Dynamic Dialogue with Danny Matranga - 103 - Q+A: Muscle Loss, Locking Out No FAP and MORE!
Episode Date: June 4, 2021In this episode, Coach Danny answers listener questions on a variety of topics!---Thanks For Listening!---RESOURCES/COACHING: I am all about education and that is not limited to this podcast! Feel fre...e to grab a FREE guide (Nutrition, Training, Macros, Etc!) HERE! Interested in Working With Coach Danny and His One-On-One Coaching Team? Click HERE! Want To Have YOUR Question Answered On an Upcoming Episode of DYNAMIC DIALOGUE? You Can Submit It HERE!Want to Support The Podcast AND Get in Better Shape? Grab a Program HERE!----SOCIAL LINKS: Sign up for the trainer mentorship HEREFollow Coach Danny on INSTAGRAMFollow Coach Danny on TwitterFollow Coach Danny on FacebookGet More In-Depth Articles Written By Yours’ Truly HERE!Support the Show.
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Hey, everybody, welcome in to another episode of the Dynamic Dialogue podcast. As always,
I'm your host, Coach Danny Matranga. And today, we're going to answer a ton of your questions.
I have been fielding these various Q&A questions from my Instagram for a little while now. And I
think there's a lot of good ones in here. And this is
going to be a more rapid fire Q&A. I'd like to answer as many of these as I can that I think
kind of are congruent and that go together or that hit on different things so that we're not going
into just this never ending spiral of redundancy. But before we do, let's do a little housekeeping. Today is June 2nd. So we are already,
we're not halfway through the year, but we are five months of the way through 2021, which is
hard to believe for me, especially, I shouldn't say for me, especially because I'm certainly not
the only person who I'm sure has acknowledged this, but 2020 seemed like it was an incredibly chaotic, insane year with, of course, everything that was
happening as the result of the pandemic. And for those of you who live here in America, there was
a lot of political tension. There was a lot of race-related tension. The year just kind of dragged
on and seemed extremely high stress. And 2021 started off a little rocky and certainly has been crazy for a large number of people,
but it certainly seems to have picked up the pace.
And I'm bringing this up because we're getting that much closer to another year passing by.
And every time that happens, I think we kind of have to check in and go,
okay, how am I doing with the goals that I set for myself, whether that's with my fitness, my business,
my relationships, romantic family, friendships, otherwise, however you want to slice that
pie, ask yourself how you're doing with the things that you set out to do and acknowledge
that there's still seven twelfths of the year remaining.
So you have over half of a year remaining to make that change. And this year is going pretty quick, specifically when we look at,
hey, how was our pacing in 2020? It seemed slow, a little crazy. 2021 appears to be speeding right
along. Looks like we're getting towards the tail end of this pandemic. So just me checking in with
you, keep in touch with the things that you want to accomplish, the goals that you've set for yourself and acknowledge that, hey, we're halfway through this year. So if you had things that you wanted to do, now would be a very good time to sit down the opportunity to unwind and recharge. And for me,
that was actually at the top of my list. I had a lot of vacations planned last year,
because I was very, very, very certain after the financial year I had in 2019, and the way that I
operate my business, that 2020 was going to be a year spent traveling. I had multiple flights,
multiple hotels, multiple trips booked well in advance, going to Tulum, going to be a year spent traveling. I had multiple flights, multiple hotels, multiple trips booked well in advance. I was going to Tulum, going to Hawaii, amongst many other
places. All of that was derailed and I ended up spending most of 2020 the way I spent 2018 and
2019, which was working like crazy. And the chaos that was 2020 bled into 2021. And I just got out
for my first vacation and I plan on doing quite a few
more, but that was my commitment to myself in 2020. And I fell through on it. And so, you know,
I'm just getting started with some of my own commitments. Now I wanted to take time to detach
because for somebody who likes to work like myself, that actually takes a commitment,
which I know sounds kind of strange, but whatever those commitments are that you wanted to make,
takes a commitment, which I know sounds kind of strange, but whatever those commitments are that you wanted to make, acknowledge that we're now, like I said, five twelfths of the year behind us.
We have seven twelfths remaining. What are you going to do with that seven twelfths? What are
you going to do with June, July, August, September, October, November, and December? You can do a lot
in that time if you're focused and you have those check-ins. Okay. So first question comes from at Kelly Kalinsky and she
asks, what are your thoughts on home workout programs like those created by Beachbody?
I'm not particularly a huge fan of the Beachbody brand as a whole. I've harped enough on direct
marketing and multi-level marketing in our space before that I don't want to dive
too far down that rabbit hole. One thing that I will always say, and that I really stand by
in a country where, you know, we have over 60% of the population overweight or obese.
I don't think that there's anything out there that's quote unquote bad, but I would say that
for most people, Beachbody home programs are far from optimal, but they certainly beat the alternative. And if that's where you're at with your current level of fitness, I'm sure they make a fine solution. But if you are like most people and you have a goal that's pertaining to your body composition, you want to build muscle, you want to burn body fat, I think you would be better off focusing on a more, what I would describe as
traditional resistance training modality, like just plain old weightlifting three times a week
paired with proper nutrition and paying attention to lifestyle factors like sleep, stress,
supplementation, non-exercise activity, thermogenesis, like walking, great things like
that. I would do that and try to put my eggs
in that basket per se, before I put my eggs in the basket of like home workouts on my TV from
Beachbody and the Shakeology and all the other layers and elements that are kind of just tied
into or woven into that brand as a whole. I would avoid that if I were, you know, in your shoes. Next question comes from
at Maria Baby, and she asks, should I lock my knees at the top after squatting? Yes or no?
So the answer is basically yes, but it really depends on how we define the term lock. So when
you squat, you have a barbell on your back, and it's going from probably the top of your shoulder
blades or slightly on your upper back if you squat low bar. And that force is going to carry
you downward. It rests on your spine. You bend your knees, your ass goes down, you extend your
knees, your ass comes up and you lock out, you're done. That's how you squat. Obviously, there's
degrees of external rotation that happen at the hip. There's forward knee travel over the ankle.
There's a lot of bracing. It's a lot of mechanical things that happen when we squat.
But in essence, what we're performing is what we would describe as an axial loaded knee and hip
extension exercise, flexion extension exercise. So your knees start to bend and they flex, flex,
flex. Your butt gets closer to your calves. You get towards the bottom. When you get to the top
of that squat to train through a full range of motion, you need to extend your knees. And that
would require to reach that full range of motion that your knees extend fully, which would be
quote unquote locking out. However, if you're somebody who hyper extends or has a tendency to
hyper extend joints, I for one one am one of those people,
you might not want to hyperextend your knees.
In the same way that at the top of a bench press,
you might not want to hyperextend your elbows or at the top of a, say, hip extension,
biased exercise like an RDL or a deadlift,
you might not want to hyperextend your hips
to the point where you begin flexing your upper back.
Because again, part of that whole hip extension piece, if you go too far, it's actually just the lumbar
hyperextension. So we want to lock out at the top of our movements, but we don't want to lock out
into hyperextension. And we might not want to lock out in an overly aggressive fashion. Okay.
So the next question, this is an interesting one, comes from Prescription
Properties. And he asks, is nofap beneficial? And for those of you who are uninitiated, nofap
basically means not masturbating. And there are some pretty crazy theories around nofap. And some
people absolutely swear by it. And I don't have a particularly professional
opinion, nor should you really take too much salt or put too much, take my opinion with a grain of
salt. There we go. Don't salt my opinion. I think if you were going to salt it to taste, you might
need quite a bit because I'm pretty sure this is going to be an uneducated opinion on whether or
whether or not you shouldn't masturbate, which if you're driving in your car on your way to work was probably not what you were banking
on hearing me talk about. If you were running on the treadmill, you probably weren't banking on it.
But I think it's an interesting physiological question because it's thrown around a lot for men
and ladies, this might be interesting to you too, not masturbating for whatever reason.
ladies, this might be interesting to you too. Not masturbating for whatever reason
has created this ideology that you will store or produce more testosterone. And I don't know if that has ever been fleshed out or tested. I do know, if I can recall correctly, that there
is a testosterone dip during the refractory period after a man has an orgasm. Now, does that mean that it's
unhealthy to masturbate or that you should never masturbate? I don't know. But what most men are
after when they're asking this question is like, okay, what am I going to stand to gain from not
doing this? Is holding this stuff in going to give me more testosterone, make me build more muscle,
make me more aggressive, whatever? I don't think that's going to be the case, not to a meaningful
level. And that's still not my way of saying like, hey, free pass, go masturbate as much you want,
or hey, never masturbate again. I think that you should probably develop a habit with that,
that makes sense for your lifestyle and with you and your partner or lack of your partner. But one thing that I think might be beneficial from not fapping all the time would be you'd
probably reduce your consumption of internet pornography because most men when they fap
are going to simultaneously consume some form of internet pornography.
And internet pornography is something that is consumed at an extremely high rate in our society.
It's mildly concerning when we talk about like, hey, what are the implications of consuming this kind of content, particularly hyper explicit content on my sex life when I'm with an actual partner, right? Like what are the byproducts of, you know,
extensive porn watching or masturbating and watching porn all the time? And I think that
what we do know is that it has a desensitizing effect and it might reduce, or I should say,
it might skew your expectations around real sex and what most women look like. So there could be some
benefit there, but I don't know if like not masturbating is going to make your gains any
better. But I would imagine that taking a little break, if it's something that you do like way too
much might be a decent idea. So there was your totally out of left field take on whether or not
I think this guy should masturbate. Okay, so next question
comes from Ingrid Delamus. And she asked, what machines do you have in your gym? So she's talking
about my garage gym. And I have a ton of free weight equipment, like dumbbells, barbells,
kettlebells, hex bars, bumper plates. You know, I have tons of dumbbells, tons of kettlebells,
a lot of bands, I have a squat rack, a beautiful bench, all the things that I would need to train the entirety of my body with free weights. But there are a few machines that I was particularly interested in getting for a variety of reasons.
is because I love to have my clients train that vertical pull. And we do some analogs of vertical pulling with other stuff. I'll have clients do straight arm pull downs on the free motion,
which I'll get to in a minute. I'll have them do banded pull-ups, which I quite like when I do a
low band setup on my rogue rack. I like, you know, even dumbbell pullovers, even though I wouldn't
necessarily describe those as a vertical pull, there's some similar elements. But when it comes
to training women in particular, and I train a lot of women in my in-person
clientele, um, being able to give them a vertical pull that doesn't require them pulling their body
up over a bar, even in an assisted fashion is really, really practical, right? Because I can't
have all women do assisted pull-ups because some of my clients just will not be able to fatigue their lats in the same way that they could on a lat pull-down because their grip's
going to fail. So that's one that I really love. Another one I have is a cable row. I'm a huge fan
of cable rowing, particularly closer neutral grip cable rows. I like them for developing the upper
back. I like that the strength and resistance profile, meaning where is the movement or where
am I strongest in this range of motion relative to where is the actual like impact physics has on
the implement I'm moving? Do these things match up? And with a lot of rowing, they don't,
particularly free weight rowing can be a little tricky. So a cable row is wonderful machine to
have. And then the last machine, and this is kind of the big daddy, I spent like $5,000 on this
machine because I love it, is a free motion dual cable. And for those of you who aren't familiar with this, this is that
machine that you'll see at the gym that has two arms on it that guys or girls will usually adjust
to do things like cable flies, or they'll drop them all the way to the bottom to do like cable
laterals. It's one of my favorite machines out there. I love it for chest flies. It's fabulous
for things like cable arm training, right?
Because I myself like to do a lot of cable related arm training.
I have sensitivity in my elbows.
So things like rope extensions tend to be more agreeable than things like skull crushers,
for example.
And again, that cable apparatus really gives me the ability to make better decisions with
how I train and making sure that I'm taking my joints and my
longevity into account, which was something that I did find mildly problematic when I had less
equipment because having to do everything free weight didn't give me the ideal ability to match
strength curves, resistance profiles, etc. I can just make better decisions. And this really has
increased the library of exercises that I have
at my disposal. And so the next question I have is from a can a k k i a i n n a k i n. And she says,
Can you tell me how much time a 20 year old should spend exercising? I can't because everybody's
lifestyle is different. Everybody's situation is different. But I do think you should commit
if you're serious about your fitness and your health and your longevity, which all of us should be, um, you should commit at least 90
minutes a week to your exercise. And I know that for some of you, you're like, Oh my gosh, that's
a lot. And for others, you're like, that's nothing. I literally work out 90 minutes every day.
I'm saying like, that's the bare ass minimum. That's where I would set the line. Three 30
minute total body resistance training sessions a week or two total body resistance training sessions a week with something aerobic. Like if you want to take this
seriously, though, you could consider working out four to seven days a week, depending on how you
adjust your training, I would recommend somewhere between four to six if you're super serious.
I think taking zero days off is kind of silly, you don't give your body or your mind the time
to really detach from that
aggressive training stimulus and training hard really does help. But one thing that I know is
that young people who have more free time have a tendency to be a little bit obsessive with things.
So there's certainly a line at which there's too much. And we get to that point where we would say,
hey, the returns here are diminishing or that point of diminishing marginal returns where basically,
oh, if I work out 10 hours, I actually get better gains than if I work out 12 hours weekly
because I have, I actually end up over training or training beyond the point at which I can
recover.
And so finding that sweet spot can be tricky when you're really zealous and, you know,
passionate and you want to do the most and you want to make the gains.
I totally get that.
We've been there. I've been there. A lot of people listening have been there, but there is a limit to
just how much time that you're going to spend in the gym that'll end up being productive.
And where that limit is, generally speaking, has to do with how long you've been training.
And so for older clients, older, or I shouldn't say older, more advanced trainees,
people who have been in the game, have more skin in the game, who've been doing this for years,
they might require a more advanced, more frequent, more intense stimulus. But for a 20-year-old who
at all likelihood is probably still a novice or at the, you know, maybe an intermediate lifter,
you could probably get away with training between five to 12 hours a week.
If you train intelligently, I can't imagine that you'd need to train for more than 12 hours a week.
You know, that's six, two hour sessions. I'm imagining that the target number is probably
well below that for, you know, 90% of the population, even those who do lift if you're
training intelligently. So hopefully that gives you something to work with. And I think that might be beneficial. form you're listening to and share the episode to your Instagram story or share it to Facebook. But be sure to tag me so I can say thanks and we can chat it up about what you liked and how I can
continue to improve. Thanks so much for supporting the podcast and enjoy the rest of the episode.
Next question is from at Mia Giselle and she says tips on returning back to exercising after being
sick. My number one tip is to truly make sure that you're not sick anymore, because
nothing's more obnoxious, and this is again, somebody who worked at a gym for years,
than members coming to the gym when they're still clearly sick, or when they've maybe been one day
free of their cold, and then they pass it around to everybody at the gym, not just the trainers,
but the other members. And I know with the pandemic, everybody's been talking about,
everybody thinks they're an epidemiologist and an expert on infectious disease.
But you know, the surface contact stuff with COVID has really been up in the air. But there
are a lot of other colds, flus, bugs, that do really have a tendency to spread quite effectively
with surface contact. So places like the gym can be a very easy place to get sick. If somebody's walking in there,
and they're totally sick, infecting everybody. So number one tip is make sure you're actually
good to go back before you go back. And then the next piece is to take it slow, see where you're at
and make a lot of what I like to call game time decisions. So you sit down, you take the time you
plan it out, what am I training today? What are my goals today, and then work in some ways for you to kind of let off the gas if you feel like you're overdoing it. Like if you're
like, okay, I'm going in first day back after getting sick, I'm going to do the exact workout
that I was going to do and act like I never got sick. That I don't love. Instead, maybe look at
that workout and go, okay, I'm going to try to do 75, 80% of this. If I can push here, I'm going to
push here. If I need to back off, I'll back off here. I, you know, give yourself the ability to train with some degree of intensity
and with some degree of ambition, but also understand that it's very reasonable that
you might have some type of lingering fatigue, if you will, some present, uh, like just, you know,
Hey, I'm not quite all the way back physically, mentally. Maybe I've been derailed because I've had this
cold for a while and I'm just, you know, feeling a little weak. Weakness tends to be pretty common.
Just be patient with yourself there. And I think that that's really the best key that I could give
you. Okay. At Shelby Lake asks, suggestions on beneficial snacks before workout. How long before
a workout should I eat? So I'll give you the advice that I give the clients that I work with online, the clients that I work with in
person. Speaking of which, the new coaching company that I am launching is going to be called
Core Coaching. Very excited about this. This is the kind of, I guess, low-key 20 minutes into a
podcast drop. But yeah, I'm going to be launching a coaching company. I've gotten to the point with
my online client roster now where I'm happy with the amount of clients that I'm working with.
And I'd like to help more people. And I just simply can't work with all the people who apply,
which is an unbelievable blessing. And so one of the things I'm really excited to bring to the
table and that I'm happy to be announcing today is the launch of core coaching and core coaching will be coming soon.
I'm working on everything now, but my goal is to hire trainers and coaches to do the things that
have been so effective with the clients that I've worked with online and in person for years,
hiring coaches who have an experience in working with clients in person and online. I think that's
what's really going to make this different. Like I'll be selecting coaches who have five to 10 years of in-person personal training experience in addition
to what they've done working with clients online. I don't want to create a coaching company that is
all a bunch of people who've only ever sat behind Excel spreadsheets or people who only work with
bodybuilders. I want to create a coaching company that can really work with anybody in any situation. And that means if you're a bodybuilder at the highest
level and you want to compete, we can take care of you. If you're an off-season athlete and you
want to come into your next season at the best and perform at your best, we can take care of you.
If you're a mom with two kids and you're just trying to figure out how to get back to working
out after the pandemic, we can take care of you. If you're working out from home and you're
totally new to this and you need help, perhaps even in a one-on-one setting, whether that's
hands-on or using some of the video interface technology that we have access to like Zoom,
we can take care of you. And really trying to build a team of coaches who have the experience that I think is required
to provide a quality product in a space that truthfully, I believe is loaded with crap.
And I do think that online coaches, many of them have good intentions, but a lot of them just don't
have enough skin in the game and they don't have enough practice to actually help people because
they don't know how to communicate. They don't know how to talk to their clients because they've never trained enough people in person. They're like,
okay, I know how to help people get on stage because I can pump out macros and write body
building plans. Well, it's like, hey, buddy, guess what? You train people, okay? Human beings,
okay? They are not machines. You don't just type on them and they just give you the output that
you want. There are nuances and intricacies that you learn as you coach for years. And so creating a coaching company with people
like that in it is really, really something I've wanted to do for a long time because I think that
it's industry changing in the way and in many ways, but particularly in how it would allow
clients to interface with their coach, knowing that yes, I choosing online coaching because
it's more convenient, more cost effective, but I'm getting the level of, I'm getting the quality
that comes with somebody who's actually coached in person for a very long time and can still
deliver these things to me. These, whether it's a form related stuff, whether it's nutrition
related stuff, whether it's psychology related stuff, obviously that's in the scope of practice,
but you know, the nuance is the art of coaching that you can only have if you've been doing this for a
long time. And to me, this is a really exciting project and I'm really happy. So getting back to
the question, suggestions on beneficial snacks to eat before a workout and how long should I eat?
I recommend clients eat between 60 to 90 minutes prior to a workout. Getting closer to 90 tends to be better.
I don't find that most people can fully digest food in an hour unless they chew really well,
which most people do not.
So I like to be about 90 minutes before training.
I also like to keep my dietary fat intake fairly low in my pre-training meals because
fat does have a tendency to slow the rate at which
things digest. And I don't want things sitting around my stomach for a considerable amount of
time, especially leading into training. I like to train on a lighter feeling stomach. So about 90
minutes prior to training, I like to have something with protein in it and something with a mix of two
different types of carbohydrates, particularly one that's fructose dominant and one that's
glucose dominant
because they use different transporters to get carbohydrate into the bloodstream.
So I might do something like strawberries and cereal with a whey protein shake or a little bit
of yogurt and jerky, right? There's protein and sugar in both of those. Those tend to be okay as
well. And it doesn't have to be a huge meal, but I think the meal should fit in the context of your
overall goals. But we're looking at in simplified terms, getting a feeding in that
has a balance of protein and carbohydrates that's low on fat. If you can get different types of
carbohydrate, that would be additionally beneficial and trying to add that into your routine about 90
minutes before you train. And you can honestly do the same thing after if you're just looking for a post-workout meal. All right. So next question from Garza Vanessa, what do you
think of fat burners like EHP Labs OxyShred? I hear a lot about it. So fat burners are
what I would call things that enhance fat metabolism indirectly. And what I mean by that
is when you take something that would burn fat directly,
it would literally go in and break down fat. But what we see in most over-the-counter fat burner products are things like appetite suppressants, which could help with fat
loss by minimizing caloric intake, and stimulants like caffeine, which can help with caloric
expenditure by doing things like speeding up the heart rate, decreasing rate of fatigue so you can
exercise harder. Whether or not these products are going to make a meaningful difference for you and
your fat loss is very much up in the air. And I think if they make any difference, it's a small
one. So what you have to do here is weigh what I like to call the opportunity cost. And what I mean
by that is this. If a fat burner costs $40 for a month's supply, can you fit that $40 into your budget?
Or could you make another $40 purchase that would give you better outcomes?
So for example, if you're looking to lose fat, but you're not eating enough dietary
protein, you would be 10 times better off spending that $40 on a protein supplement
than a fat burner supplement.
off spending that $40 on a protein supplement than a fat burner supplement because nutrition and getting your nutrition right is exponentially more directly related to fat loss than something
like an indirect thing, more of like what you would find in a fat burner. And the more people
I work with, the more people I talk to, the more people that I help with their fat loss, the more I find
that the opportunity cost of purchasing a fat burner is almost never the best option. There's
almost always better ways to spend your money with regards to enhancing your fat loss and your
exercise performance. Okay. Jessica 98 asks, what would you say your online coaching is most beneficial for? So I
think the best way to answer this is who is the online coaching program most beneficial for?
And I'll just put it in simplified terms. In general, in-person coaching is best for people
who need that hands-on approach and accountability. In general, online coaching is best for people who
need that same level of accountability,
but do not need the hands-on support because perhaps they've been lifting long enough not to need somebody to oversee them.
Because most trainers charge somewhere between $60 to $200 an hour, seeing an in-person personal
trainer for every workout isn't super practical economically speaking for most people.
So having an online coach might present
a better option because for online coaches, you're generally going to pay somewhere between $199
and $1,000 a month, which generally comes out to less than going and seeing a personal trainer
every time you go to the gym or even just a few times a week. So I would say that online coaching
in most cases with most coaches is going to be best
for people who have a history and competency of lifting, but still need the accountability,
support, education.
And maybe they are just some, like a lot of my clients, for example, are coaches and they're
just done at the end of the day.
They're like, you know what, dude, fuck this.
I have been dealing with other people's shit and other people's fitness for weeks and months
and years.
And when it comes time for me, I am tapped out and I just need somebody who's going to tell me
what to do so I can show up and execute because my fitness matters to me. But I put my clients
first and I've got a job to do and I cut corners because I'm a people pleaser. So I'm going to put
myself last. Like I work with a lot of clients in that wheelhouse. So I find that online coaching
is really good for people like that too, or who just need that next level of accountability. Oh, here's another one
at Steffi Lynn 84 asks, thinking about hiring an online coach, what price range is reasonable?
And I can't say what's reasonable without knowing your financial situation, but I will say this,
you tend to get what you pay for. I find that my prices are very reasonable for what I offer.
I do know a lot of coaches that charge an absurdly high amount just because they know that they can,
but then do not deliver. I don't know these people personally, but I have heard about some
of these people and it's quite sad. But I think that most trainers have a tendency to charge what they think
they are worth. And I think that many trainers or many coaches have a tendency to really charge too
little. And oftentimes, that's because they can't deliver a high quality product. So as a consumer
being on the other end, I would say, you know, you tend to get what you pay for in life. So just take
that piece of advice with you when you pick out your coach. But if something seems like astronomically higher and reasonable, I wouldn't
necessarily just go, Oh, that's obviously better because it's more money because the fitness space
does have a tendency to attract some shysters and some kind of just generally nasty, greedy people.
Um, but it's mostly all awesome people awesome people. And most people who get into coaching
or online coaching are really cool people. So hopefully you don't run into a shit bag.
If you work with me, I can probably tell you that you're not going to run into a shit bag,
but they're out there. So just be careful. And you do tend to get what you pay for. But if
somebody's just asinine with their pricing, you can find high quality coaching for a reasonable
price. And I'd be happy to give you some recommendations. If you know my vibe and you're like, no, I don't want to work with you or your coaching company.
Okay. Next question at Soneka Vade. And she says, I have an injury. I've been out for two months.
How do I preserve muscle mass? I'm only allowed to walk. So again, resistance training is quite
possibly the best stimulus for maintaining
muscle mass.
However, there are some things we can do that are indirect or lifestyle related with our
protein intake and our sleep that can help.
And you might also, once you get cleared for exercise, or if you have a good working relationship
with whoever it is that gave you this initial kind of boundary of, hey, you're only allowed to walk.
Maybe you can ask at what point you can start incorporating low level exercise, but really what
you need to do to maintain your muscle is optimize your protein intake. Try to get as much protein as
you can within reason, probably between 0.7 to 1.2 grams per pound spread across four meals a day.
You want to spread that protein out so your muscle
protein synthesis remains high, and then do what you can to get good sleep because getting good
sleep has favorable impacts on body composition and muscle preservation. So I think that that's
a really, really good thing to focus on if your goal is maintaining and preserving muscle.
All right, guys, there you have it. Thank you so much
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So thanks so much for tuning in and stay tuned for the next episode.