I originally was designing this 35-minute video as a premium product for my Multiply Your Muscle course subscribers, but after giving it some thought, I’ve decided to release it for free to the world.

You may or may not know that I was diagnosed with low Test levels awhile back, and this video is the summary of everything that I’ve learned over the past few years while correcting this… it’s PACKED with info you may not have heard anywhere else before and I’ve taken all the scientific mumbo-jumbo and distilled it down to practical action steps that you can start with immediately after watching the video.


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The car in front of me was at a deadstop.

I looked to my left, and then looked to my right. Off to my left, the highway median.  Off to my right, a beat up Honda Civic that was occupied by an obviously aggravated woman, more than likely cursing her luck to be stuck in a massive traffic jam on a Toronto highway on a dreary October afternoon.

Whatever rage that lady was feeling though, I assure you that I was feeling magnitudes more. I was swinging wildly between having heart palpitations and laughing at how stupid the situation I found myself in was. My flight to Atlanta was leaving in 1 hour and 9 minutes… and I hadn’t moved in traffic in almost 10 minutes.

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Keep Promise
 
Take a careful and deliberate look at the people around you.  Give this past week of your life a little thought. 
 

How many times this week did someone tell you that they were going to do something, and proceed not to do it?  Did you assume that would happen – that people would break their promises and commitments so easily and frequently?

This is the realization you should’ve had if you took that quick minute to think: you live in a society where the idea of a commitment is somewhat of a joke.  People everywhere break promises and their word to both themselves and others without a second thought it seems. 

Is it just me who thinks that it’s sad that the person who actually does what they say they’re going to do is remarkable?  Shouldn’t this just be an assumed outcome of someone making a promise or commitment?

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This post will be long enough so I won’t rehash in depth what I already covered in my last post where I go into detail about the main reasons that I ended up stopping the Warrior Diet.  Here’s a quick summary though just to give some context to this post:

  • My sleep was affected because I was forced into eating too late for a variety of reasons.
  • My digestion suffered due to stress and other factors, and I wasn’t absorbing a lot of the food I was eating
  • My energy and testosterone levels, while initially great, steadily fell due to not absorbing as much food as I should be.

After really giving some thought to these considerations, and making significant changes to tailor my own eating, here’s the changes I would definitely make if I gave the Warrior Diet meal plan another run through.

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Early last year I woke up one morning fed up and frustrated with the traditional bodybuilding dogma of having to eat at least 6 meals a day.  The day in and day out meal preparation, cooking, eating, and cleaning was wearing me down.  The constant time spent in the kitchen and at the dinner table started to feel more like a job and less like a privilege… and the whole nutrition aspect of gaining muscle was becoming a massive struggle for me when I had to balance it with university exams, income generation and my social life, all while ensuring I got my workouts in.

Feeling that there must be a better way, I started researching eating strategies that would still get me significant results, but would solve my problem of being a slave to the kitchen.  Within two weeks of research, I settled on a brand new eating strategy that completely went against most of what I believed was gospel as far as proper nutrition went for gaining and maintaining muscle.

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If you’ve ever told yourself one of the following, this video is for you:

  • “I’ll do it tomorrow”
  • “Maybe I’ll do it someday”
  • “I’ll just wait a bit before doing it”
  • “I’ll just do X before doing it”
  • “I’ll do it later today”

Check this out…

Passive optimism is subtle.  It’s so subtle that you have to pay VERY CLOSE attention to the thoughts in your mind to see it at work.  Again, passive optimism is the belief or feeling that things will get better over time, even though you aren’t doing anything to act upon it.

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