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Nigel Beach - Friendship with Wim Hof, Working with All Blacks, Hot & Cold Exposure

December 03, 202301:10:55
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Nigel Beach good dayy mate how it going
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Dom thanks for having me today mate
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we're doing we're doing so thanks for
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coming over you and I have been talking
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about this for a long time um you you
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legitimately have a busy schedule so
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you've had to back out a couple of times
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um I was Dick swinging so I pretended I
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had a busy schedule and dropped you a
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couple of times but we finally made it
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happen yeah yeah it's good to be here
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mate I've been seeing you work and yeah
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really appreciate the platform you're
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creating for so many cool people and now
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you get me which is less cool but for
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your listeners I'm sure but um I'm to be
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here mate absolutely none of that we
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we're not dealing with any of that sort
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of self depre self-deprecation stuff
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here um uh so I was thinking Nigel Beach
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this we'll do this maybe as a podcast of
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two halves so uh first half will get to
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know you who is Nigel Beach um then the
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second half we'll get info from you that
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anyone can use to improve their own
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quality of life yeah cool CU you're like
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a you're like a genius like a guru with
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the stuff um first of all uh who are you
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and what do you do like elevator pitch
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yeah so uh I'm a physiotherapist by
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trade um but I use that as currency more
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so Dom because a lot of techniques I
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have gathered from different areas of my
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life and my experiences um and
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effectively what do I do well I help
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people who are struggling I help people
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who are in pain um I help people get
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their response to their situations under
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their control so how do we control your
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situational response to an environment
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uh which essentially is how do we help
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people execute their skill set under
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pressure yeah um and then I also help
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train someone's physiological response
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to exercise which I don't think is
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really done well in the training space
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even now and then the Third Way is I
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look at how people move I assess to see
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is this optimal or not and try and
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identify causes for either pain that
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they're experiencing or how can we
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actually optimize their power output or
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their economy of movement and and
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execution of their talents right I was
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trying to um wind the clock back
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yesterday and think about how how I came
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into contact with you or how we know
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each other and I can't actually pinpoint
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it exactly I think um a mutual friend of
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ours J Reef maybe he talked about you on
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Instagram and I followed you from there
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but last year I was dealing with um a
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knee injury that was persistent and just
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wouldn't go away and you you um messaged
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me out of the blue and was very kind of
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you as well and you said you gave me a
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list of like exercises to film myself
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doing like walking forwards and walking
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backwards and a bunch of a bunch of
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cooky stuff so I sent you a a bunch of
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video files and then you sent them back
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like within a few hours uh commentating
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what I was doing with lines on the the
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videos and it was really nice of you it
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was like a like a free consult cool mate
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yeah well I really I do care for people
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really at the heart of it and I think a
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lot of physiotherapists get into this
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kind of job for that
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um because they do genuinely care and I
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could see your struggles with your knee
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and I know how much it means to you to
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run so um yeah I just felt I've got to
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try and help this guy sometimes I try
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and help too many people and but um yeah
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so that's why I did that mate and um it
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was really nice of you yeah thanks man
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it was really cool and and I am um I
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mean there's been no miracle cure um but
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I am back running again and um I'd say
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maybe like 75 80% yeah back to where it
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should be so I'm hoping with um
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continued work on trying to strengthen
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the muscles and the tendons around the
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knee it'll get back to 100 at some point
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but yeah I don't know yeah um but and
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then towards the end of last year I came
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and stayed with you for a couple of days
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for like a a boot camp and um we got to
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bond a bit further then and that was a a
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invaluable experience it was fantastic
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yeah that was great and that was with
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some great people too and oh my God yeah
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yeah so that was with um s had who's um
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an Olympic gold medalist in the sevens
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and she's also won the Rugby World Cup
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and Jack good you for all black and six
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six time Super Rugby winner with the
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Crusaders and so I'm from a media
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background and then in my sort of
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circles I'm considered a bit of an
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exercise Savage cuz yeah the bar is very
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low in media you know what I mean so
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they're like who Dom runs 30ks on a
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Friday what a machine and then suddenly
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I'm at your place hanging out with um
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these high performance people and I'm
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just a piece of
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[ __ ] I'm I was was so out of my depth
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but it was it was a fascinating iic
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experience for a couple of days just
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seeing the level these sort of people
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operate on yeah and I really when I do
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my performance intensives which range
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from 2 days to 5 days down in Mount
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mongui where I live I try and bring
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together people from different
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backgrounds because you can learn so
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much from different you know experiences
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that people have had so it's good to
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bring someone who's out of the sporting
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arena in and we all learn from each
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other's stories and experiences yeah I
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thought I was going to have was I
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thought I was going to have a miserable
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couple of days I thought I I knew I knew
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you were a big fan of saers and Ice
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baths and uh I wasn't I was dreading the
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ice bath but um it turns out that was
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fine um but I thought oh he's going to
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have me on like plant-based food or it's
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going to be no alcohol but you love you
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love steak you love the barbecue you
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love a good red wine and I thought this
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is my S of guy balance yeah AB
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absolutely um yeah cook over fire
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whenever I cook which is about three
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four nights a week um because there's a
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real something good for the soul about
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cooking over fire terrible for the
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Neighbors who get to smell all my
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charcoal burning I'm sure but um yeah
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and then red wine like it's sort of the
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oldest form of artisanal alcohol making
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so there's a real story behind that um
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so yeah I do enjoy my red wine as well
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so how did you how did you blow up
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initially when did that is there exact
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moment that you can pinpoint sort of
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like a tapping point for Nigel Beach
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sort of so what got me into all of the
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sort of different teams that I've worked
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with and all of that do you mean like
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yeah well I mean you've got a like in
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terms of like a physiother you you know
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you describe yourself as a humble
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physiotherapist and there's not many
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physiotherapists that have how how many
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Instagram followers have you got like
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8,000 yeah something like that I think
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you I feel like your name is quite well
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known I'm just wondering if there was a
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moment where it felt for you like there
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was a breakthrough not really um see I
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had a decade in London so I was working
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over there for a long time I came back
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and then um yeah I looked to start
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something here in Oakland but I soon
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worked out actually um I'd rather be in
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Mount mongui so we moved down there and
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um set up shop down there just started a
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clinic there from nothing um and I just
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pitched up to one of the lowest ranks
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football lowest ranked football teams in
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the town said hey would you like a
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Physio and they're like wow what you
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know your resume is you know you've done
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all these things with different teams
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it's too good for us and I said no just
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about you know helping people out and
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then so that's where I started my clinic
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from that's really what generated my
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clinic and then um yeah I think just
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Word of Mouth it just progressively grew
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and then um yeah I just think I only
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started Instagram a couple of years ago
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and um you I'm 46 so I wasn't in that
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sort of mode you know we're both Boomers
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yeah so didn't come easy I was still
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sending faxes to people um yeah so I
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think it was just Progressive and then I
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just started working with really cool
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people who had large followings and then
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they gave testimony like art green for
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example and um Logan dods Danny Robinson
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and then their followers were attracted
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to some of this work that I was doing um
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because there really wasn't anyone in
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that space for them to learn from I
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guess yeah yeah oh you're doing great
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things and um yeah so many people speak
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so highly of you uh I by chance um
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listened to a podcast the other day that
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Bowden Barrett was on and he was was
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singing your Praises oh was he oh cool
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okay so there's um you you're highly
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respected with a lot of these high
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performance athletes they swear by you
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and I I wonder if um um like from the
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team perspective a lot of um Team like
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management or the hierarchy think you're
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about kooki yeah yeah do do they like
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sort of alternative little bit weird
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little bit out there yeah but it's kind
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of good because they've already got team
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physios um so I'm I'm I pose no threat
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to them because I really don't want
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their job don't want to be the All
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Blacks team physio because I don't want
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to be away from my family like I'm not
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actually the best at being that kind of
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physio so there's no real threat to them
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so for example I'm up here at the moment
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um you know with your blacks and Pete is
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the physio there he's been there for 18
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years we have a great relationship we
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totally respect each other's work so he
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is very welcoming and enabling of my
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work so it's really good um I think yes
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some coaches who haven't been exposed to
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this kind of work before um they can
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find it a little bit difficult to
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understand and the problem is they
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actually need to do it themselves to
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feel it to understand it so I think
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really a lot of the work needs to be
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done on the coaches and management sta
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first to if you really want to get a
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great team connection what I tend to do
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now I do work with some teams but more
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so it's the individuals within those
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teams right which are seeking out that
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top 2% they're really my nowadays well
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yeah that's what we were talking about
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before when we met um December last year
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for like a two-day retreat at your house
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with s Hy and Jack goodu um CER was at
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the end of a epic year um she was on a
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break uh Jack Goodhue in between all
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black seasons and Super Rugby season he
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was on a break as well and they just
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came to you because they wanted to be
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there yeah yeah and those those are the
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ones like you look at Cody Taylor you
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know he's I've known Cody for four years
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now we've probably worked together for
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probably two and a half to three years a
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little bit off and on in in times but he
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they had a bye for the Crusaders
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everyone goes away and plays golf um or
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they go on holiday Cody brought his
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whole family up to the Mount we had a
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5-day intensive up at the mount
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interwined with his family you know
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coming and going so um those are the
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people like and you look at Cody's year
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he's been phenomenal it doesn't happen
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by accident because talent and skill
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will only get you so far yeah and when
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you go through some adversity that's
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when all of that starts to crumble so
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you've I really admire Cody he's he's a
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great friend and those guys that are
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taking on the work they're the ones that
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have probably been at it a little bit
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longer um and they might have gone
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through some adversity whether that be
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selection um or whether that be injury
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um yeah and they sort of know a little
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bit about what it's like to lose that
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Peak Performance or being at the top and
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then they want it back yeah so well this
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is this is one thing that um um I F
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found quite compelling with you uh last
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year like I went through numerous
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physiotherapists and and they were all
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well-meaning and their advice came from
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a professional and educated place but a
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lot of them said to me if it hurts when
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you run and it doesn't generally hurt
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otherwise just don't run yeah and I
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tried to articulate to them that you
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running is quite an important part of my
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life and yeah it's like a Cornerstone
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for my mental health and you you never
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discuss that you were never like
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shrugging your shoulders saying well
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yeah maybe just don't run yeah exactly I
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really really appreciated and respected
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that cool thanks mate and I think you
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know we we do get limits put Upon Us by
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people in Authority or power in the
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medical sense whether that be from
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surgeons telling us what we can and
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can't do for example I was told I could
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never run again um you know I was told
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we could never have children so all of
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these things that get put Upon Us by
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higher powers and I think really it's a
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lack of to to me mate I know they're all
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well-meaning but I think to me that's a
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little bit lazy it's like well why not
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do we tell Cody Taylor he shouldn't
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really play rugby because he might get a
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head knock or you know no you want to
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try and optimize why they are not doing
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something at their best and how can we
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get them back there um it's like with
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Crossfit you remember the CrossFit craze
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yeah of course yeah massive so many
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physios hated CrossFit I like don't do
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it but there is a massive like there's
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so many reasons we do exercise
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and so I actually took a room at a
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CrossFit gym and I planted one of my
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physios over there to help them still
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continue to train because I saw the
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community CrossFit was building I saw
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the effects on people's mental health
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and the connection that it gave people
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um so yeah we've got to try and look
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Beyond you know I don't do this if this
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happens rather than how can we actually
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make that work so from from what I look
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at I look at okay why is a site in in
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pain why is a site in pain and it's
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typically not because of a dysfunction
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at that site it's normally improper
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loading somewhere else which is
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directing too much load into that sight
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of pain so that's what I try and work
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out okay so let's go right back why why
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physiotherapy so you're you're a kid
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from TS y That's right just just Mom and
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Dad and one brother yeah one brother
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Chris and very fortunate to have he's
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just down the road and Pap I and my mom
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and dad are in Mount [ __ ] too so the
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whole family the beaches love the beach
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they do love the beach so why why
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physiotherapy so you're you're in your
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teenage years at school mate I I wanted
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to be a physio since I was 11 years old
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that is so Random did you did you go to
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a physio at 10 or 11 yeah I did I was I
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was in all the rep teams for hockey so
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um I did have my time on the physio
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table there and I was just fascinated
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with the whole the whole thing you know
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healing um and I was always the guy
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making the first aid kits you know when
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we go away on holiday always prepared
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you know and well family holidays yeah
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EXA as a kid yeah man what do you mean
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you know those Griffin stins yeah I'd
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always like Peck like you know probably
00:14:12
nothing useful but Band-Aids or um a
00:14:14
needle to get out of Splinter or things
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like that why didn't you become like a a
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nurse or a paramedic or yeah maybe I
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should have done that but I I think it
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was the physio side of it which I was
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drawn to because of my own experiences
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with physio so um I went you know and
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from yeah from the age of 11 and that's
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all I ever wanted to be M um all of my
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you know essays and assignments that had
00:14:37
my own free choice through either
00:14:39
intermediate or high school was done on
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what is physiotherapy or um Homeopathy I
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remember I did assignment on and then
00:14:48
not only that I went and spent time with
00:14:50
physios in practice and not just in
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private practice but in Orthopedics at
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hospital or with um posttop in hospital
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so maybe the yeah different facets of
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physio just to try and learn it right
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yeah okay so you study physio what's
00:15:06
involved there how many years it's four
00:15:08
years four year degree um and then I
00:15:11
came out of that degree and then I
00:15:13
thought well I don't know anything so
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then um much to my you know my parents
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eyebrows being raised because they
00:15:19
funded me through these next courses um
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I went and did all the courses I could
00:15:24
do on Physiotherapy and then I went and
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did a postgrad in Sports physiotherapy
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so that took another two
00:15:31
years um so I got yeah and I just that
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thirst for knowledge has continued I
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I've spent so much money on courses and
00:15:39
learning um and now I'm 20 24 years in
00:15:44
and yeah I still keep that I still
00:15:46
maintain a constant thirst for knowledge
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and learning so um came out of the
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postgrad I was I had some great mentors
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here I missed out on the New Zealand
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Sevens job as their physiotherapist IST
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so I thought right I'll go overseas the
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old big OE and um who was that was that
00:16:03
when Gordon tens was still the coach of
00:16:05
the sevens he was the coach what year
00:16:06
was this what are we talking that would
00:16:08
have been early 2000s yeah that might
00:16:11
have been 01 2001 maybe um wow that
00:16:14
would have been a hell of a team yeah
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Christian Ken Jon lomu well yeah all the
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superstars and um yeah it was it was
00:16:21
really good it was a really interesting
00:16:23
experience to interview I think it was
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who was there was Doc Mayu there Kevin
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McCoy was physio at the time and and uh
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Gordon titens yeah yeah Gordon Gordon
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titens very effective coaching style but
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I feel like in um under the 2023 lens um
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he'd probably be called a bully or I
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don't
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know I I don't think his coaching style
00:16:45
would translate well now but so
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effective yeah well he he
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really well I think he was really one of
00:16:51
the first coaches now I've never
00:16:52
experienced his coaching or or seen into
00:16:55
it but just from talking to some of the
00:16:56
players who played under him um
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he was biger around Fitness wasn't he
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massive massive famous for um getting
00:17:03
these guys that were superstars of the
00:17:05
game like vomiting or almost crying on
00:17:06
the first day of his you know preseason
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Boot Camp or whatever yeah just drilled
00:17:11
them so hard but they were the they were
00:17:13
the along with FG like the best team
00:17:15
around at the time yeah they were and
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they also had that ability to um when
00:17:21
when they were down in the last 2
00:17:22
minutes which is what Fitness really
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does doesn't it it gives you the
00:17:25
opportunity to come from behind and be
00:17:29
good in the last two minutes when the
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other guys are flagging yeah okay so so
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you're quite young in your career at
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that point so you miss out on that job
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then what then I throw your toys and go
00:17:36
overseas no I I didn't really um they
00:17:40
gave very good praise and um you know
00:17:43
complimented me on the interview and it
00:17:45
was a good friend of mine that actually
00:17:47
got the role so I don't really think I
00:17:50
yeah I wasn't upset about that I just
00:17:52
thought right what next by the way I was
00:17:54
kidding about that I've um I've spent
00:17:56
quite a bit of time with you and I've
00:17:57
never seen you like yeah you you don't
00:18:00
get upset about anything yeah I've never
00:18:02
seen you raise your voice even when you
00:18:03
when when you're you're at your house
00:18:05
and you know your kids are being tirant
00:18:06
you never Raise Your Voice you're always
00:18:08
a very very measured and calm guy thanks
00:18:11
mate I think that comes from my
00:18:12
upbringing I never saw my parents scrap
00:18:14
it all um never heard my dad raise his
00:18:17
voice wow yeah so I I really do value um
00:18:22
my upbringing to a lot of My Success if
00:18:25
you call it that or um perseverance and
00:18:28
discipline dedication to my work um and
00:18:30
also love for people really based on my
00:18:33
parents um so then I thought right I'll
00:18:36
go I'll go overseas I'll go do my OE I
00:18:39
had a large friend group up here and
00:18:41
they're all going overseas traveling so
00:18:44
um my best friend he was Keen to go as
00:18:47
well so we went together and did the
00:18:49
typical southeast Asia over to Turkey
00:18:51
for Anzac day and then um yeah up into
00:18:55
London and then onwards from there and
00:18:57
it was sort of in the boom time time
00:18:58
there the economy was good I had really
00:19:00
good qualifications if you had a
00:19:02
postgrad qualification in London you did
00:19:04
really well you could step into any job
00:19:06
you wanted so then I would sort of work
00:19:08
for four to six months and then travel
00:19:10
for four to six months too so it was a
00:19:12
great way to see the world how good and
00:19:14
how did you how did you meet your wife
00:19:16
yeah so we met in London yeah uh Jess is
00:19:18
a
00:19:19
radiographer she's an absolute cracker
00:19:21
and um yeah we met there she was coming
00:19:25
back to I think she was going to
00:19:27
Australia
00:19:28
she was born in Australia um and then
00:19:31
she decided to stay convinced her to
00:19:33
stay for a couple of months um we got to
00:19:35
know each other more and then I thought
00:19:37
yeah I'm ready to come home now too so
00:19:40
yeah so we met over there yeah I I I I
00:19:42
bring her up because I think she's
00:19:44
worthy of a mentioned because um you you
00:19:46
have all sorts of people traing through
00:19:49
your house every day of the week and
00:19:51
she's so hospitable and so nice and your
00:19:53
kids are so great with everybody as well
00:19:55
so you mentioned before um something
00:19:57
about um fertility issues yeah what was
00:20:00
that was that on your side or her side
00:20:01
that was on her side in the sense of um
00:20:04
she really struggled with endometriosis
00:20:06
okay for a long time since about 16
00:20:08
years old um and she had five surgeries
00:20:12
to try and remove this endometriosis
00:20:15
which is basically these endothelial
00:20:18
endometrial cells should grow inside the
00:20:20
uterus and those cells are responsible
00:20:22
for releasing blood in the menstrual
00:20:23
cycle in endometriosis those cells grow
00:20:27
outside of the uterus so it can be very
00:20:31
painful very disabling it can cause
00:20:33
adhesions all sorts of issues it's a
00:20:35
terrible problem that we really need to
00:20:37
try and Tackle better than what we are
00:20:38
now um and yeah I remember she had her
00:20:42
fifth surgery and they opened her up and
00:20:44
just closed her up and just I remember
00:20:46
when the surgeon came into the room and
00:20:49
just said I'm really sorry honey but you
00:20:50
cannot have children and for a guy
00:20:53
that's gotten everything he's ever
00:20:55
wanted in life through perseverance
00:20:56
discipline and you know all of that um I
00:20:59
was like wow that was the first thing
00:21:01
that was token taken totally out of my
00:21:03
control mate um and then of course you
00:21:06
ask well what can we do and anyone who's
00:21:08
got endometriosis would be able to you
00:21:12
know um be sympathetic to hearing that
00:21:16
you can't do anything or maybe go on a
00:21:18
vegan diet or maybe you know these kind
00:21:20
of there's nothing really that you can
00:21:23
do about it we weren't even really told
00:21:25
what it was so if you don't know what it
00:21:27
is how can you overcome it you don't
00:21:29
really know the the physiology of it um
00:21:34
yeah so that yeah but hey there's a
00:21:36
there's a great story at the end of it
00:21:38
we've got our beautiful family now and
00:21:40
um yeah two kids yeah so I think I think
00:21:44
language is really important and I think
00:21:46
optimism um is perhaps lacking in some
00:21:50
medical spaces I think you got to give
00:21:53
people confidence yeah and I mean
00:21:56
completely different but like we were
00:21:57
talking before with my knee I think some
00:21:59
of the physios I went to see sort of
00:22:00
underestimated my um will and desire to
00:22:03
be running again yeah um yeah but the
00:22:06
the fertility thing that's something
00:22:07
that I'm um it's quite close to my heart
00:22:10
uh myself and my former wife JJ like we
00:22:12
we I had a tumor in my abdomen area that
00:22:15
was taken out and it left me with a a
00:22:17
condition called retrograde ejaculate
00:22:19
which means everything works the same
00:22:20
but when you have an orgasm um nothing
00:22:22
comes out but the so the surgeon that um
00:22:25
that uh took the tumor out and like
00:22:28
quite a lengthy and I suppose in a way
00:22:31
potentially a life-saving operation he
00:22:33
he knew nothing about fertility and he
00:22:35
saw me when I was recovering in hospital
00:22:37
like a couple of days after the
00:22:38
operation and he said to me oh hey you
00:22:40
may have this condition now it's fairly
00:22:42
common retrograde ejaculate but don't
00:22:44
worry um the fertility situation is real
00:22:47
easy now they just um harvest the sperm
00:22:50
and blah you know and he made it sound
00:22:52
really simple and I thought at the time
00:22:54
okay sweet is and all I knew about um
00:22:56
IVF and fertility at that point was what
00:22:58
you read in women's day like you know
00:23:00
she had a baby at the age of 70 or you
00:23:02
know Nicole Kidman's having quadruplets
00:23:05
or whatever and you do think it's really
00:23:06
easy and turns out this surgeon he was a
00:23:08
fantastic surgeon but he knew nothing
00:23:10
about fertility treatment so anyway long
00:23:12
story short we went through years and
00:23:14
years of fertility and didn't have kids
00:23:16
at the end but speaking to you now like
00:23:17
I wonder if there was um I yeah I don't
00:23:20
know I wonder if there was anything else
00:23:21
that could have been done to like
00:23:23
Rectify or change my situation Maybe not
00:23:25
maybe not it's really it's really tough
00:23:27
isn't it you know winding back and see
00:23:29
and I think that what we can do from
00:23:31
there is maybe look forward and say what
00:23:34
are some of the things that do affect
00:23:36
the ability to conceive and that's a lot
00:23:38
of my work is looking at the autonomic
00:23:39
nervous system which is that stress
00:23:42
State and the calm State and really to
00:23:44
have your body in an optimal state for
00:23:46
all sorts of Health not only just
00:23:48
fertility is to have a a balanced system
00:23:51
not be in that stress State too much
00:23:53
because our body isn't really made to
00:23:55
conceive if we're in this burnt out
00:23:58
stressed out situation because it's not
00:24:01
going to be doing harm uh not be going
00:24:03
to be doing benefit for a baby to be
00:24:05
brought up in that environment because
00:24:07
what if there's a famine going on or war
00:24:09
or something like that so um I think
00:24:13
yeah the more we can educate ourselves
00:24:15
on the role of the autonomic nervous
00:24:16
system in Health Plus also stopping this
00:24:20
cleaving at the joints every sort of
00:24:24
injury or uh disease State and looking
00:24:27
at us from a holistic one being you know
00:24:30
which means instead of saying you know
00:24:33
okay here's depression okay you need to
00:24:35
see this guy for that okay here oh
00:24:37
here's your back pain you need to see
00:24:38
this guy for that and then the
00:24:40
depression guy won't talk about the back
00:24:42
pain because that's not his domain and
00:24:43
then oh the doctor's going to prescribe
00:24:45
something but he's not responsible for
00:24:46
that I think we really need to stop
00:24:49
siloing off all these different things
00:24:51
like fertility the psychology around um
00:24:54
depression or anxiety that may come from
00:24:56
chronic pain um and we need to start
00:24:59
bringing things more together M and
00:25:03
educating people like instead of saying
00:25:05
that's not my role educating people on
00:25:07
some of that whole person approach to
00:25:12
back pain fertility what whatever it be
00:25:15
I think that's really the key mate how's
00:25:18
how's your mental health been has it
00:25:20
always been good yeah it has mate I'm
00:25:23
have you had to work work on it or you
00:25:24
just you've been one of the lucky ones
00:25:26
or really fortunate mate and that um I
00:25:30
found a lot of these modalities before I
00:25:33
got married before I had kids before I
00:25:36
had a mortgage before I had a business
00:25:39
all of the things which may Peak people
00:25:42
off to have a less than optimal mental
00:25:45
health I was already doing things to
00:25:47
steal my or make more resilient my
00:25:50
mental health or mental Fitness uh so if
00:25:52
you think of mental Fitness like
00:25:54
physical fitness so I was just very
00:25:56
fortunate in my Pursuit of helping my
00:25:58
population of clients that these
00:26:00
techniques also help to improve your
00:26:02
mental Fitness so mate I've been really
00:26:05
good I'm I'm really fortunate to say
00:26:07
that what what has been um like the
00:26:10
lowest point in your life you reckon I
00:26:12
think um back pain I struggled with back
00:26:14
pain yeah for a very long time and I
00:26:16
think that out of that adversity has
00:26:18
given me these tools to look at things
00:26:20
differently because I had back pain for
00:26:22
12 years really debilitating back pain
00:26:24
and I remember when my my parents came
00:26:26
over to see me in London
00:26:28
and uh we went to have dinner and they
00:26:30
were up at the table and I was kneeling
00:26:31
down on the floor and Mom just started
00:26:33
crying and it you know still creases me
00:26:35
up a little bit now because I couldn't
00:26:37
sit because of my back um and I just
00:26:41
thought that was normal I'm like yeah
00:26:42
but I've got three prolapse discs in my
00:26:44
back I there is a ceiling on what I can
00:26:47
do that I just normalized that because
00:26:48
that's what I was told by the 14
00:26:50
different physios that I saw oh you in
00:26:53
for my my girlfriend she said to me Dom
00:26:56
you can't keep replacing phys until you
00:26:58
find the answer you want but it turns
00:26:59
out you can you can mate and I really
00:27:01
encourage you to four people out there
00:27:03
keep searching cuz so many people come
00:27:05
to me or when you go to a barbecue which
00:27:08
you know you always get tapped for info
00:27:09
when you're at a barbecue um and then
00:27:12
they I tried physio you know so
00:27:15
depending on how much um respect I have
00:27:19
for that person will depend on my answer
00:27:20
it might be like okay cool man or it
00:27:22
might be like hey do you know that not
00:27:24
all physio the same and not all physios
00:27:27
are s of the same on the one day as the
00:27:29
next day so physios really get a window
00:27:33
of maybe 20 to 30 minutes to see someone
00:27:35
yeah they can't unravel all the stuff so
00:27:39
maybe you need to give that physio
00:27:40
another chance a different lens to look
00:27:42
through maybe more time or maybe you
00:27:44
need to seek out another physio who will
00:27:46
be totally different to the other one
00:27:48
yeah and you got to keep searching
00:27:49
that's certainly what I did and then
00:27:51
found the answer eventually so how did
00:27:53
you fix your
00:27:54
back so um I had spinal surgery when I
00:27:58
was 30 over in London which was a really
00:28:02
I was a Physio and I saw what happened
00:28:04
when people had spinal surgery so I was
00:28:06
really freaked out about that um but
00:28:09
that was yeah that was the lowest point
00:28:10
in my life the Searing back pain I
00:28:12
couldn't defecate in the morning you
00:28:13
know it was those things which was such
00:28:16
a problem I couldn't touch my kneecaps
00:28:18
from a standing position wow wild mate
00:28:22
so much disability you wouldn't believe
00:28:23
it now right but um so I saw Europe's uh
00:28:27
top neurosurgeon um Peter Hamlin and he
00:28:32
did a really good job on my back but a
00:28:35
year later I was still in pain and I
00:28:37
went back to him and um he was sort of
00:28:41
frustrated and annoyed because surgeons
00:28:43
don't really like to admit that they
00:28:45
might not have got that problem sorted
00:28:47
so he sort of dismissed me which is fine
00:28:49
that's okay but it made me now my good
00:28:52
friend Jimmy hunt will call this radical
00:28:54
ownership but it made me have a moment
00:28:56
of radical ownership realizing no one's
00:28:58
going to fix this it's up to me now and
00:29:01
that's when I looked outside the box of
00:29:03
physiotherapy to basically come up with
00:29:07
a program that alleviated my back
00:29:09
pain radical ownership I like that I've
00:29:12
never heard that phrase Jimmy HP by the
00:29:13
way for anyone that doesn't know he's
00:29:14
like a mental health Advocate um he's
00:29:16
written a book about didn't he like raft
00:29:18
down the W River he did he led down Li
00:29:21
yeah and walked the uh walked the length
00:29:23
of the country as well he did yeah he's
00:29:25
the world's largest water slide um yeah
00:29:28
he's he's an amazing guy so worth
00:29:30
Googling withth Googling and doing some
00:29:32
uh research on him yeah and he's he's
00:29:34
got numerous books out but he also just
00:29:36
genuinely cares for people yeah and you
00:29:38
can hit him up and he will try and help
00:29:40
you yeah but that radical ownership
00:29:42
that's that comes from a position of yes
00:29:44
things aren't fair in life things aren't
00:29:46
just whatever it took to get you into
00:29:49
this state it might be totally unfair
00:29:52
but it's how you come out of it and
00:29:53
that's 100% your
00:29:55
responsibility do you do you think with
00:29:57
mental health there's some people that
00:29:58
um that would say clinical depression
00:30:01
need to be medicated or do you think
00:30:02
that for most people like 95 99% of
00:30:05
people there's an alternative way yeah I
00:30:08
think um depression is a there's it's a
00:30:11
really complex thing depression is um
00:30:14
but I do think there's mental health and
00:30:18
mental illness yeah well this mate this
00:30:21
is one thing that really irks me like
00:30:23
someone will say um oh yeah no he's not
00:30:25
he's not well he's got mental health but
00:30:26
it's like
00:30:27
everyone has physical health and
00:30:29
everyone has mental health yeah like
00:30:31
mental health is not a condition it's
00:30:32
something that we all have yeah exactly
00:30:34
and this is where I think mental health
00:30:36
awareness is not really doing quite
00:30:39
right and if anything it might be making
00:30:40
things worse because people are learning
00:30:42
that there's mental health out there and
00:30:45
then they use that as an excuse or a
00:30:47
crutch because they don't really
00:30:49
understand the physiology of say anxiety
00:30:52
and when you understand that anxiety is
00:30:54
actually a physiological state that
00:30:56
occurs goes through various things maybe
00:30:59
a disordered breathing pattern maybe a
00:31:01
poor tolerance to carbon dioxide maybe
00:31:04
inflammation and then there are actually
00:31:06
some things you can do to alter that
00:31:08
positively so how about we have the
00:31:10
discussion around mental health
00:31:12
awareness of actually talking about what
00:31:14
is anxiety yeah what is depression how
00:31:17
about we talk about the fact that 30% of
00:31:20
depression 30 to 40% of depression is
00:31:23
caused by inflammation so why don't we
00:31:25
learn about how inflammation is
00:31:27
potentially causing depression and how
00:31:30
people with inflammation as their cause
00:31:32
of depression the medications won't
00:31:34
actually work well for them not only
00:31:36
that Dom but there's also the notion
00:31:38
that if you are inflamed your risk of
00:31:43
depression becomes greater yeah so why
00:31:45
aren't we testing people for their
00:31:47
inflammatory marker which is a very
00:31:49
difficult thing to get out of a doctor I
00:31:51
pay for my own cost
00:31:53
$20.10 down down at toonga and why
00:31:56
aren't we testing these things routinely
00:32:00
and then we can say well your
00:32:01
inflammation marker is up a little bit
00:32:03
there's a you know there's a potential
00:32:05
risk factor here for depression yeah do
00:32:08
we understand what that is and until we
00:32:09
go through some things which might be
00:32:11
able to mitigate that from happening so
00:32:13
the other conversations I'd rather see
00:32:15
in Mental Health Awareness Week um or
00:32:18
just in mental health programming really
00:32:20
the understanding of what mental Fitness
00:32:23
is because what I'm seeing is people
00:32:25
coming to me asking for it note to get
00:32:27
them out of PE because of their anxiety
00:32:30
you know but it's sort of been you know
00:32:32
it's in our culture now we get the
00:32:34
Kardashians on the television there and
00:32:36
you get Courtney come out and say to
00:32:37
Chloe oh my God those shoes are giving
00:32:40
me anxiety so we're using the words
00:32:42
wrong th those shoes are not giving her
00:32:45
anxiety she is upset at the color choice
00:32:48
of Chloe's shoes or whatever it be but
00:32:50
that is not anxiety yeah that's it's a
00:32:52
flippant remark isn't it totally and
00:32:54
we're using that now and people are
00:32:56
hanging on to my anxiety you know what
00:32:59
is that is it a a living thing within
00:33:01
you no it's just your response or
00:33:03
reaction to a situation which is over
00:33:06
and above what it needs to be
00:33:09
yeah um speaking of anxiety though um I
00:33:12
did have real anxiety when I was at your
00:33:15
place and I was about to go on the ice
00:33:16
bath um so at the back of Nigel's house
00:33:18
you've got a a SAA um which is a great
00:33:21
social Space by the way and you share a
00:33:22
lot on your social media um does has
00:33:25
anyone anyone um complained or said oh
00:33:27
no can you not please no photos you like
00:33:30
right everyone everyone seems really
00:33:32
good like you have you have so many high
00:33:33
performance and high function Joel
00:33:35
shadbolt good friend of yours from the
00:33:37
band La one of the best vocalists in the
00:33:38
country um he's on your Instagram all
00:33:40
the time in the sa All Blacks rugby
00:33:42
league players yeah you name that
00:33:44
they're there no everyone's okay with
00:33:46
being yeah they are yeah yeah they um I
00:33:49
mean I was happy when I was there
00:33:50
because I was um flanked between an all
00:33:52
black and one of the greatest female
00:33:54
rugby players yeah that's right and and
00:33:56
the conversations are so good and
00:33:58
honestly what's happened on that sauna
00:34:00
bench has really launched some careers
00:34:03
so Josiah naty who um there was we had a
00:34:06
great performance group there we we did
00:34:09
I think it was four days we had Marcus
00:34:11
Armstrong who's the Indie Car Racer now
00:34:13
um Josiah natski who's a he races for
00:34:17
Kawasaki uh over in North America um
00:34:21
professional Motocross rider we had Nick
00:34:23
Mo from zuru oh yeah he's a great guy
00:34:25
Jay reev was there and on Ln Brown so
00:34:28
man what a pool of experience and advice
00:34:31
and it was in the SAA that Josiah you
00:34:34
know Anton lard Brown and Sarah had they
00:34:37
asked him what where's he going with his
00:34:39
career and Josiah said oh I really want
00:34:41
to race at America and Anton he was
00:34:44
pretty tough he said well you're not in
00:34:47
America you need to be in America if you
00:34:49
want to race in America so he really
00:34:51
challenged his process of Josiah was
00:34:53
just sort of cruising through with this
00:34:56
notion and this head that that was his
00:34:57
goal but he didn't have any steps to
00:34:59
enable him to reach that goal right so
00:35:01
in that SAA mate that was the moment
00:35:04
that triggered his he brought flights to
00:35:07
the states that week I I I love that so
00:35:10
much about that space that you've
00:35:12
created in your saw it's like it is like
00:35:13
an exchanging of ideas yeah um I had
00:35:16
very little to bring when when I was in
00:35:19
this cor um but I was just like taking
00:35:21
it all in and absorbing it it was great
00:35:23
so when did you get into the the whole
00:35:25
hot cold thing because this is become I
00:35:28
suppose um like a Cornerstone of what
00:35:30
you're about but it's nothing
00:35:31
necessarily to do with physiotherapy is
00:35:32
it no not really and but it kind of is
00:35:35
it's what it should be because I was
00:35:37
seeing this population of clients who
00:35:39
are struggling with chronic pain I
00:35:41
typically see people that have had pain
00:35:42
for a long time I don't see the rugby
00:35:43
guys that have had a bump or a bruise on
00:35:45
the weekend or the sprained ankles going
00:35:47
up the mound I don't see that stuff you
00:35:49
better off seen someone down the road
00:35:50
who can who can handle that I tend to
00:35:52
see people who are struggling that are
00:35:54
failed common treatment approaches and I
00:35:57
knew that there was a role in their pain
00:35:59
and their condition of the autonomic
00:36:02
nervous system which is made up of the
00:36:04
parasympathetic and the sympathetic so
00:36:07
rest and digest flight fight and freeze
00:36:10
calm stress I knew there was a role but
00:36:14
we didn't know that we could influence
00:36:15
it we thought it was unconsciously
00:36:18
beyond our control and that's what
00:36:20
science said in the books and then in
00:36:22
2013 whim Hoff did a study at the Rabon
00:36:26
University in the Netherlands where he
00:36:27
was injected with ecoli an
00:36:30
endotoxin uh which should have triggered
00:36:32
off this huge immune response he
00:36:34
defeated the eoli within 15 minutes so
00:36:38
that then to those researchers they were
00:36:40
like wow whim you've just attenuated the
00:36:43
innate immune response the that cannot
00:36:45
be controlled you've controlled it
00:36:47
you're amazing and whm bean whim said
00:36:50
I'm not amazing you know he could have
00:36:52
been a David Blaine and done all these
00:36:54
tricks around the world slowing his
00:36:55
heart rate yeah yeah so for anyone I
00:36:58
don't want to patronize anyone that's
00:36:59
listening but just in case there's
00:37:00
anyone that doesn't know uh about the
00:37:02
Wim Hoff story or who he is um how would
00:37:05
you how would you describe him in a
00:37:06
couple of sentences I know he's got a
00:37:08
[ __ ] ton of World Records yep 26
00:37:09
Guinness World Records he is a
00:37:12
remarkable man who has a technique
00:37:16
called the Wim Hoff method which
00:37:18
utilizes breathing techniques and
00:37:20
gradual nonforced exposure to cold an
00:37:24
awful awful backstory right with us with
00:37:26
wife yeah and when you think about why
00:37:30
why did whim get into this well his wife
00:37:32
committed suicide and he was left with
00:37:35
five four children between the age of 5
00:37:37
and 11 to bring up so his real Mission
00:37:40
he wanted to end depression so she had
00:37:43
depression and uh she committed suicide
00:37:45
and you know he had his own grief to go
00:37:47
through as well so that was his very
00:37:49
noble cause for seeking out how to help
00:37:52
the world and he's just a
00:37:54
massive like his spirit is phenomenal if
00:37:58
you could watch a documentary on him I
00:37:59
think and if it was just one I would say
00:38:02
the goop lab no I would agree with seen
00:38:05
that yeah it's it's a good bite-size
00:38:07
entry into the world of Wim Hof yeah and
00:38:09
it comes from a bit more of a feminine
00:38:10
angle rather than some of the you know
00:38:13
people that he was on Joe Rogan's
00:38:16
podcast so then you got a lot of Macho
00:38:17
male men attracted to his techniques and
00:38:20
methods and they were sort of telling
00:38:21
the story from the ah but I think
00:38:23
gwyneth's show brings it down to more of
00:38:25
that more feminine um style which I
00:38:28
really like so so you're you're not just
00:38:30
a student of H you and him are sort of
00:38:32
like mates right yeah stays at your
00:38:34
house and yeah so we're very good
00:38:36
friends good confidants um yeah Mass how
00:38:40
did how did that happen um so that study
00:38:43
was in
00:38:44
2013 um so so then I read that study I
00:38:50
was blown away and I was like this is
00:38:51
going to help my population of clients I
00:38:53
have to seek this guy out and learn more
00:38:56
from him and he happened to be coming
00:38:57
down to Australia to do a weekl long
00:38:59
livein retreat so I went over there um
00:39:03
to try and learn more about his methods
00:39:04
it was an amazing group of people there
00:39:06
were 30 of us there this would never
00:39:08
happen now there' be probably 500 people
00:39:10
there and you'd probably get an
00:39:11
instructor of whims but there were 30
00:39:13
people there and we still really tight
00:39:15
to this day that group of people and
00:39:18
there was no one there really going to
00:39:20
learn about his method to deploy it in a
00:39:22
clinical setting it was more people they
00:39:25
had lme disease uh major depressive
00:39:28
disorder um all manners of you know
00:39:32
there was pain it was like wow this is
00:39:34
amazing but all of these people were
00:39:36
sort of seeking out that top 2% you know
00:39:39
these were real successful people in
00:39:40
business but they might have been
00:39:42
suffering with burnout or successful
00:39:44
people in um whatever they're trying to
00:39:46
do in life um yeah so amazing group
00:39:49
people so I went and had a week with him
00:39:51
um just connected um and yeah we became
00:39:56
really really good friends I help him I
00:39:57
helped him articulate some of the
00:39:59
science that I was seen from what I
00:40:02
thought was occurring during the Wim
00:40:03
Hoff method um then he came and stayed
00:40:06
yeah with the family and uh my little
00:40:09
boy is is sharing his middle name uh my
00:40:12
my little boy's middle name is whim so
00:40:15
wow yeah so there's a connection there
00:40:17
named after whim that wasn't my choice
00:40:18
that was my wife's and you um you you do
00:40:21
you do a great impression of him you um
00:40:24
I don't I don't know if you want to
00:40:24
share this on maybe this is a thing but
00:40:27
uh uh when I stayed with you we walked
00:40:29
up Mount [ __ ] and you were bare feet
00:40:31
and you you did an impression of wh
00:40:33
walking up uh Mount [ __ ] chatting to
00:40:35
strangers on the way oh yeah yeah cuz it
00:40:37
was amazing we're cuz when we're staying
00:40:39
and we're going up the mount and you
00:40:41
know it was always a bit of a bug beer
00:40:43
of mine when you'd go up the mount that
00:40:45
people wouldn't say hello and um you
00:40:47
know I like saying hello to people
00:40:49
you're you're both out there doing the
00:40:51
same thing at the same time and it's
00:40:52
kind of a cool connection I agree I'm
00:40:54
like that with running I wave at
00:40:55
everybody and wh just wouldn't say hello
00:40:57
mate he say hey man hey how you going
00:41:00
good are you man keep it going we go on
00:41:03
you go and these people were just
00:41:06
getting bursts of enthusiasm from weird
00:41:10
Barefoot Jesus looking guy they didn't
00:41:13
know who he
00:41:14
was yeah so yeah it was great stuff um
00:41:18
oh yeah yeah you told me another story
00:41:20
about um most people had no idea who he
00:41:22
was or they didn't acknowledge Him and
00:41:23
then there was some guy at the top that
00:41:24
uh said oh my God whim off you changed
00:41:27
my life thing that's so cool and I've
00:41:29
been with whim so many times now Jess
00:41:31
and I went and saw him um had a week
00:41:33
with him in Australia a couple of months
00:41:35
ago and he's so so full of life mate but
00:41:38
he practices what he preaches he gets up
00:41:39
in the morning and he does does the
00:41:41
stuff um but when you're out with him in
00:41:44
public now like especially in Australia
00:41:46
people come up to him and say you saved
00:41:48
my life and they like one guy jumped
00:41:52
through a restaurant window women and I
00:41:54
were having dinner he jumped in through
00:41:55
the restaurant window
00:41:56
and hugged him and said how he saved his
00:41:59
life so and that just happens so often
00:42:02
mate amazing and he travels only with um
00:42:04
like carry on right like a he tuned up
00:42:07
at my house I had to give him a pair of
00:42:08
shoes um yeah and he had a just a
00:42:11
backpack which was half full he had
00:42:13
nothing in there so um mate he's he's
00:42:16
the Gypsy traveler yeah um I listen to
00:42:20
an audio book of his a few years ago and
00:42:21
there was a there's a mentor in the a
00:42:23
cold Sher day keeps the doctor away um
00:42:25
but you go level you've got like a a
00:42:28
customade ice bath which by by the way
00:42:32
um am I the most hilarious person you be
00:42:34
honest with me the most hilarious
00:42:37
awkward uncomfortable person you've seen
00:42:38
in the eyes you were definitely up there
00:42:41
yes it was I'm not good at putting on a
00:42:44
a poker face but so this this this this
00:42:47
time I spent at your house so um Jack
00:42:48
godu from the crusaders had get in and
00:42:50
he was like chatting to me and chatting
00:42:52
to you chatting to people it was like it
00:42:54
was a warm bath I got in there and and I
00:42:56
was like a face of concentration you can
00:42:58
see veins poking out of my neck I wasn't
00:43:00
haming it up or anything I was doing the
00:43:01
best I could to be calm yeah but then
00:43:04
when I see that in someone that's when I
00:43:06
know hey he's in the right place because
00:43:08
this is what he needs and day two you
00:43:10
were much much better you know so and I
00:43:12
I I didn't not enjoy it either I found
00:43:15
it invigorating it was a wonderful
00:43:16
experience it was it was [ __ ] amazing
00:43:19
well that's the unconscious that's the
00:43:21
that's our threshold for that stress
00:43:23
system to come on is governed by our
00:43:25
environment
00:43:26
so past experiences current environment
00:43:30
and everyone's got a different threshold
00:43:31
to that stress St so by going into the
00:43:33
ice that triggered off your stress
00:43:35
system that was like flight and fight
00:43:37
and freeze you know survival so you know
00:43:41
people like Jack and you know I jumped
00:43:43
out of my first cold shower after 10
00:43:45
seconds I thought F this no way man but
00:43:48
um yeah is that a good way for people to
00:43:49
start so I must admit so you're in my
00:43:52
house at the moment it's an apartment I
00:43:54
could probably get a sauna put in the
00:43:55
closet somewhere but I don't really have
00:43:57
room for an ice bath so I've been doing
00:43:58
I'll have a shower in the morning and
00:44:00
then for the last minute I'll put it on
00:44:02
cold and stand there in the first couple
00:44:04
of times you do it you're
00:44:05
hyperventilating um and then it just
00:44:07
gets it gets easier and easier and now I
00:44:10
wouldn't wouldn't say I look forward to
00:44:11
it but um it's a nice feeling when you
00:44:13
get out yeah if if you think about
00:44:15
what's the loow hanging fruit what is
00:44:18
the
00:44:19
non-negotiable cold shower at the end of
00:44:21
your daily warm shower non-negotiable
00:44:24
because for 30 seconds there is no one
00:44:27
who can come up with an excuse which
00:44:29
could derail you from that constant
00:44:31
practice so that's what I do personally
00:44:34
every day non-negotiable a cold show at
00:44:36
the end of my warm and if people just
00:44:38
start with that because then they're
00:44:40
achieving something and that is going to
00:44:42
have a therapeutic benefit and then
00:44:45
there are you're going to see a
00:44:46
proliferation of spaces around Oakland
00:44:49
uh coming up over the next few years
00:44:51
with proper SAA proper cold plunge and
00:44:54
then there will be a community to this
00:44:57
like I'm sure that people in Finland
00:44:59
would be uh like thinking wow there's a
00:45:02
guy talking about saer and cold plunging
00:45:04
on a podcast you know it's just their
00:45:06
culture it's their life it's what they
00:45:08
do and uh cuz it feels like it was um I
00:45:11
don't know I remember vaguely like like
00:45:14
growing up being real little like in the
00:45:15
1970s or 1980s and saers became like a
00:45:18
thing um and it feels like it's sort of
00:45:20
fashionable again but do you think it's
00:45:22
do you think it's like a a phase at the
00:45:24
moment or it's going to be here to stay
00:45:25
yeah I think it's fashionable now
00:45:27
because of the understanding around how
00:45:28
it works okay and the big thing with SAA
00:45:30
there was a 20-year observational study
00:45:33
which is huge 20 observing people over
00:45:36
20 years and to see what the effects are
00:45:38
of saering in Finland done by a
00:45:40
cardiologist called Dr Yari linan um in
00:45:43
Finland observing
00:45:45
2340 men over a space of 20 years to see
00:45:48
how it influences their health and that
00:45:50
study was amazing because it came out
00:45:52
that if you sorted four plus times a
00:45:55
week your risk risk of death from any
00:45:57
cause went down 40% your risk of
00:46:00
cardiovascular related death went down
00:46:02
50% and I think it's those kinds of
00:46:04
numbers that have gotten people to say
00:46:07
hey I want some of that now so instead
00:46:09
of us not really knowing what sauna was
00:46:11
thinking it was some kind of
00:46:12
Scandinavian or Russian kind of practice
00:46:14
that they would do but not knowing the
00:46:16
reason behind it and I've spoken to many
00:46:19
Scandinavians uh an Estonian sauna
00:46:21
master who we a great chat in a sauna he
00:46:23
knew nothing about the health benefits
00:46:25
of sauna he just knew it made him feel
00:46:27
great but he knew a lot about the
00:46:28
cultural aspect of sauna which we had a
00:46:30
great chat about um but I think that's
00:46:33
why youve seen this uptick people like d
00:46:35
Dr Ronda Patrick that are coming out
00:46:38
explaining the benefits of sauna people
00:46:40
like Andrew hubman coming out explaining
00:46:42
the benefits of SAA um yeah Lex fredman
00:46:45
Joe Rogan all that circuit they're all
00:46:47
massive on it um doesn't matter if it's
00:46:49
INF fored yeah so you will get some
00:46:52
benefit from infrared but you get a lot
00:46:54
more benefit from traditional authentic
00:46:57
finish SAA and in fact in in Europe in
00:47:00
countries it is illegal to to use
00:47:03
infrared SAA as two words oh okay you
00:47:06
have to say infrared cabin okay because
00:47:09
it just doesn't have the same benefits
00:47:11
you know it's better than nothing maybe
00:47:12
but um I really think if people can I I
00:47:16
really push for people to get an
00:47:17
authentic finish saer or authentic
00:47:20
Scandinavian sauner uh in their home and
00:47:22
that is what defines that well that
00:47:24
means a saer that can go
00:47:26
um between 0 and 100° which is bloody
00:47:29
hot and also you need to have the
00:47:31
ability to put water onto rocks which
00:47:33
will create what in the in the Finnish
00:47:36
term is Lulu which I'm probably
00:47:38
pronouncing terrible there but um uh
00:47:41
yeah Lulu which is essentially means the
00:47:42
spirit of life or the essence of life um
00:47:45
that really does bring about a new
00:47:47
sensation into the sauna remember when I
00:47:49
put the water on the rocks and it's like
00:47:51
w this wave of heat and you try and bury
00:47:53
down as low as you can go to try and get
00:47:54
away from that um oh me me specifically
00:47:57
yeah yeah only you Dom ever
00:48:01
so yeah I know since I saw you I've been
00:48:05
doing the cold shower thing which I know
00:48:06
is not as good as a nice bath but it's
00:48:08
still invigorating and makes you feel
00:48:10
good and I've been going to um there's
00:48:12
some baths not far from where I live
00:48:13
called The [ __ ] baths and I've been
00:48:14
going there but this morning's like 70
00:48:16
70° yeah so I did 30 or 40 minutes in
00:48:18
there and I know I remember you saying
00:48:20
something about how it's um it should be
00:48:23
stressing your body but I actually enjoy
00:48:26
starts to get maybe a little unpleasant
00:48:27
towards the end but it's mostly
00:48:28
enjoyable does that mean I'm not getting
00:48:29
the benefit potentially if you're at 70
00:48:32
you need to have a high amount of water
00:48:34
on the Rocks so I was in London end of
00:48:36
last year um and I went to two amazing
00:48:39
saers over there um though were more
00:48:42
Russian style so they run their saers at
00:48:45
about 70° but they use a lot of humidity
00:48:47
a lot of water on the rocks and boy that
00:48:49
was tough so I think 70° in a dry sauna
00:48:54
probably won't be enough um so when I
00:48:57
say won't be enough you probably have to
00:48:58
spend a lot longer in there to reach
00:49:00
that state of discomfort but really with
00:49:03
saer it should be uncomfortable in the
00:49:05
last minute or two um and with ice it's
00:49:08
always uncomfortable in the first minute
00:49:10
and then you start to get a little bit
00:49:11
used to it yeah that's
00:49:14
cool that's really cool okay well yeah I
00:49:17
was eyeing up this one called an Oslo
00:49:18
which is like a one
00:49:20
person um sweet infrared cabin I guess
00:49:24
yes um maybe I'll I'll put that on hold
00:49:26
for now save your money if you and I I
00:49:28
really yeah I get a lot of this on my
00:49:30
Instagram people always ask me what's
00:49:32
the difference and there are benefits
00:49:34
from infrared SAA but it's a different
00:49:36
style of heating it's it's heating you
00:49:38
from within so it's infrared waves which
00:49:40
enter in your body so it's not really
00:49:42
heating up the room um whereas authentic
00:49:45
SAA heats up the room to 80 to 100° and
00:49:49
the modality is a lot different and then
00:49:52
you think about well why do we SAA and
00:49:55
you know why are we seeing all these
00:49:56
amazing results in the studies looking
00:49:58
at longevity but also depression uh heat
00:50:02
as a um modality to help treat a major
00:50:06
depressive disorder there's some great
00:50:08
research on that um so really we're
00:50:11
activating what's called our heat shock
00:50:13
proteins these are proteins that um
00:50:16
directly come out as a response to heat
00:50:18
and they seek out the damaged proteins
00:50:21
in our body which when proteins damaged
00:50:23
we're all made up of proteins when they
00:50:25
damage they fold over and then they
00:50:27
aggregate they stick together and that
00:50:29
can cause all sorts of problems
00:50:31
medically so these heat chock proteins
00:50:33
come out and literally unfold those
00:50:36
damaged proteins so that's how we get
00:50:38
repair and Rejuvenation but there's
00:50:40
numerous other benefits to that
00:50:42
authentic St sauna it um stiffens the
00:50:45
arteries which is actually a good thing
00:50:47
um it uh helps our blood pressure it
00:50:51
mimics moderate cardiovascular exercise
00:50:53
it's really like a workout so there's
00:50:55
there's a lot of benefits to traditional
00:50:57
SAA you've used so many big words in
00:50:59
this podcast um I I I generally assume
00:51:02
any room I go to I assume I'm probably
00:51:04
the dumbest person in the room so I'm
00:51:05
sure there's a lot of people that
00:51:06
understand everything you're talking
00:51:07
about but maybe there's some people like
00:51:09
me that don't but it's um the the bits
00:51:11
in between that I do understand it's
00:51:12
bloody great stuff cool God you're doing
00:51:14
great work um so the week we're
00:51:17
recording this the the All Blacks are in
00:51:18
Oakland and they're about to go to
00:51:20
Melbourne for a game against Australia
00:51:22
who so who reaches out to you so you're
00:51:24
not here in an official role with the
00:51:25
All Blacks yeah no I'm not like an
00:51:27
individual sort of personal trainer sort
00:51:29
of VI yeah but but with their blessing I
00:51:31
guess so I was with the All Blacks in
00:51:33
2019 I was asked to come in and uh give
00:51:38
um my thoughts on performance I was with
00:51:40
the uh Wes at that stage and um yeah so
00:51:45
implemented a program in that World Cup
00:51:47
campaign that um they use for the year
00:51:49
so in that time I got to meet a number
00:51:51
of the All Blacks and um I continued to
00:51:55
work with they they saw some of my work
00:51:58
and the when you're in an all black
00:51:59
environment there's just no time so but
00:52:01
they knew that there was some more to my
00:52:03
work and so I started working with
00:52:05
members of the team on a one-on-one
00:52:07
capacity over time and
00:52:11
then yeah
00:52:13
the uh the All Blacks had a camp down in
00:52:15
Mount mongui one of the players reached
00:52:17
out to me um for some help around a
00:52:20
situation and then seeing I I knew the
00:52:24
All Blacks set up he went back spoke to
00:52:26
them and they said yeah let's bring [ __ ]
00:52:28
into these camps to help um how did you
00:52:30
how did you um team up with Joel
00:52:32
shadbolt from laab how did that
00:52:34
relationship come about yeah so he came
00:52:35
to me um and he was just you know he was
00:52:41
having some issues um before a
00:52:43
performance so i n stage yeah which is
00:52:47
totally logical when you go out in front
00:52:49
of you know 30,000 people and you have
00:52:53
to execute a skill set and give to that
00:52:56
crowd and lift them up and to all of
00:52:58
those things um yeah it's logical that
00:53:01
your body will start to corrupt your
00:53:02
skill SC and start to put you into this
00:53:05
state of uh maybe Panic or agitation or
00:53:08
and then yeah so I started working with
00:53:10
Joel back then um and yeah we just
00:53:14
continue on because there's been it's
00:53:16
been a really good relationship and um
00:53:19
there's still some techniques and
00:53:21
modalities that Joel uses you know
00:53:23
before a performance or um on tour
00:53:25
especially cuz that's really rigorous
00:53:28
but he's noticed massive changes and um
00:53:31
yeah he's great so he he comes for the
00:53:32
catch-ups we were working together for
00:53:35
three years saering doing all the stuff
00:53:38
before we actually had a drink so that
00:53:41
was he loved it because it was like
00:53:43
every time people want to catch up with
00:53:45
him it's always around alcohol and it
00:53:47
was only about six weeks ago he's like
00:53:48
mate do you want a whiskey on the deck
00:53:50
and we did and he's like this is the
00:53:52
first time we've actually had alcohol so
00:53:54
I think saer is great because you don't
00:53:56
need to have something in your hand I
00:53:59
was going to say just when you were
00:54:00
Midway through that sentence um that
00:54:02
environment of being in your sauna with
00:54:05
a bunch of other people it is kind of
00:54:07
like sitting around in the evening
00:54:08
having a drink with people on a deck the
00:54:10
sort of conversations that go on I don't
00:54:12
know it just feels like a safe space or
00:54:13
something totally it is really good for
00:54:15
that totally good for that so that's why
00:54:17
I recommend when people get saers get
00:54:18
bigger than what you think you'll need
00:54:20
because then you can invite people
00:54:21
around and it's quite a social thing um
00:54:24
does does I mean clear clearly the
00:54:26
answer is no but I I wonder if like your
00:54:28
wife's bothered bothered about this like
00:54:29
your house is like a halfway house yeah
00:54:32
gr granted it's it's a very very um upm
00:54:35
Market halfway house it's like a who's
00:54:37
who of New Zealand sports and
00:54:38
entertainment but there's people traing
00:54:40
through all the time she's getting tows
00:54:41
out for people like me that forget to
00:54:43
bring their own yeah she all good with
00:54:44
it yeah she is she's she's very
00:54:47
welcoming and she's um she's amazing
00:54:49
mate she totally is so um very welcoming
00:54:53
of the people um and she knows the
00:54:56
mission yeah
00:54:57
so
00:54:59
um yeah she's she loves it yeah she's
00:55:03
very shy like she'll she will like be
00:55:06
like I won't go in when you're in there
00:55:07
or you know but then I'm like no come on
00:55:09
then but it's great she doesn't know
00:55:11
half them because she's not really in
00:55:13
that space it's quite funny she asked
00:55:15
one of the All Blacks uh what do you do
00:55:18
and play R oh who do you play for you
00:55:20
know it's quite endearing exactly quite
00:55:23
good um and so you got two kids man's
00:55:26
your daughter how how old she she's
00:55:28
eight eight and Henley Henley that's
00:55:31
right um yeah so so when when we were
00:55:34
there last year um your daughter Mani
00:55:36
she she kept on writing me up like
00:55:38
citation tickets for swearing yeah mate
00:55:40
um yeah Jack good she's clearly got a
00:55:42
type and it's going to be it's going to
00:55:44
be big rugby players because um yeah
00:55:47
Jack good Hugh he he didn't get any
00:55:48
citations yeah well he got a free pass
00:55:51
on a lot of things I don't know if he
00:55:52
transgressed as much as you do um
00:55:55
yeah so that great yeah well yeah she
00:55:59
used to you know if you said the word
00:56:01
bloody she' get herck WR your a little
00:56:04
note that's awesome um should we end
00:56:07
with a couple of sort of um I was going
00:56:08
to say quick five but they don't
00:56:09
actually have to be quick five but um
00:56:11
just some questions that I think um can
00:56:14
provide some information that can you
00:56:16
help anyone that's listening to this
00:56:17
yeah that would be good um first of all
00:56:19
one thing one thing I've I've noticed
00:56:20
and some people I suppose depending on
00:56:22
the quality of the headphones they're
00:56:23
listening with would have noticed um
00:56:25
you're a nasal breather like quite often
00:56:27
you'll stop at the end of a sentence and
00:56:30
inhale through the nose and speak again
00:56:32
um this is an intentional thing this is
00:56:34
the correct way of breathing yes exactly
00:56:36
the we should be breathing through our
00:56:38
nose for pretty much 100% of the time
00:56:41
for most people because nasal breathing
00:56:44
is so important for Optimal Health the
00:56:47
nose serves 26 different functions it
00:56:49
warms the air humidifies the air you've
00:56:52
got turbinid in the nasal cavity which
00:56:53
spiral the air into the lungs at the
00:56:55
right speed you've got mucus which traps
00:56:58
pathogens and um all sorts of stuff um
00:57:02
Motorway dust out here in Oakland Dom
00:57:04
but um yeah and you've got the cyia
00:57:07
which is here which traps pathogens and
00:57:10
filters as well uh you got nitric oxide
00:57:12
which is a vasod dilator which opens up
00:57:14
the Airways so it's all about getting
00:57:17
more oxygen into our body how do we feel
00:57:19
good well if our body is properly
00:57:21
oxygenated when you're breathing through
00:57:23
your nose all of that St starts to
00:57:25
happen when you breathe through your
00:57:27
mouth you're blowing off carbon dioxide
00:57:30
far too much you're not utilizing the
00:57:33
nitric oxide which is not only a vasod
00:57:35
dilator mean more oxygen into the the
00:57:38
blood but it's also a sterilizing agent
00:57:40
so another protective mechanism um if
00:57:43
you breathe through your mouth you can
00:57:45
actually alter your jaw shape so it's
00:57:47
really important for kids to be nasal
00:57:50
breathers what takes us away from nasal
00:57:52
breathing is things like growing up in
00:57:53
an anxious environment experiencing some
00:57:55
form of trauma perhaps um and that
00:57:58
doesn't have to be like an emotional
00:57:59
abuse or anything like that it could
00:58:01
merely be growing up in a moldy damp
00:58:03
home and that will dictate kids to fall
00:58:07
into a mouth breathing trap postco I'm
00:58:10
seeing a lot of people with um you know
00:58:12
long covid problems and they flick into
00:58:15
a mouth breathing pattern um what else
00:58:18
it changes teeth um growth so you can
00:58:21
get a clusion of the teeth you get a um
00:58:24
m
00:58:25
um Mal form jaw formation so it becomes
00:58:27
a lot shorter and sunken rather than
00:58:29
elongated um what else happens so it
00:58:33
really yeah makes sense to try and be a
00:58:35
nasal breather at all times and I this
00:58:38
is a real loow hanging fruit not only
00:58:40
for just dayto day but for exercise as
00:58:42
well and did I am I imagining this or
00:58:45
did I um hear you say somewhere that
00:58:47
people should sleep with um tape over
00:58:49
their mouth yeah some people should um
00:58:51
and there's a thing in one of the meteor
00:58:54
Outlets you know just trying to debunk
00:58:56
that until you read down the bottom um
00:58:58
they had like a uh you know a little
00:59:01
conflict of interest report there saying
00:59:03
actually this guy owns a sleep sleep
00:59:05
clinic and of course he's advocating for
00:59:06
everyone to go to a Sleep Clinic but on
00:59:09
the whole let's Empower people let's not
00:59:13
say oh you've actually got to you know
00:59:14
give them something and try it is it
00:59:16
going to work yes or no you're not going
00:59:17
to die from taping your mouth and how do
00:59:20
how do how do we take that because the
00:59:22
last thing I want is anyone to you go is
00:59:24
it like a little strip covering the lips
00:59:26
or all all it is and of course you use
00:59:29
some logic if you're full with a cold if
00:59:32
you can't breathe very well through your
00:59:34
nose to start with yeah you wouldn't
00:59:36
maybe tape it but if you do die hey come
00:59:39
back and see us and
00:59:41
then give you a refund ha Nigel ha Nigel
00:59:45
but yeah mouth taping is simply a strip
00:59:47
of you can use multiple tapes I've
00:59:49
actually got some specific mouth tape
00:59:51
with me now for one of the guys but um
00:59:54
you can get something called myotape or
00:59:56
you can just get some 3M micropore and
00:59:58
it's literally a vertical strip so your
01:00:00
lips aren't even completely uded and I
01:00:03
think if people just try even if they
01:00:05
don't tape through the night they might
01:00:07
just tape their mouth for the hour
01:00:08
before bed and see does this bring about
01:00:11
some change because if you tape your
01:00:13
mouth at night and if it's going to work
01:00:14
for you you'll wake up feeling massively
01:00:17
more refreshed that's how you know if
01:00:18
it's
01:00:19
working is there um breathing routines
01:00:23
or techniques that anyone can do while
01:00:24
while you know driving or walking or
01:00:26
whatever that can improve their mood I
01:00:28
know I know wh whm Hoff like before the
01:00:30
the the ice ice water stuff um it's
01:00:33
generally rooted in sort of a breathing
01:00:35
technique isn't it yeah but with whims
01:00:37
breathing definitely keep that away from
01:00:39
water because um wh's breathing
01:00:42
technique is very strong and powerful
01:00:44
it's a controlled hyperventilation
01:00:46
technique I actually don't teach that in
01:00:48
my clinic so um there's other forms of
01:00:52
breathing you can do which can bring
01:00:54
about
01:00:55
a a better change within you I think for
01:00:58
the general population and that is to
01:01:00
shut their mouth and breathe through
01:01:01
their nose that's a key okay and then on
01:01:04
my Instagram um I've actually done a
01:01:08
video of my 5 minute anti- agitation
01:01:11
breathing and I get so many comments
01:01:13
about that um and that's just the tile
01:01:15
where it's my head holding up four
01:01:17
fingers and if you look at that one and
01:01:19
go through that for 5 minutes I think
01:01:22
that would be my advice on a powerful
01:01:24
technique that you can do to bring about
01:01:27
change when you're in an anxious moment
01:01:29
it brings about a real sense of calm how
01:01:31
far down on your Instagram is that oh
01:01:33
yeah it's a little bit you you need to
01:01:35
learn how to pin post maybe I should pin
01:01:38
that that at the top I pin it for two
01:01:40
months or something and then people you
01:01:42
know the listeners can check it out
01:01:43
sounds good um I've heard you say in a
01:01:45
podcast that the gut is the second brain
01:01:47
can you explain what that means yeah I I
01:01:50
think I don't want to get too In The
01:01:51
Weeds on that because yeah but cuz there
01:01:54
there are some other things that we can
01:01:56
do which can influence the gut for
01:01:58
example the vagus nerves go vagus nerve
01:02:00
goes all the way from the neck down into
01:02:02
the gut the Vegas nerve is directly
01:02:05
related to your autonomic nervous system
01:02:08
so if you can bring about some
01:02:10
equilibrium into that stress and calm
01:02:12
State your gut is going to get better
01:02:14
what I see in people is people that come
01:02:16
in with say anxiety or chronic pain you
01:02:20
will often find they'll have either um
01:02:22
diarrhea or constipation so that's a
01:02:25
neurally driven autonomically driven
01:02:28
problem so sometimes people can be
01:02:31
labeled with say IBS irritable bowel
01:02:33
syndrome or different things but really
01:02:35
I think we we've got to come out from
01:02:36
the heart of it which is a um
01:02:39
disequilibrium in the autonomic nervous
01:02:41
system so I think that's really where it
01:02:43
comes in yeah oh that's cool on how did
01:02:47
how what's your relationship with Mike
01:02:49
hosking and Kate hawksby he he talks
01:02:51
about you quite a lot yeah have you have
01:02:53
you had sessions with him haven't made
01:02:55
no so you you guys not bros I thought
01:02:56
you were like Bros no and have you met
01:03:00
we haven't met no he had me on his show
01:03:02
and I I did an interview with him I've
01:03:04
heard him do an interview with you and
01:03:05
he he and he talks about you a lot in
01:03:07
other interviews as well and I've I've
01:03:09
heard him talk about how you love a like
01:03:11
a French readed wine and I thought oh
01:03:13
these guys must have been on the Dick
01:03:14
together yeah no we haven't mate I'd
01:03:16
love I'd love to meet him um he really
01:03:19
sings your Praises yeah it's really it's
01:03:21
really good I and I really do appreciate
01:03:23
it cuz he's got such a platform
01:03:25
and and Kate does as well and yeah I
01:03:28
really appreciate those two it's amazing
01:03:31
that you can be on like a top rating
01:03:34
essentially a news program and he's
01:03:35
talking about things to optimize the
01:03:37
health so I really do like that well one
01:03:39
thing about that so um I believe they've
01:03:41
got a sauner at home uh I've heard him
01:03:43
say he has three cold showers a day yep
01:03:46
is that too is that one too
01:03:48
many I think one might be one's probably
01:03:51
linked into the SAA so when you when you
01:03:53
do SA he should always finish on cold
01:03:55
whether that be a cold shower or cold
01:03:58
plunge um and that's probably going to
01:04:00
make up at least one of his and if he
01:04:02
showers twice a day he'll always finish
01:04:04
on cold which is really what you should
01:04:06
do I mean what whatever he's doing it's
01:04:08
it's working for him I know I know he's
01:04:10
got a massive massive following like his
01:04:11
ratings are something like he's got like
01:04:12
a 20% market share which in radio is
01:04:14
massive um there's also a lot of people
01:04:16
that you know don't like him for his
01:04:17
beliefs or whatever but you listen to
01:04:19
the guy he's upbeat he's never sick he's
01:04:22
relentlessly positive and enthusiastic
01:04:24
and you think whatever he's doing he's
01:04:26
doing it right he's very cognitively
01:04:28
sharp isn't he when he's you know
01:04:30
imagine interviewing all those people
01:04:31
with a very short moment's notice and
01:04:33
having to be over such a range of topics
01:04:36
so I think when you look at him from
01:04:37
that
01:04:37
perspective um yeah someone sent like I
01:04:41
did a a post there and I said be like
01:04:44
Mike you know because in terms how did
01:04:47
they go down in the comments not too
01:04:48
well yeah so and I saying like be like
01:04:52
Mike in terms of his
01:04:55
you know what his health practices are
01:04:56
not his opinions oh and the the work
01:04:58
ethic of both those guys is second to
01:05:00
none I mean um you cannot take anything
01:05:02
away from the success that they have
01:05:04
because they they get up at [ __ ] o00
01:05:07
every like in the we're talking middle
01:05:09
of the night like 233 a.m. so they have
01:05:12
no sort of life during the week outside
01:05:13
of work and um he's done that for
01:05:16
they've both done it for a number of
01:05:17
years they're phenomenal broadcasters so
01:05:19
to to stay at the top of your game um
01:05:22
with those sort of growling hours for
01:05:23
that long um there's got to be some
01:05:25
secret to the success and uh maybe it's
01:05:27
the hot and cold thing yeah and I do
01:05:29
like looking at Elite performers and
01:05:31
looking at what they're doing and it
01:05:33
sometimes it's Sports people sometimes
01:05:35
it's the UFC which is a real great
01:05:39
playground for people to be in that
01:05:40
sympathetical stress state so I love
01:05:43
like watching and observing those guys I
01:05:44
would never do a UFC fight you don't
01:05:46
have to agree with what they're doing
01:05:47
but in terms of a study around um how
01:05:50
they're executing their skill set and
01:05:51
talents it's the the fighting realm is
01:05:56
yeah fascinating and also you look at
01:05:58
sport the clutch kicks you know or the
01:06:00
clutch throws and high preure situations
01:06:03
have you done much with any of the UFC
01:06:05
guys um who do you know yeah well I have
01:06:08
met israela Dan hooker um uh Shane Young
01:06:13
because they came to a workshop that
01:06:15
wonderful guy Jason suty and I did
01:06:18
together at Jason's gym but um no but I
01:06:22
don't work with them one-on-one they
01:06:24
they are now um doing some great work
01:06:26
with a wonderful guy called Dave Wood
01:06:28
and Woody is an amazing guy really
01:06:30
trying to bring up this um notion that
01:06:34
we can have better influence and control
01:06:36
over our um our situations oh yeah I've
01:06:39
seen what Dave would his his Retreats
01:06:40
look way less fun than yours I don't
01:06:42
imagine he's having red meat and red
01:06:44
wine in the
01:06:45
evening would he he might be having a DB
01:06:48
export or something like that but um no
01:06:50
he's a he's a top guy yeah hey but um
01:06:54
the only when I was coming here I was
01:06:55
thinking Runners podcast Runners podcast
01:06:57
what could I say to help runners or
01:06:58
maybe help them understand what the
01:07:00
process is because so many Runners they
01:07:02
feel great doing it right and that's
01:07:04
what is driving a lot of their uh
01:07:07
Pursuit into running is the feeling they
01:07:10
get from it right Dom you feel that AB
01:07:12
absolutely even on days you I I don't
01:07:15
feel great every day but even on days
01:07:16
where I don't feel great and I'm not
01:07:17
enjoying it I I always feel good
01:07:19
afterwards feel amazing I never get home
01:07:21
from a run and regret going on a run so
01:07:24
what about if I try and educate people
01:07:26
there will be a couple of big words on
01:07:28
why that's happening so I think that's
01:07:30
the key if people understand the why
01:07:32
maybe they can um then program
01:07:35
accordingly so when we run so we've got
01:07:39
amino acids in our body amino acids they
01:07:42
aid in the repair of muscle tissue but
01:07:44
we've also got a substance called
01:07:46
tryptophan tryptophan is a precursor for
01:07:49
something called serotonin serotonin is
01:07:51
what makes us feel great yeah tryptophan
01:07:55
and amino acids travel on the same
01:07:57
Pathway to the brain amino acids Will
01:08:00
trump tryptophan all the time so that
01:08:02
means that amino acids are going up to
01:08:04
the brain and trypt tryptophan cannot
01:08:07
get on that track to get to the brain to
01:08:08
release serotonin to make you feel good
01:08:11
unless you exercise when you run your
01:08:14
muscles are now needing amino acids so
01:08:17
they come down which frees up the track
01:08:20
for the tryptophan to go to the brain
01:08:22
and release ser at Onin so that's why a
01:08:25
lot of people genuinely feel happy and
01:08:28
high and they feel great when they go
01:08:30
for a run so I think if people
01:08:32
understand the physiology around how
01:08:33
exercise can influence our mental health
01:08:36
then that might be a reason for people
01:08:37
to hey let's give this a go yeah I love
01:08:40
that hey thanks for coming over today
01:08:43
thanks and for being so uh generous with
01:08:45
your time my God the big words that you
01:08:48
use um and they just like roll off your
01:08:50
tongue um it's phenomenal you're so well
01:08:53
educated um how are your books full or
01:08:56
can you like consult new people if
01:08:58
someone if someone has heard this
01:09:00
podcast and they want to get a hold of
01:09:01
you what's the best way to go about that
01:09:03
yeah so I work with people in different
01:09:04
ways um my clinic is generally booked up
01:09:07
about a month or so in advance but but
01:09:10
that's okay you just wait for that time
01:09:12
and um so you can book online just Nigel
01:09:15
beach.com very old website doesn't
01:09:17
really say what I do nowadays but that's
01:09:19
all right too busy helping people to fix
01:09:22
that just yet but they can book on
01:09:23
online for a consult either in person or
01:09:25
over Zoom but what I also do I do 12E
01:09:28
programs with people via my app so I
01:09:31
don't actually need to see someone in
01:09:33
clinic and um that's another option and
01:09:36
then the I guess another way of working
01:09:38
with me is I work in the corporate space
01:09:40
a lot so you know some people if they've
01:09:42
heard this they might have a chat to
01:09:44
their HR manager and say hey let's get
01:09:46
this guy in to talk about some real
01:09:48
tangible ways we can influence our
01:09:49
mental Fitness or health and that's
01:09:52
another way and then finally I do run
01:09:54
those performance intensives down in
01:09:55
Mount mongui it's generally word of
01:09:57
mouth but I am going to start to open
01:09:59
those up to to people now yeah I mean it
01:10:02
was it was great as I've said it was an
01:10:03
invaluable experience and I I would I
01:10:05
would love to go back for another one
01:10:06
because it was fantastic it was really
01:10:08
cool I got so much out of it there
01:10:10
things I do now and I I think of you
01:10:12
like if I'm if I'm waiting in line at a
01:10:13
coffee store I'll look down at my feet
01:10:16
and make sure my feet are both quite
01:10:18
close to each other like a fist apart
01:10:20
facing forward that's it and that's the
01:10:22
correct way to standard activate your
01:10:23
butt muscles just little little things
01:10:25
like that and I'll I'll catch myself
01:10:28
doing it I'll go oh that's something I
01:10:29
got from Nigel yeah cool that's great
01:10:31
would great we would love to see you
01:10:33
again the kids would totally love to see
01:10:34
you again I don't know if I can afford
01:10:36
all the fines from your daughter and Nel
01:10:39
Beach you're a good man thank you very
01:10:41
much for coming on the podcast I
01:10:42
appreciate you thanks for having me
01:10:43
thanks for listening
01:10:44
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Podspun Insights

In this episode, Nigel Beach and Dom dive deep into the world of physiotherapy, performance, and the emotional journeys tied to physical health. Nigel, a physiotherapist with a unique approach, shares his insights on helping individuals regain control over their bodies and lives, especially those dealing with chronic pain. The conversation flows from Nigel's personal experiences with injury and recovery to his innovative methods that blend traditional physiotherapy with holistic practices.

Listeners are treated to stories of high-performance athletes, including Olympic champions and All Blacks, who have sought Nigel's expertise. The dynamic duo discusses the importance of mental health in physical performance, touching on topics like the autonomic nervous system and the impact of stress on overall well-being. They also explore the significance of community and connection, particularly in Nigel's sauna sessions where ideas and inspiration flow freely among diverse individuals.

As the episode unfolds, Nigel emphasizes the need for a more integrated approach to health, advocating for a shift in how we view physical and mental challenges. With humor and sincerity, he encourages listeners to embrace their struggles and seek out the right support, reminding us that healing is often a journey rather than a destination. This episode is not just about physiotherapy; it's a heartfelt exploration of resilience, community, and the power of human connection in overcoming life's hurdles.

Badges

This episode stands out for the following:

  • 90
    Most inspiring
  • 90
    Best performance
  • 85
    Most emotional
  • 85
    Best overall

Episode Highlights

  • Caring Beyond Limits
    Nigel discusses the importance of understanding individual needs in physiotherapy.
    “I really do care for people at the heart of it.”
    @ 02m 54s
    December 03, 2023
  • Overcoming Medical Limitations
    Nigel reflects on the challenges he faced from medical advice regarding running.
    “I was told I could never run again.”
    @ 11m 48s
    December 03, 2023
  • The Journey of Nigel Beach
    Nigel Beach shares his journey from a young aspiring physiotherapist to a respected professional.
    “I wanted to be a physio since I was 11 years old.”
    @ 13m 39s
    December 03, 2023
  • Traveling Adventures
    Exploring Southeast Asia and Turkey during the boom time in London.
    “It was a great way to see the world.”
    @ 19m 12s
    December 03, 2023
  • Fertility Struggles
    Facing the challenges of endometriosis and the impact on family planning.
    “You cannot have children.”
    @ 20m 50s
    December 03, 2023
  • Radical Ownership
    Taking responsibility for one’s health journey after a frustrating medical experience.
    “No one’s going to fix this; it’s up to me now.”
    @ 28m 56s
    December 03, 2023
  • The Wim Hof Method
    Wim Hof, known for his 26 Guinness World Records, developed a unique method combining breathing and cold exposure.
    “He is a remarkable man with a technique called the Wim Hof method.”
    @ 37m 12s
    December 03, 2023
  • A Tragic Backstory
    Wim Hof's journey into his method began after the tragic suicide of his wife, which left him with five children.
    “His wife committed suicide and he was left with five children.”
    @ 37m 30s
    December 03, 2023
  • A Unique Connection
    The speaker shares a personal connection with Wim Hof, including naming their son after him.
    “My little boy's middle name is Wim, named after Wim Hof.”
    @ 40m 12s
    December 03, 2023
  • Nasal Breathing Importance
    Nasal breathing is crucial for optimal health, serving 26 different functions.
    “The nose serves 26 different functions.”
    @ 56m 47s
    December 03, 2023
  • Mouth Taping Benefits
    Mouth taping can enhance sleep quality and breathing efficiency at night.
    “If you tape your mouth at night, you'll wake up feeling massively more refreshed.”
    @ 01h 00m 11s
    December 03, 2023
  • Running and Mental Health
    Understanding the physiological effects of running can enhance mental well-being.
    “People genuinely feel happy and high when they go for a run.”
    @ 01h 08m 28s
    December 03, 2023

Episode Quotes

Key Moments

  • Early Aspirations13:39
  • Traveling Together18:44
  • Endometriosis Challenges20:01
  • Mental Health Awareness30:31
  • Personal Tragedy37:30
  • Unique Friendship39:51
  • Breathing Techniques56:47
  • Running Benefits1:08:28

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown

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