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The Silvercore Podcast explores the mindset and skills that build capable people. Host Travis Bader speaks with hunters, adventurers, soldiers, athletes, craftsmen, and founders about competence, integrity, and the pursuit of mastery, in the wild and in daily life. Hit follow and step into conversations that sharpen your edge.
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Travis Bader: I'm Travis Bader,
and this is the Silvercore podcast.
Silvercore has been providing its
members with the skills and knowledge
necessary to be confident and proficient
in the outdoors for over 20 years.
And we make it easier for people to deepen
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If you enjoy the positive
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We provide, please let others
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If you'd like to learn more
about becoming a member of the
Silvercore club and community,
visit our website at silvercore.
ca.
He's a professional skier who's
captivated audiences worldwide.
He's a stuntman in the
movie Inception and others.
Survivor of a 1, 600 foot fall
off a mountain in Alaska and
pushes the boundaries of what
is considered traversable.
He's someone who's been changing
the concept of what it means to
be a professional outdoorsman
in a healthy and positive way.
Welcome to the Silvercore
Ian McIntosh: podcast, Ian McIntosh.
Thank you.
Pleasure to be
Travis Bader: here.
You know, when Emily said, you got to
check this guy out, he is a cool dude.
I got on the internet.
I started looking at
some of the stuff you do.
And I would agree with
Emily, you are a cool dude.
You're doing some pretty amazing
things in the world of skiing and
just, you know, life in general,
some of the stuff that you get into.
I'm, I'm curious because, you know,
we're an outdoors podcast and talk
with the people and businesses
that comprise the community.
How did you first get started into this?
Ian McIntosh: Well, I mean, that's just
through my family and where I grew up, I
guess, or, you know, I'm very obviously
privileged and blessed in that sense.
I grew up in Invermere, BC, um,
interior BC and my, both my parents
were avid skiers, backcountry skiers.
You know, I had the Purcell
mountains at my fingertips.
I grew up ski racing and, uh, my mom
was a level three ski instructor.
My dad, uh, dabbled in the guide world.
And, And was president of the back
country, a HUD association when I grew up.
So it was just, I was just constantly
in the mountains when I was, I remember
when I was really little, I don't even,
I didn't even think there was anywhere
in the world that didn't have mountains.
Really?
I remember figuring that out
as a kid, like, whoa, there's
places that don't have mountains.
I thought everywhere did.
And so, you know, very privileged in
that sense and blessed in that sense
that I grew up in that environment and,
uh, Yeah, my parents were always just
pushing me outside and, and, you know, I,
I developed a passion for it pretty early.
I
Travis Bader: read that you
learned to ski before you
Ian McIntosh: learned to walk.
Right around the same time.
Yeah, it was basically
the same, same time.
Um, now obviously having kids now, I
realize that the notion of like taking
a two year old skiing is, is novel.
Novelty, um, or a less
than two year old skiing.
So it's very novelty skiing at
that point, but, but nonetheless,
you know, got the skis on, got the
feel for it at a super young age.
I, I learned how to ski
before I remember for sure.
So, uh, for me, it's,
it's the same as walking.
Travis Bader: So, you know, I I've read
through, you've got a number of quotes.
I'm going to get into
them in a little bit, but.
There was a couple of, there's one viral
fall that really captivated my attention.
Cause it was whole thing
was caught on video.
That was 1600 feet in Alaska.
And you were what, heli dropped in
on a mountain and decided to just run
this line and everything went sideways.
Ian McIntosh: Yeah.
I mean, basically, um, you know, I've,
Doing what I do for a living, there's a
certain amount of steps that you take,
um, when you're approaching these kinds
of mountains that, that you do to ensure
that you're doing it safely and that
you're going to, you know, uh, ski out
the bottom and, uh, that particular
face, we really wanted it on that trip.
And it was this, this type of
face that was so North facing,
it only got light and the Ridge
that went off of it, it only got.
Sunlight on it for like
15 minutes at like 7 AM.
And so we had to get the heli off
the ground before, you know, it
was even technically supposed to be
legally allowed to, and we had to,
you know, we, and then we skipped
all these, like, you know, the amount
of time that we spend scoping lines.
And I honestly looked at the
mountain is not that tough of a ski.
Like it's for the mountains
that I ski, that was pretty
easy line for me, I thought.
And so I didn't really give the mountain.
The respect it deserved.
And I paid the price for all that.
I, I, you know, I skipped a lot of steps.
I rushed it.
I didn't pay homage or respect to the
mountain and then yeah, dropped in.
And the, and the light was really playing
tricks with my eyes and the shadows.
And, uh, we call these like kind
of fluted features in Alaska.
We call them spines.
And I was on the sunny side of
the spine and I thought I could
do a turn on the shady side, but
the shady side was just like this
vertical wall that dropped into a.
Ditch into a trough.
And once I fell into that trough, I knew
it was either, okay, I could straight
line this whole mountain, which I'm
going to explode at the bottom and
probably break myself into pieces, or
I can try and get back onto the spine.
And when I tried to get back on the
spine, because it was such a steep little
vertical wall, it basically just high
sided me, spun me around backwards and
I lost both my skis and I was tumbling.
Um, yeah.
And then next thing I know,
uh, that video goes out.
And it's viral and I'm on good morning,
America and CNN and all this stuff.
Um, yeah, it was a bit of a
whirlwind for a few days there.
What
Travis Bader: was going through your
mind right as you're dropping in?
Ian McIntosh: Right as I was dropping
in, um, not much, like just like, you
know, typically that's what I love about
what I do is when you drop in, there's,
you're just reacting, your, your brain
shuts off and it's like, it's kind of
almost this meditative state where,
where you stop thinking about everything.
And you're just now doing.
It's a forced presence.
It's very, yeah, very forced presentness.
And so I, uh, yeah, not much.
I was just thinking about, you know,
linking turns and, and, um, not until
did I drop off the wrong side of the
spine, did anything occur to me that it
was going to be challenging or difficult
or, or weird or anything like that.
So before I knew it, I was
tomahawking down that mountain.
So the second
Travis Bader: you start tomahawking.
In your head, what's going on
Ian McIntosh: in my head?
I'm like, I'm going to the bottom
of this mountain and, uh, this
sucks and I'm inhaling tons of snow.
And basically those troughs were
all that they're formed from this
because the mountain's so steep,
it's constantly shedding snow
and it sheds in those troughs.
So the bottom of the trough is like
rock hard as hard as this table.
And so I'm just like bouncing off of
what feels like ice and, and getting
pushed by all the moving snow.
And I knew I was going to the bottom.
So I was just like, I gotta just.
Like try and grit and bear it.
And, you know, um, I think I was on like
the Jason Ellis show and he was like, it
sounded like Homer Simpson falling into
the Springfield Gorge, like, oh, yeah,
that was me like the whole way down.
But, uh, you know, I pulled my
airbag to think like, maybe that'll
provide me some sort of protection.
Um, it was just kind of biding my
time until I got to the bottom.
Really.
Did it
Travis Bader: cross your mind?
You might not make it through that fall.
Ian McIntosh: Um.
My biggest concern was at the bottom of
these mountains, there's the thing, a big
crack usually where the glaciers pulling
away from the base of the mountain.
That's called the Berks run.
And my concern was going in that,
but then I felt myself go over that.
I felt myself do a double flip where all
my other Tomahawks were single flips.
And so I felt myself do a double flip.
And I was like, that was the Berks run.
I'm almost at the bottom.
And I knew like, once I, once
I was past that, I felt like
I was going to be all good.
So that was my big concern.
Did you ever get your skis back?
Uh, yeah, actually, um, my good friend,
Angel Collinson, she was still up
top cause she was going to ski a line
and we kind of aborted all everyone
else skiing lines on the face and
she just kind of picked her way down
slowly and gathered my gear for me.
Travis Bader: That wasn't the first
kind of big spill that you took, was it?
Ian McIntosh: No, uh, I'd say that one.
And then in 2011, uh, which was many years
earlier was probably my biggest crash.
And that was again in Alaska.
Travis Bader: And so yours, you said
something I thought was kind of cool.
You said you didn't pay
homage to the mountain.
What do you mean by that?
Ian McIntosh: Uh, I mean, mother nature
deserves respect is what I mean by that.
And it doesn't matter if you're going
hunting or fishing or, um, mountain
biking or skiing or whatever it is.
If you're playing in mother nature and
you're out in the wilderness, it deserves
respect in the mountains, especially
the snow covered mountains deserve an
extra level of, of respect, I feel.
And, uh, by not.
You know, doing my due diligence, uh,
beforehand, before I ski it, I feel like
I'm disrespecting the mountain in a way.
And, and ultimately when you do
that, you, you can pay the price.
We had
Travis Bader: a guest on here
before she was on the TV show alone,
where they drop you off and you've
got to survive all on your own.
And Nikki Van Schendel and
she, um, she was an ace in the
hole for, uh, for that show.
They ended up giving
her a medical RTU, just.
Because the doctor said
she'd lost too much weight.
She said she felt she
was on top of the world.
Right.
But there's something that she
said that always stuck with me.
Um, she says, you know, when you come
from the city and you go into the woods,
all the little brown birds are chirping.
Yeah.
All the squirrels are chirping at you.
You're not in sync with what's going on.
And she says, every time that she
leaves one environment to go into the
next one, when she leaves the city
or wherever she was a little higher,
faster pace to go into the forest.
She'll say, hello, forest.
It's me, Nikki.
And she'll introduce herself and
she'll go through this process.
And it sounds.
I like that.
It sounds airy fairy, but you know what?
I do it as well.
And she says, the forest will accept you.
The, the birds will stop chirping.
The squirrels will stop.
So you start, cause about
day three, if you're.
If you're just doing, going into
the forest without going through
a process, usually by about day
three, things start ignoring you
and you start finding your flow.
And you, you, you work with.
Ian McIntosh: Your energy starts
to align with your environment.
That's it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, everything's energy, right?
Where we're all, everything
in this world is 99.
99 to the 12th decibel point of nines of
energy, more than it is mass or anything.
Right.
And the forest is all energy.
All those creatures are energy.
We're energy.
We're all admitting energy.
And so if you walk into the forest
and your energy's not in line with, or
into the wilderness and your energy's
not in line with that space, like, i.
e., you were just at camp and you'd
hopped in a helicopter and heli'd to
the top of a mountain and then dropped
in before you even said, Hey, mountain!
I'm here to ski you.
Travis Bader: That's right.
It sounds cheesy, but there's
Ian McIntosh: something to it.
There is something to it.
And whether it's just, you know, internal
or, or it is definitely something linked
to that energy that connects everything.
Um, yeah, it, there's, there's
a bit of that going on and
you got to pay homage for
Travis Bader: sure.
Well, it sounds like there's
a bit of an energy shift.
For you after the 2011 injury,
do you want to talk about this?
What, what was going on
in your life at the time?
What was the
Ian McIntosh: injury?
Yeah.
So, I mean, I've told this story
a few times obviously, but, uh, at
that time, you know, I was pretty on
top of the world with my ski career.
Uh, things were feeling pretty good,
but my personal life was pretty rocky.
I was married to a woman that
I'm not, no longer married to.
Uh, and.
Uh, it was not going well.
There was a lot of drama and anxiety
in my life, uh, things were not lining
up in that respect, and, uh, it was
the same week I threw my wedding ring
in the garbage, told her I was done,
and then, uh, the next day, we'd been
waiting three weeks for good weather,
and the next day it popped blue, and
it was blue for five days, and I wasn't
sleeping, and Cause I was thinking
about my failed marriage and all the,
everything else that was going on my life.
And then I, if, if I wasn't thinking
about that, I was thinking about like
all the gnarly lines I wanted to ski
the next day that I have photos of,
you know, and that just kept me up
for night after night after night.
And then by day five, you know, I
was actually having one of the best
sessions of my life and I was kind of
skiing angry, but like it was working
out, you know, I was like skiing,
um, at a very high level for me.
And, and that morning
we went out and skied.
Pretty amazing line for me.
Uh, and then, you know, I started
the whole area where I was like,
I'm not going to ski there.
Like, that's like a no go zone.
All of a sudden I'm like, I'm going there.
And again, it's like this
disrespect for the place.
Like my initial gut
instinct was don't go there.
And then, you know.
My first run went really well.
My ego gets inflated even more.
I'm kind of pissed off about everything
else that's going on in my life.
And I'm like, I'm going to go ski
that and show everyone how rad I am.
And it's going to be the most next
level thing that anyone's ever seen.
And everyone will love
me for it, you know?
And, and so I run, I go up
there, heli up there and drop in.
And anyway, it took a huge fall,
broke my femur, had to get extracted
off the mountain, uh, flown back to.
Uh, Vancouver from, from Alaska and a
Medijet had, you know, a rod put in my
leg and returned home a few days later,
you know, I'd lost a couple of liters
of blood, but I turned, came home a few
days later to my home in Pemberton, B.
C.
and, and empty house, wife was gone,
uh, broken leg, career might be.
Hanging in the balance.
And, uh, it was a huge time of
self reflection and growth for me.
And I'm a completely different
person than I was before that.
What process did you go through?
Oh, well, there's the first, the
process of like, woes me feeling,
feeling sorry for yourself.
But then there's like, wait a second.
I'm, I'm responsible for
everything in my life.
So take the responsibility, own it.
Why are you here?
And it's like, Oh, well, it turns out
you're an egomaniac and everything
you're doing is to inflate your
ego, including your hot wife.
That wasn't a proper match for you, but
was, you know, looked a certain way.
So it inflated your ego
even more, you know?
Um, and so being able
to kind of reflect on.
Where I was and like, okay, how
do I move forward in this career?
And in my life with we all have ego, like
I'm not sitting here, I'm not sitting
here today claiming I don't have an ego
anymore, but putting all that in check and
figuring out, um, what's really important
and how do I move forward in what I do
in career and in life so that I'm staying
true to myself and not doing things so
that other people will approve of me.
Or like me or whatever it may be and
turns out I was, I was skiing a lot of
stuff back in those days to impress.
Sure.
Um, and ego is a powerful thing and
I think as a young man, it can get us
a lot of places, you know, but, uh.
You know, as someone who is trying
to figure out where I got to and
how I got there, I, I came to that
conclusion that I needed to put my
ego in check and start and start
approaching life from a different way.
Travis Bader: So, I mean, we can
look at somebody like Eckhart Tolle,
who had the, uh, four agreement.
Ian McIntosh: Right.
Or no, sorry.
That's no, that's Don Miguel Ruiz.
Uh, Eckhart Tolle.
Is that the power of now?
That's him.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah, yeah.
Travis Bader: And I love listening to his
stuff, but I can only listen to it for so
long before I start falling asleep, but,
but maybe that's part of the process.
Ian McIntosh: Yeah.
Um, yeah, but yeah, I mean, there's a
lot of, uh, great wisdom in those books
and it was a, definitely a period for
me where I was reaching to those and
I still do those self growth books.
Um, you know, kind of trying to
become a better version of myself.
Uh, and that was, I think, the time in my
life where I stopped thinking that I knew
it all and I stopped thinking that I was
the man and I was the best and I started
going, you know nothing, you're not the
man, and started being more grateful
for everything I had and started, you
know, just I Putting everything in check.
And since then, everything is kind of
been working out way better for me.
Um, since I, since I
realigned myself, if you will.
Travis Bader: I find that to be a
commonality between successful people
that I've met or have been on the podcast.
And that's the common theme is that one
of gratitude, uh, oftentimes talking about
energy and an energy, two things, whatever
the, whether you can quantify it, put
your finger on it, or just call it that.
And, um.
Being responsible, knowing that.
Everything that happens to you, whether
it's good or it's bad is based on, on you
and you have a level of control over it.
And you know, Eckhart Tolle's got no ego.
So he says, right.
Or from what I've heard of,
there's a death of the ego
and it sounds really neat.
I, I think a certain level of legal
is important if it's managed properly,
if people know how to manage it.
I think Eckhart
Ian McIntosh: Tolle's book
sales, uh, fuel his ego.
We all have one.
I think he's got his very well in check.
You know, and he's, he, he understands
it and he has a great relationship
with it, but to say that you have no
ego is, is very, I think, very, uh,
uncommon or rare, or I don't, I don't
know if I think even Buddha had an ego.
I'd say so.
You know, like the most,
I think everyone does.
It's, it's just a matter of like what
your relationship with your ego is like.
Yeah.
Travis Bader: So what's your relationship
Ian McIntosh: with your ego like?
Well, these days I've liked to feel that,
um, I'm constantly checking in with that.
How?
You know, in just making sure that
I'm a, I'm approaching life, uh, for
the reasons that I want to approach
life, you know, and, and when I go
into the mountains, I'm approaching the
mountains because I want to be, do that.
I'm, I'm skiing a line because I want
to have that adventure because I want
to prove to myself that I can do that.
And rather than trying to
prove to everyone else, I've
got nothing else to prove.
I don't need to prove to anyone else and I
don't need anyone else's approval anymore.
And it's funny, the more you do
that, the more approval you get.
And so it's, it's the whole notion of
like, you know, to, to have abundance,
you need to first feel abundant.
Uh, you know, people who feel
like they lack and have lack will
create more lack for themself.
People who feel abundant and
grateful and full of gratitude will
continue to attract more of what
they are grateful for and makes them
feel abundant in the first place.
And so that's why I think everyone
always comes back to that gratitude
thing and it really helps you put
your ego in check because then if
you can just keep coming back to,
well, what am I grateful right now?
What do I need?
Well, I don't need anything.
You really don't need much, do you?
No.
I mean, especially at this point in my
life, I've got everything as a young
man who is sleeping in a closet and
Whistler paying 200 bucks a month rent.
So I could ski every day.
Everything I have right now is what
I dreamt of having in those days.
And I look back to those days as some
of the funnest times in my life, because
there was just not a care in the world,
but everything I have, I already have.
And so how could I not feel.
Like I am abundant and grateful and all
this sorts of stuff because yeah, I mean
as we grow we always want more You know,
yes, that's the nature of the beast.
That's called being a human being but
But realizing and constantly putting
that in check with like hey the younger
version of you looking at you now
Travis Bader: I just came back
from a hunting trip with a guy.
He said, you know, some of the happiest
times in my life were when I had nothing.
Yeah.
And I was trying to, I was working
towards something I was trying to make it.
And you look at me now, it feels
like I got everything and, and, uh,
but I've got all these stresses and
problems and headaches that go with it.
Ian McIntosh: More money, more problems,
you know, money, more problems.
It's, it's, it's the nature of the
beast, but you know, at the same time,
um, it's, it's, You got to also realize
that like, Hey, all those things that
you have, you know, you've worked your
butt off for, and yes, now it's, it's,
I think in, in our society, it's, it's
crucial to not fall into the trap of
trying to keep up with the Joneses to
just have stuff because everyone else
has stuff and you need to have, you need
to present this version of yourself.
That's your ego that wants, wants
all these materialistic things.
And then those materialistic things
inevitably end up trapping you into this.
You know, feedback loop where you're
constantly trying to work to pay for
all your things instead of just being
grateful and not needing anything.
And then everything, and then more
of everything will just flow to you.
It's kind of like a interesting way of
looking at it, but the more I embody
that, the more that is the case.
I, I
Travis Bader: agree with you.
I've said on the podcast in
the past, you know, like money
is not a motivator for me.
No.
Yeah.
Like when I was younger and I had
nothing and you think, well, man,
if only I could have X amount, or if
only I could have this item or that
item, and you reach those stages
and you get them and you realize
that's not where happiness is found.
No.
And.
I had to release self reflect and
say, what is it that I like to do?
I like to create, I
like to meet new people.
I like to, uh, be positive, share
positivity and try and create
an environment around myself.
That's going to influence the
world in a more positive way.
Right.
And if I can keep building towards that,
The interesting thing is that money
will be a natural by product of the
hard work and effort that you put in.
But if you chase that money, you're
always going to be behind it.
Exactly,
Ian McIntosh: exactly.
Let go of the need for it
and then it'll flow to you.
It's the, it's the need of, or the feeling
of lack versus the feeling of abundance.
You know, it's like if you're
completely content and you say,
I don't need money, then all of a
sudden money will be like, here I am.
It's like
Travis Bader: being a teenager, man,
it'd be great to have a girlfriend.
Well, when you have a girlfriend, all
the other girls are interested in you.
Right.
It's.
Yeah.
Ian McIntosh: Yeah.
Or like, but I think back to being
a single man, uh, even in between
my marriages and it was like.
This need of, of, of wanting a partner or
needing a feeling like you need a partner,
you'll never find that your partner, it's
when you let go of that desire and that
need, and you fall in love with yourself
and you become content with who you are
and where you are, your partner flows to
you and it's the partner of your dreams.
And that's exactly what
I'm living proof of that.
It's exactly what
Travis Bader: happened to me.
Fall in love with yourself.
I think that's one of those things
that a lot of people listening.
We'll have a very difficult time with, I
Ian McIntosh: mean, I think in the era
of things like social media and constant
connectivity and all this sort of stuff,
uh, mental health is, uh, at its worst
and, and yeah, I'll agree with you.
It's, it's hard to wrap your head around.
It's hard to get yourself to that place.
And, and, uh, you know, I wasn't always
where I am mentally, you know, but
ultimately it's, it's, it's realizing.
That, um, letting go of all
that is, is the true key.
Travis Bader: So there's a common thread
I've also seen, and that's people who
say, look at, make your bed, right?
Tighten up your belt.
Yeah.
Straighten up, fly right.
You're fully responsible for everything in
your life and everything that happens to
you, which I a hundred percent believe in.
Yeah.
And live by, but there's
a dichotomy there as well.
There's a level of control that an
individual will try and feel over every
aspect of their life in order to make sure
that things are going in the right path.
And there's, there's a point
where they have to let go and just
understand what's going to be, is
going to be, or essentially accept.
Things for, as they are, I
Ian McIntosh: think.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I mean, it's, it's like a funny
analogy, but I don't know why it came
to my head, but, uh, it's like the
stock market, for instance, if you like
do your homework and invest in some
good stuff, but then you're trying to
constantly play the game of trading and
buying and selling sell, you know, sell
high, buy low, all you're going to end
up losing money or make very little.
Whereas if you just like let go,
you're like, okay, I've put that there.
And don't look at it for 20 years,
you're going to come back and realize
that your money's growing at least 10%,
if not like way, way more, you know?
And so, um, yeah, it's, it's that letting
go of, of, of control over it all.
And I think that's a lot of, a
lot of people make that mistake.
Yeah.
Travis Bader: You also highlight a really
important point that it's a long game.
It's not a short game.
And so many people look,
I'm on top of the world.
Oh, I'm the bottom.
I'm on top.
I'm on bottom.
What's your long
Ian McIntosh: game look like?
Well, the long game is, is,
is making sure that you.
That you continue to, uh, create a
life that you want to be grateful
for, you know, um, gratitude breeds
more things to be grateful for.
Um, and so, yeah, my long game personally,
like what are my current dreams?
Yeah.
Oh shit, man.
So much like that's, I think, I think
having dreams is a huge part of feeling
alive and being human, but not just
having dreams and, and being too scared
to pursue them, like actually going and
getting them, you know, and for me right
now, um, you know, I've got a multitude
of things that I could list right now.
But I'll, I'll take the one off the
top of top of my head that sticks out
the most is I want to get a big old
50 foot catamaran, sail catamaran.
And I want to take my
family around the world.
Sail around the world.
Do I currently know how to sail?
Very little.
Oh, I love it.
But I am going to achieve that
and I'm going to achieve it.
And there's no timeframe.
But I will.
And, uh, that's one of my goals
and it has nothing to do with
what I currently do in my life.
But that's what I love about it.
That's maybe why I'm so drawn to it.
I've spent my life in the mountains
and there's this whole ocean out there.
Yeah.
Like world of ocean, like so much ocean.
And, and, you know, I mean, there's a
bit of sailing background in my family.
Like my grandfather built a boat and
my uncle sails and so on and so forth.
But for me more, it's just that like,
it's this whole new frontier of adventure
and, and, um, Takes this whole new
skill set that I don't currently have.
And, and, you know, is going to challenge
me and push me in so many different
ways that I haven't done before.
That's what I love
Travis Bader: about it.
Well, good friend of mine, Jason,
he's, uh, said something to me
one time, which has kind of become
a, uh, a motto in our house.
He says.
He went, he bought himself a sailboat.
Yeah.
I'm like, I didn't know you could sail.
He said, what do you, what do you mean?
Anyone can sail a boat.
You just, it's a boat and it's
got a sail and you point the wind
into it and you can sail a boat.
Am I going to be great at it?
No, but I'll figure it out.
Right.
Ian McIntosh: Yeah.
I mean, the sailboats were built
by humans for humans to operate.
Right.
So if you're a human being.
You should be able to figure out how to
Travis Bader: operate.
So whenever there's something
challenging or something
coming up, talk with the kids.
Anyone can sail a boat.
This has become a little
catechism that we just
Ian McIntosh: keep throwing in.
That's awesome.
I love it.
Travis Bader: Um, yeah, I remember
about 20 years ago, I was teaching
a course out at, I think it was a
Renfrew park community center, maybe
it was a Croatian cultural center.
A guy came in, he'd written a book
about sailing around the world and, uh,
interesting fellow, adventurous spirit.
And he went out with his wife and he
says, well, we made it to Australia.
And then we realized that, uh, we weren't
meant to be in such tight, confined
quarters for such a long period of time.
I give it to her, she stuck
with me for that long, but,
uh, we're no longer married.
So yeah,
Ian McIntosh: there's, uh, there's
probably two things that'll test a
marriage more than anything else.
And that's having kids and then
putting yourself on a sailboat.
Yeah, that'll test your marriage for sure.
I mean, my, my uncle and my aunt,
uh, sailed halfway around the world
on a boat that my grandfather built.
Uh, and then when they were
in Australia, they were.
Yeah.
My aunt was like, I'm going back.
They live in Fernie, BC.
And she's like, I'm going back because
I miss my grandchildren or I have
grandchildren now, I want to see them.
I miss my kids.
Like I, I want to be
connected with family.
And so my uncle sailed solo from
Australia back to Vancouver.
Travis Bader: That'd be an adventure.
Like you need an autopilot
on that thing, eh?
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I remember reading about Bear Grylls.
He took a rigid inflatable from, uh, Nova
Scotia over to Ireland and, uh, him and
I think a couple of other people getting
this book of records, doing this thing.
And I'm like.
Just trying to wrap my head
around what that looks like.
And like, how do you pre plan
for these weather conditions that
could, may or may not be happening.
Ian McIntosh: It's.
It's, it's a wild adventure and
you're really throwing yourself out
there, especially doing it in like
dinghy, like they did, you know,
I mean, yeah, it's one thing to
do it in a big ocean going vessel.
It's another thing to do it
in a, in a small little boat.
So yeah, they, they threw themselves
out there, but they also probably
knew what they were doing.
So,
Travis Bader: so would you say
that you're an adrenaline junkie?
Ian McIntosh: I mean, I don't know.
Sure, I guess.
I mean, I used, you know, I
used to think so definitely.
And then, you know, I bass
jumped for a number of years.
And I remember being in Switzerland
on this three week base jumping trip.
And I'm like on vacation.
And when we did like 49 base jumps in
19 days, me and my buddy, and I remember
at one point, like near the end of the
trip, I'm like, man, I just want to
stop being scared for a couple of days.
It was like, almost like.
I was getting tapped out on adrenaline
and I started to realize that like,
there is more to life than just being
full of adrenaline all the time.
Not to say that I don't love it.
Not to say that, like when I ski a
really nice line and I get to the
bottom, I don't feel like so fricking
alive, you know, but, um, but yeah,
a junkie, maybe a connoisseur.
Travis Bader: I won't
like that or something.
Adrenaline caught a sewer.
Ian McIntosh: Yeah.
I only like the sweetest, most fresh
adrenaline that there is, the purest
adrenaline now, um, not just like all
the time, whatever adrenaline I can find,
you know, the, the real special moments.
Travis Bader: So what is it that
makes you feel alive in those moments?
Because from a personal perspective, I
know in times when I've done something
well outside of my comfort zone and the
odds of survival or not survival are kind
of in the balance there, I know you never.
Truly feel as alive as
when you've almost died.
It's true.
Would that be, what's the sort of driving
Ian McIntosh: factor there?
I think so.
Yeah.
And I think it's, you know, a, you've
been launched like, like a monk
who's been practicing for 50 years
to get into this like state of pure.
Oneness and consciousness you've
been thrust into that world of like,
I'm not thinking about anything.
I'm just reacting.
So it's like this meditative,
very active meditative
Travis Bader: state.
It's a forced meditation.
It's a forced
Ian McIntosh: meditation like we were
talking about and then and then you
pop out of it and you've put yourself
right at the edge and pulled it off.
Just like you knew you could, knew
you would, and there's nothing that
feels so good because you're like,
it's, it's all those, it's all those
emotions rushing in, but it's also
the, like, I knew I could do it.
And you like put yourself out
there because you wanted to
see what you're capable of.
And you pulled it off and it was
right on the edge, you know, there's
something about that, that, yeah,
it makes you feel super alive.
And that's where I think a lot of
people get trapped into it and they
become more of the junkie variety.
And then maybe they start to make,
you know, I've been lucky, uh,
my, my couple big, bad decisions.
Uh, in the big mountains I walked
or not walked away from, but I lived
through and, uh, not everyone gets that
opportunity, you know, so it, there is
a bit of luck there and so on and so
forth, but yeah, it's, it's really about
that like feeling of, I've just put
myself to the very edge and I pulled it
off just like I knew I could, you know.
Travis Bader: You know, like
you say, Oh, I would say to
my wife, it always works out.
And she says, well, that's
because you're still alive.
When, when you're playing that
game, the workout is, you don't
get to say that anymore, right?
Yeah, exactly.
Ian McIntosh: And you won't even realize.
Yeah.
Travis Bader: So a couple of kids now.
Yeah.
Uh, two and four.
Yeah.
Nothing I found, nothing makes you
recognize your own mortality like
that of having children yourself.
100%.
Uh, it's
Ian McIntosh: changed my game in the sense
that like, you know, I've had kids and
I'm a bit older now, same with my wife.
We're both in our early forties.
Um, and so it's in the sense that like,
man, I better like be the healthiest
version of myself so that I can
be around for as long as possible.
Cause I want to see these two little
girls grow into women and have
families of their own or whatever
they decide to do with their lives.
Um, so there's a bit of that and
yeah, it checks your mortality in the
sense that like, wow, you know, I've,
I'm now at this stage of my life.
When I was a kid, I looked at
my parents like they're so old.
And, you know, and now my dad's gone.
I still have my mom's still around
and, and, but it's like, okay, you
know, like when these little girls
are my age, I'm going to be on my
way out if not already, you know?
And so, yeah, it does in that sense, but
it also, um, It also forces me to make
sure that I'm really making those good
decisions with everything I'm doing.
And, you know, I don't want to be the, the
person that like the second I had kids,
I'm like, okay, I'm done taking risk.
And then, and then show that to my
kids, like, well, the second I had
you, I stopped taking risks because
I love you so much, but then I'm not
showing you how to live your life
properly in my mind, my opinion.
But you know, Some, some risks
are more tolerable than others.
I felt before I even had kids, I
felt that base jumping was more
risk than I was willing to take on.
Um, and there's a multitude of
reasons for that, but like I wasn't
even about to have kids yet, but I
just, I just knew that I was probably
going to kill myself in that sport.
I wasn't afraid enough.
And, uh, of, of the
risks that I was taking.
And so I needed to take a step back.
And so, yeah, it's finding that, like,
it's different for everybody, finding
that healthy balance of, of still being
able to put yourself out there and
take risk because ultimately that's.
You know, a life well lived and you'll
be happier and so on and so forth,
but also ensuring now as a parent
that I'm making good decisions and,
and that, um, you know, I'm going
to set myself up hopefully to live
the longest life I can too, because
life's too good to just end it short.
Travis Bader: So when you first
started down this process, we're
doing pretty damn early age.
When, when did you first
started getting sponsored?
Ian McIntosh: Uh, my first like gear
sponsors, I was in my early twenties.
Okay.
Um, and then my first contract was 2006.
Travis Bader: So you were getting up in
your game, getting higher and higher.
Yeah.
Ian McIntosh: And now
I think I was like 24.
So yeah.
Um, yeah, you know, it was, it.
You know, I moved out to the Whistler
area, um, from the interior with
the idea, you know, I thought I was
going to be a guide, which I've now
got my guide ticket in just the last
couple of years, but I thought I was
going to be a guide as a young man.
And, um, I, you know, I kind of
got like these like hunches that I
could pursue this pro skiing career.
And I met some guys from
Whistler and they've.
We're like, dude, you got what it takes.
Like you should move out to Whistler.
And, and then I started doing the
contest scene and all that sort of
stuff and filming and, and everything.
And yeah, you know, things just kind
of, you know, slowly, you know, for
an inpatient person, especially a
young twenties, it was taking forever
looking back at it at all, just kind
of like happened, you know, in the
right order, how it should happen.
And I slowly, slowly started
to build my way up and.
Build my credentials and eventually
got the opportunities I needed to
start making a living doing it.
Travis Bader: Were you taking some silly
risks to kind of stand out from the crowd?
Ian McIntosh: Oh yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I was, yeah, constantly anyone who
wanted to watch me do anything, I was
throwing myself three sheets to the
wind, you know, like, uh, no, no fear.
And just going for it.
And it didn't matter if it was just
someone on the ski resort, like watching,
or, you know, there was a camera on me or
whatever it was, or is this is a contest.
I was like out there to prove
to everyone what I could do,
or what I thought I could do.
Travis Bader: You see, that was
a necessary part of the process,
or would you say that now in
Ian McIntosh: hindsight?
I would say yes.
And that's why I said, like, you know,
going back to the ego thing is like,
as a young boy, I think that that's
when our egos are strongest or a young
man, I should say, and that's not
necessarily a bad thing because it's
going to cause you to pursue your dreams.
Um, now there is points where you could
maybe go to an unhealthy side of that.
Um, I started to get to
that unhealthy place.
And had a huge reality
check as we talked about.
And that's how I've kind of like
found myself where I am now.
But I don't think without being
so, uh, egocentric as a young man,
I would have got where I am today.
Travis Bader: If your daughter
started going down this route,
what would you have to say to them?
Ian McIntosh: I would say, uh,
if, if that's, what's going to
make you happy, 100%, I support
it full heartedly, but know that
you're going to beat your body up.
And then as a middle aged person need
to find a new career and you're going
to have a beat up body and need to find
a new career because As a professional
skier, I'm not an NFL football player.
I'm not making the kind of money where I
can just retire when I'm done my sport.
I need to find, need to reinvent myself.
And so as, as long as they're aware of
that and, you know, for me, if I could
do it all over again, I would probably
try and go down a path where I, you
know, change the world in, in some way.
And whatever that looks
like, I don't know, but like.
I guess, you know, I, it's funny
because on a recent trip in Chile,
um, a guy, a guy kind of presented
this back to me cause we were having
a similar, similar conversation.
He's like, well, you're only 41.
Why don't you, you still can go do that?
It's what I just wrote down.
Yeah.
And I was like, huh, you're right.
And so, yeah, there's like some things
in the works that I'm like, Huh, okay.
There is like some ideas being sparked
of like, how could I, how could
I do something that would have a
positive impact beyond just inspiring
people to get outside and inspiring
people to push themselves and, you
know, whatever I do as a pro skier.
Um, but yeah, something a little bit
more profound that I can look back at
my daughters and be like, daddy tried,
daddy, daddy did his best to, to kind
of set you girls up for, for a future.
Travis Bader: Well, I think those two
right there are going to be the easiest
vehicle towards changing the future and
changing, having an impact on the world.
Ian McIntosh: 100%.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I look at, I look at the next
generation, you know, um, my
kids, other people's kids.
I hope people are raising their kids
to, to have those kinds of morals
and to love nature and to love, um,
the natural world and to want to
protect it and want to preserve it.
Um, you know, I think the, you know,
I don't eat meat anymore, but I
think the hunting community does a
great job of this in a lot of ways.
There, there are some ways
that maybe could have been.
Could be done better, but you know,
there's still that passion for nature
and preserving it and, and wanting it
to be there for future generations so
that they can go out and experience
the same things and get their own
wild meat and so on and so forth.
So, you know, there's a lot of
polarities there and, and, uh, and
that's, that's all you can hope for
is, is that your kids grow up and, and
are the voice and, and go out there
and do something to actually make
Travis Bader: a difference.
That was one of the things that gave me a
chuckle when Tiffany was talking with you.
And yeah, do you think I'll be
a good fit for this podcast?
Because like, I don't eat meat.
Yeah.
That's good.
From my perspective, that's,
that's neither here nor there.
Ian McIntosh: Yeah.
And that was just kind of my uneducated,
uh, response to like, okay, it
seems like you guys are very like,
want to interview people that are
into hunting and fishing and so on.
And like, I used to be a meatitarian.
And they're, if I go live on a sailboat,
I'm going to probably eat fish again.
Sure.
You know, um.
Travis Bader: Oh, you cut fish
Ian McIntosh: out as well.
Like everything.
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah.
Um, I went full vegan
for three years and then.
Talk me through this
Travis Bader: process because it's
foreign to me, but I'd like to understand.
Yeah.
Ian McIntosh: Yeah.
Um, well, so a good friend of mine, Julia
Murray, uh, Dave Murray, downhiller has.
It's got a run on Whistler mountain
called Dave Murray downhill,
his daughter, uh, good friend
of mine and amazing human being.
She is, you know, your quintessential
high energy vegan chick that, um, she'd,
she's, you know, works for blogs and
she works, you know, on social media and
like, that's her job or has been her job.
She just got a real estate license, but
it has been her job for years, um, to.
To promote veganism.
And, you know, I was interested.
I was like, you know what?
You're bouncing off the walls with energy.
You're kicking all the boys butts
on the hill climbs on the bikes.
And, you know, I'm into whatever you
got going on, let me give it a go.
And so I, you know, I'm open
minded to anything and I'll try
anything for at least a while.
And, um.
Yeah.
Veganism was great.
Like, you know, it takes some
time to adjust to and figure out
how to get your proper nutrition.
Is that hard?
At first.
Yeah.
Cause you're just like, what do I eat?
I don't know what to eat.
And like, you, you know, you're
constantly missing things in your diet.
And then as time goes
on, it's less difficult.
Now.
You know, last year I went to Italy with
my family for three weeks and we got back
into the cheese pretty hard and I came
back and I'm like, okay, you know what?
Like vegetarian actually for
now is where I want to be.
And I don't know if a year from now I'm
going to go back to being vegan or go back
to eating meat or pescetarian, whatever.
I'm open to anything.
I'm not closed minded about anything.
I'm just, this is what feels
right for me right now.
You know, I've got this really sick.
Gosney pizza oven sent to
me and, and I saw that.
Yeah.
And so I'm like, I did not
Travis Bader: put pepperoni on that
Ian McIntosh: pizza.
Well, I mean, I, yeah, I don't put
pepperoni on it, but a lot of my
friends put there, you know, I cook
a lot of pepperoni pizzas at my house
for my friends, you know, football
Sundays and stuff, but, um, For me,
it was like, I, this fake cheese,
this like cashew cheese is great.
Like, I don't, it's just a dip.
I don't call it cheese.
You know, it's like all these other vegan
cheeses that are like made from nuts.
They're, they're delicious
and good for you.
Yes.
But like the type of fake cheese
that melts on a pizza doesn't work.
It's made of coconut oil and a million
other ingredients you can't pronounce.
So that's in my mind, not better for you.
Um, and so that's where I kind
of started drawing the line.
I'm like, I like pizza and I'm going
to have real cheese on my pizza.
Travis Bader: Damn it.
I'm not going to have a bacon.
If
Ian McIntosh: I'm not having all this
other amazing like meat product, I'm going
to at least have some good cheese on it.
I'm with you on that one.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So that's.
Yeah, that's where I'm at right now.
But like I say, um, you know,
I've, I've, I've had every
diet and there is in the world.
And, um, this is the one I'm on now.
Travis Bader: Got a couple of
quotes that, uh, you have here.
I thought they were interesting.
Ian McIntosh: Sure.
Travis Bader: It says to succeed as a
pro skier, you can't be self motivated.
You have to let go of
the ego in this industry.
There's only group success.
And if you're focused on
the individual, you'll be
Ian McIntosh: alienated.
Yeah.
I've, I've seen a lot of athletes in our
sport that people don't want to work with.
Um, some of them have continued to
find success cause they're so, they're
so freaking talented, but they just
make their own movies, you know?
Um, but.
If you're not one of those people,
when you go on to film a ski movie,
a, you're part of a ski movie
that has 20, 30 athletes in it.
You want the whole film to be good.
You're going on trips that have
cinematographers, safety personnel,
you know, maybe chefs, maybe, you know.
The laundry list of photographers, the
laundry list, heli pilots, all these
other people that you're working with, all
the other athletes that are on the trip,
you're also working with collectively,
you want to make a good product.
And so to go out every day and you
yourself only gets good shots and gets
good lines and everyone else crashes.
Do you want to know what the vibe
is like at the end of the day?
Oh, it's gotta be terrible.
You're like inside.
You're like, that was sick day.
But like everyone else is just like.
So down in the dumps, it's no fun.
And then also now the portion of the
film that you're trying to make isn't as
good because all the only person that's
doing anything good is maybe yourself
at that point in time, much better is
when everyone crushes it at their job.
Cinematographers nailed the shot.
Every skier nails their line.
The photographer nails their shot.
The guides did a great job.
The pilot flew the heli so well.
Everyone crushed the chef makes
a great dinner that night.
Everyone crushed it at their job.
And the vibe is through the roof,
the energy is through the roof.
And then that energy carries through
the whole trip and the film as a whole.
And so now you're part
of something greater than
yourself and your part and you.
Your active player in making
the collective whole succeed.
And if the collective whole
succeeds, you succeed more.
That's awesome.
Then by
Travis Bader: yourself.
Actually part of a group called
the collective is some special
forces folk and military folk.
Have you heard of them?
The collective?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But, um, Every single day, at least for a
year, putting out new podcasts and stuff.
And it's the same mentality.
How do we make the collective better?
How do we work together?
Right.
And in the hunting world, it was an
interesting one because, uh, like you look
at social media and you see the, uh, The
Instagram famous and the famous social
media, people who are out there hunting
and all the hero shots, and they're going
back home with game over their shoulder.
And it's all about them.
Yeah.
I was over in Nuremberg a few months
ago and I was talking to the head of
the, um, hunter education and firearms
training for the Bavarian region.
He was saying, it's completely
different over here.
Like we've got a process.
If you go out, especially for your
first hunt, your first stag that you're
getting, when you're successful on
that, you're You don't come back and
you're not celebrated by everybody.
It's your job now to celebrate the person
in camp who's cooking, the person who
helped set up, the people who are out.
Yeah.
Everybody else who made this possible.
Totally.
And I really like that mentality.
And it sounds like you've taken a
very similar mentality to that German
hunting protocol to your, to your
Ian McIntosh: work.
For sure.
And the more I've taken that mentality,
To what I do, the more success I find and
not just in skiing in life, everything
I do with has that mentality going into
it with my wife, raising our Children,
you know, is if we have this collective
mentality, we nothing can ever stop us.
We're unstoppable and will always
succeed, you know, because uh, Trying
to just do it on your own, man, it's
a lonely road and it's a tough one.
Um, you know.
And you get
Travis Bader: there at the end.
And nobody cares.
That's it.
Everyone knows it's not the destination.
It's a journey.
So if we can realize that part,
that it's a journey, who are
you doing the journey with?
Ian McIntosh: Exactly.
Um, you know, one of the major film
companies I work with is Teton Gravity
Research, um, you know, they're an
action sports media brand, uh, and.
We every year when we we just came
back from our world film premiere of
our new film in Jackson, Wyoming, and
every year we go up the gondola and
we have a big feast and it's called
the family dinner and we do speeches
and we give out awards to the like
the old legacy athletes for, you know,
um, And it's really this family vibe.
And that's why I think that brand is,
has been so successful for so long.
And it feels cool to be part of that
family and to be celebrated as part of
that family and not just someone that like
people are a, or like maybe just putting
up with because they have to, or, or be
there just like, they want to, they don't
really want to bring you into the family.
You know, you want to be part
Travis Bader: of that.
You're not just a meal ticket.
You're not just someone
who's, it's not just.
Business.
Ian McIntosh: Yeah.
Yeah.
And so it's, it's, it feels nice
to be part of something like that.
Um, and with that mentality,
that's what creates that.
You know,
Travis Bader: I've had people
tell me before, it's not
personal, it's just business.
Yeah.
And I can understand the concept that
in business, not everyone is going to
be friends, but you've got a shared
goal that you're working together.
And that goal is going to take
priority over the individuals.
That's the collective goal is going
to take priority over the individual.
But I always come back to every part of
business is personal because business
is built on trust and relationships
and that trust takes time to create.
I mean, your reputation is
gotta be impeccable if you want
to succeed and move forward.
So when they say it's not personal,
it's business, I'd say it's a good,
healthy dose dose of both and having that
Ian McIntosh: perspective.
For sure.
And I think that, I think that.
Sentiment just is a cop out for
people that, uh, prioritize, you know,
themselves over anyone else around them.
Mm.
Um, and that's fine.
You might get ahead for a while as
that, but then you'll just end up
being a wealthy, old, lonely person.
Mm.
You know, you, with, with nobody
around you instead of the, the
alternative could be being a wealthy,
old, celebrated person with tons of
people that love you and respect you
and, and, and then, you know, that day
that comes where you meet your demise.
There's a ton of people there
speaking volumes and remembering you
because what is our legacy, you know?
Um, and ultimately, you know, if
you're only in it for yourself,
your legacy is going to be crap.
Travis Bader: Do you
think about that a lot?
What's where your legacy is
Ian McIntosh: going to be?
Not really.
Um, but I, you know, like a year
ago, my dad died and so I guess
it kind of got to front of mind.
Um, he's got an amazing legacy.
He was an amazing human being and.
Uh, very celebrated.
Um, so...
Yeah, I think that's like,
ultimately we want to be that person.
Don't we?
If, if your motivation is to be the
person that, that nobody remembers
and nobody cared about, then you're
dead, you're done, you're done.
Or if you live forever, if you.
If you, you know, made a big
enough impact on enough people,
you know, or at least a lot longer.
They
Travis Bader: say you died twice, once
when you pass away and the second time
when the last time your name was uttered.
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
So Teton did a, uh, phenomenal,
and I shortened it cause I don't
know the, uh, the whole Teton.
What is it?
Gravity research.
Gravity research.
They did a phenomenal interview with you.
I thought it was really good.
I pulled a few of the quotes out of there.
Uh, they took a different approach.
And now that you're mentioning, there's
sort of that family aspect to it.
I can see why.
Cause he, uh, that's what it
felt like when you were, we were
going through the interview.
Ian McIntosh: That's good.
I'm glad that
Travis Bader: came across.
Oh, it totally did.
But one of the things that, uh, came
up was your, your, uh, your, uh,
your, uh, your Uh, aversion at the
time, anyways, to getting back in
a helicopter and, uh, using that.
And it said you were going up by foot and,
uh, summiting your mountains doing two,
three runs instead of sipping a latte,
going to the top and, uh, what, talk to me
Ian McIntosh: about that.
Yeah, I mean, uh, I got to a point in
my career, you know, I was, I guess a
decade, over a decade as a professional
skier and I just kind of felt like I
was just doing the same thing every
year and I wanted to switch it up,
you know, I'm very pro environment.
I'm very pro, uh, protecting
mother nature and preserving her.
And so I was like, okay, I'm just
going to like stop traveling so much.
I'm going to not use helicopters anymore.
I'm going to not use
my snowmobile anymore.
I'm I'm going to just like
primarily just hike mountains.
Um, and that was great for a
few years, but it was funny.
The first year we did it was
the best year that I found.
Really?
Oh yeah.
We just scored conditions,
terrain, everything.
I was awarded line of the year.
Um, which was the first time anyone
had got that award off of a foot
powered line, like hiking to the line
and everything just kind of lined up.
And then I was chasing that.
For years afterwards, and
it wasn't really happening.
We just kept getting rejected and I kept
sitting there in my tent going, man,
if I had a helicopter, I could fly like
five miles that way and find good snow.
And instead we're stuck here
where the snow sucks, wasting
our time and money, you know?
And so.
Uh, and then it was during the
pandemic, um, that all the lodges in
BC, all the heli ski lodges were empty.
And I started getting phone calls by
all these lodges that I always wanted
to go to, but we're always just full
with clients and could care less
about giving some pro skier a deal.
And then all of a sudden I started
getting the phone calls and I was
like, you know what, these are
opportunities I'm going to regret.
If I don't take, and so I got back in
the heli and I started going, oh man,
I remember what this is all about.
And it's not about like just
getting to the top easily.
It's like, I can hike to the top,
but it's about the repetition.
It's about how your confidence grows
when you're getting repetition, you
know, and when you're in the mountains,
you go out, out into the mountains.
Your first run is like snow check.
Second run builds on that.
And then it builds on that and
builds on that and builds on that.
And like, you know, you get 10 laps in
the day or however many you get on a film
day, 10 is probably way more than norm.
Most film days you get like five really
good film laps at the most, but like
you're still getting all that repetition.
Whereas like on a foot power
trip, you might only do one.
Or maybe two, if you're lucky
one in the morning, one in the
afternoon, you know, that's max.
And so that repetition, you know,
my confidence started building.
I'm like, man, I'm skiing.
Like I'm 20 something again.
And whereas when I was just doing foot
power, I felt, I started to think that
I was, I must be getting old because I'm
just not skiing the way I used to ski.
And it was really the, the one factor
was missing was the helicopter.
What a mental game, eh?
Yeah, it is.
Yeah, for sure.
I mean, everything is in life,
you know, it's, um, you know,
we, we become our thoughts.
You know, our thoughts are energy.
This is what we were talking about.
And we become what we think about,
you know, what we obsess about.
And, you know, if you start thinking
I'm old, I don't have it anymore.
I'm not feeling it.
You're going to become that.
But if you're thinking, it doesn't
matter what, how, what age I am,
I'm still stoked to be doing this.
I'm still fired up.
I've still got a leg up on all
these young bucks out there.
I'm still, you know, I've still got it.
Then you're going to
still have it, you know?
Um, and you're going to be able to
continue to prove that you still have it.
So yeah, it's, you literally
become your thoughts.
Travis Bader: I think that's one of
your legacies, something that you can
do to, uh, promote that throughout
your community and through like just
through the podcast and whatever the,
um, cause I, I believe in that deeply.
Yeah.
You do become your thoughts.
When you talk about energy
at a friend of mine, he's.
Similar, I don't know if it's
an ADHD thing or what, but
he's, he's got it pretty bad.
Yeah.
Um, but he got into ham radio
all of a sudden, it's like, okay,
getting to have interesting, great.
And he's like rebuilding like these
ancient radios and he's like, see this
one just operates off of crystals.
You take this crystal load, you
put this crystal in, and now
you're on a different frequency.
And he's like, if you think about
it, everything's on a frequency.
We hear on a frequency, we speak on
a frequency, we see on a frequency.
Ian McIntosh: Well, I mean, when you
go down to the very Quantum level,
everything's vibrating, all the
electrons in every atom are vibrating
around the nucleus of the atom, right?
Like, and so.
Everything is vibrating at a
frequency, you know, everything is 99.
99 to the 12th decibel point.
Like I said of energy, like empty
space, but energy over mass.
This table, the only difference between
this table and you and I is the frequency
where vibe our atoms are vibrating at.
That's the only thing that makes us
any different because we're all made
of the same stuff, atoms, particles,
like we're all made of the same shit.
So yeah, that's all the,
the only difference between
anything is how it vibrates.
You've done some research on this, eh?
Yeah.
I've been diving deep these days.
Like I say, when I, when I'm like,
you know, self growth books, you
know, are a big part of my life.
Um, and it's, and it's because.
I want to be a better version of myself.
I, I'm not happy with, I am happy.
I'm extremely happy, but
I'm not happy to just.
Be stagnant.
Like this is where I'm at and I don't
need to be any more or any less than this.
I want to be more, not because I feel
lack, but just because I feel like that's
like the, one of the purposes of life is
to become a better version of yourself.
Every day you get an opportunity to live.
You know, and so that's why I dive
deep into these books, and I've been
getting heavily into the quantum
world these days, and how quant,
the, you know, quantum mechanics and,
and physics and spirituality have
kind of found this crossroad, um,
lately, in the last number of years.
Travis Bader: Yeah.
There's COVID's awakened the, um,
uh, a sense of wanting to be outside.
That was a Dr.
Swart, I forget her first name.
Uh, she was talking about that
saying people wanted to be outside,
but it's also awakened a sense of
spirituality in people as well.
I'm not sure why that is, but I can
definitely see it in the masses out there.
I don't know if it's a distrust
in government and now it's turning
to what, what can I put my faith
into, or if there's a idea of, um,
a global oneness and, and people
are starting to, uh, tie into
Ian McIntosh: that.
I think, you know, I think
it's our access to information.
You know, sometimes the access to
information can just like overburden
us with information and, and not give
us education, but if you turn that
information into education, like you
actually learn it, apply it and use
it, um, then it is true information.
And I think a lot of people are starting
to learn that, like the things that I'm
talking about are real, they're tangible.
And when you align yourself, uh.
With, with the energy that you want
to align with and, and you're going to
find success and you're all, it's like
immediate, the results are immediate.
Like you can, if you just go out
and emulate what some of these books
are, are saying immediately, you
will see that people are gravitating
towards you and want to work with you.
And all of a sudden money's flowing
to you and everything's happening.
Like, so the, the.
The feedback of like, this actually works.
It's there and it happens quickly.
And so I think people are realizing that.
And, you know, I think a lot of people,
um, I have no problem with any religion
that's out there, you know, and I don't
want to turn this into a religious chart.
Definitely don't want it.
But like, I think what a lot of people
who are, who are typically not religious
people are, we're missing something.
Cause they felt like, yeah, I'm not
connected to what this religion's telling
me about, you know, the mechanics of the
universe and, and God and everything.
But then in this scientific realm,
we have this connection and on this
quantum level, it seems to be like these
mystical magical things are happening.
And learning that you're just a
ball of energy, influencing all the
other energy that's coming into your
world and around you, um, can have
a profound impact on one's self.
And, and so, yeah, I, I think diving deep
into that has kind of been something I've
been doing lately and, and it's been.
You know, like I say, immediate
results, like I'm seeing the
results happening before my eyes.
That's one of those
Travis Bader: YouTube
wormholes that you can get
Ian McIntosh: stuck into.
YouTube wormholes.
You know, I'm, I'm big audible guy.
Cause I, I spend a lot of time traveling
and you know, I can just audio book
and you know, I kind of think of
it as like the matrix when like
Neo gets plugged into the chair and
just like, now, you know, Taekwondo,
you know, it's like, you just like.
Download information.
And so, you know, I think it's pretty sad
to think that like majority, vast majority
of people only read fiction, you know, um,
and, and, you know, very few are diving in
like, but like, I think that's changing.
And I think our, our access
to information is changing.
And for me, having something like
audible, you know, someone who hated
school and hated reading and all this
sort of stuff to have, to be able to
just download these books into my brain.
Um, and then just keep going down the
rabbit hole, like 20 hour book done.
Are you retaining it though?
Yeah.
And, and when I think I don't retain
it, I just go back and listen again.
Travis Bader: What kind of
books you listen to right
Ian McIntosh: now?
Ah, there's, you know, like there's.
Like secrets to manifesting your destiny.
There's, you know, becoming supernatural.
You are the placebo, um, breath.
Um, you know, I'm listening to, to
books on money these days as well.
How, how to, you know, reach your
potential, your earning potential.
Um, yeah.
Which ones
Travis Bader: made the
biggest impact on you?
Ian McIntosh: Uh, you know,
Joe Dispenza is a kind of
culty, but like in a good way.
Um, but his book becoming supernatural was
kind of like a really eye opener to me.
And then, uh, you know, I've dove into
a bunch of other books kind of related
to that and, and realizing like how much
we can influence the energy that is.
Everywhere all around us and our own
energy and how that influences the world
around us, um, is, and then, you know,
learning, I'm an adolescent in learning
how to meditate, but I always used to
think what a kooky thing, meditation,
who meditates, what a bunch of kooks.
But now there's so
Travis Bader: much power to it.
There's
Ian McIntosh: so it's
a superpower, you know?
Um, and so now I'm, I've, you know.
I've gotten out of that judgmental mind
of like, you know, assuming something
is some way without ever trying it.
And now I'm in a very open mind.
I'll try anything.
And meditation is like a superpower.
And yes, it is very hard to properly
meditate without your mind constantly
wandering off because that's your ego.
Your ego wants to wander off and think
about like things that fuel it, you know,
or all the stresses that you have in
life and things that cause you anxiety.
But if you can continue to realize that,
like, every time you come back to that
place of, of, you know, just thinking
about your breath or whatever it may
be, or that place where you've got all
those thoughts out of your head and
you're like, just in the moment when you
constantly can bring yourself back there.
Every time you do it, it's a
little victory and you just get
slowly better and better at it.
And it's one of these
things, it's like anything.
Uh, you know, the whole notion of
10, 000, you need 10, 000 hours at
anything to become a master of it.
So to think that you can just jump
into meditation and know how to do it
right out the gate is, is ludicrous.
You need to put in your time and
to, and to not give up on it and
continue to trust that the superpowers
are, are lying in there somewhere.
Well,
Travis Bader: you talk about the energy
and how that we can affect different.
Energies around us.
And one of the first podcasts I did
was with a fellow by the name of
Guy Kramer, and he's got a company
called Hyperstealth and I just
thought, this guy's a really cool guy.
How does this tie into things?
Well, in the hunting, fishing,
outdoors world, well, I'm going
to find a way to make it fit in
because I just want to talk to him.
He's, he's really cool, but he
makes, um, a invisible cloak.
Oh, no way.
Right.
And I'd be like, yeah, okay.
Invisible cloak, right.
And, uh, but.
Uh, interesting fellow, but he's
also made camouflages for hundreds of
different militaries all across the world.
Uh, Gore, uh, Optifade, uh,
Sitka's line, all the rest, he
makes their camouflage patterns.
Cool.
And he brought in his invisible
cloak thing, and you can, you
can pull it up on YouTube.
You can see it.
He actually put a patent on it.
He was trying to get
the military involved.
And finally he's like, oh,
I'm going to patent it.
Everyone's going to know how it's made.
So people on YouTube have gone and
they made their own and it's just
a, an array of lenticular lenses.
With a viscous fluid in book in behind,
and they just kind of press these
two things together and it different
arrays will reflect different things.
And so the one he had, I'd be holds up.
There's a picture of us in the office.
We disappear, but we
can see the background.
It was really cool.
That's cool.
But, um, And an lenticular lens sounds
really cool, but you know, those little
stickers where you kind of move them
and it's like a moving cartoon thing.
That's what it is.
Right.
That little plastic anyways,
but he's talking about, um,
the double slit experiment.
Yes.
Okay.
So you, and you're familiar with that one.
Very, yes.
So interesting how an observer, for
people listening to this, who don't know
about the double slit experiment, that's,
they were firing, I think a photon.
Ian McIntosh: A photon, a light particle.
Yes, they're, they're firing
light particles at two slits
in a wall, for instance.
And when they.
Had an instrument there to detect
how the particles would react.
They reacted just how we would
predict they would react.
Um, like particles.
But when you took away the observer,
it now reacted like a wave.
And so, when we're not observing
matter, matter acts like energy.
And when we're observing
matter, matter acts like matter.
Which is kind of a twisted...
It's, it's hard to even wrap your brain.
It's like, it's the whole like
quantum entanglement thing.
That's right.
It's hard to wrap, wrap your brain around.
Like two particles, once they
come, quantum entanglement could
be on the opposite sides of the
universe and you affect one, the
other one's affected the same way.
Mm hmm.
You know.
But yeah, this is kind of the
mystical, weird thing that
happened at the quantum level.
And so the whole notion that like
matter reacts completely different
when you're observing it versus when
you're not goes to show that like,
I mean, is everything in your world,
just a construct of your imagination?
Oh, are we in the matrix?
Yeah.
Like what, but like, you know,
I mean, really at the end of the
day, it's like matter is both, it
is a particle and it is a wave.
It is energy and it is mass.
And.
Actually turns out it's much, much, much
more energy than it is physical mass.
And learning that, um, can pave
the way into understanding how
to use it to your advantage, to
create the life that you want.
Travis Bader: Knowing that
as well, kind of takes it.
For the people, the naysayers, oh no,
it hasn't been scientifically proven.
Well, our science is at the
infancy, really where we're at.
Totally.
And as
Ian McIntosh: you start.
I mean, when the aliens look down at
us, we're basically, we've basically
just crawled out of the cave.
Totally.
At this
Travis Bader: point, you know.
Didn't they just find aliens in Mexico?
Yeah, I mean,
Ian McIntosh: there's definitely aliens.
I mean, anyone who just
says there isn't aliens.
Okay, go ahead and keep believing that,
but like, um, mathematically impossible,
but you know, I, I think that, um,
again, being open to anything, you know,
um, but yeah, the, the understanding
that, that everything is energy.
Um, has a fundamental impact on your
life, um, because you understand then
that your emotion and this is why all
these successful people keep coming
back to gratitude because gratitude
turns out is your most powerful,
one of your most powerful emotions
for manifesting what you want.
And so if you're grateful, you'll continue
to get more things to be grateful for.
Travis Bader: There was a quote that
you had that I thought was interesting,
cause we kind of talked about it before
we started recording, we talked around
it and, uh, here's a quote in the darkest
hours, you learn who you really are,
but you have to dig, but you have to dig
deep, get healthy and get back out there.
Yes.
And I thought that's interesting
because, you know, when we're talking
about, uh, the long game, the macro
and people, they're high and they're
low and, you know, it's, it's Social
media, uh, today's culture, I, I see
people, a lot of our youth, they become
despondent when things go get low.
Oh, that's it.
I'm going to give up.
It's over.
Right.
, um, in your darkest hours, that's when
everything starts to become clearer for
you and you realize you can actually
get out of the, was that in reference
to what was going on with the, the
divorce and the, uh, broken femur?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I
Ian McIntosh: mean, I recognized
that like, woe was me.
I'm sitting in my nice house in Pemberton
with a broken leg, and my wife left me,
and that's my, one of my darkest hours.
Like I'm pretty privileged, you know?
Mm.
That's one of my darkest hours, but at the
same time, it was, you know, I was, I had
just gotten really successful as a skier.
I was just starting to make a really
decent living where I didn't have to
work a construction job in the summer.
And, um, you know, and my life felt
like to me, like it came crashing down.
And so that was a low point.
And now I look back at that
is like the best thing that's
ever happened in my life.
I love that perspective shift.
My, my lowest moment.
Was the best thing that's
ever happened to me.
And I think you need to go through
those intense lows to ultimately
get to and appreciate your highs.
Yeah, I agree.
Or you can just let it consume you.
And, and the low becomes lower, you
know, um, but it's your decision, uh,
and that's what I think a lot of people
are, are starting to realize, but maybe
a lot don't realize yet is that it is
our decision on how our mental state is.
And, and it's easy for me to say.
As someone who has this great life going
on, but it hasn't always been that way.
I haven't always had everything I
have today, but I approaching life
with that mentality is ultimately
always going to get you from your
lows back to your super highs.
And it doesn't matter how many
times you get batted back down.
You'll, you'll recognize like, this
is another opportunity for growth.
I need to go through this.
In order to get to where
I'm eventually going to be.
Travis Bader: Have you read, uh, Viktor
Frankl's Man's Search for Meaning?
Ian McIntosh: No, I'll
put that on my list.
Travis Bader: Okay.
Uh, cause there's one thing that
always stuck out to me in that one.
And he was the father
of modern logotherapy.
He was in a concentration camp and
he took an analytical perspective
to what was going on around him.
Yeah.
People who'd had
everything taken from them.
They're stripped naked, all their
belongings gone, their loved ones.
Dead, they're despondent,
um, beside themselves.
True lows.
True lows, true, true lows.
Right.
Yeah.
But some people, well,
they'd given up on life.
Others had found reason to crack a joke
or laugh about things, or there was,
um, there was a difference in some of
these people that he was observing.
So he's putting all of this together
and really the crux of the entire
book that I took away from it was a
quote that he had, which is, um, And
he'd had everything taken from him.
He says, the one thing you can't
take from me is the way I choose
to respond to what you do to me.
The last of life's great freedoms
is one's ability to choose their own
attitude in any given circumstance.
And that's, that was the biggest takeaway.
And that was one thing that, you know,
it doesn't matter how bad things get.
It's my choice.
Do I look at this as that's it?
I'm giving up.
Do I look at this as, okay,
what can I learn from this?
How do I move forward?
Ian McIntosh: Right.
How is this, how is this moment going
to eventually be one day and a moment
I look back at as a really positive.
Experience that I needed to go through
and it's hard to say that even in
like, you know, you, you, you stories
about people who hit their ultimate
true lows and I'm not saying that
they're ever going to get to a place
where they can look back and be like,
I'm so glad that happened to me, but.
The person that the people who pick
themselves up and change their mentality
from like, you know, just being down in
the dumps to a more positive outlook,
those people are eventually going to
be able to look back and be like, I'm
not happy it happened to me, but I am
the person I am today because of that.
Travis Bader: I used to ask a
question of people and say, if you
could look back on your younger
self, uh, what advice would you give?
What would you do differently?
Right.
Yeah.
And I've had to reframe that question
because more and more of them.
The people who are doing well in
life and who are successful and have
things kind of squared away and sorted
would give the exact same answer.
Exactly.
Nothing.
I wouldn't change anything.
It's made me who I am.
The good times, the bad times, they've
all culminated to where I am now.
The things that went poorly
were there to teach me a lesson.
Yeah.
The things that went well or
because I was getting things
Ian McIntosh: dialed in.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it's, you know, taking that
woe is me attitude or the poor me
attitude and switching it to like,
you know, I can, I can do anything
and I can get myself out of this.
And I, um, I'm, I'm going to be
stronger and better for this.
You know, when I broke my
leg, I, Lived in the gym.
I came back physically, mentally,
you know, I started reading
books and going to the gym.
I didn't see my friends.
I just went to the gym, read books, and
I came back out of that experience so
much better, mentally, stronger mentally
and physically than I ever was before.
Travis Bader: And they, now you
can pass it on to your family.
Ian McIntosh: Exactly.
Yeah.
And that, and the, probably the reason
I love telling that story is because
I, I look at it as the most positive
experience that's ever happened to me.
You know, there's a young kid who's
the son of one of the founders of
Teton Gravity Research, Kai Jones.
He's the star of our movies.
Now he's 17 years old.
He's been in there for years.
He's incredible.
But last year he broke both of his legs.
Hmm.
And he was down in the
dumps, like in a wheelchair.
And it's like, dude, trust in the
fact that one day you'll look back
at this as like, I'm like, lucky you,
you get to go through this at 17.
I didn't get to go through
this till I was 30.
Or 29, you know, lucky you.
And he's like, what?
And I'm like, dude, you're going
to become a better human for this.
You're going to be stronger
physically and more and mentally.
And you're just going to be a better
human because of this, this, you
needed to go through this hard time.
Cause maybe everything was, it had been
just a little too easy up until now.
You're talented.
You know, everything fell into place.
Now you've got some hard times.
You'll come out of it better.
Travis Bader: You know, we talked
about, uh, the individual who's
talking, said that when he was
younger and he had nothing, and
that's when he felt the happiest.
Yeah.
I have to wonder if you go another
20, 30 years in the future, are you
going to look back and say, man,
30 years ago, that was the time.
Probably, I mean, the brain's got a way of
varnishing over the past that we freak, no
one ever thinks about the bad old times.
They always think about
the good old times.
Well,
Ian McIntosh: that's the only reason
women have baby, a second baby.
You got it.
We ultimately, we forget pain, you know?
Um, and, and we try and.
You know, uh, things that stick
in our mind are the positive,
more memorable experiences.
And we are conditioned to forget pain.
We're supposed to forget it or else we'd
never like animals wouldn't hunt anymore.
Because their last hunt, they got injured.
They would never go out and
eat again if they were afraid.
Of, of pain.
So, you know, um, we're conditioned
to, to forget that sort of stuff.
And, and ultimately, uh, you know,
these, these are opportunities like we're
saying for, to grow as a human being.
And one day you'll look back at it and
you'll be like, I only remember the good.
Mm-hmm.
, you know, it's like when I was
living in the closet, I only
remember the good part in a closet.
I was
Travis Bader: like, were you?
I like, yeah.
Literally in a closet.
Ian McIntosh: Yes.
It was like in a kitchen.
It was a pantry closet that we
like turned into my bedroom.
And I mean, I would wake up like my floors
on my heads on the kitchen floor, like my
buddy's like making coffee, you know, but,
uh, when I was living in the closet, like,
I look back at that was such a nostalgia
and like, oh my God, that was so amazing.
I was just flying by the seat of my pants.
I forgot all the times where I couldn't.
And like, you know, I'm just thinking
about like the fact that I skied every
day without a care in the world and
I didn't have any bills or stresses
of any kind, but there was stresses.
I just don't remember those.
There was the stresses of like, you
know, not being able to eat and not being
able to afford to, you know, pay my 200
bucks a month rent, that sort of stuff.
But yeah, I only remember the skiing.
Yeah, I skied every
Travis Bader: day.
I remember when I got my first snowboard,
it was around 17, I think it was 17, 18.
And the entire season I would sleep
in the back of my wood panel station
wagon and a broken window on it,
but I'd be first up sleeping in
the parking lots of the local hills
Ian McIntosh: here.
Yeah.
And I mean, you don't remember how cold
you were and how uncomfortable it was.
You just remember how good it was.
Travis Bader: How good it was.
I can still remember the smell of
Ian McIntosh: Right.
So there's one aspect that maybe wasn't
Travis Bader: so
positive that you Or I'm hiking
up the side and everyone's like.
Ian McIntosh: And it didn't matter.
That's right.
Didn't matter.
Yeah.
I was like, now, if you went to the
ski hill and couldn't get yourself
a lift ticket, you'd be all bummed
and stressed about it or whatever.
Totally.
It's like back then, it's
like nothing mattered.
No, you figure it out.
Yeah.
Travis Bader: Um, sponsors,
you got a number of sponsors
and you got a company too.
That's, uh, kind of cool.
I wanted to talk about.
Yeah.
Ian McIntosh: Yeah.
Um, yeah.
So like, you know, my, my obvious, my
premium sponsors, I guess I would, I
would mention are the North Face, Volcom
Marker Dalbello is a ski boot binding,
uh, brand, uh, marker being binding,
Dalbello being boot, um, Smartwool.
Uh, you know, Mammut safety
equipment, uh, Stay Wild Organics,
which is the company that you were
referring to, uh, Surefoot skiing.
Um, yeah, the list goes on, but
those are the kind of the major ones.
Mammut.
Travis Bader: I'm glad I
know how to pronounce it.
I always call it Mammut.
I got the, uh, the transceivers and
the, uh, you got the safety equipment.
You
Ian McIntosh: got the best gear
in the game then, in my opinion.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And you know, it's Swiss made,
it's like a Swiss company, right.
And, um, the owner of that
company is very focused on making
high quality safety products.
Oh, I love it.
And yeah, they do a great job.
Travis Bader: So did they approach you
being a safety oriented company, did
they approach you before or after your,
uh, your pig spill down the mountain in
Ian McIntosh: Alaska?
Much after, but it was actually
after an incident with another,
uh, another pro skier friend of
mine where we had to get him out of
an avalanche, but his transceiver
malfunctioned and we won't name names
on all that, it all, it all went.
On the internet and big things
happened with that brand.
But, um, you know, ultimately
we realized that like not all
safety equipment is created equal.
And, uh, I wanted to align with the
safety equipment that I felt was some
of the best in the game and, and Mahmood
was also, uh, looking for ambassadors.
So it worked out.
Travis Bader: Can you talk
to me about Stay Wild?
I looked at it on the internet a
little bit and, uh, I got questions.
Yeah,
Ian McIntosh: sure.
Yes.
Uh, stay wild is a medicinal,
um, mushroom brand.
Um, you know, mushrooms
these days are all the craze.
Uh, there's a lot of hype around
the, uh, how good they are for you.
And the hype is real.
They're, they are incredibly good for you.
Um, there's, there's a lot of science,
uh, pointing to, uh, the benefits of
mushrooms and, you know, when you learn,
have you ever watched the fantastic fungi?
Travis Bader: I have, I
I've seen clips out of it.
I haven't, I haven't watched a
whole thing, but is that the one
where the, it mapped out a better
way for like a Tokyo, um, subways?
Ian McIntosh: Yes.
Okay.
Yeah.
But like, basically, um, if you're
walking in the forest, every footstep
you take has about 300 miles of
mycelium network under that footstep.
And every footstep
you've taken the forest.
And so mycelium is connecting everything.
And it's like the neural
network of the forest.
Um, it also does incredible things
for your neural network of your brain.
Right.
Um, and mushrooms are not like a plant.
They don't photosynthesize like a plant.
Um, they're not an animal,
but they eat like an animal.
Right.
They eat decomposing things.
And so they're kind of
in this middle ground.
And I, I truly feel like
the power of mushroom.
There's a lot of great studies coming out.
If you just eat, like, I can't remember
how many ounces of mushrooms a week,
it lowers your chances of dementia by.
a huge amount.
Um, and I mean, I could
pull up the numbers again.
I can't remember exactly, but
um, people can look at it for
themselves and, and that's just like
regular, like store bought brown
mushrooms and so on and so forth.
And then you look into these more
medicinal mushrooms and their
powers are even exponentially more.
Um, you know, like something like a lion's
mane is incredibly good for your brain.
Whereas, you know, you look at.
Something like chaga,
which grows on birch trees.
Um, that's just like, there's
more antioxidants in a spoonful
of chaga than there is in like
a entire box of blueberries.
You know, it's, it's, I mean,
the exact numbers again, I don't
remember, I've read them all in the
past, but it's, it's astronomical.
The, the amount of antioxidants there
in something like a chaga mushroom.
And, and so, yeah, I've.
I got on board cause my
buddy, Chris Brown, he's a pro
snowmobiler or a pro snowmobiler.
Um, used to be like, you know, throwing
crazy stuff on his sled these days.
He does more, um, tours and stuff.
He's beaten up his body pretty bad.
Uh, he got a lot of concussions
and that he got into lion's mane
and that kind of really helped
him with his concussion symptoms.
Oh yeah.
He's night and day different.
Um, and so then he's like.
What is this medicinal mushroom world?
And then he decided to start his own
company and they've grown in Pemberton.
And, uh, they're, they're
just getting things going.
They've got like a lot of future
plans going on for energy drinks.
And, um, I won't even get into.
Into it all just because I don't think
it's, uh, the right, the right time
to announce, but, um, they have a lot
of cool things, some, some government
grants and stuff that are going to
allow them to do some really cool stuff
that I think, you know, people are
starting to see the power of, of the
therapeutic power of mushrooms as well.
Um, psilocybin obviously is, is,
uh, starting to be really used as
something that can help people a
lot with depression or dealing with
mortality or whatever it may be.
And, uh, I was
Travis Bader: surprised at the number
of people who I've spoken with on the
podcast, who, uh, Use psilocybin, I've
had some ex, uh, special forces folk
and talking with one fellow and he's
like, oh, I don't like medication.
I don't, I don't use meds.
Right.
Okay.
Oh, but I do take, I do micro
dose psilocybin and there
was a time I did ayahuasca.
He goes through his whole list.
I'm like.
To me, that sounds like meds,
but I think it's being viewed a
little bit differently nowadays.
Well, yeah,
Ian McIntosh: it's like holistic meds.
Right.
You know, I think, um, I think our
system in the world is, is really set
up to like, the fact that the food
and drug administration, and there's
one in every country, not just talking
about America, but the fact that
they are the same administration.
So we're going to feed you the food that
gets you sick so that you can take the
drugs that don't make you better, but.
Deal with the symptoms of your sickness.
Right.
So, you know, this is where medicinal
mushrooms are outside of that world.
And they're dealing with the
actual sickness and actual
healing and preventative medicine.
You know, there's a, there's a book
that I, I, I did recently, um, lifespan.
Okay.
And I can't, I'm trying to remember
the author, but he's a PhD, um, at
Harvard, uh, scientists that he studies
longevity in human beings and, um, and
he, he was touching on the fact that,
you know, Australia, for instance.
In the 90s, I think it was, they
made this huge initiative because
they have a government healthcare,
just like we do in Canada.
They're like, we want to spend less money
on our healthcare system, so we're going
to work hard on preventative medicine.
And they've, in that period of time, in
30 years, they've extended the lifespan
expectancy of an Australian by 10 years.
At the same time, the lifespan in
America has gone the other direction.
Travis Bader: 10 years extended,
do they just cut out the VBs?
Ian McIntosh: They're just, they're, it's
more of a holistic health based focused
preventative, you know, like the, all the
obvious stuff, eat well, exercise, yeah,
good mental health, you know, all these
sorts of things that, you know, not too
much stress, all these, these, these sorts
of things ultimately keep you healthy.
And in, in our world, it's, it's
more about like, Yeah, whatever.
Just eat whatever you
want, do whatever you want.
And then when you get sick, we'll
give you something that, you know,
doesn't cure you, but it'll deal
with the symptoms of whatever your
sickness is so that you don't, you're
not in pain or discomfort anymore, you
know, and, and, you know, companies
are making huge amounts of money.
The food industry and the drug industry
are making huge amounts of money,
uh, with this system the way it is.
And so, yeah, uh, for me, yeah.
Stay wild mushrooms, medicinal
mushrooms lie outside of that.
And they're the more holistic, they're
the more preventative medicine.
And the thing about mushrooms is, you
know, someone like Chris Brown, who
had like hardcore concussion issues has
really noticed the difference, someone
like me, I have noticed the difference.
It's not that I haven't,
but it's a lot more subtle.
But it is, I, I trust in the science
and I believe in the fact that
I'm doing preventative medicine.
And also not only do I trust in the
science and believe I'm doing preventative
medicine, but going back to a book
I referenced, you are the placebo.
Whereas just my belief alone, I could
be taking pills with nothing in them,
but if I believe hard enough that
that is going to make me healthier.
It will, because the ultimate
health machine is your mind.
Yeah, I agree.
And, you know, believing in
something will make it true.
And it goes back to everything
we already talked about.
What a man thinks he will do.
Yes.
And so there is amazing health
properties to medicinal mushrooms,
but I know just the fact that I
believe in those health properties
and I'm taking them, that in itself.
Is going to make
Travis Bader: me healthier.
But isn't the government talking
about the Canadian government anyways,
talking about clamping down on all
of this holistic type medicine.
Of course
Ian McIntosh: they are.
Right.
Who do you think's in charge of that?
Yeah, there you go.
The Canadian, the Canadian FDA.
Yeah.
You know, the, the people that want
to make money off of feeding us crap
food that they can mass produce.
And then when we get sick, uh, selling
us drugs to deal with, uh, the pain of
our sickness, um, that's, that's the MO.
And of course they're going to try
and clamp down on this sort of stuff.
But I will say at the same time,
you know, uh, stay wild has, has
gotten Canadian government grants to.
Do stuff, um, and you know, they're
growing facilities and the new facilities
that they're developing in Pemberton, uh,
for the future are a big part of that.
And so they might be trying to
clamp down on it, but at the
same time, um, they're not.
And, you know, I think the legalization
of marijuana is a, is a, you know, I'm not
going to sit here and be a proponent of
you should do marijuana or not, but for a
lot of people, it's helping them and, and
just like allowing people to have that.
Choice, uh, and take
that holistic approach.
If that's helping you with your anxiety or
whatever it may be, then great, you should
be able to do it, you know, um, instead
of being like, no, that's illegal because
we're going to sell you this instead,
Travis Bader: you know.
So very early age, I was diagnosed with
ADHD, high dose of Ritalin, I was on
an experimental program in the province
and I took myself off cold Turkey by,
uh, before I went into high school.
Right.
Um, you'll notice we have.
Pads here that we can write stuff
down as we talk and that way
we don't interrupt each other.
But it's also a long
term memory is fantastic.
My short term memory, man, I better
get this written down right away.
Right.
So you're saying lion's mane.
Is that the one that's
supposed to help with that
Ian McIntosh: kind of stuff?
Yeah.
Lion's mane and reishi mushrooms will
really help with your cognitive function.
And there's actually new scientific
studies that are directly
pointing to lion's mane helps your
brain grow new neural pathways.
It's not like we, the old science used
to be like, you get to a certain age,
your brain becomes fully developed as
a human and you do not grow any more
neural cells or new neural pathways.
And that's no longer the truth.
Psilocybin is another one that does
it, but, um, lion's mane, uh, does
actually help your brain grow new
neural cells and neural pathways.
And so it really, it, it heals your
brain and helps your brain, um, become.
And if you're, if you're combining
that with like some educational
tools, you're, you're literally
making yourself smarter every day.
And you're decreasing your
chances of one day developing
Alzheimer's or dementia immensely.
Travis Bader: So a friend and past podcast
guest lives up in the Squamish area,
Sonny, he is a pro bare knuckle boxer and
he's a, uh, uh, Raises money for heroic
hearts and their, uh, they use psilocybin
treatment for PTSD and veterans and
anyways, um, and he keeps saying, you
know, these medicinal mushrooms out there,
but you have to put the work in, right?
Cause the same thing he says,
you know, makes a new neural
networks and all the rest.
I have to wonder though, because
I've heard the analogy, it's like.
A ski slope and everyone's going down
the slope and you got the ruts that are
all worn in, it gives the ability to
basically fresh snow and you can start
choosing new paths, new, new ways to go.
Would it.
If it gives the ability to create
new neural networks, so hopefully
you're putting the work in to
be able to do something that's
a little bit more positive.
Yeah.
If you don't put that work in, are
you doubling down on those past
neural pathways that aren't bringing
you the success or the happiness
Ian McIntosh: that you're looking for?
I mean, I think so, but I mean,
I, I don't know the, I don't know
what the science is there, so I'm
not going to say definitively.
Yes or no, my gut instinct is probably
yes, but it goes, it goes back to
the same thing of like manifesting.
It's like, you know, the whole idea of
like the energy connects everything.
And you know, the feeling of
abundance creates more abundance,
but you got to still put in the work.
There's an action
Travis Bader: piece that needs to
Ian McIntosh: happen.
There's a reason that, and I
might offend some people here,
but there's a reason that simply
sitting there and praying to God.
Is nothing's going to happen.
God's listening, or in my mind, the energy
that connects everything is listening.
Sure.
But if you then don't turn that prayer
into action, nothing will ever happen.
And so it's about combining
all that stuff, right?
So it's, yes, take the lion's
mane, but continue to download.
Books into your brain, continue to
exercise your brain so that those
new neural pathways have reason for
developing in the first place, you're
growing your brain, you're becoming
smarter, you're becoming, you know, uh,
more intelligent and, and you're healing
past traumas and, and healing parts
of your brain that might be damaged.
And so, um, yeah, you
got to put in the work.
Travis Bader: I'm sure
you've heard that old joke.
There's a flood coming and the guys.
In front of his house, person
drives by, he's like, there's
a big flood, the dam broke.
It's going to flood the whole town.
You got to get out.
Right.
And he's like, I'll pray to my God.
Don't worry.
We're good.
Right.
I said my prayers this morning.
I'll just continue praying.
Right.
Okay.
She goes inside and water levels rise.
And so the guy gets up on the
second floor and a boat comes by.
He's like, buddy, you got to get out.
No, no, my God's going to save me.
We're all good.
Right.
Next thing you know, he's on the
roof and a helicopter comes by.
Here, I'll throw you the ladder.
He's like, no, no, no.
My God's going to save me next
thing you know, he's in heaven.
He's like, what the hell God,
you're supposed to save me.
He's like, I don't know what happened.
I sent you a car, a boat
now on the carpet, right?
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
Ian McIntosh: There's all these things
that have come your way, providing
you help and you didn't take them
because you were expecting some
sort of mystical thing to happen.
And it doesn't work that way.
It doesn't work that way.
You got to still put in the work.
You still got to take those opportunities
that present themselves, uh, and, and
almost just, you know, try everything.
You know, I'm, I'm a big pro I'm big
proponent of like, right now in life,
I'm just throwing darts and seeing what
sticks, you know, and I'll throw as many
darts as I can, uh, you know, coming
into winter, I've got a lot coming up.
I'm just like, like, what else can
I, you know, sign myself up for?
And, you know, all.
Probably only like 25 percent of
it will end up coming to fruition,
but I'm just trying everything
and seeing, seeing what sticks.
And then ultimately the universe, it's
like, okay, you're putting in the work.
Here's the
Travis Bader: path.
The universe will unfold as it should.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Here's
Ian McIntosh: the path that you
need to take because here's, here's
the darts that stuck, you know?
Um, and so, yeah, that's kind
of my mentality right now.
Travis Bader: Is there anything.
Is there anything that we haven't
talked about that we should be talking
Ian McIntosh: about?
Oh, good question.
I mean, You know, we can, we can
talk about, uh, I don't know,
you know, what's a huge trend
these days that I've gotten into?
What?
Fasting, intermittent fasting.
There's
Travis Bader: so much science behind that.
That's positive.
Yes.
Particularly for men.
Yes.
Uh, women there's benefits, but there's,
I think there's a little bit more to
it that they have to watch out for.
Yes.
Ian McIntosh: Um, with men, it's
a huge, it definitely helps your
testosterone levels and stuff.
And, uh, And I mean, just
longevity in, in, in general.
And it goes back to that book.
Uh, I was talking about lifespan.
Uh, he goes deep into that and that
guy actually, he, his job and he's
funded heavily and works at Harvard in
a lab to study human cellular structure
and how to elongate human life.
And he's like very, he's very
adamant that our generation.
In our lives, we're going to have
the inter, we'll have what we
need to live to 120, no problem.
But he's like, the sky is almost
the limit for human lifespan.
And don't worry, there's a huge chapter
on what's that going to do to the
planet if everyone lives that long.
And he actually has some great points
in that about like how it's not going
to be the decimation of the planet.
Um, but.
Anyway, the whole point of it
is, is fasting is a huge part of
what he talks about, because we
didn't get to where we are as human
beings by having three meals a day.
Travis Bader: Well, doesn't
fasting have cellular regeneration?
Ian McIntosh: Yes.
Cause when you, when your body has no
food to digest and your cells don't,
aren't full of glucose, they now go.
Oh, what's our other job.
Oh yeah.
Regeneration.
Whereas if they're so focused on just
dealing with the constant digestion
and the constant processing of food
and, and energy and, and glucose in
the, in their cells, they're, they
never have time to go like, Hey,
there's a cancer cell over there.
We should get that out of here.
Or there's like a virus.
Let's get that out of here.
Also a fun fact, if
you're in a fasted state.
Uh, you can, you cannot get
coronavirus or any other virus
like that, or anything like that.
Yeah.
Because there's no glucose in your cell.
You can't, you can't develop cancer cells.
If you're in a fasted state, it literally
is the silver bullet to health because
when you're in that fasted state,
there's no glucose left in your cell.
And I'm talking like 15 hours
plus 17 hours beyond 17 hours
is actually like the real money.
Uh, time.
So if you can push yourself so you have an
early dinner and you're pushing yourself
past noon the next day before your next
meal, before anything but water goes in.
Now your cells have turned within
and they're like, they're cleaning
up junk DNA and junk cells.
They're, they're cleaning
up your system, but also.
Uh, if a virus enters your body
during that time, now, after you eat
that goes away, cause then you now
have glucose in your cells, but all
these diseases and viruses, they need
glucose to reproduce in your system.
And so if they don't have it, if there
is no glucose in your cell, you will
not get the virus or the disease.
And, um, again, that is only
when you're in the fasted state,
it doesn't count beyond that.
So it's not like, Oh, I intermittently
fast every day and I can never get sick.
Well, there still is periods of time
where you can get sick, but, um, you know,
there's a lot of science behind, like,
if you are sick or you're getting sick,
you know, Stop eating, just drink water.
Travis Bader: Feed a fever, starve a cold
Ian McIntosh: or whatever.
Yeah.
And I mean, like, you know how, when you
get really sick, you're not really hungry.
You don't have an appetite.
That's your body going like, don't eat.
Interesting.
We, we need, we need to just
focus on dealing with this.
And then after we're done
dealing with this, you can eat
Travis Bader: again.
Cause anecdotally, I will do that.
I'll just, I won't eat.
I feel myself getting sick, something
Ian McIntosh: happening.
But like growing up, my mom would
always be like, you know, like
you gotta have chicken noodle
soup or you gotta, you know, like.
Here's some Sprite.
I'm filling my body with, with sugar
and, and, um, I'm, I'm putting food in.
So now my body's like, well, we
can't deal with getting you better.
We're dealing with deal with all this food
and sugar that you're putting into us.
Yeah.
Sugar's a killer, isn't it?
It is.
I mean, there's good sugars.
There's like, you know, like
your natural, like honeys and,
and maple syrups and stuff.
And to a certain extent, like
you can't just like consume
just huge quantities of it.
But, you know, it's like, I, when
my kids get sick or a cold, now I
just give them a scoop of honey,
like local honey from my town.
And it works way better than giving
them Tylenol because Tylenol,
Tylenol works great for, for them
to sleep because it like numbs them.
And it like, it's, it basically masks all
the symptoms, never will make them better.
It's not a healer.
It's just a, something to help
you deal with your symptoms.
And so the scoop of honey
actually has those antimicrobial
antibacterial properties that are
going to actually, and they love it.
So it's easy to convince them to take it,
but it actually helps them get better.
Travis Bader: Kept bees
for a number of years.
My wife and I, I'm thinking
of talking about it here.
It makes me want to put
a couple more hives up.
Right.
Ian McIntosh: My neighbors used to
have bees and my yard is packed with
flowers and they were, they would give
us honey and we're like, oh, this is
honey from our yard, which is, you know,
about as close to home as you can get.
But, uh, but yeah, man, it, you
know, if you, if you have the time
and energy for stuff like that,
it's of course amazing to do.
Travis Bader: Awesome.
Fasting, intermittent fasting.
Ian McIntosh: Intermittent
fasting is a game changer for me.
I've, I've noticed nothing but
positive, um, uh, aspects to it.
I am so sold on it and, uh, I'm
going to continue to do it for
Well, as long as I feel necessary,
but at the same time, I don't see
a time where I won't at this point.
Yeah.
We'll see.
I mean, I haven't even been a full
year of doing it yet, but I've just,
I've just noticed so much good coming
from it and I just feel better.
I feel light.
Is it
Travis Bader: easier
if you're a vegetarian?
Ian McIntosh: No, cause I love food.
Yeah.
You should see me eat.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
My brother and I, like we ate,
almost ate my parents out of house
and home and like, I'm a big eater.
And it's not about like eating less.
It's about eating less often, you know?
And so I still consume similar
amount of calories a day, but I
just put the space in between.
Yeah, much longer.
And, and then I, I do two
bigger meals instead of three.
Travis Bader: I spent a couple of months
over in Greece and, um, I love eating.
I love food.
And I realized I just like
all the variety of flavors.
Like we go, we got Vietnamese
food, we got Japanese food.
Vancouver is great for that.
We've got everything right.
And I'm like, and then we've
got access to all this stuff.
And when I was over there was.
The same kind of access to food,
the same greens, lamb, chicken.
Uh, and I just got bored and I was
not hungry, but I lost 30 pounds.
Yeah.
That was over about a two month period.
Ian McIntosh: Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, that's your body.
Like a lot of people think that, oh, if
you starve yourself, starve yourself,
if you go hungry, your body's going
to start eating its muscle mass.
Our bodies are not designed like
that mother nature didn't design
us so that the first thing our body
starts eating when we're, when we
don't get food is our muscle mass.
It goes straight for the fat reserves.
It's like a bear hibernating,
you know, it's like, uh, a lion
doesn't lose its muscle mass.
If it hasn't eaten in days,
it loses all of its fat.
And that's the first thing to go.
So yeah, that's the, another huge benefit.
You get into that 13 to 15
hour fast, that's your like
fat burning, big time stage.
That's when your body's
just like feeding on fat.
Travis Bader: Well, Michael Easter
wrote a book called the comfort crisis.
Yeah.
Popular book.
I just finished.
Actually, I started reading
it and I finished listening to
it on a, uh, on a road trip.
A friend of mine gave me the book
says, you gotta listen to it.
It's really good.
It's got some good info.
And he talks about intermittent fasting,
but also the psychological benefit
of not always being comfortable.
It's okay to be hungry for
Ian McIntosh: a while.
I think it's really good
for your mental strength.
It's really good for mental fortitude
and, and like not becoming someone who
has an addictive personality or, you know,
if you can like just be hungry and be
okay with it and then move on with your
life, it's one thing to just sit there
staring at the pantry or the fridge.
And like you're 17 hours into a fast.
You just be like, screw this.
You know, it's like, but if you just
go out and do stuff, you don't even
notice, you know, you just forget
that you're, that you haven't eaten.
And yeah, it's, it's, it's how we evolved.
We didn't evolve eating
three square meals a day.
You know, it's the whole notion too.
And again, don't take offense to anyone
who's listening, but eating meat,
three square meals a day is not how
we were designed to do food either.
And I'm not anti meat.
I think eating meats.
Really good for you in certain amounts,
but it was only 50 years ago where people
didn't eat meat three square meals a day.
Yeah.
And there are farming
Travis Bader: practices
have allowed that now.
Ian McIntosh: Yeah.
And it's, it's, uh, our farming practices
have allowed it, which is doing huge
damage to the planet, but, um, they've
allowed us to have meat all the time.
Our body, it's just too much
for our body to deal with.
It's it's meats really.
High in nutrition.
I have no, no, uh, qualms about that.
It is very high in nutrition, but it
is really hard for your body to digest.
Well,
Travis Bader: didn't Jordan Peterson
and his diet, his diet, Jordan
Peterson and his daughter go on a,
uh, a diet where all they eat is meat.
Yes.
And they're talking
about how great that is
Ian McIntosh: for them.
Well, there, okay.
So the thing about all these diets,
vegan or, or all meat or anything, you
know what all the common denominator is
between all this, it's a whole foods diet.
Why are you feeling better?
Because you're not eating
processed junk anymore.
I
Travis Bader: can a hundred percent get
Ian McIntosh: behind that.
So this is the thing why I don't, I'm
not, I'm not the vegetarian or vegan
that's screaming from the rooftops.
Don't eat meat.
I'm saying you, you shouldn't eat
as much because your body, it's
just really slowing you down.
Um, in, in the right amounts,
it's going to help propel you.
The people who go all meat.
First, I don't understand how they
poop, but they, they, they clearly
get into this like lion, uh, style of
digestion, which is people can do that.
Sure.
And, but I, I ultimately think the reason
they're feeling better and, and there's
been some research done into this is
because they're now on a whole foods diet.
They're cut out all the processed junk.
And that's really what.
Ultimately, everyone should be trying
to do is eat more whole foods, eat
less processed junk, look at the
ingredients on the stuff you're buying.
You know, there's a lot of great wording
that food companies put on stuff like
made with fruit, made with fruit, not
made of fruit or something like that.
You know, as an example, you know, um.
So, and then you look at it and
it's like sugar, first ingredient.
And then, you know, fruit is like way
down the line, you know, these are
examples of like heavily processed things.
So really actually, you know, I don't
buy anything new to me without reading
what's in it, you know, and the less that
there is in it, the better, the more.
It is closer to a whole food or it
is just a whole food, the better.
And that's really what people should
be focusing on more than like all meat
or all vegan or whatever it may be.
And also I think like.
You know, if, if we are, if we're
lucky enough to live in an area
where we can go hunt for our meat,
that is obviously a really holistic,
healthy meat that you're eating.
Um, you know, the tortured pig
that, uh, spent its life in a, in a.
In a pin that it couldn't turn around
in, in Georgia, um, and is just
constantly being, you know, pregnant.
And, and, you know, that
meat is not good for you.
It is full of bad energy for
one it's, it's depression meat.
Interesting perspective.
Yeah.
You know, you're, you're basically
eating depression hormones.
Hmm.
And that animal is depressed.
Yeah.
These animals are very intelligent.
Right.
So again, it goes back to like a whole
foods diet and, and understanding
where your, where your food came from.
And if you're just buying like, you
know, the cheapest stuff off the shelf,
I know that a lot of people it's hard
times right now and we're all feeling it.
And things are expensive, but that
cheapest stuff off the shelf is also the,
the worst, probably the worst for you.
Yeah.
The cost
Travis Bader: behind that's pretty high.
Yes.
Your health cost behind
Ian McIntosh: it.
The environmental cost behind it.
Um, the, the cost that went into whatever,
if it's an animal, that animal's mental
health, you know, like there's all,
there's a huge cost associated there.
And it's, it's the whole notion where
people are like organic blueberries,
eight 99, that's ludicrous.
But then they immediately go over to the.
Brewery and buy a 12 IPA, totally.
You know, it's like, all right,
well, don't get me wrong.
I love myself a 12 IPA, but.
That is alcohol is poison and
those blueberries, those organic
blueberries were a whole health food.
And you're saying, so our mentality
around food, especially in this day
and age is got to switch a little
bit because we got to prioritize
where we're putting our money.
And I think prioritizing, putting
your money into your health.
Is ultimately going to allow you to
be a happier, more fulfilled person.
It's going to change
your mental everything.
And therefore you're just going to
find everything flows your way better.
Even like, it's like feeding your
mind, you know, feeding your body is
feeding your mind, our, our, our, our
digestive system is full of neural.
A neural network as well.
Like there's that we're
literally feeding our brain.
And if you've are, all you're eating is
junk, your mind is going to be junk and
you're probably going to be depressed.
Like it really impacts everything.
And I think people are starting to
realize that, but more people should
is what we're putting into our bodies
is, is directly affecting not only
our internal health, but our mindset.
Travis Bader: Do you think
people are recognizing it?
Cause my, I look in my circles.
And I would say so based like my wife's
a red seal chef, she worked in a bakery
for a number of years, worked at, uh,
some high end restaurants and we do all
our own butchering, everything like I'll
complain, I open up the fridge and it
looks like it's all condiments and like,
how am I supposed to make something
out of, uh, All these different crazy
containers and whatever is in there.
And I look in the pantry and
it's stuff full of stuff.
Yeah.
We have awesome food all the time.
Yeah.
And everything I hear back
from her is a new book.
She's read about basically how we should
have our own farm in our backyard and
we should have, um, so my circle is
definitely leaning towards the, uh,
recognition that, Eating whole foods,
proper foods is, is the way to go.
Do you think people in
general are seeing that?
Ian McIntosh: And the entire world?
No.
Travis Bader: And, and I mean, when you're
saying times are getting tight and money's
getting tight, um, it's easier for people
just to go and buy the cheap fast food.
Ian McIntosh: Um, I think, I mean,
it's kind of by design, isn't it?
Yeah.
You know, we're going to go there.
Well, I mean, it's the FDA, you know,
they're, they're, uh, they're not.
Um, they're not worried about your health.
They want to make big profits
on the crap food they sell you.
And then when you get sick,
feed you full of meds.
That's what we talked about, you know?
And, um, and so, yeah, you need to, you
need to take a step back and realize
that like, I'm not a big conspiracy
guy, you know, I, I love conspiracies.
I love entertaining the notion of them.
Sure.
I'm not going to buy into anything
without concrete evidence or proof,
but, um, I will say that there's
some pretty good concrete evidence
and proof that the powers that
be do not care about our health.
And so you need to take the
matters into your own hands.
And yes, we're in a time where just going
to get the cheap food is, seems to be the
better option, but I can guarantee you,
there's a lot of people out there that
will still have budget to go to the pub or
go, you know, get drunk on the weekends.
But they're not willing to
invest into that high quality
food at the grocery store.
Well, wasn't
Travis Bader: that food pyramid that
we all learned in elementary school?
Wasn't that?
Basically put together by in groups that
had an interest in seeing people eat
lots of, uh, uh, grains essentially.
Ian McIntosh: Yes.
And, and dairy and, and, uh, I mean,
it's, yeah, it was, you know, the whole
notion that like pork is a breakfast meat.
Right.
Everyone eats pork for breakfast.
Why is that?
Well, it was because in the, I think it
was in the fifties, they went on this
huge market, nobody was eating pork.
They're like, we need to change this.
So more people eat pork.
We're going to make it the breakfast meat.
And then they like went on this huge
campaign to make it the breakfast.
And now everyone eats pork for breakfast
every day without even questioning why.
It's like.
This happened by design.
It didn't happen by accident.
Yeah,
Travis Bader: you raise a good point.
I should have break, he can
breakfast, lunch, and dinner.
Yeah, exactly.
Or not just breakfast.
Not
Ian McIntosh: just breakfast.
Yeah.
But yeah, I mean, I've got a buddy
like, you know, uh, here I am like
the vegetarian vegan, but like one
of my good friends, he's an avid
hunter and he grows his own pigs.
He's got five acres up in Pemberton.
He grows his own pigs.
They have a garden.
Um, the deer come and eat their garden
all the time, but then they went up on
the mountainside and they shoot those deer
and then they cut it with the pork that
they've been growing in their backyard.
I'm like, that's a closed
system right there.
Not everyone has that.
Living the life.
That not everyone has that like ability.
They don't all live on a five acre
property in the countryside, but like.
But like understanding that that should
be, you should really try and understand
where your food's coming from and
what's in your food and it should be
the most simplest basic ingredients.
You know, it's, um,
when you look at bread.
For instance, mm.
Like 12 grain artisan bread.
And you look at the back and it's got like
a million ingredients in it and it's full
of all these like B 12 and rib flavin and
thi rib flavin, you know, all this stuff.
And you're like, oh, this
stuff is all good for me.
Your body doesn't know
what to do with all that.
It's, there's too much stuff.
Mm.
In one little mouthful that your body's
like, nah, I can't deal with this.
Um, you know, whereas if you just had
bread that was just like flour mm-hmm.
yeast.
Water, salt, that's a way healthier
product and it could be white flour is
still healthier than your 12 grain artisan
riboflavin filled bread, you know, so.
Understanding that the most simple
ingredients is, is ultimately the
best, best food for you, you know,
and this is mushrooms are just
mushrooms because, you know, they're
a whole food and they're a whole food.
That's really good for you.
And so there's a lot of whole
foods that are really good for you.
You look at the, um, you
know, the, the blue zones.
You ever heard of this?
No, what's that?
Oh, it's like the zones in the world
where people live over a hundred,
like where there's like a higher
concentration of people living over a
Travis Bader: hundred.
So we're not talking about the conductive
energy weapons and the color blue.
Okay.
Ian McIntosh: Different blue zones.
But yeah, the guy who wrote the book
blue zones, which is, uh, he came
to a North face athlete summit that
we had one year and presented his
book to us and all the blue zones
that he had found around the world.
I think the big common denominator
aside from the fact that these
elderly people were still valued
in their community and still felt
like they had purpose, they weren't
just shoved in a home and forgotten.
That was a big part of it.
Um, but also that they were
eating a very whole foods diet.
You know, um, and had been their
whole life, whether it's fish or
meat or plants, it doesn't matter.
It's basic whole food ingredients.
So, and then, yeah, maybe not eating
like, you know, three massive meals a day.
You don't need to be full all the time.
You don't need to be full all the time.
It's like, I now embrace
the feeling of hunger.
It's weird.
I was the same way.
I used to.
Like the second I felt hungry, I
would like shove a giant burrito
in my face, you know, like, and
now I'm just like, oh, I'm hungry.
Sweet.
Like I am officially in a fasted state.
Done.
Done.
Yeah.
We're doing it.
You know, it's like, this is good for me.
Travis Bader: I find
that hunting as well too.
I'll go out and I might miss a meal or
I might end up working on an animal for
a longer time and I'm real tired and
I'll skip it and I go for the next one.
I don't.
You're in a more wild state, I think.
And perhaps a bit more attuned
with things, but I don't find I, I.
Eat, I know others I've gone hunting
with and like, you're just picking away
a little bits all through the day and
eating a little bit here and a little bit
Ian McIntosh: there.
But, uh.
Well, and your, your body,
everything that's going on in your
body, all the cells in your body
are working on processing that.
Yeah.
And meanwhile, the person who's in a
more fasted state, your body is 100
percent focused on your environment
and your energy is 100 percent
in tune with your environment.
You know, so there is a, there is a
real scientific thing going on there.
And, um, and I think, I think
it's really cool to, to, to
start to go down that path.
And for me, it's just
been very enlightening.
to to realize all these things in
the last number of years of my life.
And, um, I'm not, I don't know
everything and I don't claim I ever
will or, or anything like that.
But, you know, I'm just, like I
say, I'm just trying to become a
little bit better of a human or more
educated human than I was the day.
yesterday, um, and tomorrow I hope to
again, and if I can keep doing that, then
I think I'm winning, you know, in life.
And, and, uh, yeah, a big part
of that education is, has been
all the things we're just talking
about, about diet and food and the
reality of the world we live in.
Travis Bader: Ian, really
enjoyed the conversation here.
I want to thank you so much for
being on the Silvercore podcast
and I know I'm going to be picking
your brain about a bunch of other
things when we're, uh, off air here.
Ian McIntosh: Thank you.
Awesome.
Travis, thank you so much for having me.
It was a pleasure, man.