?
I never tried that.
I should have done that.
And then everybody's like, oh, that's Russia capturing our facial.
That was like that and the old one where they turned you into like this old man.
Dude, so let me tell you why that app creep me out.
So bad, bro.
We did, my family.
It was like circulating my family.
I remember what it was that.
It was like four years ago, five years ago.
It looked just like your sister.
It was so weird, dude.
I remember that.
I remember the picture.
Oh, it was weird.
Spot on to your sister.
It was my sister.
And I don't think I looked that much like her.
It looked just like her.
And then she did hers.
And she looked just like me.
I mean, it just shows you how good that the software was.
Yeah.
I mean, that's, you know, that was like so popular than went away.
What happened to that?
I think that it was capturing people's like, it was capturing people's data.
Yeah.
Like facial recognition and stuff like that.
I mean, people were still, even when that came out and people knew
that they were still doing identity is all in place.
I think it was the same one as the
old man one. Wasn't it that one? Because we all did
that. I mean, probably same company
I would imagine.
I did that one. My face looked the same.
Make him old.
There it is. It looked like a picture from last year.
Like my grandpa. I was like. I'm going backwards.
What the hell?
What's going on? Hey, speaking of like facial
recognition, do you guys hear about the latest conspiracy theory?
Oh, let's hear it. That grocery
stores are putting
little mini cameras
under their products.
So you'll see paper price tags under things,
but they're replacing them with these new tags,
and in them is a little tiny camera.
And what it's doing is it's capturing your picture
and using facial recognition technology
to start identifying you and then communicate.
They buy this.
They communicate with Amazon and other companies.
Selling you out to companies.
Have you guys been,
you guys see what Amazon has been doing on its, all,
it's streaming?
No.
Oh, so now, so on Amazon,
like a,
I watch a lot of sports on Amazon, right?
Yeah.
So when the commercials come up now.
Okay.
So say it's like a dove commercial or something like through soap or something like that.
And then I can add it right to my shopping cart.
From there.
Yeah.
I can go, oh, Amazon add to cart.
And it'll just add to your shop.
Just take advantage of impulsive.
Yes.
While you're watching watching the commercial live, why it's happening, you literally just
right then and there, add it to your shopping cart.
Wow.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Soon you just think of a product and then it shows up.
Well, or even next leg to this type of stuff is soon, very soon,
this is coming, if it isn't already happening,
is the commercials will start to change.
For you.
For me, to you.
Like, so we'll both be watching basketball playoffs on Amazon,
but I'll get ads that have caught my,
you know,
when you can compile,
when AI can compile all the data from all your social media,
searches,
hovers, clicks,
comments,
plus data that's with wearables,
that's measuring your...
Dude, where are we with augmented reality?
Well, I'm just going to say,
like, the ads are going to be weird, brother.
It's so like,
you're like, that's exactly.
They're pushing that so hard.
Just thinking about that, yeah.
But I mean, VR, too,
it was like people are pulling back
from producing more VR content and stuff.
That's because it makes people nauseous, dude.
Yeah, I don't think it's just not hitting.
It's funny because, I don't know,
I guess you see like movies where they tried to make them 3D forever.
You know, and then it just never, and they kept trying and it just never happened.
Have you ever seen 80s movies that were 3D?
Like, they're so dumb.
They will include scenes to try to make it more 3D.
Like, hey, have this cookie.
And they're like, put it around this.
Yeah, it's so dumb to what they mean them to try to do all that stuff.
Yeah.
No, VR completely fell out.
Like that.
Then the, the-
How's nice surprise by that?
Metaverse.
And all of some I tried it, it was like, oh, it's cool.
Dude, my algorithm.
I bought my wife, which she's like, don't do this anymore.
So I'm like, whatever.
I bought, I want to try to, I love buying gifts.
This is like one of my love.
It's maybe not hers, but it's my love language.
So whatever.
I like to buy things, right?
Yeah.
And so I bought her this dress.
And I don't think she liked it.
So I bought her a dress.
And I want to be able to do that.
Like, I want to be able to buy things that, you know?
And she's like, don't do that.
She's like, I got to pick it out.
I got to try it on the whole thing.
But now my argument.
Algorithms a bunch of women's clothing.
So I have to go in there.
Like every ad.
Yeah.
Every ad is just some new something else.
So I got to go in there and like I do the whole thing where I click on it.
Don't want to see this ad.
It's taking me like 10 times for the stupid algorithm to pick up.
Yeah.
I've had a problem.
So I do that a lot, right?
So for Katrina.
And there's so many companies now online.
And a lot of them are like, uh, scam sites.
Like I've had to go back and get like refunds.
I got, in fact, I got something right now.
What do you mean?
I bought.
Oh, yeah.
like, so there's a lot.
So you buy something you don't get it?
So a lot of these sites are just like fronts.
So again, algorithms figured me out the type of outfits that I'm buying for Katrina.
And so now I'm getting like bombarded with all these.
And a lot of them are like, great.
I'm like, oh, man, that's a great fit.
I'm going to get that.
But it's like all these off brands have never heard of.
But it's like, and I've learned now to go and read all the reviews.
Then I go online and I actually search about the company.
And so, but I had to learn the hard way of like I'd buy someone.
I just had something recently that I bought, I bought it for her.
back in January.
I still haven't received it.
Yeah.
And I'm like,
I emailed them and stuff like that.
I got one of the two items, but not the other one.
And I'm like, I bought this back in January.
Like, oh, yeah, that's on back.
I'm like, I'm like, I want my money back at this point.
It's like, six months.
And you have to remember that you bought it.
Oh, totally.
That's another thing too.
It's like, there's been times where I'm like.
Because I don't even remember.
Yeah.
So I know.
Yeah.
I try to trace it back and get that like,
uh, item number and all that kind of stuff.
I bought Courtney.
I was so excited about it too because it was like,
so random. I saw she's like,
she has like chimp tendencies,
you know,
or she just like wants to poke on my,
oh,
yeah,
my pimples.
Yeah,
that's,
that's,
that's,
I was like,
this is a good distraction.
It was like some head of this guy.
You put,
like,
goo in,
in,
in black heads and in,
and you actually,
like,
can physically pop these.
Just the butt.
And I'm like,
this will be great,
you know,
it'll distract her from trying to do this
to me and the kids,
you know?
And, yeah, it never came, dude.
It was, like, a total front.
Yeah, like, if I squeeze a pimple and Jessica knows that I did it without telling her,
she actually gets angry.
Yeah, Courtney does too.
No, no, she actually gets angry.
She's like, like, there's a little bit of inside of her, like, and I think she realized, like,
this is a dumb thing to fight about it.
It's rare, too, yeah.
But there's, like, her 15 seconds where I'm looking at, and I know, like, she's actually
irritated that I didn't let her squeeze this.
Yeah.
I mean, it's weird, dude.
Does Katrina do that for me?
No, she doesn't.
She actually thinks it's disgusting, which is, I know that's a very,
common thing with women.
Remember,
she's kind of like a dude.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
She watches sports.
Like, she's not like a,
she's not like the...
Did she play video games with you?
I don't play video games.
But if I did,
maybe she would.
Did she?
I don't know.
I don't think so.
When we first dated,
I was still playing video games.
When we first met,
was 17 years ago.
You guys played video games back then?
Not together.
I did.
She played on her own?
No, no, no.
So when we,
so, you know,
her, my best friend,
Justin, is her,
and his wife is really close.
Her and Katrina,
are really close.
When we first started dating,
we had my condo,
and Justin lived with me,
and he was a physical therapist assistant, right?
And the girls would come over on,
like, this is how lame we are,
Friday nights,
and the two of us would play video games
why our girlfriends went out and danced
and went to clubs and shit like that.
That's so great.
Just here like,
yeah, go hit the clubs.
We're going to stay.
We're a level of security is amazing.
I know, I'm not like a normal person like that.
We have no idea.
Oh, yeah.
You guys go to the club.
and go hang out and get drunk and we'll do something totally unattractive.
Over here.
Pass me the funnions.
Wow.
Yeah.
I mean, if you ask you, I'm sure that was probably one of the things that she,
the fact that I would, I don't, I didn't care about that stuff when I was secure.
And so, yeah, but yeah, we were doing stuff like that when we first met.
But only lasted a little while.
And then after that, it was like, I don't think I ever looked back.
No, you're going to play anymore.
Study came out on another study on what women consider to be the most attractive in men.
physically.
And they actually came out with some data.
I'm going to pull it up here.
Their bank account?
Nice.
No.
No.
They have a body fat percentage
and a shoulder to hip ratio
that they found to be most attractive.
So body fat percentage,
13 to 14 percent.
Okay.
Which is fit.
By the way, everybody listening,
it's achievable.
That's achievable.
Are you kidding me?
That's not even abs.
Yeah.
No.
That's no abs.
You're just fit.
You don't get a flat.
stomach.
You don't have a beer belly.
You look like you lift weights, but you don't look like you live in the gym.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
13 to 14 percent.
And then the shoulder to waist ratio is about 1.5.
So shoulders to waste.
So whatever the waist is, 1.5 of that to the shoulders.
I don't know what that would look like on a man with a, but that's a pretty good.
V taper.
Yeah, that's a pretty good V taper.
So I don't know.
Maybe Doug you could type in some numbers and see.
Yeah.
Dr.
integrity has it.
Yep.
I want to stop.
I wonder if there's like an app for you to, to, I bet there's...
Well, you can measure your waist, I guess,
then measure your shoulders and see if you match this, you know, type of deal.
Yo, I think I'm, I think my, you know what your suit.
So I'm 46.
I don't know.
My suit, I have no idea.
I think I'm a 46 on shoulders.
Yeah.
Yeah, I have no idea.
My waist is 30.
I'm like, whatever SpongeBob is, I think.
That's, those measurements apply to me.
Justice.
He's a refrigerator.
You make them a refrigerator.
Water heater, you're
You make up with,
Hey, glutes and calves, bro, you make up.
You say, where are you losing?
A taper, you make up in gluci and gas.
Everything's square.
It's stable.
It's very stable.
That's what, 1.6 to 1.
Yeah, but that guy's lean.
He's really, really lean.
Yeah.
You know, so you have to be less than,
they always have, it's like, the best V taper.
And they got a picture of a, like, body bow.
But is he like in that pose.
Yeah.
That's like, that's how Adam is.
That's how I pose.
Remember Adam's posing when he was on stage?
I think that was an average.
I like the way.
You used to, like, flare up your hands.
Yeah, what was that all about?
Stop it.
I didn't do that.
Yeah, you did, dude.
I didn't flare my hand like that.
You did something with your hands.
Just to, like, you did this thing with your hands.
You should shake out.
It's like you're getting all the feathers out or something.
It's good.
Dude, oh, my God.
That's so awesome.
It's great.
It's great as I saw how uncomfortable you were.
The closing part.
The worst part is how much I had really hated that part and had to do all of it.
So, of course, I'm going to get roasted by all my buddies.
Yeah.
We have to.
In no world, is there anything.
cool about that.
And you know what it's funny when I
talking about that world for a minute was
the guys that actually thought that was cool.
Yeah, that's where there's a massive
disconnect. Yeah, we are not, this is
we are not alike here. I know I'm doing it with you.
I know I'm getting... You guys, we're not cool.
Yeah, this is not cool.
My niece is working at...
My niece is working at the gym right now.
You know what, Doug, you can find an example.
If you just look up mind pump
Adam, it'll pull up...
Oh, don't do it, too.
Don't do it too.
You'll pull up a nice V-Taver for you.
No, no, I got to tell you.
It's check it out.
My niece is working at a gym, and so she's never been in that gym culture.
By the way, it's a great place.
Gym culture has got its own problems, right?
Working in gym has got its own issues, but I think it's a great atmosphere.
I really do.
I think it's, generally speaking, people are coming in to better themselves.
Staff is high energy.
People work out together.
If you've got a good manager, good culture in a gym, it's like a great atmosphere.
So I'm so happy that she's working there.
But she told me, she's like, there were some guys in the aerobics room.
And they took their shirts off.
And she's like, and they were like.
She hasn't seen that before.
And she was like, they were posing in front of the mirror.
And like, you mean they were flexing?
She goes, no, they were posing.
So she tried to show me.
I'm like, oh, those are physique.
Those are visage.
Yeah, dude.
That's what I'd be.
Like, I wrote, like, the gym I went to, right, back then was very popular for like men's
physique and bodybuilders.
And, like, that was, like, that was, like, like,
like a thing. Like after your workout, go post. Yeah. And like I just was not a like,
no, I don't want to do this here. Like I'll do it in my, I'll do it in my house. I don't even
want to do that. If I'll do it in my house, I don't want to do this here. But there's like a lot
of sense of, you know what it is. The guys get all aired up. You know what I look at themselves.
You're all aired up. But hey, it's for my sport. I got to do this. They think there's all these
girls watching and really just dudes like, yeah. It's 100%. There's no chick. No
chicks forever watching other dudes. It's always other dudes.
Bring your hand in a little bit.
Which I think that's the thing that every guy thinks is going to happen, right?
It's going to happen when you get looking like that.
But it doesn't, it's not chicks that are over there.
It's other dudes that are.
Yeah, way more respect lifting heavy.
That's just the way.
It's still probably from guys.
Truth.
No, yeah, as I said, I don't think girls care about that either.
Have you ever had a girl walk over?
You'd be like, oh, that's nice squat.
No, no.
No, no.
They're intimidated.
I mean, they'll make fun of you if it's small weights, so.
Yeah.
I feel like that's something you would, or I would do, right?
If you, if I saw, when I see a girl squat in like two plates plus, like, oh, I'll come, I'll compliment.
I'll be like, oh my God, it's a great squad or land you're strong.
Like, I'll say something.
But girls don't do that the other way.
There's this, there's this, you guys know I go to several gyms.
And one of the ones I go to is more like a country club.
And so the crowd is a little older.
And when I go in the morning, there's definitely a group of people who are in their like 60s, 70s, maybe even 80s.
Because that's the time they like to work out.
Yeah.
And there's this little, there's this little Asian woman.
And she's got to be 80.
And I see every time, man, I see her in there.
She's working out.
She's on the machines.
She always makes eye contact with me.
She gives me a smile.
If I grunt a little too hard, she gives me a thumbs up.
I don't think she speaks any English whatsoever.
But I so bad want to give her a hug.
But I'm for sure going to be creepy if I do.
But she's so, I love her.
She thinks you guys are in the same age category.
You're doing a good job for 80.
You can do it.
How did you do that?
I see you guys.
But she's like 410.
like 410. She's like this little tiny pig. Oh, I love watching it. It's so great. That's so funny.
Study came out on the happiest men. What group of men are the happiest? And it's married men with kids.
Yeah, of course. Married men with kids are the happiest. The least happy, single men, no kids.
Peter Pan, dudes. Dude. And you know what's why I'm saying this? I wonder if income plays a role.
And what? In that, the guy, like, you, you, you, you,
the guys that are single.
Obviously, we know the difference between.
Yeah.
But a guy that is single and is struggling to get by versus a guy who's single and is,
well, now also like, you know, the window of time in terms of it being like, are they older
or the younger?
Like, I don't know.
I would assume I'd have a different perspective as a younger guy.
Yeah, I'm sure they're not interviewing, you know, 18-year-olds.
Yeah.
Yeah, that kind of stuff.
So these are, like, within what you would consider married kind of father age.
probably late 20s and between whatever.
But the difference is pretty big.
It's like...
What's interesting about that, Sal, is that the single guy...
Oh, 22 to 35.
Oh, between 22 to 35.
That's pretty young.
So percentage of dads age 22 to 35 who are very happy.
Okay?
Married dads, 37%.
Unmarried childless, 14%.
That's a big difference.
More than double.
Yeah.
Or consider happy.
And this is important because...
Well, it's interesting.
have you believe otherwise. Well, not only that, but what's interesting about that is that that would
include the early 30 guy who is making good money who, like, he's also admitting that he's not
as happy. Like a lot of the, would you think that a lot of people like that would admit that?
Yeah. You think so? That they're unhatt. Yeah, they're unhapped. I don't think they would.
I feel like they, I feel like most of them would put on the front that like, I'm happy.
I'm killing it. Yeah. I'm flying all over the world. I'm hanging, hook it up with chips all time.
You know that that's terrific. Yeah, but see, Adam, you just said right now,
is what the media portrays.
How many 34-year-old dudes with no kids
are traveling the world
hooking up with all kinds of things?
No, no, that's a fair. That's a fair. That's a fair. That's a fair point.
That's a fair point. That's how you're talking about the 0.5%
You're right. You're right. So that makes more sense.
Most of them are lonely. A lot of those guys
are the thought that that's what it was going to look like.
They didn't look like that. They were like,
man, I thought I'd be flying all over,
hooking up with hot chicks and I'm just sitting in my apartment playing video games.
Yeah, I mean, at the high school level when I was coaching.
It was such a culture shock for me, like,
to see what these kids were like,
into and like, you know, like what your most popular kid, what they did on the weekends and
they were like starting Dungeons and Dragons.
They had like all these like little sub clubs that they're a part of and all this stuff.
And I was like, that's so interesting.
The popular kid was the popular kid that the quarterback, the handsome kid that's like,
you know, should be out there.
Was it in D&G?
Yeah.
Wow.
Or D&D, whatever it is?
DNG.
What's D&G?
D&D. Dungeons and Dragons.
You know, so it's funny you say that.
Survey of 2,000 Americans of Gen Ziers found that 39% of Gen Ziers
are choose social media over sex, at least sometimes.
21% do so often.
One in eight Gen Zers believe scrolling is more pleasurable than sex.
Whoa.
23% see no difference between the two.
That's sad.
What is going on?
It's a bad sex.
That's, as you say.
Well, I mean.
Real bad sense.
You're not doing it right.
Yeah.
You don't do it right.
I mean, this just...
So what does that mean?
Okay.
Yeah, let's break it down.
Yeah, because that means...
Because that sounds crazy to me.
It does sound crazy.
So you're saying that there's...
How do they get that?
Where I have this option to have sex with my girlfriend, but I just say, you know, honey, I'd rather scroll on Instagram right now.
I don't want to do that.
Is that what you're...
Yeah.
What?
Yeah.
That's what they're showing.
Teenage, young boy?
Young men?
2,000, 2,000 both men and women.
So here's what I think is happening.
By the way, according to another survey,
44% spends six or more hours a day on the phone,
92% sacrifice sleep to scroll,
20% ignore basic bodily needs to get more screen time.
You do notice how that has continued
every time you read one of those go up.
And I still think it's underreported.
Right. So what I think is what you have is a generation,
a significant percentage of a generation,
the largest percentage of any generation,
where they've just been on this since they were kids.
And so their brains are wired this way.
Yeah.
Which is different than us.
Like comfort thing.
Like I can get stuck on my phone for sure because it's addictive.
Yeah.
But I wasn't raised with it.
So my brain didn't model itself after this.
Well, yeah, it's not normal for you.
So even you, you can get caught doing it.
Yeah.
But you recognize right away how not normal it is.
That's right.
Versus someone who's been who's been raised with it.
And their brain is wired that way.
That is their medium.
That's the medium.
That's their normal.
So that's like, it doesn't feel weird.
Yeah, which is crazy because we're talking about sex.
But I think if they asked another study,
what they're really doing is suck.
Okay, take sex aside.
What's probably worse or what this is downstream of
is these kids are happier doing that than just having relationship.
Yeah, even interacting with real people.
That's the real one.
That's bad.
Is that they prefer to do that over being with regular people?
Well, I mean, I think that's an obvious because I think this,
what the study highlights is like they're willing to pass up even sex, which everybody knows is so
pleasurable. It's like if you're passing up something that is that pleasurable, you're of course
passing up something as mundane as just a conversation or connection to somebody. That's why I think
when we look at the data, I really feel strongly about this. When you look at the data at people that use
the most social media and its correlation to depression and anxiety, what are we looking at right now?
I think it's less, well, I think it's less to do with the social media and more to do that they're not
getting real relationship. What are you showing us, though? Yeah. I just wanted to see the
age range for Gen Z.
What is it?
It's 13 through 28.
Okay.
Currently.
So hopefully it's not 13 year old saying that.
Yeah.
Well, I'm sure they're...
Yeah, they're probably eight, they're looking at 18 and up, but...
We're glad they're passing that up.
Yeah.
So, yeah, so I think, I think that's what the data is showing.
When you look at social media and its relationship to depression and you're officially a boomer, huh?
No, no, no, no, no.
You're not a boomer?
You're not a boomer?
Oh, you just...
Don't drop me in that group.
I feel like I'm going to boomer you.
Are you a mollessing?
Are you a moll?
A millennial?
Yeah, technically, I'm an 81.
So I'm right on the...
I turned 45 this year.
Wait a minute, bro.
You're a millennial?
Yeah, no.
I wonder.
Yeah, exactly.
Wonder?
There's not a millennial ounce of me.
Oh, not a tiny...
If there's any difference.
He just tried to call me a boomer.
Yeah.
I think it's fair game.
Millennial.
You know what?
Hey, people get pissed off on the podcast.
I get DMs all the time and people like,
you know, you're a millennial, right?
When we just talk about millennial and stuff all the time,
people always.
Wait, what's above baby?
boomer. What is that called?
Silent Generation.
The Silent Generation?
Is that like,
because of talkie films?
Because they're dead.
Oh, that's harsh.
That's cold,
my mom's part of that generation, by the way.
I actually never knew that's what that was called.
Yeah.
Did you know that?
Have you ever heard of that?
I never heard of silent generation.
What's the deal with Silent Generation?
What are their characteristics?
They didn't say much, I guess.
I mean, that's probably,
World War I.
It seems logical.
They're deduced just down.
Yeah.
Your powers of the talk out of them.
I get paid the big dollars, man?
So our kids are
Gen Alpha.
Alpha.
Yeah, Gen Alpha is our little ones.
Okay.
Anyway, so our crisp power
is so popular.
Our new trainers, we're talking about it.
Did you hear that?
Oh, yeah.
She used this like a stiff.
We should, huh?
This is what you get
for coming through and getting trained.
I like the cheddar, which is,
I don't like competition.
The cheese one is that a very,
of all the things that we get sent to us,
of all of our partners, that one is gone, the fastest.
Gone.
Yeah.
Everybody's just eating those.
It used to be the beef jerky.
It's been coming out of the crisp power.
It is.
Yeah, it used to be the beef turkey, but now everybody's on that.
Now, you said this before.
I want to ask this again, because who eats it consistently?
Doug, you'll have it.
Yeah.
Justin.
You do for sure.
Yeah.
It's a snack processed, but it's high protein.
Does it still hit satiety better than it?
It does.
Okay.
I have brought this up before where...
Because it's what, 27 grams of protein, I think?
25 to 28.
25.20.
I've, I, I, I, maybe, maybe three times.
I've ate two bags.
Um, just to see.
I was kind of curious to like, but one bag is satisfying.
Okay.
And I, like, if you gave me, if you gave me a bag of pretzels that size, I would want an extra
large bag.
Yeah.
And, and the fact that I know that it's high in protein and it's a healthier choice for me,
there's, there's a, the barrier to go to the other one isn't very high.
Right.
Because you're like, cool, another 25.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, I would totally do that.
But it totally satiates.
Like, after one, I'm good.
It's like a perfect, perfect driving snack.
That's cool.
They should be in every gas station, dude.
There's always a whole lot of options, you know.
They're going to be.
They have to be.
They definitely should be.
No, I mean, that's such as it would be so smart.
I don't know if they've even tried to do it.
I mean, they're in Costco now.
In Costco?
Yeah, yeah.
I don't know if they made Target yet.
I know they're in Costco.
And they're in another big, big chain.
That's the formula, dude.
If you can create a really.
really tasty high protein,
like not for a high protein snack
because when I say tasty high protein,
people put in the context of things that are high protein,
it just tastes good.
Oh, and by the way, it's high protein,
you're going to crush.
You're going to crush right now.
And they were able to figure that out.
Yeah.
That's good.
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Back to the show.
Our first caller is Josh from Vermont.
What's up, John?
How's it going?
Thanks for having me.
You got it, dude. How can we help you?
Well, so I'm just kind of, I started doing CrossFit back four years ago, and it's, honestly, it's changed in my life very dramatically.
I've lost about 100 pounds, and I gained a lot of good skills, but the part of it that I really have enjoyed is doing the powerlifting portions that we do.
And I'm kind of trying to transition out of going, you know, I go five, six days a week sometimes, and I'm trying to switch my focus to do.
doing more.
Like, do crossfit, because I enjoy the community.
I enjoy the people.
Like, I enjoy 70% of the workouts, but I really like the powerlifting portion of it.
And I'm trying to figure out what kind of, like, what kind of routine I should kind of
get into to continue building my lifts up, which are, they're decent.
I know they can get better.
But I just thought maybe I'd ask you guys what you might suggest.
Yeah, power lift.
All right.
Here's a good question.
And there's more in your email.
So in your email, it says,
you're trying to transition from CrossFit about five days a week or six days a week
to a weight training routine while doing CrossFit a few days a week, right?
Yes, yes, yes.
Okay, so, okay, ready?
Check this out.
The appropriate amount of CrossFit per week, if you love CrossFit, is a few days a week.
Okay.
And then nothing else.
Okay.
So if you do CrossFit three days a week, that's it.
You actually get better results with CrossFit, by the way.
You'll get better results with CrossFit doing a three days a week, but you can't add any more.
Okay.
If you want to do CrossFit and PowerLift, you might get away with one day a week at CrossFit and maybe two days a week of traditional powerlifting.
Okay.
All right.
That makes sense.
I mean, it's a big mental thing for me.
Like, I kind of have to be there sometimes, it feels like.
It kind of saved me from, you know, alcoholism.
I'm like five years sober and six years sober on Christmas.
And that's kind of when I started thinking, like, I was up to 300 pounds at that point.
and I just jumped into it because I was wasting money at gyms everywhere else trying to figure my own shit.
I just walk around in circles for an hour and then I believe basically.
And all right, well, okay, that makes sense.
I guess I'd have to figure out how I could incorporate other things that kind of satisfy the mental need for the...
Throw on the podcast and go for an hour hike or walk on the other days.
I do a lot of like disc golfing too.
Or that.
Yeah, I love that.
You don't have to like, so a lot of people think when we talk about this, they go like, man, I like the five days a week of working out.
Like still keep that routine of five days.
You have this hour block that you go do something active and like fitness related.
It's going to be lower intensity.
That's right.
It's got to be lower intensity.
So let it be disc golf.
Let it be a hike.
Let it be, you know, something like that.
Okay.
On those other days and start to schedule it.
So like literally, if you like disc golf, like start playing two days a week.
Yeah.
Yeah, I try to do like three or four.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah. Make that a part of your lifestyle.
Well, let me ask a few more questions, Josh, because I don't want to discount a few things that you said.
You said it helped you with your sobriety.
You mentioned the community.
How close are you with the community there at CrossFit with the people that go there?
Oh, very close.
I'm not trying to talk to my own horn.
I'm like a staple of that at our group.
Like I'm very boisterous and I'm very personable.
So here, so look, I don't want to downplay that, bro.
Yeah.
That's very valuable.
I think that's the most valuable thing here.
I think it's more valuable than you lifting more with your power lifting.
Now, the challenge is, can we keep you from overtraining or beating yourself up or causing injury?
Because that's a lot of intensity.
Yeah.
But I think what you're saying, with the value that you're getting from community and what it's done for you, I don't want to discount that.
That's the most important thing.
In fact, of all the things you said, that's way more valuable than getting your deadlift and your squat higher.
It's way more valuable than hiking and listen to mind pump in your ears.
It's way more valuable than that.
It's the most valuable thing of all the things we talked about.
So what I would actually recommend to someone like you is keep doing what you're doing
and lower the intensity when appropriate.
Yeah, just crank it down.
So when you go in there, I'd say two or three days a week go hard like you normally do.
The other two days a week go easy.
Yeah.
And you'll feel better.
You'll feel better and you'll still be in the community.
Yeah, I feel like sometimes I go into it thinking that.
Today was a perfect example.
We had a shoulder overhead day and we had another shoulder overhead during the
workout and you're supposed to build up heavy and I was going to build up heavy during the strength
training but during the workout I'm going to go you know 115 instead of 155 and I got into the
workout and I after doing 195 the first during the strength I was go 135 this is fine so I didn't I feel
great but I just I don't a lot of times I have a hard time allowing myself to lower the intensity
down because like yeah I don't know it's an addiction it's it's wild so here's what you do
I got this will this is what you do you're going to involve your community so tell uh the
coaches there and the people that you work out with and literally tell them, hey, guys, listen,
I got a problem.
Two days a week, it needs to look like this.
Yeah, I got a problem with overdoing it.
Today, I need to go easy.
If you see me going too hard, I want you to come.
And I'm going to do 115 on overhead press.
If you see me adding more weight, I want you to come slap me in the face and I'll lower
like, involve your community, bro.
Seriously.
Yeah, for sure.
They've already helped you so much.
So let them know.
Say, hey, man, I got to go easy two or three days a week here.
I can't keep going hard.
So I need your help.
Today's my easy day.
So here's the weights I'm going to go with.
You see me go over that once you call me out.
And then that'll make it awesome for you, dude.
All right, cool.
Cool.
That sounds good.
I mean, they've tried, but I guess the slap in the head might work probably the best.
Yeah, dude.
Well, they're so valuable to you, bro.
I think that that's what's going to help you the most.
Okay, cool.
You know?
Yeah.
That sounds great.
That's it, dude.
That's it, bro.
Do you do mobility work, too?
I, funny you mentioned that.
I just, my mobility is pretty horrible.
and I just started one of the trainers there got me on to, I think it's Go Wad, something like that.
And you kind of, you do a test, and then it kind of builds you a mobility thing that you do 20 minutes a day to help with your, like with my lack of my, I'm more of like my hips are super tight.
And so I've been starting, I started that, I started that yesterday.
So I can't say I've been doing it.
But.
All right.
I've done it two days.
Is it possible on the two days that we're talking about where you focus on?
that where you can back off the intensity can you will they let you on the side of the class kind of
do your mobility routine because that's what I would tell you to do is like since it's probably
hard for you to discipline yourself to do that outside of your classes like make that a part of
your class is on the days that you're supposed to back off intensity also do the first 20 minutes of
your you know hour at the at the box do your mobility stuff that would really serve you yeah
I'll say yeah I'm going to send you prime pro that's our mobility kind of program okay
so you'll have another another thing to reference uh okay okay
Cool. Yeah, I've got an open gym patch there too, so I can sign up and just do the open gym those days as well.
And I love that. I have been trying to, I've been, it's really hard for me, but I've been trying to make a schedule where I'm like, all right, Wednesdays, I'm going to just do mobility.
I'm going to maybe ride a bike and just kind of not sweat too much and just take kind of an off day.
I'm still working on it. I'm going to try harder.
So, Josh, that would be the ideal. So this is, to me, this is the compromise I would make.
I know Sal already said to you that there, you know, obviously the community value is so huge.
And I'm going to say something else to you that, like, I think you're kind of aware of.
At one point you will be forced to become aware of.
There's a lot of times we trade one addiction for another addiction.
And it's easy to get caught in the fitness addiction because it serves us so much, right?
It's so much healthier and everybody's going to pat you in the back and so you're just, but you still have that addictive personality towards something.
And I think you recognize that in yourself.
And so it will eventually.
lead to injury and all this other stuff that will make you learn this lesson.
And so, but yet at the same time, too, I agree with Sal that there's such tremendous value
in the community and I wouldn't want to pull you from that.
So you just told me there's a way that I could still let you go to that CrossFit box five
days a week, but we can modify it to what I think would be better.
So what it would look like is three days a week, you're doing those classes.
The other two days you're doing open gym.
An open gym looks like your mobility routine and then getting on like the elliptical or a bike
and just cruise it.
And you still get to be a part of the kids.
community. You're still in there five days a week, but you're starting to scale back the
intensity and the kind of beating yourself up five days a week. And two of the days are very
recoupative. And then I think you get the best of both worlds. I'm going to tell you the two
things that'll protect you from taking fitness and going too far with it. Okay. Yeah. One is to
involve the community and let them know it's a challenge for you because you value it so much. You've got
great connections there. That's the best thing you can do. That's number one. Number two,
what do you do for a living?
Let me ask you that first.
Unfortunately, I drive a truck,
which is really hard sometimes.
That's fine.
Okay, this will also help you a lot.
Get yourself a client or two
and train them for free.
Okay.
Start working with maybe someone in the class.
Hey, let me train you for free.
I'm going to take,
that'll actually help you with yourself.
Okay.
I actually, I just started shadowing to coach there as well.
Good.
Good.
So you coaching someone else is going to really help you a lot.
really, it's so much easier to do the right thing for another person. Like, you're going to be good
at telling someone else you're overdoing it, but it's real hard for you to do it. And it'll help,
it'll help you a lot. So coach somebody for free and then just involve, let your, let your people
know there, man. Listen, I overdo it you guys. I need help. Like, today's my light day. Make sure
I go easy. That, and even if you don't listen to them, whatever, they're aware. And it's,
it's, it's so valuable for someone like you to do that. Okay, cool. Yeah, that sounds, that sounds great.
All things I've, like, kind of milled over from time to time. And,
I just keep going back to the same routines,
but I'm definitely going to put in some work
and try to lighten the load a little bit, I guess.
Yeah, that's it, dude.
Keep us posted, Josh.
I'd like to hear back from you
when you've been doing this for like three months
because I think you'll see a difference in your performance, too.
You'll feel better, you'll look better,
you'll see strength go up.
Like, you'll be benefited by doing this.
I know mentally it's difficult,
but you'll definitely see the benefits when you stick with it.
Yeah, and all for sure.
I'd love to get back in touch with you guys about it.
All right, Josh.
All right, man.
Good luck, brother.
Thanks, guys.
Yeah, when he said it helped with sobriety, and he mentioned the community, I was like,
ooh, let's keep them.
Let's keep them with these people.
Because, I mean, I tell you, dude, that makes such a big difference for some people,
especially what he's doing right now, like you said it, Adam, right?
You go from one drug to another.
What he's doing is he's self-medicating differently.
Now, fitness can go real bad, but it can also go real good, right?
It can go real good.
Whereas with drugs and stuff, not necessarily.
it's almost always bad.
But with fitness,
it could go pretty good.
And it could be a decent way
to medicate things like anxiety and depression.
Now you can overdo it.
There's a tipping point to that.
But let me tell you, for anxiety and depression,
fitness done right is the best thing,
according to the data.
Community, throw that in there.
He's got himself a winning formula
so long as he doesn't beat himself up.
I mean, I feel like the answer is right there.
When he said that he has the open gym pass
where he can come in two days and do what he wants,
that's, if I'm coaching him, it's, because you're right, I agree, like, pulling him away from this community that has literally probably saved his life is not something I'd want to do, even if I knew there's better programming for him to be doing. I get this to where you're going. And so to me, the middle ground here is, oh, this is easy. He's got an open gym pass. So it's like two days a week, you do that mobility routine that you've already know you need to do. And now it forces you to because you show up to an hour and there versus trying to do it at home and then adding it all by yourself.
Yeah, yeah.
Like, that becomes your two days a week.
Two or five days a week now is 20 minutes of mobility and low intensity cardio.
And that you're still there.
And you get to see everybody.
You're part of the community still.
Like, to me, that's the answer is that.
And boy, I mean, that's a way healthier balance.
Yep.
And relationship with exercise.
And if he can get to there, he's going to see a ton of benefits from it.
Our next caller is Kelly from Massachusetts.
Hi, Kelly.
How are you doing, Kelly?
Hi, good.
How are you guys?
Good.
How can we help you?
So I reached out because I am dealing with relative energy deficiency.
I'm 21.
I work out a lot.
And I have been dealing with it for like three years now.
And I just can't seem to find a solution for that.
And who diagnosed you with this?
I have a sports physician.
I see her.
Her name's Dr. Schley.
I see her.
And she diagnosed me a while back because my energy intake.
intake was really low. And I had all the red flags were shining bright.
Yeah. So you were under-eating and overtraining essentially is what was happening.
Yeah. So I was training like six days a week. And I think my intake was roughly 1,200 calories per day, which is not enough.
So I've tried, I see a nutritionist now. I've tried increasing my, my calories, but I just haven't. It's been a while and I haven't really seen.
positive change. So I just kind of am stuck and I'm not sure what to do.
When you say you've tried increasing your calories, tell me what this looks like.
So I tried slowly increasing. So I would add like 200 calories every few days. I would try.
But it was just so uncomfortable and bloating and I couldn't really keep up with it.
What number did you end up getting up to?
I want to say 18. But I didn't stay very long.
because it was so uncomfortable.
Yeah, that's why it didn't work.
What feels comfortable for you is actually what's unhealthy.
And eating an appropriate amount for you is going to feel like you're stuffing yourself.
You're going to feel like it's too much.
So we often say on the podcast, listen to your body.
But that's not a good strategy for someone who doesn't know how to listen to their body,
whose signals are off, which would be like someone like you.
Listening to your body is under eating and overtraining.
Okay.
So it's going to feel uncomfortable for a while, Hunt,
and you're going to have to stay in it for a while to fix some of these issues.
So you're going to kind of have to get through that discomfort.
And there's things that we advise, like stay away from the mirror, stay away from the scale.
Like you can't.
Focus on getting stronger in the gym.
Let's talk about strength.
I think that's a great metric for you to focus on.
Yeah.
Right.
That's kind of, it was confusing for me because I was gaining strength.
I was getting stronger when it first started.
Like I had cut my calories and I was.
super lean and I was gaining all this strength and I was doing really good and then I think it caught up to me.
Yep.
Now I'm like plateaued.
Yep.
And I have like I have a good training program for myself.
I think I'm a personal trainer too.
So like I know I think I know what I'm doing with how I'm making myself lift.
But I think it's just not doing anything.
You got to eat more.
Yeah.
Well, I let's talk about five days a week training too though.
That's what's what's the training routine look like?
because if you're training five days a week with me,
you'd only be doing two exercises.
Yeah.
So I initially, I cut down now because I realized it was way too much.
I'm doing like probably four now.
But I do work a very like physical job.
I work in a hospital.
So I'm like always on my feet and moving people and lifting people.
So I'm doing four days actually lifting.
And it's like a push, pull.
legs and then a full body type thing.
So to do that, be active, your age plus strength training.
Yeah, your calories would, with me would probably get you up to around 24,
2,500.
Dang.
Easy.
But you, we have to ease our way there, obviously.
And you would get, and you would just have body comp change.
Yeah.
I mean, that's me trying to sell it to you, but that's what you got to do, hon.
You got to bump your calories.
I do, I do want to, uh, you know,
to warn you, though, what this journey kind of looks like.
I'm going through this with Corinne right now as I'm coaching her through a reverse diet.
And when you've been low calorie and overtrained for such a long period of time,
it will take the body a little while before it responds the way you want it to.
It's not this like beautiful linear progress.
It's like, oh, I bump calories and strength follows.
And then I all of a sudden I look better too.
And then I bump more.
It won't look like that.
What it will look like is I'm going to feel uncomfortable.
this doesn't feel right.
This is,
oh,
I feel bloated all the time.
And it's like,
I don't feel like
I'm seeing much
change or difference.
The thing that you should notice,
though, is energy and strength.
Those are the two main things
we want to focus on
because the body composition
and all that and feeling comfortable
will come down the road.
Like,
that's down the road
after our body gets healthy.
It first has to get healthy
and then it will start to give you
the results that you want.
And it's not,
it's not this perfect.
I start this,
and then right away I feel that, it'll be a while before it,
and you just kind of trust that process.
Kelly, how long would you say that you were over-training and under-eating for?
Honestly, definitely over a year.
I would say maybe a year and a half.
Okay.
It took a while for me to, like, lose my menstrual cycle in that.
Like, I was doing good for a while, and I was sticking on that routine, and everything was good.
And then maybe a year into it.
How long did you lose it for?
I haven't gotten it back.
It's been three years.
Oh, wow.
Okay.
So it's going to probably, this is going to be about a year.
Yeah.
This is going to take you a year.
You're going to go on a reverse diet-ish kind of protocol for about a year.
Okay.
Like no cut.
You're not going to go on a cut for a long time.
And it's going to be reverse dieting slowly, pausing when you're too uncomfortable, not going down, and then reversing again.
and I'd like to see your calories at least for what you're doing at least around 2,500 calories.
Okay.
So do you suggest like adding $200 per week or like what protocol would you?
You're going to add $200 and then you're going to stay there for a couple weeks and then we're going to add another $200 to stay there.
I mean, here's, I would also highly recommend outsourcing to a coach.
I mean, this is why Corinne has me helping her.
She's smarter than I am.
She's very experienced.
she's a great, she's an incredible coach,
but she knows that this is challenging for her.
And so outsourcing it to me,
that's just going to listen to me regardless of it.
Because she's like, this doesn't feel right.
I don't feel uncomfortable.
I'm not seeing what it's like, yeah,
but I'm telling you to do this.
You just need to listen to me.
And so I would recommend,
even with your knowledge and experience,
like I would recommend outsourcing that
if you're open to it.
Because then it is, just let a coach,
let them handle that week to week with you.
And what it looks like with McCarran and I,
sometimes I'll be,
increasing, increasing.
And then I also am listening to her.
That's right.
And so they're like, I get over a break.
And so because I, and that's what a good coach will do.
Like they'll listen to you and they'll feel you.
And I'm like, and so I kind of push her, push her, push her, push her where I want her to go.
And then I can, I can hear it in her voice.
I can see how she's responding to me.
And I'm like, all right, hey, we're going to take a little diet break for a little bit.
And then I'll bring her down for a week or two.
And they're like, hey, are you ready?
We're going to go back up again.
And so it is a little bit of push and pull.
And there isn't like this mathematical formula of it's going to look exactly like this.
outsourcing to them, them hearing you out, knowing where they want to take you, and then together, you guys head down this path for a year, like Sal was saying.
Okay.
Yeah.
Yeah, I would definitely be interested in that.
Okay.
Awesome.
We'll have somebody reach out to you, Kelly.
You're going to do great, by the way.
You're so young.
You've got a fitness background.
Yeah.
As long as you can get over the mental part, you're going to crush.
And if you're open to outsourcing that, you'll do well.
You'll do great.
Just like her.
If you just trust that you're in good hands and we'll take care of you.
and just like focus on hitting the goals they give you
and then and stay in the course and you're going to be all right.
Okay.
Thank you so much, guys.
I really appreciate it.
You got it, Kelly.
Meet you.
Yeah.
Thank you.
Hopefully we'll see you.
Yeah,
that's right.
I'd love for to circle back with you too.
See here it's going.
Yeah, definitely.
We will.
All right, Kelly.
Thank you.
Bye,
bye.
I mean,
we said this off air,
but it's funny how they give a clinical name to it,
not eating enough and overtraining.
Yeah.
I haven't heard that term actually before.
What,
What it refers to is like losing your menstrual.
Female athletes see this a lot.
Yeah.
They lose their menstrual cycle quite often.
It's so common that oftentimes coaches are like, yeah, it's normal.
You know, keep going.
Type of deal.
That's a sign.
I know.
Not necessarily a good sign.
Not a good one.
But yeah, I mean, you know, she's 21.
Her body's going to respond for the, I mean, I'm very confidence.
It's not going to be as hard as it can be sometimes with someone.
Oh, yeah.
But it's going to be a year of slowly increasing your calories.
It needs to be uncomfortable.
Well, it is.
And the hard part about this is that, like I said, is,
you do the work that you're supposed to do,
and you don't necessarily see the results you want right away.
And so you have to accept that.
Listen,
you have been beating up or abusing your body
for an extended period of time.
It's going to take an extended period of time
for your body to get healthy and then respond.
This is the repair process.
Right.
Respond the way you want to.
So really the focus is not related to scale,
the way I look, any of those things.
Right now, let's get our body healthy.
Yep.
And so a huge win is the period coming back.
And in fact,
I'm coaching someone like this and saying like,
we shouldn't expect any great aesthetic results
until we get that.
So let's go get that.
And we can fix that. I know we can fix that.
I know what that looks like.
And so let's get there first.
Then that's a good sign.
We continue to move the direction.
And then we'll start to look and see those things.
Our next caller is Ted from Indiana.
What's up, Ted?
How you doing, Ted?
Hey, what's up, guys?
So thanks for having me.
I'll just go ahead and read my question,
even though it doesn't apply as much as it was going to.
Okay.
My work schedule is about to change where I'm going to have very little sleep and time to work out.
I'll have one, maybe two days.
I'm a little anxious about my work, home sleep balance because of how wildly my days are going to fluctuate.
I really just need some pointers on how to stay consistent, not just with exercise and sleep,
but also with my family.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
So the schedule was going to be 35 hours on and then about a day off, then 15 hours on,
then a day off, and then another 35 hours on and a day off.
I'm a truck driver.
I deliver.
Okay.
And it's a cyclical sleep schedule on those three days.
I was really just wondering like the best way to kind of go about that.
I'm not so much worried about exercise and stuff,
but I really am worried about sleep.
That's a really great question.
And they go hand at hand, though, just so you know,
because sometimes when you have like a point of time in your life like this,
what healthy looks like, strength training might be only one day a week
or an exercise or two a day, just really.
So it does, because if you do too much on the workout, it's going to impact sleep.
And so the workouts need to be look like what complements me getting better sleep versus, I know I can work out this many days.
It's more like, okay, what allows me to get better sleep?
And so it starts to look more like that for that type of a schedule.
Ted, explain the cyclic sleep schedule.
Give me some more details.
So you're sleeping in the bus.
of the tractor while the other person drives.
And then you wake up when you get to the stop and you deliver all the product.
You're on a hand cart loading the cart up running down the ramp into the store, back up.
And then that goes on for 45 minutes maybe.
And then you hop back in the tractor.
You get back in the bunk and you take maybe an hour and a half, two hour nap to your next stop.
And you and the driver switch off.
doing that throughout the day.
Now, like I said, it doesn't apply to me so much now because my schedule
changed twice since I sent the question in, but it could apply in the future,
so I still appreciate it.
Do you get, do you ever, do you get like a full eight hours at any point when you're doing that?
No.
Okay.
It's, it's, um, yeah, it's pretty, pretty rough whenever it comes to sleep on those days.
I am able to make it up.
on my off days.
But yeah, no, not really.
You don't get eight hours.
And now when you wake up, are you awake enough to be able to do your work?
Or do you find yourself groggy?
Well, honestly, I'm kind of used to it a little bit at this point.
So I don't notice so much groginess.
Plus, I kind of implemented a lot of the stuff that you guys have already talked about.
Like, on the days that I do work, I take my 20 milligrams of creatine or my 20 grams of
creatine a few hours before I start my shift and then throughout the shift.
And I try to get as much sunlight when I first wake up to try to help myself get to sleep
whenever I am in the bunk.
I time caffeine so that it hits me harder when I am tired.
So I don't really notice a whole lot of the groginess, but I know that we're good
at pushing through a lot of stuff.
and I kind of know that I can push through a lot.
And I want to just be able to not age the way that I've seen.
A lot of the people that I do work with who's been there for 20 years,
their back hurts.
And, you know, they've got like all of these problems and stuff.
And I don't want to end up like that.
Do you find it difficult to fall asleep when you got to get in the bunk?
Yeah, I do have a sleep mask.
And I use the, I use the.
I use the sleep mask and brain FM.
Oh, good.
So when I get in there, that's what I first do.
And then I try to wear blue light blocking glasses throughout the shift until I have to do my part to drive.
That's what I was going to tell you.
So if groginess is one thing, but falling a hard time falling asleep is another thing.
And I was going to tell you to wear really strong blue light blocking glasses when you get out of the bunk.
And I mean the strong ones, the red ones.
so yeah not the clear ones like the red ones that block everything
because that'll help you fall asleep when it's time to get back in
but you're kind of doing everything right
now here's a deal it's brutal
so what we're doing is we're doing everything right but this is like as good as it gets
yeah so that's a really brutal well this is we didn't talk much about the working out
this is what I meant by they go hand in hand is like the one thing I would caution
you is is pushing your body in the gym really hard for
multiple days during a like a cycle like this this is like the time where our our training like you're
getting in there you're doing movements but it's not i'm not trying to hit prs while you're also and
i'd be more concerned with strength in your core and your posture and like you know really kind of
reinforcing that to counter a lot of that like forward position seated positions yeah that would be
my focus in the gym and then everything else is like complimentary yeah you know you could do you
put a suspension you bring a suspension trainer with you and
And when you feel like you're a little stiff or whatever,
you do a couple movements on there, more for mobility than anything.
I do carry a band with me.
Bands works.
I don't have a suspension trainer, but I do carry bands with me whenever I go.
They're both great.
Suspension trainer offers a little bit different.
I actually prefer it.
So if you can grab one, it's easy to hook onto something.
You can probably hook it onto the truck and do like Ws and some rotation and just
yeah, just to feel good.
but otherwise you're doing everything
I mean you're honestly doing everything right dude
yeah sounds good like
I kind of thought that I might be doing
everything to what you guys would say
but I didn't know if there was something else
that I should probably be doing that I'm not like
my workouts are I'm not really focused on them so much right now
like I if I can get two days in fine
one day and it's usually like bench
squat deadlift one day or something like
oh you're doing good bro.
You're doing good.
You're doing good.
So another supplement you could try is liposomal N-A-D.
So we have Roe nutrition.
It's a company we work with.
We'll send you a link.
That'll help you with the energy part.
It'll complement the crating that you're taking.
You're doing good, though.
Because you are depleting certain energies because of the sleep.
You look really healthy, too.
I'm assuming you have a pretty good diet then, too.
Yeah.
I don't, sorry, there's a tractor going by.
Um, yeah, I don't really ever eat bad.
Um, unless, you know, maybe once or twice a month when we go out to eat, like, I don't really think about it because, I mean, I'm with my family and stuff.
So it's not really that big of a deal.
But I'm pretty dialed in on my diet.
You're nice.
You're good, bro.
Your peers aren't good examples of what you will look like in 20 years if you're still doing that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
If you're eating well, you're straight training once or twice a week.
You're not drinking a bunch of alcohols.
You're doing all the things.
Yeah, bro, you're going to be good.
You're doing good.
Okay.
Yeah.
And what about eating real fast?
This is just the last part.
What about eating on my routes?
Like, is it okay to maybe not go the whole 35 hours or whatever I'm out without eating?
But like, maybe most of the day because it's hard to like focus on going in and heating up your food and then getting back in the bunk and eating and trying to go to sleep.
I would rather just go.
No, you're fine.
Totally fine.
Yeah, you're fine.
I would drink, make sure you stay hydrated.
So much better than probably what everybody else does,
which is get the frozen burrito at the truck stop and eat it while they're driving.
No.
Yeah.
Dude, no.
I've seen the people that touch the truck stop.
Yeah, yeah, that's what I'm saying.
Like, that's, yeah, like you're way better off choosing to fast through that time and then eating when you can.
And yeah, no, you're doing good, dude.
You're doing all the things right.
Sweet.
Yeah.
All right.
Yeah, well, I think that's about it.
I appreciate everything.
and I'll have a, well, I'll have Doug send you a link to the suspension trainer and I'll also gift you the, the maps suspension program so that you have something that you can do off the truck, whatever you want to, which I think it's about the only advice I have for you that. And then send them the Roe Nutrition link. Yeah. So we'll send that over to you. All right. Cool. I appreciate it, guys.
You got up, Jared on. All right. Y'all have a good one. You too. Man, it's funny. You're like, uh, man, people just, they have some hard work to do.
Dude, that's a tough one.
That's a bitch, bro.
Get up and like straight from his sleep.
They start moving crap.
And then, okay, get back to sleep.
Your turn.
While they're driving.
I mean, if anyone here, you're the only one that could have that gift.
To fall asleep?
Yeah, but then getting up and moving after.
Oh, I don't know.
I would be mad.
You also train early.
You would be able to do it.
If anyone could do it out of us, it's you.
Oh.
You know, angry I'd be here all day long?
I don't know.
I'd be in a bad movie.
I mean, talk about an exception of the rule right there.
I mean, I could see he looks healthy.
I can tell by his face and I could tell by it.
I mean, he looked like a healthy guy.
Yeah.
At that profession with that.
15 years?
Unhealthy job.
Bro.
Yeah.
But he's, I mean, he's obviously cares in just trying to everything and doing everything really, really well.
But the people he works with are probably not a good example of what he'll look like or feel like.
I mean, they're drinking, they're smoking.
They're eating.
Well, yeah.
They're trying to cope with it.
Yeah.
Just give me some French fry.
Yeah.
It's a rough environment.
Yeah.
Pretty sure I'd smoke cigarettes if I'd.
Oh yeah, dude.
Absolutely.
Just to feel something.
Our next caller is Alexandra from Washington.
Hi, Alexandra.
Hello.
Hi.
How are you guys?
Good.
How can we help you?
So I've got two questions.
One is program related and the other is sort of career related, but I'll start with programming.
Let's do it.
So I was a competitive athlete in high school.
And then after graduating in 2018, I kind of kept training in that same mindset.
when I was in college.
And then in 2021, I had this really weird, I don't want to call it an injury, but I, something
hurt.
And then after a couple months of recovering from that, I realized it was related to my hypermobility.
And that's when the way that I trained really started to shift.
And then since then, I've just had a handful of things that I don't really want to call
them injuries again, but I don't have a better word for them.
And I don't know how much background you guys have with hypermobobility.
or hypermobile
Ellers-Danlos is another
sort of part of it.
But it's like a connective tissue
disorder, so there's
a lot of body-wide effects, but from
a training standpoint, the biggest issue for me is
joint laxity.
My shoulders are the
primary problem area. That's like
the major instability.
So sometimes sub-bloxations,
especially in certain
positions.
So I just end up with a lot of like muscle
guarding all in like my traps and my neck extensors. Like it just all gets super locked up.
And when particularly activated or irritated causes like a lot of pain and a lot of restriction.
And then my right hip is also a little bit less stable in my left. And I think that kind of
plays into some low back irritation as well. And then the laxity also makes my internal cues
unreliable. So it's really easy for me to overextend. I'm not really sure what I'm feeling if it's
the proper muscle working or if it's like a compensatory pattern that I developed. Co-contraction
is also like a really difficult thing for me to catch when it's happening. And then I don't realize
I'm doing something wrong until I wake up the next day and I'm just like locked up. And so,
and like mirrors they help sometimes, but it still is a little bit, like it's good for external
cueing, but internal queuing, it just is not helpful at all.
And I've got like training and aesthetic goals, but there's just like this big
wall for me that every time I train, I just keep running into like, I'll feel good.
And then I'm like out for like a couple weeks.
And then it just totally sets me back.
So I'm trying, I guess, to understand like from your experience, if you've worked
with people with this, like how I know when my body is ready for more weight.
Because that's something I keep doing is ramping the weight and then it's too much.
I can move it.
And then how I know when movement patterns are solid enough in order to progress into
higher weight or reps or something like that.
And then how you're meant to approach strength training when your body can clearly move more weight
than it can tolerate properly, especially when I don't have the clear signals to do so
in the moment.
I know that it was kind of like a couple questions in one, but generally.
That's great.
Have you worked with a trainer in person?
No, I haven't. I had thought about it, but I've been having a hard time finding somebody who specializes in it.
We don't have necessarily specializes in this. We all have experience doing it.
It's another set of eyes, yeah.
Are you, what's your education, by the way?
I know, you're very versed in this, for sure.
I graduated with a nutrition degree. I went to Cal Poly in San Luis Obispo.
And then I came back up here because I, the path that I led me.
me on was sort of like dietitian in the medical field and I didn't want to do that.
And now I'm pursuing personal training after like four years of trying to figure out.
That's why you want.
That's why you want a specialist.
Yeah.
Are you, uh, you said up here.
Are you near us?
Are you up near San Jose area?
No.
So I live in Seattle.
Okay, okay.
I was in the sake.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Gotcha.
Way north.
Okay.
So your, so, so, so, okay, here's what's interesting about this.
When, when, when you have hypermobility, uh, some of, a lot of the rules
need to change.
It's the opposite of what we coach most people.
You know what you would do really well with?
First off, isometric is your best friend.
Isometrics is your best friend.
And I mean like not just like holding a weight, that's part of it, but also pressing or pulling or squatting.
Overcoming, yielding.
Yeah.
So like you're trying to move something that's immovable, right?
So an example.
So, okay, so let's talk about a deadlift, right?
So deadlift, you know, the traditional form, right?
Off the floor, stand up all the way.
Yeah.
What it would look like with isymetrics is I would do a set.
where I'm at the bottom.
Then I would do a set where I'm up more inches.
Then I would do a set where I'm higher.
So I would move through the range of motion,
but each one is an isometric.
And I would pull against a bar that isn't going to move
for 15 seconds.
Does that make sense?
So I'm breaking the movement up into segments.
And I'm doing an isometric with each one.
And I'm using force.
It's almost like you feel robotic now
with a lot of the movements you're going to do.
But that's like the attention of it.
It drives me crazy.
So like a shoulder press would look like this.
I get under a bar.
I'd put it on a rack.
I'd load it or put it somewhere so it's not going to move.
And I'm going to push against the bar for 15 seconds.
Then I'll make it go up a little higher.
Now I'll do another set there.
And so I'm doing the range of motion, but it's all isometrics.
Okay.
Gotcha.
Number two, machines are actually great for you.
Really?
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's true.
It's going to limit your range of motion,
which is the opposite of what we tell everybody else.
Everybody else, we're always encouraging full range of motion.
with someone with your case.
You're actually going to train like a meathead.
Yeah, this is where we typically will give opposite advice,
which is shorten the range up.
You know you can go further.
I actually want you to go shorter range of motion right now.
You do the two of those things, the isometrics with shortened range of motion on your movements.
And you'll stop.
And the reason why it's not the weight, by the way, too, that's making you feel that way.
It's the weight in those in ranges that's resting on the joints that's causing that.
So it's like you can still progressively overload.
the body and get stronger, that totally can happen.
What we just need to do it in a shorter range of motion, which is the opposite of what we're
taught.
We've got to teach the body to respond and create tension.
And that muscle recruitment process is what we're training right now and all these different
ranges of motion.
So it responds more adequately.
Yeah.
Are you, how tall are you?
Just under 5-7.
Oh, you're perfect.
Machines will be great for you.
So get in a machine, set it up.
You're going to do a shoulder press.
This is as low as I'm going to.
to go. I'm not going to go all the way down. This is the range of motion. Just like this kind of
limited range of motion. That's your strength training. And then you're going to do isometrics.
And that's going to help with your stability and around your joints. And that's honestly it.
So you're going to train yourself very differently than you would train 99% of your clients.
Yep. Yeah.
She's not excited about this.
Yeah, there was like I had been trying to do a couple. Like, are you familiar with, gosh,
I'm forgetting his name, but he's known as the shirtless dude.
On Instagram?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You mean Justin?
I'm sure.
You used to be part of move you.
Andrew, something and Kate is his wife.
And they have like a, they're both hyper mobile and they have like a program that I've been sort of working through.
Does it helping?
Yes.
But it also feels like what like immature.
Not immature, but sort of like I am starting too early in it.
It feels like I can do all the stuff pretty easily.
Like it's not making as much progress as I would have expected.
There are certain ones that do for sure.
I would say a lot of the isometrics and like the band work as well.
It does progress like pretty quickly.
But I do find sometimes like it just like I just haven't really found like I feel like I still haven't gotten over this like hump.
Yeah.
That I'm expecting to have like better strength in the.
Because my whole idea.
and correct me if I'm wrong is like because I have a large range of motion that I should strengthen it in those hyper extended or not hyper extended.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Or not the hyper extended, but the further ones to that when I do get there.
Not yet.
You wouldn't even play with that until, yeah, you got to start strengthening shorter ranges of motion.
And then you can do some light, you can do some light isometrics in those positions.
Because that'll give you 15% north and south of that.
So that's the benefit of doing the isometrics in those three stages.
That's the radiance.
Both sides.
Yeah.
So you're getting,
you're getting strength benefits further on than where you're stopping at when you do isometrics.
That's what's so great about them.
And that's the way you build strength at that end is by an isometric right before what you would do consider full range of motions.
And then you still get 15 degrees more by holding that isometric there.
Yeah.
That's why that.
And that's how you would get that strength there.
99% of people,
trying to strengthen you in a full range of motion.
Hypermobility, we're staying away from your full range of motion because that's where you get hurt.
Yeah. That's where you don't, that's where you lack stability.
Yeah.
You're lacking stability at the, at the end ranges.
And that's what's happening.
It's not the mid range.
It's the end range.
Yeah.
So that would make me think that I would need to strengthen those end ranges, but you're saying
strengthen that's how you, that's how you get that strength.
Yeah, we build up to that.
Is you come short of it and you create an isometric contraction there and you'll get 15 to
15%.
Yeah.
That's right. That's right.
Eventually, here's a deal.
It's a progressive overload in that direction.
If you do this well enough, over time, you will be able to train in a really full range of motion.
But right now, I wouldn't touch that.
That's why you're getting hurt.
So that's down the line.
So let's say we do this right, maybe a year or two from now.
Then you're able to go full range of motion and you're stable.
But right now that's not.
So here's what's happening.
You have a range of motion that you don't own.
And so, and you really don't own it.
Yeah. So we don't want to...
Ligger way to put it.
That's right.
So we don't want to play with that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
At right now.
Prime Pro would be great.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Prime Pro would be good.
I mean, because otherwise I'd be like, learn FRC.
That would benefit you a lot as well.
But like, yeah, for what they're saying, it's really, it's a gradual progressive process.
And to get those core movement patterns first where you generate the most force and kind of expand out is, you know, the...
Gotcha.
Yeah.
So are you familiar with yielding isometrics?
No.
So that's like where I, so that's where you're pushing or pulling or, or,
oh, again, something that's not moving.
So a really cool setup that you could do is you could put some anchor bolts into some
concrete, attached chains on them with callers.
Then I can put a barbell in there and that's it.
And I can pull a,
it's a great DIY little project for it.
It's a real simple.
Now I can get a bench underneath it, get a long enough chain.
And I press up.
I mean, this is probably one of the most valuable ways to use the Smith machine too.
Yes.
Yes.
Smith machine would be good for this.
I've seen a couple people sort of rig it that way.
Yeah, yeah, you can use a Smith machine to do that with bench,
overhead press, with rowing, with deadlifting.
A lot of these movements we're talking about, you can use,
you can use the Smith machine for that.
That's why that's actually, this would be a great use of it.
Interesting.
Do you find that the clients that you work with that or worked who had hypermobility,
were they able to make significant?
Yes.
Oh, yes.
Yeah.
Great.
But it was, it's like, you said, you've got a approach.
You approach it very differently.
Yeah.
All right.
Sweet.
I appreciate that.
And since you're going to become a trainer and you sound like you're really smart,
research isometrics.
Look at the data on isometrics.
This is going to fix you.
Isometric training is what's going to be the most valuable style of training for you.
All right.
Sweet.
Yeah, I'll definitely look into that.
I keep hearing that word bounce around.
I haven't really gotten to it.
I just have not really, I've been too afraid to do anything with like,
like any of the big A exercises
because it just is so unapproachable.
So I've just really stuck with like hand weights
and Pilates sometimes.
But even that I can like overextend it.
Yeah.
Yeah, no, no, no.
No, it's totally doable.
It's just, it's different than what you would do
with the traditional person.
Right.
Okay, that's good to hear.
My other question regarding personal training as a career,
I found you guys a couple months ago.
It's so funny, like for so long,
for literally four years, I'm like, I don't know what to do.
Am we going to be a doctor?
Am I going to be a nutritionist?
It was always something in the health field, but nothing really ever clicked.
And then I watched or listened to like a 20-minute podcast where you guys spoke about
like a couple things to know before becoming a personal trainer.
And it was like done.
And so I started preparing for the exam.
I'm sort of in a weird space right now because I'm getting married in like a month.
And so it's just like not a great time to be wanting to, I'm just busy.
busy, really. But after I passed the exam, I'm sort of thinking about, I mean, it seems like most
people are doing, like, the path is like big box gym, sort of like get reps with clients and then
progress forward. And I was just wondering if that's like what you would recommend or our, like,
can you apprentice with personal trainers or like shadow them? Like, is that something that's
I mean, if you got, if you know some, for example, if you lived up here, like, of course,
coming over and shadowing or, you know, someone.
of our coaches or trainers would be ideal. But I would, but who you shadow would make a big
difference too, though. So I would want to make to, you know, you'd want to make sure you got
an elite level coach that you're following. The best bet is to go into the big box. That's going
to give you that. The other thing that I would suggest if this is the career path you're doing. So,
like if NSCA is what you're going through or what do you is that way? Okay. Yeah. So it's great
certification. NCSF, NASM. Those are all great courses and certifications. When the course that we
created was to fill the gap in the need that we felt for coaches and trainers, it's more.
highly focused on building your business. And so what would compliment after you finish your
NSEA would be going through our course because that's more. Yeah. That's what I was planning.
Yeah. That'll really complement that because you're going to, I can tell already you're just to make
a career out of it. You're proficient enough and understanding anatomy, the body, stuff like that.
And what you're going to get from NSCA is going to be great. The next piece will be the business side.
So our course plus getting some experience in a big box gym will set you up for a lot of success.
that's great yeah are you you sorry go ahead no as I said are you gonna do you want to train people in
person or virtually ideally in person I mean I suppose virtual it seems like it's accessible to people
when they need it and it I mean I can see the benefit in like having more clients that way but
I'm definitely an in person kind of big box that's better yeah go big box preferable you'll be a better
trainer by going in person first anyway so totally yeah so we've got the gym that I
go to right now is the LA Fitness, which no shade. It's not my most favorite, but I don't know.
I know that you guys mentioned, it was like a podcast a couple weeks ago, I think, where you're
talking about like the gyms that Mike, Mike Mass stuff, I think, owns. Yeah, but we don't have,
I don't think we have a crunch in Seattle. And I know that he just bought 24 hour or something
like that, or he rejoined as the CEO. But it doesn't seem like the one that's available to me.
is that established right now.
So I don't know if you have a recommendation for...
LA fitness is fine.
You want...
That's a good big box gym.
That's a good big box gym.
What you're looking for from a big box gym is a gym that's got 10 plus trainers,
so you got peers.
They can feed you clients.
They're getting a thousand plus workouts a day.
You want volume.
Exactly.
It's less about how good of a gym it is,
and it's more about just practice for you.
Yep.
Like, this is, like, think of it more like,
this is more education for you than it is like,
is my career and I'm going to work here forever.
It's like, I'm going here to get the reps in.
And so a high volume gym is more important than like, oh, it's the best company ever.
It's like, I just want to get bodies in front of me to practice all this stuff that I've learned.
And that is what's going to sharpen your skills and get you to a place.
And normally what we recommend to somebody is the goal should be get there, get your reps in,
and try and become one of the top trainers there.
If you're one of the top trainers in a big box gym, you're ready to go build,
your own business or grow in that company or you'll be you'll do great. And that would be like a
you're on your own kind of situation. If you want to, if you want to, you know,
there's a lot of options from there. What normally happens when you when you move your way up
into being the top personal trainer inside of LA fitness or UFC or 24 fitness is you'll also
be presented with opportunity within the company too. So if you end up falling in love with the company,
there's a good chance they'll offer you management positions and leadership roles.
Think of it as a paid internship.
I'm going to go here for a year.
I'm going to do my best.
And then you're going to have a lot of opportunities and much more clear path of where you want to go from there.
Yes.
Okay.
Cool.
That's it.
Well, thank you so much.
I really appreciate you guys taking the call.
I wasn't like expecting to be selected so quickly when after submitting a question.
It's been awesome getting to know all the information that you guys provide for free.
And it's obviously changed the direction that I'm.
I'm going. So much, much love.
Did you have you found, you know that we have Kyle, our head trainer, uh, actually holds a podcast
too. So on our, on the YouTube channel. Oh. It's just for trainers. Just for personal trainers.
So it's, okay. Yeah. And some of our coaches come on there with him and they discuss, uh,
just personal training and growing your business. It's called the lead trainer academy. Yep.
Oh yeah. Okay. I've seen, I've seen the name. That's cool. Yeah, yeah. All right. I'll check it out.
Thank you guys so much. You got incorrect. Congratulations on your wedding coming up.
Yep. Thanks.
All right.
Appreciate it.
Yeah,
she'll do great.
She'll be fine.
Hypermobility.
The first time I had a client with hypermobility, I was like, what is this puzzle?
It's the opposite.
I was like, what's happening here?
I couldn't figure out, but then once you figure it out, it's like, oh, this is my new.
And then you just progress great, but it's a totally different approach.
Like, shorten the range of motion?
I never do that.
I know, but it works.
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