Dynamic Dialogue with Danny Matranga - 137: POT-Cast, Cannabis, CBD, THC & Fitness
Episode Date: November 10, 2021In this episode, coach Danny reviews give his opinion on cannabis consumption and fitness. He also reviews some new literature in the CBD space and discusses whether or not CBD can actually enhance re...covery.- Thanks For Listening!---Grab the new Female Physique Advanced HERE!---RESOURCES/COACHING: I am all about education and that is not limited to this podcast! Feel free 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 Coach Danny to Fix Your S*** (training, nutrition, lifestyle, etc) fill the form HERE for a chance to have your current approach reviewed live on the show. 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.
Transcript
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Welcome in everybody to another episode of the dynamic dialogue podcast. As always, I am your host Danny Matringa, and we're getting into the early part of November at the time of recording. It's November 9. It's a nice crispy Tuesday, California, we're having some rain and some storms. And I'm looking forward to increasing my podcast frequency in the next couple of weeks.
I'm hoping to get you at least two, hopefully three episodes weekly between now and the
end of the year.
And I just want to make sure that that's a frequency that I can keep up and that you
guys enjoy.
So stay tuned for that.
Stay tuned for more episodes.
I'm excited to bring you that.
Today's episode will be interesting in that I think I'm going to be able to provide you with some perspective that perhaps you have not gotten on a topic that is
interesting to many, but certainly more relevant now than ever before. And that is cannabis, THC,
CBD, and fitness slash performance slash body composition. And the interconnectedness of these
things now that cannabis consumption is more common than perhaps it was previously, or at least more legal than it was previously.
Before we touch on kind of the ins and outs of the ways in which I think the fitness industry
and the cannabis industry might intertwine in coming years, and maybe your relationship to
cannabis if you choose to use and how that might affect your fitness outcomes. I do want to go through kind of a non-procedural list of things. First off,
I'm not a doctor. Second off, I'm certainly not a lawyer, but the lawyer wants me to let you know
that use of any substances, banned or otherwise, is at your own discretion. That of course includes
cannabis. And I just want
to do a little bit of a kind of bias check so that you guys know where I'm coming from before
we talk about this. The first thing you should know is that I live in a state where cannabis
is legal to consume and to cultivate. In California, it's legal to grow cannabis and
it's legal to consume cannabis. In many states, that's not the case.
In some states, you might be able to consume, whereas in other states, you might not.
And cannabis is different than CBD, and we'll talk quite a bit about CBD in our first section
here when we go over some of the emerging literature around CBD and CBD's ability to
impact performance.
I thought that you guys might find that very interesting since CBD is all over the place.
I am an advocate though for legalization.
I do think that that is a bias.
I do want to share that upfront.
I think you guys should know that
before you listen to anything I have to say about the topic
that I am an advocate for the legalization of cannabis.
I've been exposed to cannabis for many years.
I indulge in cannabis.
It is my drug of choice
in that I don't use any other drugs. I do not drink. Rarely, if ever, occasionally with my
girlfriend, I will have a drink, usually at her request. Otherwise, I'm basically what many people
would refer to as green and sober. I don't even really use caffeine much anymore. So, you know,
cannabis is a drug that I'm very familiar with.
However, CBD as it's typically marketed is something that I'm still skeptical. I think
the claims are very broad. I think they've spread very fast. I think it's sold everywhere. I think
there's a high variance in quality. I don't think that cannabis or CBD is a catch-all. So despite
all these biases, I'm going to shoot you totally straight here as we have a little bit of a
discussion about cannabis, which I think is becoming one of the more popular recreational drugs.
I know plenty of fitness enthusiasts who use it.
I know plenty of bodybuilders who use it.
I know plenty of athletes who use it.
In fact, I think you guys would be surprised to know at just how many athletes at the professional level are using cannabis.
at the professional level, are using cannabis. In fact, it's cannabis use that is effectively ubiquitous in the NBA. From Tom Haberstroh and Monty Poole of NBC Sports, there's a quote here
that says six different NBA players who did not want to be identified estimated that the percentage
of active players using marijuana in some form, buds, edibles, concentrates, CBD oils, lotions,
patches, etc., was at least 50 to as high as 85% of NBA athletes.
So we're talking about one of the most demanding sports in the year, or one of the most demanding
sports we watch that goes pretty much most of the year, one of the longest seasons, one
of the hardest with the traveling that these guys have to do across so many different time
zones, and cannabis use has become extremely
normal. Now, whether or not that negatively or positively impacts performance is hard to say
because there's a lot of different elements of the actual cannabis plant that might be influencing
your performance. Could it be some of the relieving effects of things like THC, some of the
inhibition lowering effects of something like THC, maybe it enhances your appetite and you can eat
and recover better using the THC side of the plant. But then we have CBD or cannabidiol, which are
the non-psychoactive elements of the plant that are often touted for their ability to reduce anxiety
or to maybe have an impact on pain reduction, which would also be beneficial. So why these
people might be using the cannabis plant, how they might be using it, whether they're using a more psychoactive form like an edible or perhaps cannabis bud, or they're using a non-psychoactive
form like a CBD tincture or a CBD patch is hard to say, but cannabis use is quite, quite prevalent
in one of the most popular sports globally, uh, with some of the athletes who I think have the
most demands asked of them.
So clearly, it's not the worst thing in the world for your performance if used properly.
But kind of working our way slowly into the first portion of this discussion,
I want to talk about CBD specifically. And I think before we talk about CBD, you guys should know that CBD is not the same thing as THC. CBD is in fact non-psychoactive. So when you guys
think about cannabis, when you think about marijuana, you probably think about smoking
weed and getting high, right? And that high that you get from marijuana comes from THC or tetrahydrocannabidiol. CBD is just cannabidiol. Okay.
So CBD, cannabidiol, THC, tetrahydrocannabidiol, right? And so you're getting psychoactive things
in THC when you eat it or when it's heated that can influence the brain to have psychoactive,
euphoric, really intense responses. That is the
high. Now, cannabidiol is very different. It's usually harvested from hemp, right, or part of
the hemp plant, whereas much of your conventional THC-rich cannabis is harvested from strains of
the cannabis plant that are indica or sativa that are the THC producing rich strains.
Hemp isn't technically the same thing as marijuana. Industrial hemp, right, refers to the
strain of the cannabis plant that's basically just grown for agricultural purposes. And marijuana,
which is in the same family, right, it's in the cannabis family. Marijuana is kind of the more
flowering, bud-laden, THC-rich type. So a lot of your hemp or CBD products are being produced
independently of a lot of your marijuana, THC-rich products. So it's a huge industry
from the medicinal use to the recreational use to the gray market to the black market, and a lot of people are using cannabis.
But CBD has been the fastest growing wing of the cannabis, let's call it, marketplace
for quite some time.
One of the primary reasons for this is harvesting related in that you can produce large amounts
of THC for much more cost efficient margins than you could equivalent amounts of, say,
psychoactive product from flour to edible. You can create CBD from the hemp plant, which is
generally cheaper to cultivate and maintain than a lot of the stringent maintenance of THC-specific
strains of the marijuana plant. And because it's cheap to produce, and there is some literature
out there supporting that it's good for a number of things.
The strongest literature we have with regards to what CBD can be beneficial for is seizures.
There are a lot of studies that show CBD can be effective at reducing seizures.
And again, taking all of this into account.
Remember, I'm not a doctor.
I don't know the legality in your state.
I'm not encouraging the utilization of cannabis or even CBD, right? Anything in that cannabis plant umbrella, right? Whether it's pot, marijuana, hemp, CBD, you name it, whatever the hell you want
to call it. I'm not encouraging you to consume this plant. I'm probably going to say that three
or four more times as we go along here. But again, there is some strong literature that supports CBD or cannabidiol having a positive
impact on seizure reduction. There's also some literature, five studies in fact,
that show a notable effect on managing or mitigating symptoms of anxiety.
Another correlation here, three studies show a minor impact on pain
reduction. And then we have some literature that shows minor reductions in symptoms of schizophrenia,
as well as minor reductions in symptoms of ulcerative colitis. These are the five things
that I could find when perusing examine.com, which is phenomenal for seeing just how much evidence
and how much weight there is behind
some of these claims. So of all of the evidence available, I think that these five things
in order from seizures, anxiety, pain reduction, schizophrenic symptoms, and ulcerative colitis
have some of the best data supporting their use. Now with CBD, you will see it sold in the fitness space as being able to enhance
recovery, being able to improve your ability to manage and deal with the hard training you're
doing and reducing your pain and reducing inflammation. And until very recently, there
just has not been a lot of literature to support that. In fact, I can think of at least two or
three studies, I know there's probably more, that shows CBD doesn't do much of anything with regards to exercise performance. However,
I did find this interesting. A new study published in August of 2021 from Eisenman,
Veidt, Stark, Fenker, and Diehl titled Effects of Cannabidiol Supplementation on Skeletal Muscle
Regeneration After Int intensive resistance training. These titles
are generally indexed this way, but what this is saying is what effect does CBD supplementation have
on muscle recovery after hard exercise, right? So what we're going to get into here is kind of the
nuts and bolts of this study and what we found. I've
actually linked it in the show notes, but what they did was they tested to see if taking CBD
after you trained, right, had an impact on your recovery and the exercises that they used to kind
of gauge how well you recovered or your squats and drop jumps. Part of why they use these
exercises and studies is because it's pretty easy to test squats and drop jumps. But again,
this is how they're measuring recovery. So probably looking at like, okay, how'd you perform
when you had a group taking a placebo and a group taking a CBD when one squatted on Wednesday,
and then they squatted
again on Friday, which group recovered better, right? You know what I mean? Like this is pretty
simple, pretty easy to understand, but I understand, I get that not everybody's approaching
the literature the same way. So we're looking at how does cannabis help you recover, particularly
CBD? How does cannabidiol CBD help you recover when supplemented testing using squats and drop
jumps to test our recovery. So that's the nuts and bolts of it. Uh, CBD supplementation. So the
group that supplemented with CBD showed lower levels of certain muscle damage biomarkers.
I don't think it's super important to dive into what those biomarkers were, but if you want to know, there were of these creatine kinases and these myoglobin,
uh, 72 hours after exercise. So if you supplement for two days, you're not going to get as much as
if you supplement for three days. In fact, supplementation did not really have a lot of
an impact on these outcomes within that 24 to 48 hour timeframe. You're going to get most of the
juice from CBD supplementation two to
three days after exercise. My initial thing here after reading this was I thought to myself,
okay, if you have a group using CBD and a group not using CBD, but the group that is using CBD
is showing enhanced recovery after three days, but not two and not as much after days one and two,
I'm asking myself, does CBD take up to three days to take effect? Do we need to wait three days, but not as much after days one and two. I'm asking myself, does CBD take up to three
days to take effect? Do we need to wait three days for some level of saturation to occur?
Is within that three-day window, am I going to see decreases in these biomarkers anyway? Of course
we are, but that's why we have a control group. I mean, it raised some questions for me. I'm not
willing to just move forward and say CBD is perfect. It certainly doesn't have these amazingly acute effects,
but now we have a little bit of evidence that shows CBD might help with recovery,
but there's plenty that shows it doesn't.
I wanted to bring this up because I'm sure this is going to lead to a huge boon
in CBD marketing aimed at fitness type people.
Let's call us fitness fanatics. I hate to use the term,
but you know, a lot of us are quite fanatic about our approach to fitness and wellbeing.
And you've already seen a lot of marketing for CBD as an anti-inflammatory, for CBD as a,
you know, soreness management thing. Like I see CBD all the time being sold as a topical
at many spas, CBD sport plus
wraps.
I see, you see it all it's everywhere.
And it's definitely being sold as a product that might be able to help you with recovery.
And while we do have this one study that shows that we still have plenty more that don't,
uh, I think what we could take away from this, uh, is that there's more reason to at least look at CBD as a potentially helpful product
in the recovery space. I think we might be able to say, I don't know that CBD is going to hurt you.
In fact, we might have some reason to believe it's going to help. Probably now we can confidently say
it's not going to hurt you and it might even help.
I don't know what the opportunity cost of what many people pay for THC supplementation,
depending on where you're living, depending on the product you're using, the purity,
the potency, et cetera. If you're going to be getting what you want out of just over the
counter CBD product. But again, something new to bring to the discussion here, because I would have told you if you asked me maybe a month and a half ago if I thought CBD could help you out with your fitness in any way, I would have told you absolutely not. That's bullshit. The only way it's going to help you is if in some capacity you're dealing with anxiety or elevated levels of pain because I'm, or obviously if you're having seizures,
but because that's the most robust evidence, but that's probably less likely. But if you were
having some anxiety that was maybe making it challenging to get to the gym, or you were having
some anxiety that was maybe making it challenging to get good sleep, that might help with performance.
I would say that CBD could indirectly be beneficial in managing these symptoms if you wanted to experiment and you were cleared by your
doctor to experiment with CBD as a means to treat anxiety. I deal with anxiety from time to time,
can be sometimes quite debilitating, and I will often turn to cannabis, much of which includes THC, because if you are smoking cannabis,
you're getting THC and CBD in most instances, unless you're smoking a strange form of cannabis
that has very little THC and a high total of CBD or a strain that has almost no CBD,
but loaded with THC. But usually you're going to get quite a bit of both. If you're just doing a
CBD tincture, which is what you will find sold at places like Vitamin Shoppe, you'll find them at dispensaries. If you're in a state that has
medical cannabis, you're mostly just going to get CBD. And many of these products, despite being
graded as having no THC, you will find traces of THC, which could be problematic.
That's not allowed by your employer. Perhaps that's not allowed by your religion. There's a
lot of reasons
that people don't use cannabis beyond the fact that maybe they just don't like it. Many people
aren't legally allowed to, or it's not supported in their faith. So it's important to take all of
these things into account. But I would have told you like two months ago, I think CBD is bullshit,
unless your anxiety or your pain is keeping you from training and you're willing to experiment and see if CBD can help that, um, go for it. But I don't think
CBD could possibly impact performance positively because I didn't believe its ability to decrease
markers of inflammation to that degree or decrease markers of damage to that degree were going to be
significant. And I still really don't, but I think this one study is positive and maybe it opens the
door for more. And as somebody who is an advocate and who does use cannabis, I think that would be really cool because I want
to see this stuff destigmatized because I look at it as like, okay, we have a lot of people who
really don't like this drug. And I'm not one to tell you that you should or shouldn't like any
drug, but I definitely think we've given it a bad rap. I think we've got way too many people in jail
for small possession related offenses right now. I don't think that's good for anybody's communities.
I don't think that's good for us because we pay for these things anyway. We pay like taxpayers pay
for people to be in jail for having small, trivial amounts of weed when anybody can go to any gas
station and buy alcohol. And we know that alcohol is exponentially more damaging
for people. It's, it has collateral damage in that. Like, if you look at the drugs that do the
most damage to the people that do not use them, things like math, things like heroin, things like
alcohol, alcohol is always at the top of the list are much more destructive. I know it's kind of an
old adage on scientific way of putting it, but
people who are toking aren't going home and beating their wives, right? I'm not trying to
minimize domestic violence at all, but if you look at the prevalence of alcohol consumption
in domestic violence arrests, it's exceptionally high. And so we very much normalized alcohol,
and I'm not saying we should
normalize cannabis consumption, but we should certainly, I think, reduce how much we demonize
it. And having discussions like this can help. That's, again, my bias. That's why we went over
that. If you're interested in learning more about this stuff, Cannabis Manifesto by Steve D'Angelo
is a good book. I think you'll find it quite interesting.
Hey guys, just wanted to take a quick second to say thanks so much for listening to the podcast.
And if you're finding value, it would mean the world to me if you would share it on your social
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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. So let's talk about THC now and THC's impact on your fitness
and your performance. Now, remember, we talked about cannabidiol, which of course is CBD.
which of course is CBD. CBD is usually productized, gathered from hemp and THC strains of the cannabis plant are usually found in marijuana. And those marijuana strains are these, there's thousands of
marijuana strains, but the two primary families you're going to find of the cannabis plant are
cannabis indica and cannabis sativa. Those are the, those are the
parts of the cannabis family that are going to produce the end product that yields the most THC.
They have these big, beautiful flowers that ooze this resin. And when you get all the females
together and you keep all the males away, they keep producing this resin because the resin is
getting the flower sticky. The flower
gets sticky and hopefully a male plant will pollinate and the plant sperm will float through
the air, landing on the sticky flower, fertilizing the female plant. You get seeds and boom, you
propagate over and over again. And in the marijuana plant, that oozy female resin that comes out of
the flower is psychoactive. It's loaded with THC. Here's the
thing. When people cultivate marijuana plants, they keep the males away. So the females just
ooze and ooze and ooze. You get this THC, that's what gets you high. So is that beneficial for your
performance? And I don't, I really don't think it is. I've seen some evidence that shows that
cannabis consumption might reduce fatigue onset in like endurance runners. I've seen some evidence that shows that cannabis consumption might reduce fatigue onset in
like endurance runners.
I've seen a lot of anecdotal evidence from people who say, I like to smoke with cannabis
before I exercise.
I actually have worked with clients who insist upon showing up to their sessions after having
done some cannabis.
I've worked with athletes at pretty high levels that actually like to use cannabis.
I do believe that all of these people are in the minority.
I think that it works really well for them.
In my experience, having used cannabis before training, it's not my favorite thing in the
world.
One thing I will say is I can definitely attest to THC having an impact on my ability to train.
Again, not a doctor.
Please don't do anything I'm saying.
an impact on my ability to train. So again, not a doctor, please don't do anything I'm saying,
but after having used marijuana before training, I have noticed that my ability to really perceive fatigue and muscle pain is pretty reduced. And again, there's a lot of things happening
psychoactively. So that's probably just a perception thing, but I'm, I could stand after,
you know, getting high, I could stand there and do like a set of 50 curls and not really feel the
fatigue, which is kind of weird, right? Like that's definitely not what you're feeling when
you're not stoned. And I'm not saying go do that. I'm saying that that is one thing that I have felt
and personally, I didn't really like it because I also
felt like the sensation and the numbness that came with that wasn't allowing me to really
feel my training the way that I like. Additionally, additionally, depending on what kind of training
you're doing, that could really be negative. As far as body composition is concerned, like,
I don't think you're going to get any benefit from CBD. And I really don't think you're going to get much benefit from THC. I've seen some bodybuilding
coaches whose athletes smoke say they like their athletes to actually pull THC as they get closer
and closer to shows. They don't want them doing anything with THC because some people believe that
THC can have an impact on the estrogen receptor and that it can disrupt some estrogen signaling
and throw some things out
of whack. And if you're doing a bodybuilding show and you're going through all of the challenges and
all of the constraints that come with that, I don't think I could totally see why you would
want to have something like cannabis on your side. But with the munchies that come with that in many,
many of these strains of the marijuana plant, one of the common symptoms from ingesting it,
whether it's smoking
or eating it or however you're going about getting high, a lot of times people will talk about
something called the munchies, which is this appetite increase that's oftenly associated with
increasing your intake of THC. So when you get a little stoned, you might get a little bit of
munchies and appetite, which is probably going to, paired with the reduced inhibition that often comes with cannabis, you're more likely to make bad food decisions. Not all strains do that.
Meaning, if you're smoking purple gummy ooey gooey haze versus blackbeard's big booty kush,
you might get different stuff or responses. That's almost a guarantee depending on the actual
phenotype that you're smoking, the actual strain of the plant. But again, munchies is a very common
side effect, if you will, in the same way that people like will often say, oh, I felt very
creative. I felt very relaxed. I felt very euphoric. A lot of people say, oh, I felt the
munchies. So THC definitely has a chance to interact with the
estrogen receptor. I don't know how much of an impact that would have on body comp. It's definitely
got an ability to impact how you train. Personally, I don't like that. It definitely increases more
strains than not increase my appetite. So if body comp and cutting was my primary thing,
I probably wouldn't do that. But if bulking was my thing
and I was having a hard time getting food in, we might have found a little bit of a secret weapon
here. So I would say CBD may be beneficial for recovery, beneficial for anxiety, beneficial for
pain reduction, potentially not much else. THC, not very beneficial for body composition. If cutting,
potentially very helpful for dieting if your goals are bulking and you have a hard time with appetite.
So that might be the demographic in the fitness community that would respond best to THC-rich
strains of the cannabis plant, which may well contain some CBD too, but overall, I would say it's not
my favorite. And even though I'm an advocate for the plant, I don't think consuming massive amounts
of cannabis over the long run, or even most CBD supplements are going to make much of a difference.
I'd say by and large, it's a wash, but the habits that you have in place with your training and
with your nutrition are going to play the biggest role in your overall well-being. Okay, so moving on to the Q&A section of today's podcast. Thanks again
for bearing with me. Hopefully you got something out of that. We're going to chat a little bit
about food tracking apps. We're going to talk a little bit about calories, best training splits,
things like that. I've got some questions dialed up from you guys on Instagram.
But before we do that, I want to take a minute to pay the bills and plug one of my awesome sponsors,
and that is Legion Athletics. Legion Athletics makes my favorite line of naturally flavored,
naturally sweetened sports performance products. I love the strawberry lemonade recharge creatine
that's also loaded with L-carnitine, which can help
reduce soreness. It tastes phenomenal. I love to have that with ice after every training session
as a way to cool down and relax. It's also phenomenal in the unflavored version. Additionally,
I have a shake every day with two scoops, one and a half or so scoops usually of Legion Whey Plus, some collagen that I just
get at Costco and some Legion Genesis. So the supplements that I take from Legion every single
day are my Legion Recharge Creatine for my muscular health, my endurance, my performance,
my metabolic health, and my long-term cognition. I also take the Legion Genesis because it's loaded
with phytonutrients, polyphenols, but particularly the reishi mushroom I'm really big on and the Legion whey. one comes from Jordan Deutsch, and he asks,
what app are you currently using for food tracking? So I have been playing around with Macro Factor from Stronger by Science, or from Greg and Eric over at Stronger by Science.
Eric has been on the podcast. He's really smart. He's really, really cool. Greg is really,
really smart. I don't know if he's really, really cool because he hasn't been on the podcast yet,
but I do really enjoy their podcast
and I've heard that Greg's a cool guy too.
So they created an awesome dieting app called Macro Factor
and I'm playing with that right now.
I like to jump around and try different ones
and I've tried MyFitnessPal, I've tried FatSecret,
I've tried Carbon, and I'm currently
trying MacroFactor and I'm enjoying it quite a bit. I don't want to give a full review just yet
because I do believe I will be getting to a review at some point, probably right here on the podcast,
but I am enjoying it so far. It's definitely going to give MyFitnessPal some competition,
particularly for those of you who I think want a little bit more
feedback on the micronutrient end. And I don't think the UI is that bad. A lot of these macro
apps that have come from people in the fitness community oftentimes have really sticky, buggy UI,
but I'm not having any problems yet. And there actually is even an AI feature that I'm playing
with with regards to getting some meals in there
that are a little bit harder
to like log in MyFitnessPal.
So I'm kind of enjoying it.
The app is MacroFactor.
You could definitely check it out,
but I will have a review coming on that.
But it's in all likelihood
going to be a fairly positive review.
So thanks to Greg and Eric
for taking the time to make something
in a space that's congested,
full of a lot of kind of
middle of the road players
that I think has a lot of potential
and will continue to be a great tracking app
as it only gets better with use.
I can tell they're updating it.
And when I,
they actually have a podcast,
Stronger by Science.
You might check that out too.
I quite like that.
And they go over some of the ways in
which they're changing the app as they go for a better user experience. So they're doing a great
job. This question comes from Michaela.Corson. She says best split for building strength and muscle
with a busy school schedule. So the busier you are, the less likely it's going to be that you're
going to go to the gym high number of days per week. that you're going to go to the gym a high number of days per week.
It's just challenging to get to the gym four, five, six days a week. If you're super busy,
maybe you're a student, maybe you have a job, maybe you're doing both. I know I did both when
I was in school, so I know how challenging that can be. And I think if you're training any less
than three times a week, you should be training total body. So if you can only go one to two to
three times a week, I would recommend training your total body. If you can get to the four time a week threshold,
I would go for an upper lower split, two times a week training the upper body, two times a week
training the lower, preferably doing upper than lower than resting, then upper than lower than
resting. If you can go five days a week, I like upper lower,, upper, lower, total, upper, lower, push, pull, leg, push, pull, leg,
upper, lower. And if you can do six times a week, then you're not that busy. I'm just kidding. Then
you probably are really dedicated to the gym. You love it. It's part of your mental health. It's
part of everything. You're going to go no matter what you build your schedule around it. I love it.
But if you're going to train six days a week, that's when you can get really specialized and
do things like push, pull, leg splits, or really specific body part splits where you spread your
volume out. And the more you train, the more conscientious you have to be of how much volume
you're doing with regards to number of sessions. This question comes from underscore underscore
Yelly asking, can carb cycling also be effective for maintenance calories or on a surplus slash bulk goal. So it absolutely can be.
If you remember, when you carb cycle traditionally, you're probably doing a day at maintenance
calories where your carbs are quote unquote high or slightly above maintenance where they're high,
a day at probably a small deficit where carbs are moderate, and then a day in a really deep
deficit where carbs are really low. And you're cycling through high, medium and low carb days, not necessarily high, medium,
low, high, medium, low. Maybe you go high, medium, low, low, high, medium, low, low, or high, low,
low, medium, medium, high, low, low, medium, medium, whatever. If you were to flip that
model on its head and say, I want to do like a day at maintenance, a day in a small surplus and a day
in a large surplus, and maybe at maintenance you're at 300 carbs at medium day or at 350 and at high day
you're at 400. Sure. I don't think that would hurt. I think you could flip it on its head.
As far as maintenance. Oh my gosh. I think that would just be cumbersome. I'd rather just
shoot for about the same thing every single day. That's my two cents. Anyway, guys, thanks so much
for tuning in and listening
to me rant. I felt that I owed you some type of discussion about cannabis, given that many of you
are aware that not only do I live in a state where it's legal, but I also interact with the plant in
a way that I think is safe. I don't think it affects my life, but again, if it's illegal where
you live, then definitely don't use the plant. Definitely don't listen to anything I say.
I'm not a doctor. Definitely consult your doctor before you use any drugs at all. I hope you guys
enjoyed this episode. Please stay tuned for more. If you have not yet, please leave me a five-star
rating and review on the iTunes store. If you listen on iTunes, it makes a huge difference.
It helps other people find the podcast. Reviews
are to podcasts what things like follows are on social media. So this stuff really makes a big
difference and it helps me out a ton. I hope you guys enjoy the rest of your day and stay tuned
for the next couple episodes because I'll be coming at you at a better frequency now and I'm excited.