Dynamic Dialogue with Danny Matranga - 218: Eating at Night + Exercises that are a Waste of Time
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Welcome, everybody, to a Monday episode of the Dynamic Dialogue podcast. As always, I'm
your host, Danny Matrenga. And in today's episode, we are going to be discussing exercises
in futility, if you will. These are exercises that people do all the time that are quite
popular and might even be popular for the wrong reasons that just don't offer the return
on investment that I think I want when I'm training. Training is something that I love popular and might even be popular for the wrong reasons that just don't offer the return on
investment that I think I want when I'm training. Training is something that I love to do and not
everything has to be optimal, that's for sure, but I do think it helps to have high efficiency
exercise selection at the front of your mind when putting together programs and when looking
through programs. So we'll go over that and answering some questions directly from you. And we will also touch on a question about how eating, particularly eating later in the day,
can affect sleep and therefore body composition, kind of unpacking the commonly asked question of
does eating late at night make you gain weight or disproportionately cause weight gain? Many
people have been told don't eat past
a certain time, so we'll unpack that a little bit. Before we do, I want to tell you about our amazing
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football seasons. And of course, NBA is not far away if you are a fan of basketball. So getting
into our first question here, this one was asked on Instagram. If you guys want to have
your questions answered on the podcast, I would highly recommend engaging with me over on that
platform. I'm on every platform, TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, podcasts, of course.
But Instagram is the platform on which I field the most direct user feedback and user questions.
So while I'm not particularly good
at answering my DMs, I'm working on getting better at that. I do the best I can to answer
questions in the question box when I throw it up. So this question, this is a nice one. I really
like it. It's from Kelly P.T. Oman. And the question is, what are some exercises that you
think people do that are the least helpful? So I've narrowed this
down into a list of seven exercises or exercises paired with some context so you can understand
how my brain looks at the way we position exercises and what we ask exercises to do.
So some of them will just be generally inefficient exercises
and some of them will be exercises
that I believe to be misused.
So the number one exercise that I think people do
that are not particularly helpful are burpees.
And that's not a very hot take.
A lot of trainers and personal trainers,
fitness coaches, strength and conditioning coaches
are critical of the burpee for obvious reasons, right? The
burpee basically includes a pretty forceful deceleration of the body and all of its mass
in a prone position as you fall downward with your wrists in extension. So you're really,
really putting a lot of hyper extension force into your wrists as you come kind of crashing
and barreling down into the ground.
Burpees are usually used as a conditioning exercise, as a simple extender exercise in that
like you can throw them onto the end of a workout or onto the end of a water, inject them into
something to just generally make it harder. Because as you fall down and you absorb and
decelerate the weight of your body, you then push up, throw your arms overhead, violently jump and repeat. So you get this kind of peripheral
heart action effect of going up and down, up and down from prone to literally triple extension at
the jump point. And you're essentially picking an exercise that's really going to elevate your
heart rate, your blood pressure, put a lot of compressive forces on your wrists. It'll get you working hard. It will get you burning calories, but it doesn't
really efficiently train any of the muscles involved. It's basically just caloric expenditure
that I think makes for really high impact conditioning work or low efficiency, additional
kind of in between the numbers work. Like there's so many things I'd rather do if I wanted to spend
a little extra time in the gym improving or enhancing my conditioning. And there's a million
other things I'd rather do if I was trying to maintain movement during rest breaks or inject
other forms of movement into my workout. If I was making a numerically-based WOD,
which is so popular in the CrossFit community that was like 10 toes to bars,
eight box jumps, five burpees. I would just make that five, whatever that numerical number is,
because in CrossFit, you see a lot of these kind of like lat numbers and ladder style sets,
like 20 of this, 15 of this, 10 of this, five of this, five rounds, blah, blah, blah. That's
really popular way to program. It's accessible. And I actually think it kind of breaks the mold in a not so bad way. Um, but you know, I'd rather
do a million other things like five kettlebell swings or five 90, 90 hip switch. If you're just
using the burpee as like filler as movement, as conditioning, all of the things that it's
conventionally used for, um, it's a pretty inefficient exercise. And if I'm being entirely honest and completely
just straightforward, uh, I really can't think of a single, um, I really can't think of a single
application for which the burpee is really useful. So, uh, just a generally inefficient exercise
that doesn't do much at all. Okay, this is one that comes with
a little more context, but it is doing plyometric work for conditioning. So you will see a lot of
individuals do low-level plyo work like pogos, hops, stairs, stuff like that where there is a
lot of ground contact and you do have to kind of leave and come back down a lot at the end of leg days or as a separate form of conditioning or even at the
beginning of leg days because they have this notion that doing plyos is some form of muscle
building conditioning style exercise when in fact plyometric training as it's conventionally done
is best utilized to develop and cultivate
athletic performance, tendon stiffness, the ability to be twitchy, explosive, and fast,
which is very, very valuable in athletic context specifically. The more you do your plyos with the
goal of fatigue, the less efficient they become for actually developing those sports specific
adaptations. You want them to be intentional, forceful, and powerful.
When you do kind of hopping around bodyweight-style conditioning,
there's nothing wrong with it per se,
but it's substantially more fatiguing than things like incline walking
and even Stairmaster, which is a notoriously fatiguing form of cardio.
We'll talk about one way that that machine has a tendency to be misused conventionally.
But plyometric exercises used for
conditioning I think are inefficient. I think they require a lot of additional recovery compared to
say something like low intensity steady state cardio or even higher intensity cardios that
have impact. So I don't like plyos for anything really other than athletic performance.
If you want to move around and get some more fluid or free kind of fun flowing cardio,
I think there's better ways to do it.
Okay, number three, again, a contextual one, is using cardio as the primary tool for fat
loss from an exercise standpoint.
I have to use the caveat from an exercise standpoint
because anybody using exercise as the primary intervention for weight loss is really selling
themselves short. It's substantially easier to monitor your calorie intake and it's damn near
required to know what it is that you're eating and have an idea of how many calories you should eat
to reliably lose weight, at least consistently enough to get the weight off that most people are trying to get off their frame. So understand
that cardiovascular exercise or running or jogging or incline walking or being on the
row or being on the bike or being on the stairmaster, all these exercises are phenomenal
for your aerobic health, for your heart health, for the health of your lungs, your mitochondria,
your vascular system. There's no denying that these exercises are extremely
beneficial and that you should do a good amount of them. You should include both short duration
cardiovascular exercise that's high output and long form cardiovascular exercise that's low
output. So things like sprints and things like walks are both really, really good
for having a
fit, well-developed, robust body and aerobic capacity. However, if you are trying to lose
body fat, it's imperative that you maintain or attempt to build muscle or at least send the
signal to your body that your muscle is important. And this is done through axial loading from like
having weight on your back,
on the bar, you know, weight on the machine. It doesn't have to be axial top to bottom,
but you have to literally load your exterior. You have to get some weight on your body. Body
weight training can be helpful, but it's a really good idea to load up your body in the weight room.
That tells your body, hey, you know, the tissue that we're going to lose most preferentially or the one we're going to lean into losing here since we're in a deficit
and anytime we go into a deficit, we have to lose tissue of some type. When we talk about sleep a
little later, we'll talk about how sleep can influence this. But if there's no external
stimuli, if there's no input coming into the system to maintain muscle tissue,
you will lose more of that than you might like while dieting. And that makes it very hard to
maintain your lean physique and it will lead to more severe adaptations of the metabolism and
downregulation of the metabolism, which you would like to avoid. So I like to use cardiovascular
exercise generally to improve my health, fitness, get outside, go on walks. But I think it's very important to remember if your goal is body fat reduction,
you need to carve out at least the same amount of time for loaded anaerobic exercise. This is
resistance training. This is weightlifting. This is bodybuilding. This kind of stuff is really,
really important. And it's certainly not just for athletes. And it's certainly not just for people
who want to compete. There is a reason why the people who reliably get the most lean have the majority of their program built around lifting
and start implementing more and more cardio the closer they get to their shows. And that's because
when you have a lot of muscle and you maintain it, you can do that cardio with a little bit less of
the interference effect. And the amount of cardio you can do before you start losing muscle is actually pretty high, or the amount of cardio that you can do before it starts
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promo code Danny to save on all your sports supplement needs. Back to the show. But when
people come out of the gate, a lot of them are heavy hitters with the cardio. Some people do an
hour a day, six hours a week. And you know, that's an awful lot if you're not doing any lifting and
you're really restricting your nutrition and your protein intake's not particularly high, you might lose some muscle,
which is never a good idea. So moving on to number four, and this one's kind of nitpicky
because I do think it can be helpful, but it's deadlifting as a catch-all for back development.
You'll hear a lot of people discuss the deadlift as being kind of this king of all back development
exercises. And I think
it's a good exercise for back development indirectly, and that it makes you super strong.
There's a lot of isometric components for like the lats and the erectors and, you know, even
secondary shoulder extensors when you're pulling the bar into your body and extending your hips
into the body. The bar obviously works your glutes and hamstrings, which are, you know,
they're not part of your back, but they're part of your posterior chain.
And I think just generally having power, strength, stability, and being able to create a high
amount of output whenever you're in hip flexion and your back is kind of parallel with the
floor, that can be a skill that deadlifting really enhances and really helps with.
But the lack of eccentric
and concentric contraction of the big players in the back, like the rhomboids and the lats and the
upper traps and the mid traps, paired with the fact that deadlifting is very, very fatiguing
and requires a lot of central nervous system output, especially when done at higher loads,
I think that there's better primary exercises and that you might look at deadlifting more as a strength developer. Now, I think the
Romanian deadlift is a great example of a deadlift that's awesome for hypertrophy or muscle growth
because the muscles that we're trying to use it to develop, the glutes and hamstrings, they actually
go through a full lengthening and full shortening in that contraction. They stay completely lengthened at the bottom,
or they get completely lengthened as the bar comes down.
And then without the bar touching the ground,
you come back up by contracting the glutes and the hamstrings.
So they're basically doing like a curl or any exercise where you lengthen and you shorten.
Whereas during a deadlift, if we're looking at the conventional deadlift
and we're trying to use it as a back developer,
I mean, theoretically, we'd like some of those back muscles to lengthen and contract under load, but we just don't get that there. We get a lot of isometric constant
tension, just muscles holding tight without that contractile element. And we're going to miss out
on something there. So if you're doing a boatload of deadlifts, it's a very good chance you'll build
a respectable back. Many bodybuilders have done this. There just might be a more efficient way to do this depending also,
and this is a huge one, on your kind of body's natural preponderance for deadlift safety. Not
everybody can deadlift with the same safety profile. It's certainly not a dangerous exercise,
but when we're talking about, okay, you need to train fairly close to
failure to optimize for muscle growth in any given set, not to failure, but really close.
Do you want to do that with a deadlift for something like your back? And I would say
more often than not, there's better options. Still deadlift. I'm not saying don't deadlift.
I'm just saying don't, you know, be like, it's back day. I'm going to start by blasting myself
into fatigue with deadlifts and then try to get to the contractile work. You might miss out on
something. Okay. So number five is using the Stairmaster with a band on to try to develop
the glutes. You might've seen this before, particularly with women where they get on the
Stairmaster with a glute band around their hips, usually mid-thigh, and they push out against the
band, pushing their heel towards the wall behind them, extending the hips, which is great. That's
a great way to train the gluteus maximus. It extends the hip, but not against a whole lot of
load with a band, and you've got a really strong muscle like the glute, so you need a lot more
stimulation. And even with getting a rep per leg every other step, meaning you get one leg on one step, then you get one leg on the next
step, you keep alternating back and forth. The stimulus that's actually happening at the level
of the glute is going to be pretty limited because you're pushing off of one leg, holding
onto a Stairmaster, battling fatigue and building up basically just mechanical tension. If you were to just say
practice single leg hip extension in a more stable environment, like a single leg bridge or a single
leg hip thrust with a band on even, you weren't on a stair master and you did the same number of
reps, I think you'd develop more muscle in a more stable setting where your aerobic system is not
being challenged by the demands of the stairs. So not a great option there. Speaking of banded glute work in general,
we're going to just talk about banded glute work being misused as a glute hypertrophy
kind of form of work. I think banded glute work is great for opening up the hips, for developing
kind of a good mind muscle connection with the glutes and adding some penalty free volume as
Brett Contreras, kind of the popularizer of this stuff would say to the glutes. I think that's
awesome. I really do. I wouldn't, if you told me you wanted to get the biggest butt possible,
and it was really important to you, we're going to have band work in there. I just know a lot of
girls who have really, really big dreams and really, really want big glutes that follow
maybe more genetically blessed influencers. This would be, of course, women on the internet who
maybe have a genetic predisposition for full round glutes who have been able to maintain and develop
them with a little bit of band work. And most women cannot expect that kind of return on investment when
working with bands that somebody who's maybe more genetically gifted might get your better
off lifting weights. So I think that using the band work sparingly in between sessions to help
recover, to help warm up, to get you prepped, ready to go is fine, but definitely don't do
more of that than you do the weightlifting. Okay. And the number seven kind of
mistake or let's say exercise that I don't think is as helpful as people would like it to be is
the barbell bench press for chest growth. As is the case with the deadlift, I think it's phenomenal
for developing strength and you do get an eccentric and concentric contraction of the chest or the target tissue usually when training the bench.
But you can never get as much range of motion as you can get with dumbbells. You don't get that
bi-articular thing going on where, I guess I shouldn't use the term bi-articular because
that often describes a muscle, what each side of the body gets to articulate independently.
It gets to move independently unilaterally
would technically be the right way to say that.
While they each hold the dumbbell,
the dumbbell allows for greater range of motion
and it allows for better positioning of the humerus.
Or basically you can move your elbows around
and get into a position
where you can get a better stretch on the pec.
So that's an exercise that I think is a lot less helpful
than people would think
because it's phenomenal for building strength. And if you have some really, really good shoulders and really,
really happy elbows, you can bench your way to an incredible chest. I actually have developed a lot
of the meat on my chest from doing a lot of benching, but I'll also be the first person to
tell you I probably could have done better if I had biased even more towards dumbbell bench
pressing.
I was doing a lot of both early in my training career, and I still, to this day, have a strong
chest relative to the rest of my muscle groups, but I think that's one that's a little overrated.
Okay, this question comes from Mark L1, and we're going to talk specifically about sleep and eating,
but he asks, why does eating late at night
impact sleep? And this is a really good question and it's worth unpacking. So basically when you
eat at any point of the day, you can expect some changes to your physiology. But when you eat late
at night specifically, and you get that effect where blood goes to the stomach and the muscles
that work to digest and
metabolize your food have to keep working when they kind of should be helping you rest and,
you know, pass out. Usually you don't want that right next to bed. Eating can put you in that
parasympathetic rest and digest state, but you usually want to be through the digest portion.
Meaning if you're about to go to bed, you don't
want to eat a huge meal, right? And eating super late at night and having lots of snacks and meals
can throw your body out of syncs from a circadian rhythm perspective too, because when you eat,
you're going to see a blood pressure increase, a blood sugar increase. You're going to see some
metabolic changes unique to eating. And those things are
going to kind of tell your body, wait, are we out and about? Are we trying to get ready to go?
You know, if you're eating two to three hours before bed, you're probably fine. And you probably
will sleep quite well if you do that because eating late at night, obviously you're going to
have that physiological response. But once it settles down, you might be perfectly in that nice parasympathetic zone, ready for a nice nap. Oftentimes, you'll see this like
one hour or so after Thanksgiving dinner, after you've all sitting down, you've had this big meal,
you talk, and then you get to about the 90-minute mark in the meal, and you're like, whoa, I'm
feeling very relaxed. Well, a lot of the blood has shifted to your stomach, sure, but also you're
probably very much in a parasympathetic state. It's important to note that a lot of the blood has shifted to your stomach, sure, but also you're probably very
much in a parasympathetic state. It's important to note that a lot of times when people ask about
eating late at night, there's a question as to whether or not that can help you or hurt you when
it comes to fat loss. And the truth is when it comes to fat loss from a caloric standpoint,
your body doesn't really care when it gets those calories. But
here's the truth. If you're eating so late at night that you're causing disruptions in your
blood sugar and in digestive distress to the point where it does affect your sleep, that might
indirectly affect your fat loss because what you're going to see happen is you're not going
to sleep as well. You might miss out on some REM sleep. We know that this particularly affects late night eaters. This is this kind of commonplace reduction in REM sleep that we see
when you eat way, way, way too close to bed. Now, does that mean that you can't eat close to bed at
all if you want to get good sleep? No, it doesn't. But one study that surveyed 52 adults ages 19 to 45, these were healthy,
non-obese, non-smoking adults who did not have any pre-existing sleep disorders.
The study was from the University of Sao Paulo in Brazil. They found that men who consumed higher amounts of fat
in the evening hours had lower sleep efficiency scores
and spent less time in REM sleep.
Women's sleep patterns experienced disruption
linked to both high evening fat consumption
and overall calorie consumption.
So we can make the inference based on that study
and based on what we know generally happens when we eat that eating big, particularly high calorie fatty meals can disrupt your
REM sleep.
That might mean you get the same amount of sleep, but the sleep isn't as high quality.
And if you do that too many nights in a row, it will affect things like your willpower,
your blood sugar, and that will make it a lot harder to stick to your diet, which might
be why in addition to ob the obvious,
which is when somebody says, don't eat after six if you want to lose weight, you're cutting off the
period of the day where people tend to snack, eat hyperpalatable desserts. They tend to consume
foods whilst simultaneously consuming things like cannabis or alcohol that might excite the pleasure
centers enough to make you want to eat more or reduce the inhibitions enough to make you want
to eat more. So when you give yourself that hard cut off, not only would it maybe help
with your sleep and thus your willpower and your ability to better stick to your diet,
but it would obviously also remove a huge amount of calories. So if your goals are fat loss,
I would say you're totally fine eating at night, even late at night, but try to keep that last
meal maybe one and a half to two hours from your desired fall sleep time so as to not too much affect your REM sleep by kind of disrupting your
circadian rhythm with huge portion-sized meals that oftentimes contain things that can interact
with your blood sugar. All right, guys, that does it for today's episode, and I want to thank you
all for leaving your questions. Again, follow me over on Instagram at Danny Matranga. I'm happy to answer any of your fitness questions
on there or even bring them over to the podcast if I think they're worth talking about.
Please be safe if you are listening to this bad boy on. Well, I'm going to wait to drop this until
after the holiday. I want to give you guys the opportunity to kind of get the day off and relax.
But if I decide to drop it on Monday and you hear it on Monday, just be careful out
there, be safe and don't do anything crazy. Catch you on the next one.