Dynamic Dialogue with Danny Matranga - 232: 7 Fitness Myths That Need To DIE!
Episode Date: October 27, 2022Thanks For Listening! LEAVE A REVIEW OF THE SHOW:There is NOTHING more valuable to a podcast than leaving a written review and a 5-Star Rating. Please consider taking 1-2 minutes to do that (iTunes)... HERE. You can also leave a review on SPOTIFY!OUR PARTNERS:Legion Supplements (protein, creatine, + more!), Shop (DANNY) HERE!HEREGet Your FREE LMNT Electrolytes HERE! Care for YOUR Gut, Heart, and Skin with SEED Symbiotic (save with “DANNY15) ! Take your love of sports to the next level with UNDERDOG FANTASY and play with danny HERE! (CODE: DANNY for first deposit match up to $100!)RESOURCES/COACHING: Train with Danny on His Training AppHEREI 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:Follow Coach Danny on YOUTUBEFollow Coach Danny on INSTAGRAMFollow Coach Danny on TwitterFollow Coach Danny on FacebookGet More In-Depth Articles Written By Yours’ Truly HERE! Sign up for the trainer mentorship HERESupport the Show.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome in everybody to another episode of the Dynamic Dialogue podcast. As always, I'm
your host, Danny Matranga. And in today's episode, we are going to be going over some
of the most pervasive fitness myths that just tend to persist year after year in the face
of evidence that quite frankly frankly, refutes any
rationalization for continuing to believe these things.
Now, if you've paid any attention to the greater science communication space, the political
space, quite frankly, much of the culture war that's going on in the world right now,
you'll be very much aware of the fact that you can essentially believe
whatever it is that you want, and you can kind of isolate and incubate yourself from information
that refutes it. Social media oftentimes actually amplifies this kind of distancing effect,
the ability that we have to kind of wall ourselves off from what might be actually factual in favor
of what we wish were factual. or we can at the very least,
in some capacity, kind of adjust where it is that we get our information so as to better surround
ourselves with what's comfortable. And so a lot of what we're going to be discussing today are
going to be things that challenge conventional belief systems in the fitness space.
And quite frankly, this isn't necessarily to say that you have a particular reason to be
consistently skeptical, but practicing skepticism on a semi-regular basis is a really good idea.
my regular basis is a really good idea. Truthfully, I think that most fitness influencers and most of the people who create fitness content outside of the, of course, direct marketers in the supplement
and fitness company space are doing their best to spread what I believe they believe is truthful
information. But a lot of times they are just spreading mythology that simply won't go
away. And unfortunately, a lot of times that leaves people like you, whether it's a personal
trainer, a fitness enthusiast, somebody who's just getting started to either parse through what it is
that they're saying or learn by failing. I used to believe so many of the myths that we're going
to go through on this list today, and I want to unpack them in a way that will kind of meet you where you're at. So starting off with the first
fitness myth, and this one is quite pervasive, and it is the myth, I'll call it of starvation mode,
or let's just say the myth that if you restrict your caloric intake for long enough, meaning you do not eat enough
calories for a long enough period of time, that that will actually result in body fat accretion
or body fat gain. And I completely understand why this myth is somewhat sensible, right? Because it is born out of a very, very
noticeable and reasonable struggle that people have losing weight at a certain caloric intake
level that might even lead them to believe that like, is it possible that, you know,
I'm trying to really eat low calorie, I'm eating too low to lose weight.
And almost always what we see here is human beings making a completely unintentional
mistake when it comes to actually reporting what it is that they're eating.
Many people think they're eating substantially lower calories than they are. There's a study from Lichtman et al that shows people misrepresent and under-report
what they eat by up to 50% when locked in a metabolic ward, quite literally being examined
and saying, okay, we know exactly what you're eating. We want you to guess what you ate,
and you're going to be off by 50%. Even dieticians. Dieticians. I don't know who conducted this study,
but this one blew my mind. Dieticians have been studied to be off by as much as 20%. These are people who are trained in the technicalities and the finer points
and the most nuanced components of nutrition and nutritional tracking. And so what we tend to see
is that people have a pretty substantial capability to under-report what it is that
they're eating. So they think they're eating 1,200 calories. They're actually eating 2,000
calories. And they're saying, I should be able to lose weight on 1500 calories. Maybe I'm eating too
little. And one of the things that makes this myth ever more persistent is the kind of surrounding
mythology within the reverse dieting community, which is, hey, add more calories in, add them in
slowly, rev up your metabolism, you'll see fat loss. And what happens oftentimes is somebody who thinks they're eating 1,200, they're actually
eating 2,000.
Somebody that they work with in a coaching relationship says, hey, let's pump you up
to 1,300.
They go, whoa, I'm only eating 12.
And they track insanely diligently.
So as to really stick to the plan, maybe there's a level of financial investment here that
makes so much sense, especially if you're working with a coach.
They start eating 1,300 calories and voila, they're losing weight,
eating more. When in fact, they're just losing weight in a very substantial deficit,
but the change in prescription, the inclusion of somebody whose job it is to hold them accountable,
somebody else providing that prescription is leading to substantially better dietary adherence.
Now, I've said this before, and it might seem insensitive, but if you think about countries
in the developing world, starvation mode doesn't seem to exist in places where starvation actually
occurs. Like if you were to go to a country where starvation is quite prevalent or malnourishment
is quite prevalent, like Haiti or many of the Central African countries where food
scarcity is abundant. And you were to say, hey, you know, in America, when people eat too little
food, they actually gain body fat. These people would be like, dude, fuck out of here, okay?
You know, like we literally have people all around the world who die every day of malnourishment,
but how privileged we are in America to sit back and go, you know what? I have starvation mode kicked in. That's why I can't lose body fat. Having talked to Dr. Eric
Trexler a number of times now, who's my go-to when it comes to all things nutritional science
and metabolic adaptations, I believe that the down-regulatory effects of being in a diet for
a long time, having your metabolism downregulate,
that's very much something that can happen. But the degree to which it can happen is relatively
manageable. It's something that when you re-add calories and reintroduce calories, it tends to
get better. But I can't help but wonder, you know, if the discussion around metabolic adaptations
and metabolic damage has also kind of moved the
argument for starvation mode in the wrong direction because yes, these adaptations certainly
can occur, particularly for individuals who've dieted for a very long time, but they are
reversible. So we know that it's very unlikely that anybody who truly believes they're at a
point where a low calorie intake is actually leading to body fat gain would be stuck there. It is possible for these adaptations to occur.
However, the notion that eating too few calories is actually leading to body fat gain just doesn't
seem to line up with the massive amount of evidence that we see. And so I just, for that
reason, can't with good faith in any way, shape, or form sign off on the idea of starvation mode existing.
All right, moving on to the second myth.
And again, this is specific and it's contextual, but it's the myth that the deadlift or any
type of deadlift, not just the conventional barbell deadlift, we'll throw the Romanian
deadlift to the hex bar deadlift to the dumbbell
Romanian deadlift that movements that include the terminology deadlift in the name are bad for the
back. Now, as somebody who has struggled over the years at numerous different points with back pain,
specifically back pain related to disc specific ag. So, as somebody who has dealt with
agitation to my lumbar spine in the form of a bulging disc, I can tell you that heavy deadlifting
will agitate pre-existing back pain, specifically if you have a specific form of back pain.
There's nonspecific back pain, there's idiopathic back pain, right? But if you have
a genuine issue with your lower back, particularly in that lumbar spine, deadlifting could agitate
it. But for individuals with healthy spines who do not have any specific reason for back pain,
who do not have back pain, who are performing the deadlift with good form, proper bracing,
at submaximal loads that are not
taking these sets to failure, what I believe to be true is that these lifts are actually good
for your back. In fact, they create resilience in your back. They will make the structures in
your spine stronger, more resilient. They help you resist flexion. They help you resist extension.
resilient. They help you resist flexion. They help you resist extension. They help you promote stability. They help you strengthen the glutes, the hamstrings, the isometric capabilities of
the back. Things that over time will actually strengthen your spine, strengthen your back.
And so this isn't to say that deadlifting is a panacea for back pain, but if you have an otherwise
healthy pain-free back, deadlifting in
a progressive manner with good form and technique will probably only make it stronger. And as a
benchmark, if you're somebody who, like myself, has dealt with specific spinal issues that create
a lot of pain, I had to dial back the amount of barbell squatting I was doing. I had to dial back
the amount of barbell deadlifting I was doing, but I still did hinge movements and I still did squatting movements using the barbell bench press
and the barbell, or sorry, the barbell squat and the barbell deadlift ultimately as kind of like,
Hey, once I'm able to do these again, pain-free, I am at a new threshold. And so I regressed from squatting heavily with a barbell and doing
deadlifts with a barbell to doing single leg Romanian deadlifts, goblet squats, and lunge
variations. And once those became tolerable and the disc was tolerant of those movements,
I slowly progressed them up until I had a bar on my back and I was picking a bar up from the floor.
And those movements actually became a part of rebuilding the resilience, rebuilding the
tissue tolerance. But it all starts with making the decision at the very beginning, at the very
beginning of like, okay, I've identified there's pain here to pull, probably pull those movements
out and begin again from kind of the introductory point and starting over and starting from scratch and rebuilding.
But as a general rule of thumb, to say that deadlifts are bad for the back,
simply an incomplete thought. And it's got to be highly contextual. It's got to be individualized.
Myth number three. This is the myth that creatine and protein are particularly bad or dangerous for your kidneys. Now, I think it's
important to note that protein as well as creatine do have a particularly unique renal requirement,
renal meaning the kidney, relative to things like dietary fat and dietary carbohydrate. We see this
a lot with nitrogenous-based compounds. Protein is nitrogenous. It contains nitrogen. Creatine is
made of amino acids. It contains nitrogen. There seems to be a particularly unique strain placed
on the kidneys by substances that contain nitrogen. This does not mean, however, that they
are bad for your kidneys. There's even a pretty robust amount of literature that would lead us
to believe that not only are high protein diets safe and not
only is creatine supplementation safe for people with functional kidneys, that combining the two
also is probably safe. And so, you know, parroting the ideology that creatine is bad for the kidneys
could dissuade somebody from taking one of the most well-researched supplements that can help
stave off sarcopenia, build muscle,
increase performance, enhance recovery, and is clearly being shown in a bunch of emerging
literature to be beneficial for the brain. As far as high-protein diets are concerned,
you certainly don't need to follow one, but if you're somebody who's body composition focused,
you want to be leaner, you want to have more muscle, you don't want to suffer from a lot of
the metabolic disease and metabolic illness that comes from being over fat and under muscled. Having a lot of protein in
your diet might be a good idea. And again, dissuading people from that with misinformation,
such as the notion that, hey, high protein intakes are going to damage your kidneys.
It's simply untrue. Creatine is going to damage your kidneys. Simply untrue. What we need to do is parse out the fact that if you have pre-existing kidney or even liver dysfunction, high intakes of nitrogenous-based
compounds could cause problems. This does not apply to people with functioning, healthy kidneys,
functioning, healthy bodies. Those tend to be relatively resilient to high amounts of protein intake
and supplementing with creatine. The literature shows it. The anecdotal evidence shows it.
Fear-mongering around these compounds, I think, has a net negative in a society where over 60%
of people are overweight. We should be focusing on having better body composition. I understand
that in 2022, it might be a hot take to say you
probably should not walk around with the body composition of an infant. You probably should
not walk around with no muscle and a ton of body fat, but it's the honest truth. I know that
conventional media and a lot of what we've seen in the hyper glorification of accepting bodies of
all size is a generally inclusive criterion
that might encourage more people to exercise. I'm not against saying like, hey, fitness doesn't have
one look. But what I am saying here quite clearly, and I want to make it clear, is that having low
amounts of muscle and having high amounts of body fat, regardless of your genetics, regardless of
your socioeconomic status,
things that are obviously going to influence the outcome here. But it's a recipe for disaster.
You need to have some muscle. You shouldn't be over fat. And having a high protein intake is
honestly very helpful in doing this. So I don't like dissuading people from eating protein
with haphazard advice that it's bad for their kidneys in a world where I'm serious. 60 plus percent of Americans are overweight and damn near 50 percent are obese. We're just playing with fire there by not completing the thought and not having a really thoughtful kind of well thought out discussion.
discussion. Another myth. This is the myth that no pain equals no gain. Now, we have a ton of evidence and accumulated a ton of evidence that shows that you can train and withstand very hard
training and that that's probably the best place to train to optimize your fitness results,
especially if your goals are gaining strength and muscle. However, there's also a good amount of evidence that shows you do not need to train to failure. And there's also a ton of
good evidence and anecdotal evidence to support the idea that training through an injury or
training through pain could actually lead to greater problems, and it's probably better to
adapt. And while I think that pain and discomfort can be a harbinger of an effective set,
you know, if you're starting to feel the burn in the gym, that's probably a good idea.
It is worth noting that you do not have to be in extreme amounts of pain, that you do not have to
train to failure, and that you do not have to suffer for a workout to be effective, especially
if your goal is just general fitness. If you have higher aspirational goals, such as
goals related to performance, body composition, maybe you want to compete in strength or even
physique sports, you're going to have to have some uncomfortable training. This is just a fact,
unless you are content with being mediocre. However, this does not mean that every exercise
and every set and every session needs to be exhausting,
painful, and damaging to your body.
This seems to persist.
I think that a stimulating training effect can be had well short of failure, maybe one
to four reps short of failure.
I like to be around two to three.
We program almost all of our clients to be around two to three, but it's important to note, again, that training to extreme failure or complete muscle failure all of the time
might have a greater demand on your nervous system, could place you in a position where
you do increase the risk of developing pain or dysfunction, and it doesn't necessarily
equate to better gains.
Seems to be that if you flirt with that failure point, it's probably just as likely to be very stimulative without so much downside. coaching program. My online coaching program has kind of been the flagship for core coaching method for a while. Of course, we do have PDF programming and we have app-based programming. But if you want
a truly tailored one-on-one experience with a coach like myself or a member of my coaching team,
someone who is certified, somebody who has multiple years of experience working with clients in person
online, somebody who is licensed to provide a macro nutrition plan, somebody who is actually good
at communicating with clients because they've done it for years, whether that be via phone call,
email, text, right? This one-on-one coaching program is really designed to give you all the
support you need with custom training designed for you, whether you're training from home,
the gym, around your limitations and your goals, nothing cookie cutter here,
as well as easy to follow macro nutrition programs that are non-restrictive. You'll get customized
support directly from your coach's email or they'll text you or they'll WhatsApp you. We'll
find the communication medium that best supports your goals as well as provides you with the
accountability and the expertise you need to succeed, as well as biofeedback monitoring,
baked-in accountability support, and all of the stuff that you need from your coach when you check
in. We keep our rosters relatively small so that we can make sure you get the best support possible.
But you can apply today by going over to corecoachingmethod.com, selecting the online
coaching option, and if we have spots available,
we'll definitely reach out to you to see if you're a good candidate. And if we don't,
put you on a waiting list, but we'll be sure to give you the best shot at the best coaching in
the industry. So head over to corecoachingmethod.com and apply for one-on-one coaching with me and my
team today. Hey guys, taking a break from the show to tell you about our amazing sports nutrition partner,
Legion. Legion makes the best evidence-based formulas for sports performance, sports nutrition,
recovery, and fat loss. I don't recommend many supplements. In fact, I think you can get the
majority of the nutrition you need from a whole foods diet. But let's be honest, many of us are
either on the go and need assistance, or quite frankly, we're not going to settle for average and we want to
get the absolute most we can out of our training. So Legion is the company I go to for all of my
supplement staples, whether it's creatine, which I get from their product Recharge, my protein that
I get from either Whey Plus or Plant Plus, two of the best tasting proteins on the market. They
come in a variety of flavors and they don't have a ton of fillers and gum. Just
Whey made from grass-fed cows from Ireland in a plant protein blend with a fully comprehensive
dose of amino acids. I like to take a pre-workout. Sometimes I like it with caffeine. Sometimes I
like to enjoy coffee in the morning and have my pre-workout later without caffeine. Legion makes
both. Both the pre-workout with
caffeine and without come with a full dosage of clinically effective ingredients like beta-alanine,
betaine anhydrous, and l-citrulline to help you perform your best. They also make a phenomenal
greens powder loaded with one of my favorite things, reishi mushroom, and a men's and women's
multivitamin that contain a few different things that men and women might need for their unique
physiology. So when you think of your vitamins, your fish oil, your pre-workout,
your protein, all of the things that many of you take every single day, I'd encourage you to check
out Legion. They have an amazing line, wonderful products, wonderful flavors, naturally sweetened,
no dyes and colors. You can't go wrong. You can shop using the show notes below or by going to legionathletics.com and
checking out using the promo code Danny. That will save you 20% and it will actually help you
get two times points towards future orders, which you can use the same as cash. Pretty cool, guys.
So head over to legionathletics.com and check out using the promo code Danny to save on all
your sports supplement needs. Back to the show.
Hey guys, taking a break from the action to tell you about one of our favorite
new sponsors, Underdog Fantasy.
If you're like me, you love sports.
Sports was actually how I got into fitness in the first place.
And one of my favorite things to do when I'm not working out or working with my clients
is watch and engage in sports with my friends.
Underdog is the best fantasy sports app
out there for best ball and for pick'em. If you like football, basketball, baseball,
hockey, soccer, WNBA, UFC, boxing, Underdog has something exciting for you. You can bet on your
favorite teams. You can bet on your favorite players in the easiest and simplest way to engage
at a higher level with sports. It's so much fun to be able to do a pick-em with a player from the
NBA team I like and from the NFL team I like. Do you think LeBron James is going to have more or
less than 22.5 points? Do you think Steph Curry is going to make more or less than 4.5 threes?
Whether or not you are an avid sports fan or you just like
sports recreationally, Underdog Fantasy is an amazingly fun way to engage with sports,
to take your sports watching experience to the next level. And ladies, if you like sports,
but you don't love them, but your man does, make an Underdog account, have fun with him. I promise
you it will bring you guys closer together. It is an absolute blast. I do it all the time with my friends and my family. It's simple. It's easy to understand.
With Pick'Em, you can pick two players to three times your entry, three players to six times your
entry, four players to five times, 10 times your entry, and up to five players to 20 times your
entry. So you pick five players on your favorite teams. You pick the stat line over or under,
on your favorite teams. You pick the stat line over or under. Bet five bucks, win 120x your money.
So many cool ways to play. There's also Best Ball as we get closer to fantasy where you can draft teams against your friends or against other people on Underdog for your shot at millions of dollars
in prizes. This is definitely one of my favorite things to do when I am playing or watching sports.
I love underdog and you can go to the app store today, download underdog, enter the
promo code Danny, and they will match your first deposit up to a hundred dollars.
You'll have a blast playing underdog all season long.
Back to the action.
This is a hot take.
And this is one I actually got in a huge disagreement with when I was an
undergrad with my exercise physiology professor, who quite frankly, I shouldn't pull, I should
pull more punches, but the guy was an absolute asshole. Like I literally hated the guy,
did not treat me well, did not treat me with a whole lot of respect. You know, one of those
situations where when I was going through undergrad, I was like, why am I paying?
Why am I paying for this this level of uh,
Mediocre education i've learned so much in being a personal trainer
From mentors and from other trainers and from textbooks and from podcasts
About the topic of exercise physiology that I do think it's relatively disappointing that you know a education
I paid thousands of dollars for,
granted at a state school, so it wasn't a huge amount of money, was probably the singular worst
way in which I was absorbing exercise physiology information, like bad teacher, bad curriculum,
bad coursework. I've learned so much more. But I specifically remember having a discussion about
rep ranges, and the guy was adamant,
adamant about the notion that the hypertrophy rep range was eight to 12 repetitions.
And I was taught the very same thing through the National Academy of Sports Medicine when I got
certified in personal training in 2013. But what I ended up finding out through years of kind of
anecdotal evidence and just listening to bodybuilders, listening to people who specialize in gaining muscle, working with thousands of clients, was that clearly a
stimulative set done with five to six reps or with 15 to 20 reps can actually elicit a substantial
amount of hypertrophy, especially if we're training hard. And like I mentioned in the previous point,
maybe one to two reps short of failure. And so we were divvying up class projects and I was asked to write about these rep ranges.
And I had an extremely hard time pulling any research that supported a kind of irrefutable
eight to 12 rep range as being optimal. And I shared this with him and he was in disbelief.
There was no room for discussion. It was a non-starter
that multiple different rep ranges could be stimulative. And now we know this to absolutely
be true. And there's a good amount of evidence being done. There's a good amount of evidence
that's been generated more recently to support this idea. And this is why for all of the clients
that we work with, we are programming across multiple rep ranges and trying
to select rep ranges that actually go well with certain exercises. So if you know that a five rep
set can be great for strength, let's focus on selecting exercises that generate really functional
whole body multi-joint strength. So let's do squats, deadlifts, lunges, presses, pulls as our
strength work.
Now, if we know that eight to 12 repetitions is great for mechanical tension, progressively
overloading, you know, we can allocate those eight to 12 repetition range sets to machine work,
dumbbell work, a variety of different unilateral movements. And if we know we get a unique
metabolic effect from 15 to 30 repetition sets or even time-based sets,
but we know that the complexity of movements like deadlifts or the stability requirement of
movements like dumbbells make those high volume repetitious sets potentially a little bit less
easy to control and to target, let's use machines, let's use isolation exercises,
let's use cables, and let's play with
all of these rep ranges so that we can have a concurrent effect of developing strength,
maintaining mobility, accessing those metabolic pathways that can drive hypertrophy. You know,
you can do this aphasic approach where you're like, we're, we're focusing on a neurological
demand or strength demand in this block. And then we're going to focus on a metabolic tension or,
sorry, a mechanical tension, traditional, you know, progressive 8 to 12 rep range block. Then we're going to have a
more metabolite high rep focus block. Or you can have training blocks that are pretty consistent
and incorporate all three of those features. Maybe you work with that neurological heavy stuff first,
then you move into that mechanical tension based work. And then when you're most fatigued,
heavy stuff first, then you move into that mechanical tension-based work. And then when you're most fatigued, especially from a central nervous system perspective, you go into a higher
repetition isolation work structure that accesses those 15 to 20 repetition range sets with
isolation movements and machines. That can be so, so effective. But if you are pigeonholed into the
notion that if I'm doing any less than eight or any more than 12 reps, I'm somehow magically not
building any muscle, you are going to lose out on some gains. Okay. The next myth is the myth of genetically weak
muscle groups. And I don't say this to shit or poo-poo on the notion that certain people have
better genetics for certain muscle groups. In fact, this isn't a myth at all. There's no denying
that there is a genetic predisposition for developing certain muscles. A good example of this, my girlfriend's sister and niece love watching
Dancing with the Stars. And so I was over there about a month ago and it came on after Monday
Night Football and Arnold Schwarzenegger's son was on the show. And it was very apparent from
the way the man was built all the way to the actual structure and insertions of his muscle groups that this is Arnold Schwarzenegger's son. It's like,
okay, dude's got the same chest, same arms, same broad shoulders. Like, wow, there's obviously a
genetic predisposition to look great when Arnold Schwarzenegger's your dad. Duh. But those genetically
weak muscle groups that oftentimes might be handed down
like, oh, I got shit calves.
Oh, I got this and that.
A lot of times what people chalk up to bad genetic is just bad training structure.
Like, yeah, do your calves suck because you have genetically small calves or do they suck
because you train them at the end of every session?
Do your arms suck because you have genetically small arms or are they small because you train them at the end of every session? Do your arms suck because you have genetically small arms or are they small because you train them at the end of every session? It's very important that you make a concerted effort to practice what is known as the priority principle in certain amount of your energy. You need to allocate a certain amount of
your intensity, and you need to prioritize certain muscle groups to optimize for growth.
And if you are always positioning these genetically weak muscle groups at the very
end of your training sessions, when you're already tired, you're already fatigued,
and you've already allocated a tremendous amount of your training resources to other muscle groups, especially, and this happens a lot, muscle
groups that are already developed because you want to train the stuff you're good at because
it fluffs the ego. I have a really strong chest, so I start every push day with chest press,
but I have genetically shitty shoulders. So it's like, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. If your shoulders are
genetically inferior and you'd like to develop them and your chest is genetically superior,
and it's already quite well developed, train your shoulders first. When you're the freshest,
you can apply the most intensity. You can have the proximity to failure earlier on in the session
and really damage the tissue that you most want to ultimately grow and develop. Same thing can be said for movement quality.
Same thing can be said for strength work.
Same thing can be said for mobility.
Prioritize, prioritize, prioritize what needs the most work.
Do it when you're the freshest.
Do it when you have the most time.
Don't throw it in at the end.
That's always a bad idea.
Okay, obviously we couldn't have a myth-busting list if we didn't talk about spot targeting,
which of course is the notion that you can burn fat in a selected area by training the muscles
in that area. And again, there's just not a ton of literature to support this. And more specifically,
I don't think there's even enough anecdotal evidence. With things like compression-based
things like, okay, waist trainers, I'm going to wear this around my waist to warm the tissue and probably enhance
fat loss in the area. We do not see that happen very often. If anything, it's just local water
loss, right? I'm going to do a million sit-ups and I'm going to try to burn the fat off my gut.
We do not see this. What we do tend to see in human beings is when they lose body fat,
they lose it from the areas they have the highest predisposition to store it first. And there's probably some resistant areas as well.
I'll use myself as an example. I have a very, you know, I guess this is a good predisposition,
the way that many people think of bodies and what they tend to look for in bodies. I have
the predisposition to store a lot of body fat in my glutes and my face. So when I lose weight, I see that my glutes and my face change pretty quickly.
Now, my abdominal region does not have nearly as genetic of a predisposition to accumulate fat in
the midsection. I just don't accumulate a lot of body fat in the midsection, even at higher body
fats for me. Now, that might change with stress, that might change with age,
but what I'm typically used to seeing is that I store body fat in my face and my glutes,
and that's where I lose it first. I store a body fat in my midsection on a semi-rare basis. I have
to get to a high body fat level, but when I'm getting really, really, really lean,
it does take a little bit longer for some of that low back and midsection fat to come off.
And those are often, for many people, some of the more resistant areas where body fat
tends to just accumulate.
So the notion that you can spot target is kind of half baked.
Uh, we don't see it a lot in the literature.
A lot of the anecdote around it is misplaced specifically when it comes to wearables and
compression garments that, that enhance fluid loss in an area.
And it's just not something I would lean into. Another myth, which is, again, it's persistent. It's
the myth that cardio kills your gains. Now, doing too much cardiovascular exercise, particularly
low intensity exercise that might require a lot of type one slow twitch muscle fiber recruitment
and might require a level of aerobic
running economy that would shift your body's predisposition for heavy developed muscle mass
kind of in the quote unquote off position. You know, those kinds of running volumes,
that kind of aerobic volume does exist. You can certainly look at people who do marathons,
ultra marathons, cycling. They just have a very hard time maintaining large voluptuous muscle mass because there
probably is some type of fiber orientation switch from slow or from fast twitch type
2, type 2X, the stuff that's bigger, larger, and more muscular to that slow twitch stuff.
But that's not happening for people in the gym who are doing a little bit of cardio and
are petrified of losing their gains.
I think a little bit of cardio can be beneficial because it's good for your mitochondria. It's good for
your aerobic health. It helps with nutrient partitioning. It helps with heart health,
vascular health. That level of conditioning can lead to better workout quality, better set to set
endurance, better set to set performance. And you have to do an awful lot of cardio to kill your
gains. Look at most athletes who compete in professional sports. They you have to do an awful lot of cardio to kill your gains. Look at most
athletes who compete in professional sports. They're able to maintain their muscle despite
having a relatively high aerobic demand in practice and in sport. So again, I think the
myth that cardio kills the gains is one that we've got to kick to the curb. Now, here's one that I
think is mildly controversial. It's the notion that artificial sweeteners are somehow worse for you than sugar.
And I'm not saying that artificial sweeteners are innocuous, meaning I don't think that
they're entirely harm free.
I think if you slam back a ton of the wrong artificial sweeteners very consistently, it
could be potentially damaging to your microbiome.
We're beginning to understand more about how these substances interact with our gut, and
our gut is just so important. We're learning more and more about how important the right microbiome makeup, having a microbiome that's comprised of the right bacteria and microorganisms is for our health. compounds that are high in sugar, high in refined grains, maybe artificial sweeteners. It can
augment what's in there. It can disrupt the naturally occurring kind of healthier profile
of the right bacteria. In the same way that eating a lot of resistant starch, a lot of prebiotic
fiber, and having probiotics can help promote the right bacterial climate. That's not what I'm
saying. What I'm saying is the notion that occasional artificial sweetener intake is better than chronic sugar intake. I think that that's
pretty half-baked. We know that there's a daily as well as like a kind of weekly as well as kind
of like a cumulative amount of sugar intake that could be deleterious to your health, especially
the health of something like your pancreas. When it comes to things like body fat reduction, sugar often gets a bad rap because ultimately
that does come down to calories. But high sugar intakes can be damaging, especially if they're
chronically high sugar intakes. You're not going to find a whole lot of studies that show a lot of
elevated markers of good health
associated with high sugar intakes. So while I'm not saying go out and slam all the artificial
sweeteners you want, I'm saying think about this contextually, that occasional artificial
sweeteners are probably better than chronic sugar intake. And if you want to mix and match,
like, oh, I have a soda a couple of times a week, you know, I might go so far as to say that, hey,
the diet soda is probably going to be better just because, again, you're saving 200 calories off of a traditional soda and like 40 to 50 grams
of sugar. And one diet soda might not be at a dose dependent response that would cause microbiome
disruption. So the last one, and this is a very pervasive one, and I always feel the need to touch
on it, is the notion that lifting heavy will create a masculine look within female trainees, which is to say that lifting heavy
makes women bulky. We generally don't see this. A lot of the bulky qualities of muscle growth that
we think of when we think of masculinizing effects from resistance training, such as larger traps,
larger deltoids, big upper backs, those are driven by androgen receptors in
men, which are more densely packed in the neck and shoulder areas due to the obvious genetic
differences between males and females. Males have more androgen receptors than women in most
instances, and they are kind of accumulated in that neck and shoulder area. So those
muscles develop very quickly with
resistance training as it has an effect at elevating testosterone. And obviously, things
like anabolic steroids enhance the muscularity of those regions because when you inject androgens,
where do you think they're going to bind? Obviously, to the androgen receptors, which are
more densely in that neck and shoulder area, which is why so many men who claim to be
natural but have a wildly disproportionate amount of development in their traps and deltoids
always raise a red flag for me. But with women, the notion that lifting heavy has a masculinizing
effect, we just don't see it. Again, muscle growth is a slow process, even for men. Not so much for
men who are enhanced or women who are enhanced with anabolics, but it is a slow process that you can pump the brakes on. So nothing to be afraid of.
Building muscle is usually going to be a great idea for your health for almost every instance
I can think of. And if you are afraid of turning into a man or your physique becoming manly because
you gain some muscle, I think you're severely misguided. So that's one that I always like to
hit on. All right, guys, that does it for this episode of Mythbusting with the Dynamic Dialogue podcast.
I want to thank you all so much for tuning in. Remind you to leave a written and five-star
review on Apple Podcasts, leave a five-star rating on Spotify, and share this podcast.
The best way to help it grow is by word of mouth. Share it with somebody you know who maybe believe
some of these myths or who you think would save a lot of time and energy by hearing the truth earlier on in their
fitness journey. Thanks so much for listening and I'll catch you on the next one.