Dynamic Dialogue with Danny Matranga - 238: "I Can't Believe I Used to Do This" With Jordan Lips
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Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome in everybody to another episode of the Dynamic Dialogue podcast. Today I'm sitting down
with my good friend and fellow fitness professional, Jordan Lips. We're going to discuss a few things
that we've changed our minds on over the course of the last several years, ranging from supplementation
to training to nutrition. I think discussions like this are important because so many people
act as though they've had it right the entire time and that they're impervious to making mistakes.
And when you hear fitness professionals, coaches, and trainers admit that they're imperfect,
I think it really levels the playing field and sets us all up for success.
You can kind of learn a little bit about how we've changed the way in which we think about things,
the criteria by which we judge whether or not something's worth doing, and I really think this will help you on your fitness journey.
So sit back, enjoy the talk today with Coach Jordan Lips.
Jordan, how you doing, man?
Doing great, man. How's it going? Nice studio.
Yeah, thank you. Thank you. I am in the new studio. For those of you who probably will get
this on some kind of video, now that I'm getting in the habit studio for those of you who probably will get this on some kind of video
now that I'm getting in the habit of recording the podcast since I spent $140 on a webcam.
So you guys might get to see my obviously motivational poster or it's not a poster.
It's actually a, what do they call those?
It's a canvas artwork.
So I am not above, uh, hanging cheesy,
motivational canvas art in my workspace. I should have outgrown this phase of my life, but
as the poster says, you know, you can't change the cards you're dealt, change how you play your hand.
Um, no, but the, the new studio is dope. It's good to see a man. We were due to riff on something
and we were chatting off
there about what made the most sense. And I really love the idea of just sharing through the lens of
two people who have coached for a long time, who have trained themselves for a long time,
who've probably made mistakes in prescription for their clients and for themselves. Things that
we've just pivoted off of, changed our mind about, things that we're maybe even embarrassed that we used to believe about supplementation, about training, about
nutrition. And I just think it makes for a, not to be one of those people that uses these canned
phrases, but it makes for an honest, authentic, and kind of fun conversation that you guys should
be able to learn quite a bit from. So you ready, Jay?
Oh, I'm ready, man. Let's do it.
Cool. So I think we should start with supplements. And I think that supplements probably opens the
door for some of the more egregious and maybe funny mistakes or things that we used to believe.
But what is something or a supplement in particular that you had a particular belief,
thing or a supplement in particular that you had a a particular belief identity built around or that you used that you no longer engage with or have changed on yeah well i think the broad the broad
answer is just the the overemphasis and the idea of how beneficial these things are i think we can
individual things i'm sure we will but definitely like uh growing up as a kid with my own training
like i still remember like some of the happiest moments was like getting a little bit of money and like
going into like gnc or like or even better was like the obscure non-corporate non-chain
supplement store that had like blackstone labs and like a whole bunch of like weird creepy
marketing but you were like oh this shit's good and like that's either the same shit or like
a one three dimethyl like banned substance in it or something um and so definitely just very
generally the over emphasis on the importance of supplementation um and we could go down the list
of bcas and uh l-glutamine and protein powder and i think um maybe the one that i would pick
would be the one that actually had
an impact on myself was a good obsession with the casein before bed okay um and the the thought that
like i would literally like do casein before bed there was a period of time where i was like
prepping for a really like rinky dink mom and pop sort of like uh bodybuilding comp back when i was
really young oh gosh you were gonna say uh Chippendale and or S4 date,
but okay.
It is something like that.
It was something of like a pageant slash bodybuilding show in college.
Aren't they all somewhat?
Yeah.
Well,
that's fair.
Yeah.
I was like waking up in the middle of the night,
drinking casein shake because of this idea that like,
because casein is a slow digesting protein that it would like drip this
beneficial muscle protein
synthetic response throughout the night
and you'd get all these great benefits.
And I don't think, and again,
funny thing about this discussion on supplements is like,
yeah, we can laugh about a whole bunch of dumb shit we did,
but like, I actually think this topic,
this umbrella doesn't have a big downside
outside of like, no, it's funny.
You know what I mean?
I think that so much content is created
by well-intentioned fitness
professionals and influencers designed to like bash supplementation and bash supplements that
don't have like a really robust body of evidence and i think it's important to remember that so
much of us learn by failing or by trying and we're way ahead of the data in the literature
and the research on this stuff because because marketers just need the sniff of one study.
If you can find one study that shows even a remotely significant effect.
I don't even know if they need that, but sometimes that'd be nice.
Please just let there be at least one empirical data set that we could reference before we put this in a capsule and put it on a shelf.
But that's all you need.
And then it kind of just goes out into the universe for people like you and I to try.
And KCN is absolutely one.
I used to just slam back.
And I remember it's probably been seven, eight years since I've had a KCN shake.
have had a casey and shake but the thickness of a casey and shake for those of you who have not had it is a entirely different experience than a whey isolate shake yeah in fact i actually think um
on the scheme of things it's not actually that slow digesting in comparison especially if you
consider like if that was the goal that maybe a mixed meal might actually be
slightly better for this i don't want to go too deep without just googling but i actually recall
at some point being like well actually in the scheme of like comparing to other protein sources
actually not all that like comparing it to whey it's much more slow digesting um but there's just
no really good research that this is beneficial beyond just having enough protein and getting your
your really really basic blocks of protein distribution down. Um, don't need to be sipping casein before bed. I mean, I don't think it's a
horrible idea. It's like not like the terrible idea. It's not again, like no big downside,
no big miss here, but like definitely not something that should be in the, in the,
something you're putting at the top of the list. Yeah. And like I, in the same way that I used to
be a casein shake drinker who was really adamant about the idea that if I got the slowest digesting protein immediately before bed, I would get that anabolic trickling effect, if you will.
I mean, the marketing around it was so brilliant.
Casein takes up to eight hours to digest.
So if you have it before bed or one study shows that casein can take upwards of eight hours to digest,
probably in a mixed meal that contains fat. If you drink it before bed, you're feeding your
muscles all night long. And the flip side of that is whey protein isolate gets into your
bloodstream in an incredibly fast timeframe. And you want to have that immediately post-workout. I used to slam,
slam a protein shake post-workout. I even remember being like so dedicated to it. I would have it during my last exercise because I had this notion that like, well, if you're supposed to have it
post-workout, having it immediately during your last set is like even better than post-workout.
And then when I found some of the protein research
from Kevin Tipton, when I was taking exercise physiology in high school, I actually think
Kevin Tipton passed away recently. Um, he, he had determined that a pre-workout feeding was
actually slightly better at enhancing circulating amino acid availability post-workout than a post-workout
feeding because obviously it's already there. And so then instead of changing and pivoting
off of having a post-workout shake, I just started having two shakes and slamming back a scoop and a
half pre-workout and a scoop and a half post-workout and having like a four hour window of never ending liquid shits after
every training session. But, you know, those are, those are like examples of funny things.
I think protein, like those are kind of innocuous. Like, have you ever dabbled with, um, you know,
like, have you ever dabbled with anything outside of the, the, the protein or amino acid sphere
supplementally? Maybe you had good intentions. Maybe you even knew like odds are this probably isn't gonna work but i'm gonna send it on this
or i i want this to work so i'm gonna send it on this the amount of tribulus or like or like test
booster this or like tribulus is a big one like or zma i thought like zma was gonna like boost
rock my test one thing i'll say about ZMA is if I take ZMA,
I have crazy dreams.
It makes no sense why that might be.
I don't know what that is,
but like maybe there's something going on there,
but like I would,
I gave up on it actually doing something.
And I'm like,
yo,
fuck it.
Let's take it.
Let's roll the dice on the dreams tonight.
Let's pop a couple of ZMA.
Do you take zinc and magnesium separately?
Do you get a similar effect?
Do you even supplement with those things on occasion?
Those are like two. Funny enough, we're having this conversation. I'm a big shill
for fucking Legion wearing this shirt. So I'll take the multivitamin. But, um, other than that,
that's, that will be my only supplemental form of those. Yeah. Those are the two free for minerals.
I take on their own because I can't, and I've never been able to do this. My stomach has always
been extremely sensitive to multivitamins.
If I take a full dosage of even a high quality, Legion's multivitamin is very high quality. If I
take a Kirkland multivitamin, I'm keeling over in pain. But I can take two to three capsules of the
Legion multi with food. And then before bed, I take 200 milligrams of magnesium bisglycinate and about
15 milligrams of zinc picolinate. And I don't dream for shit.
Are you getting those from Thorne?
I get those from Pure Encapsulations. I'm too cheap to get them from Thorne,
but Thorne's really, really good. But I can't say for sure whether or not they affect my dreams
because I took a two-year hiatus from dreaming because I was consuming so much
cannabis. For those of you who don't consume a ton of cannabis, if you use it, and this is a big
reason why I've really leveled off, I drew the conclusion that I wasn't dreaming because I wasn't
getting into my deepest REM sleep because of the amount I was consuming.
When you smoke, you just don't dream. And so the last couple of weeks, I've had some crazy dreams. It's like all of my dreams are coming back online, but I was taking zinc and
magnesium free form before bed. So there must be some special shit when they're bound together
into ZMA because you are not the first person that I've heard that
from. I definitely made the mistake with Tribulus and horny goat weed and diaspartic acid. And let's
see what else. I remember all three of those I took after absolutely just mainlining Jack 3D to the point where I got what was then known on the bodybuilding MISC forums as StimDick, which was inability to get or maintain an erection due to just massively high levels of 1,3-dimethylamylamine.
of 1,3-dimethylamylamine. So if you use that much amphetamine, even when I was 18 years old,
I had every reason in the world to have a fully functioning reproductive system.
After two bottles of triple scooping that shit, it's just completely shut off. And I remember explicitly thinking the best way to fix this is with more supplements.
And I remember having a girl over and being like, I need to perform in this moment.
So I slammed like four tribulus, multiple horny go lead capsules, diaspartic acid.
And I even remember taking at the time L-arginine and Muscle Farms Assault because it
didn't. It did not contain that 1,3-dimethylamylamine, but it did contain pump-promoting
products. And so I was slamming pre-workout and supplements thinking it would work. Nothing.
It wasn't until I ran out of that bottle, and I swear, maybe three, four days after I ran out of that bottle, all of that shit hit my system at one time. Whatever effect it does have, it might have an effect at obscenely high dosages because I was ripping through that shit like it was somehow going to undo the problem. And I laughed so much at that version of myself
because I remember I wasn't in any way, shape, or form in a position to really read the research,
but I was in a position where I could Google and find consensus about a product. And I knew
that the consensus on those products was very spotty, but I still wanted it to work so badly that I ended up
taking pretty much every over the counter test booster there is. I'm trying to think of like one,
the only other thing I've ever really had the balls to fuck with was Osterine, which is like,
Osterine is like the lamest SARM of all the SARMs
so it's like
if you look at the SARMs and you go on
SARMs.com
and you sort
go to SARMs.com
and then sort products
by level of pussiness
Osterine is at the top
it's like the Anovar of SARMs
and I remember fucking buying Osterine is at the top. It's like the Anovar of SARMs. And I remember fucking buying Osterine
from, I'm not even going to say the manufacturer, because the manufacturer is a lawyer who calls
himself a doctor, a jurist doctor. And so we'll just leave it at that. But one of the sketchier
figures in the fitness space, and I was probably 20, 21.
And I was like, I'm not going to do steroids, but Osterine is natty.
And Lord knows what was actually in those capsules.
But I got like instantaneously hit by intense, intense alopecia areata, just literally huge
holes in my hair hair just falling out.
And I remember-
It really must be working.
I remember thinking to myself, one, you knew this was a bad idea.
Two, you knew this was a far from reputable source, but I had done, and I still do this
to this day, I had sold myself the dream.
It's like I do this sometimes
when I want to buy a piece of technology. I'm like, I'm going to watch reviews on this piece
of technology until I'm convinced to buy it. And I had convinced myself that taking this
over-the-counter SARM was a good idea. It did literally nothing for my gains. It just gave me
really bad skin irritation and my hair fell out. And it all came back. I think I took maybe seven to nine days worth of the stuff before I threw the whole
thing away. And it came with, this is the best part, it came with an over-the-counter PCT.
And the name of the product was PCT. And I was like, yeah, we got this, guys.
Yeah, we're good yeah so i think with supplements
there's there's so many so much of why i've changed my opinion is because i've dabbled with
them and they've fucked me up um do you have any that you've you know that have a relatively
substantive amount of research supporting their utilization
but maybe within the last three to five years um some of the newer literature or just some of what
you've grown to expect it to be able to do you've kind of steered away caffeine for being totally
honest i think that's a good one i think that at least as a counter argument, I've switched to non-stim legions, non-stim free.
Use code JLips, not code Danny.
Fuck that Danny guy.
And listen, let's just be totally real.
Non-stim pre still has something that it has alpha GPC, which is a nootropic, which gives you something of a focused feel.
And I'm not comparing caffeine to nothing i'm just saying from comparing
a stim pre-workout to a non-stim pre-workout my workouts are legitimately identical and if you
were to pose a dichotomous either or scenario i would rather take alpha gpc before workout
for hypertrophy session than caffeine um and that's a personal opinion. I think the only time I might change that opinion,
if I was training like really early in the morning, um, if I'm training at any other time
during the day for a couple of reasons, confounding variables. So I'd just rather have caffeine for
maybe work purposes. Uh, I tend to more highly value that you could flip that and you could
say nootropic benefits, you know, might benefit more of like a focus during work thing,
but the caffeine is like caffeine and creatine are the two best performance
enhancing supplements that exist.
But for a 60 minute hypertrophy session,
the recommended dose for caffeine is just fucking through the roof.
I know it's really absurd.
When you look at the effective dosage requirement for caffeine on a per kilogram basis you're like
bro that's like three scoops of pre-workout really crazy so the benefit that i've seen
both from a not od on caffeine and ability to work out in the afternoon if i want to or in
the evening if i want to um not that alpha gp probably is benign in terms of like effect on
sleep it's probably not benign.
But I've dialed back how important that is.
And I've really, really preferred.
And I push on my, not push on my page, but it's rare that I'll recommend the stim pre-workout.
I'm like, dude, everyone listening to this podcast is either already having too much caffeine, or if you introduced a pre-workout into your life, you'd now be drinking too
much caffeine.
It's such a great point. It's really a great point. I think that people have become so
conditioned to habitual caffeine consumption that we can assume that most people, to your point,
are consuming more than they should be. And I'd go so far as to say that they're getting nothing
from it besides feeling untired. You like the warm beverage in the morning, you like the coffee, but the likelihood
that your adenosine receptors in the brain are even remotely receptive to it at this point.
I remember the first time I took pre-workout was literally doing heroin or speed. It was like,
oh my God. And then within two weeks, you become desensitized to that amount of caffeine and you either need to have more or you just have diminishing marginal returns in the sensation
side of things where you're just like you know i could drink pre-workout and take a nap
yeah and knowing what caffeine can do to enhance people's anxiety and what it can do to just like
generally create irritability independence dependence. I think that's
a really good point. I do half and half. If I'm going to caffeinate a training session that's
early, I'll do one scoop of pre-workout, like 150 milligrams of caffeine, two cups of coffee.
Or if I want to enjoy caffeine, it's become espresso shots, not full-blown coffees.
it's become espresso shots, not full-blown coffees. And finding ways to enjoy smaller dosages and be more sensible about when I time the dosages makes caffeine a better drug for me
to interact with. And I call it a drug because it is a drug. I really think it's a drug. And I know
that a lot of people get up in arms about how we classify these things, but it's an addictive chemical that directly works
on your brain. So I'm pretty sure that's about as A1 criterion for qualifying a drug as you could
get. I probably go through three bottles of stim-free pre-workout for every one stim pre-workout
because I just would rather either one have less caffeine overall or enjoy it in different forms. And to be totally fair, some people have posed this with BCAAs
where you have somebody who's taking BCAAs and they put their BCAAs in the jug of water and they
get on the treadmill and after the workout and they're drinking it because they think it's
helpful and they're feeling good about stuff. And then, you know, and then somebody comes along and
shits all over their BCAA usage and they feel all down. Like your, your was something that they were
taking that was making them, you know, placebo or not. It was like aiding to their overall good
feeling and motivation towards things. When it comes to pre-workout for me, like I view it as
like a, an obligation to train now. And so when I like take that scoop and I put it in the water,
I mix it up. And I, the minute that I drink it, I'm like, well, you just took something
exogenously. That's going to give you a benefit. Don't be a fucking bum. Go work out now. You must
go work out now. So to me, like that's, it's real purpose. It signifies like you must go train now.
Like if I didn't have any pre-workout and I just had to like get myself up off the couch and I
could go later, I could, you know, I could wait another 10 minutes. Like I might do that, but I'm like, did you make the pre-workout
and you drink it? Like, you know, that you'll start to feel like, okay, I have a responsibility
to use this artificial energy, which I'm probably not even getting. There's probably a big element
of it. That's placebo, but fuck me up, man. I love placebo effect. Like let's go.
So it's a great point. It's a great point. You know, I, it's funny because you said that so
much more eloquently, but this has been something that I've seen on the internet from the NELC boys who are essentially just like childish college age provocateurs. And they're very popular and they had Elon Musk on their podcast.
No way. And they were talking to Elon Musk about their workout habits.
And Elon was saying like, oh yeah, I really don't like working out. And this dude goes like, oh,
well you got to do what I do, bro. You got to just put pre-workout in a bottle by your bed.
And then when you wake up, just fucking slam that shit. And then you have no other choice.
And I was like, well, essentially you're right. Cause if not, you're going to sit there and the beta alanine tingles will migrate to uncomfortable places in your body. And I love the ritualistic, like going into a training session is something that if you want to train for a long time has to become semi ritualized. Like it's, it becomes harder and harder as your motivation to train fades and you've trained for a long time to just be excited about it. So having rituals and routines and things that kind of, look, when the pre-workout because if I don't, I will feel physically uncomfortable from the beta alanine, which
might again for a 60 minute hypertrophy workout might not even be something that I particularly
need. But if at nothing, if for no other reason than it makes me tingle and work out, I'm all
over it. I can't think of anything from the supplement side of things on my end that's as evidence-based as caffeine that I have reduced of any of the evidence I've seen on omega-3.
It's got a lot more to do with how potent whole food-based omega-3 options are at supplying the
body with omega-3 and how much I enjoy eating those. So knowing that I love salmon and I'll
probably get sushi four nights a week, which I know is just in this economy. It's just terrible. Us California liberal elites, I go down to the Whole Foods three minutes from my house and my woke little Prius, I don't drive a Prius, and I just get my salmon sushi four nights a week. to take omega-3 at that point would almost certainly be overkill unless I was explicitly
trying to dabble with some of those higher ranges that you see people postulate could be good for
cardioprotective, neuroprotective. I've even seen people claim that two to three grams could be
potentially hypertrophic. Long story short, I have found that omega-3 is a fantastic supplement for the general
population with a ton of good evidence. Probably worth taking if you don't eat a lot of fatty
cold water fish or algae or wherever else you get it. But if you like salmon and you're in a place
in your life where you can afford to have it a couple nights a week, that's one that a supplement that you could probably save money on. Yep. I agree with that.
What about training? Because I think that this is probably the behavior that it can be,
it's probably the most rational in that we have the most, like nutrition's just too social,
too emotional. Supplements are are so ideological. We cling to
these things. We have a belief in them. But training's a lot more cut and dry and a lot
more scientific. Is there anything that you've changed your mind on recently with regards to
how you either program for yourself or how you program for your clients?
Yeah. There's two that come to mind. One is, I guess, a longer conversation, but we could start with generally lower overall volume with a general closer to failure. And I know that there's at least a couple of practical issues.
And so I think just general on the spectrum, I think we need to acknowledge that, hey, if you're going to do less sets,
that to equate for stimulus, you would have to do harder sets or different exercises or make up for that lack of number of sets elsewhere.
number of sets elsewhere. And I think on that, you know, those inversely correlated variables of sets and intensity, I would just have been trending towards more of on the low to moderate
size volume in terms of number of sets per muscle group per week, or even days per week or whatever.
And then just generally tipping a little bit closer to failure on average for, again, I think
at least physiologically, we could have a good discussion, whether that's figuratively or you, me and you now that, that you could equate for stimulus this way,
or at worst, you would be notably more efficient for the population that I'm trying to work with,
which I also fall into, which is, I want to be really, I want to be strong, healthy in the 1%
of population for health, but I'm not looking to be my most jacked at the cost of other things in my life. And so given all of that, I, you know, we looked at this
like Schoenfeld research and a lot of this, like 10 to 20 sets per muscle group per week is like,
and when we talk about the nutrition one, we're going to talk a little bit about something that's
like, that is what you, if you just look at any fitness influencer and you ask them,
you're going to get a 10 to 20 sets per muscle group per week. To me, that was like, there's a lot of issues with that as a recommendation. Um,
just by the nature of like, at least a couple of questions of like, Hey, if we're, if we're
going to do that 10 to 20 sets per muscle group per week, like does a set of leg extensions count
the same as a set of squats or leg presses? Right. Do you have to, do you have to like add a,
a, a check Mark mark like on a leg
press well that's glutes and that's yeah so that's one totally so you have if you have does pull do
pull-ups count for biceps and then you have muscles with different divisions like you know
are we you know do i need 10 sets for lats or do i need 10 sets for each division of the lat or do i
need or or what if i'm doing a pec fly and a
dumbbell press they're like entirely different resistance profiles they're with entirely
different hypertrophic benefits and recovery requirements and yes i understand the idea of
giving a really broad and 10 to 20 is purposefully broad right where it's like depending on how
you're measuring this what exercises you're doing you know it could be 20 like you could say i'm
doing 20 sets of lats. If you count
every row and every pole for lats, because they all work lats in some way, shape or form. Okay.
Maybe we get to that like 12 to 18 set range. And so I got a little bit of an issue with that.
I do think that as somebody who has an issue with it, I should also have a, I think by requirement,
I should also have a different alternative way to look at it. And so I think that it just depends on how you're quantifying it.
I think most people should start with like, you know, focusing mostly on the big compound lifts and counting those to some degree for biceps and triceps.
Once you do that, I think somewhere in that like eight to 15 sets per muscle group a week.
Like right now in my group, we're probably doing four, four sets of direct bicep work.
Yeah.
week like right now in my group we're probably doing four four sets of direct bicep work yeah 12 to 16 sets of back work which obviously back is multiple muscle groups but they're all hitting
bicep to some degree and so that four sets per week might turn into in the aggregate in that
eight to ten set per week range um and so that's something i've changed my mind on with this like
whatever just not to drag this on any longer but like a little bit less quantity a little bit more
quality and then maybe just a small little asterisk is like this. Uh, I I've tried to challenge this idea of stimulus to fatigue
ratio. Not, we need to go too deep into that, but like this, this idea that like, that like
taking a leg extension to like two RIR or zero RIR is going to be exponentially more fatiguing to go
all the way to failure on a leg extension. Like just not so sure that I just think it's a very movement dependent,
how we kind of go about classifying,
like what is fatiguing at failure right now?
My group are doing rep,
uh,
like,
like intentional partial rep match lateral raises where like in week one,
you go to full range of motion failure.
And every week after that,
you are beyond failure.
And there's nothing overly systemically fatiguing about that
where people are like, oh my God, I'm systemically past my ability to recover. It's a fucking lateral
raise. And what might be best for those movements might be actually closer and beyond failure.
That's a discussion for another day, but definitely this lower volume, a little bit
closer to failure on average. What's going on guys, taking a break from this episode to tell
you a little bit about
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try it completely free for seven days. Just click the link in the podcast description below.
Can't wait to see you in the Core Coaching Collective, my app-based training community.
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pack today completely for free. Just pay shipping back to the show. It's such a good point. And like,
I think you really hit on something phenomenal there which is
like a lot of this stuff is obviously movement specific and like you would find this out very
quickly by either training a lot of people in person training a lot of people online or training
a lot on your own you're going to find out very quickly that the rir uh scale or the RPE scale, whichever way you want to quantify the difficulty
of your sets, it can be pretty easy to standardize what failure is for each lift. But if somebody
says RPE 10 split squats or RPE 10 leg extensions, get in line. There's going to be a fucking line
and a half behind the leg extension because it's
way easier to go to failure on. And I don't care how many people want to dress up their
hellacious set of leg extensions by throwing their head back and screaming and all of the
tacky performative bullshit you see on the internet. The truth is, the more musculature involved,
the more complex the movement tends to be, the more daunting and fatiguing it is to take that
thing to failure. And if you choose to take that thing to failure, to act as though that would
simply be one set for the quads in the same way that a leg extension to failure would be is like,
have you ever fucking trained?
Like,
have you ever felt what your ass cheeks feel like after that?
Cause I think they should get a little bit of a check box,
you know,
like that.
I think that's a really good point.
And kind of sticking with not necessarily like,
I like the idea that like,
I think up to 10 sets for novices is probably where you
ought to be and then between 10 and 20 sets for intermediates to advanced lifters ultimately where
you're going to end up you just can't stay at 10 sets forever unless you're insanely good with
exercise selection um i think you eventually start encroaching upon 16 18 20 sets when you put specialization blocks together because you're trying to allocate
volume. You're trying to overreach. But one paradigm that shifted for me a lot was the
notion of a hypertrophy rep range. And this was from mostly a change in the evidence,
but also an absence of evidence that I came across coincidentally
when doing a project my junior year in college, where I was asked to basically write a presentation
on repetition range variations. And it's very easy to, you know, when you talk about what
repetition ranges are best for what, strength is really cut and dry, especially
like speed strength and strength speed, whether you're trying to develop maximal strength or
maximal power. It's probably better to do that in a way where it's entirely anaerobic and fatigue
isn't really going to be a problem. So we're talking less than six reps in most instances.
If you're trying to train somebody to be explosive and twitchy, you want three to five box jumps, three to five depth jumps.
If you want to train somebody to be extremely good at squats, you still want like three to five squats.
The hypertrophy rep range was, at least when I got certified in 2013, you were going to find it usually listed as 6 to 12 or 8 to 12 reps, which I think is super reasonable for bodybuilding. That's probably where most of your volume is going to fall because of the stimulus to fatigue ratio.
You can probably get the best
stimulus with the most reasonable amount of fatigue somewhere in there. And I remember
looking for research on 8 to 12 being the best. And I simply just had a very difficult time
finding it. And I remember going like, well, this is in every textbook, so it has to be somewhere.
And I simply could not find it. And I went to the professor and I'm like, well, I'm having a hard time digging.
Oh, it's there. It's there. And it really wasn't there. And I learned that not only was it really
never there, only that it has a lot more to do with eight to 12 reps is probably the most
reasonable place to assess people in a lab for
hypertrophy because you're like, do 10 hard reps. All right. Very nice. But a lot of your rep range,
hypertrophic specific rep range work, I think the way I look at it now, knowing that there's a huge
amount of evidence out there supporting muscle growth can essentially occur at any rep range,
so long as the training stimulus is sufficiently close to failure and demanding enough of the tissue. But to try to do that with
sub six reps is probably the worst for stimulus fatigue. So I like to think of the new, the
hypertrophy rep range now is like six to 20 and you could obviously do more than 20. I probably end every pull day with like 50 reps set of
fucking hammer curls. But if you think of that rep range as six to 20, all of a sudden,
it gives you a lot more wiggle room. It gives you a lot better opportunity to program.
And then when you are like, well, what do I do for six? And what do I do for 20? It's like, well,
like, well, what do I do for six? And what do I do for 20? It's like, well, that's where having a library of exercises and making intelligent choices makes a ton of sense. So it's like,
I would love a 20 rep set of lateral raises or tricep extensions, uh, where it's a very
isolation based, low stability requirement, high safety profile movement, where I could maybe occasionally add
in a drop set, where I could maybe occasionally add in a mechanical drop set even. And then,
you know, six, seven, eight, nine, 10 reps, compound movements that I want to probably have a
lot of load on that I'm probably going to emphasize the eccentric. If you work within that like six
to 20 rep range, it becomes really intuitive,
I think, to kind of pick which ones are closer to six and which ones are closer to 20. And
as you're learning, you'll figure out pretty quick that like 20 reps and deadlifts don't go together.
But yeah, the rep range was something I was super tied to. And I probably told hundreds of people
like, no, no, no, more than 15 reps. That's endurance, bro. That's endurance. It's like, what the hell is that
even mean? Like, that's not endurance. That's catching a pump. Endurance is like,
endurance is just like doing circuit training or CrossFit. Like there has to be like a legitimate
endurance demand, like high rep resistance training isn't quote unquote endurance.
So that's one that shifted a lot for me. You got any more?
On that note, actually, I would actually put myself, my thoughts on that would be that I've
actually gone a little bit of a ping pong ball with this and was like, initially was in the camp
of, oh, it's like one to five is strength and five five to ten is or five to fifteen is hypertrophy and fifteen to thirty is endurance and there's always like
that picture of like the continuum like the two arrows it's like sure or strength more hypertrophy
sure and then you know all this research came out famous study you know five to thirty reps
all get equivalent hypertrophy it brought you know same close to failure and then that was like a
really big talking point and i just remember like
early on my podcast days was like only three years ago or so like um so really flexing that
when it came out and being like wow look at this freedom that we have it's like totally and it's
not it's not untrue i won't go back on that i think it's fantastic i think that there's
times and places to really flex the truth that is there um that you can get roughly equivalent
equivalent enough i've heard to me but you know if sets are taken close enough to failure at you
know different loading you know percentages right different rep ranges um and so i flex that super
hard um and then again more recently i actually have come back to yeah but but like i just i know
myself so when i'm making content like i know
i can see myself no longer saying that when i post stuff so sometimes i'll like get a question
in the q a about rep ranges and like where i would have used to like totally just like
bam 530 reps close to failure bang you're good like i'm now like just having seen a little bit
of research on i guess two things one is how much worse we are at assessing failure at higher rep
ranges so again not a physiological issue but more of like yeah just very hard to calibrate very hard
failure north of right sometimes you're not actually at muscular failure there's like a
our perception of pain because at those higher reps there's definitely more of a metabolite
buildup which gives you that like people think it's like lactic acid or the burn and so a lot of people stop then when they get to their own threshold for an
ability to deal with that pain but actually muscularly that's not actually failure um just
a hydrogen ion yeah it hurts in a different way that some people aren't going to be able to
withstand and so that's one potential downside of going that high end reps. And then the other two might be that it is less time efficient. So if I can do it in 30, why wouldn't,
if I could do it in seven, why not? Why do it in 30, which is a valid thing to just speak out there
and have a discussion about like, uh, I'm with you there, brother. I'm with you there, especially
with my own training. I take so many more sets to failure because I just don't have as much time.
And I was a huge proponent of, ah, just keep it too short of failure. It's like, well, why take, why go to
26 reps if I can do it in seven permitting that, you know, everything is equated. Their technique
is the same and, you know, quality of movements there. And the third is like a little bit of
emerging research that like, uh, there seems to be a little bit more systemic fatigue actually in
higher rep ranges but that's probably in my opinion uh like a perception of people having
to have longer sets and you know if i do a set of hack squats for like 12 reps let's say you know
for the first like six reps i'm not going stuff that i'm going through the motions but like i'm
like passive in my intent like i'm just like waiting to get to the reps that I have to like kick into gear mentally.
And that in and of itself, doing these like lead in reps, the reps that are just not hard.
You know, if you do a hard set of eight, they're all hard.
You have the last three to five are like really hard.
But even the first rep of an eight rep set, you're like, all right, I'm in it, man.
Like I'm in it, right?
You're in it right away.
first rep of an eight rep set you're like all right i'm in it man like i'm in it right you're in it right away yeah the first rep of a set of 25 is like the first 15 of those like i could be
having a conversation with somebody and so i've kind of kind of had this mentality of like yes
it's not this stupid continuum that's like super black and white yes 5 to 30 you can get equal
than hypertrophy all of that said i'm probably still programming the vast majority of your work
in the 6 to 12 and then i think the maybe the benefit from the higher rep maybe there's a joint a joint benefit
that's like maybe like it's no i'm not i would love better research on this because i part of
me is a little skeptical of like yes you get lighter loads in theory you could make an argument
about it's less weight on the joint like it's less weight but it's more reps and it's equally close to failure.
It's like the stress is the stress on that joint equated,
or is it actually in an absolute sense? Cause it's less load. Is it less?
Maybe there is research I have not come across,
but it's something that people say that I'm like, okay,
that that makes some sense. And anecdotally, I do believe that.
Like if I'm doing like whatever lateral raise cross cable extension,
even a bicep curl, like maybe like when it's mega
heavy, um, versus like it being a little bit lighter, maybe there's like a little bit of a
joint relief. Um, but yeah, you hit on something too. Like if whatever exercises you were liable
to do 15 to 20, 30 reps are almost assuredly going to be exercises with a pretty substantial
range of motion, like a lateral raise, like with these
small, seemingly more vulnerable joints that don't necessarily have the opportunity to disperse force
across multiple joints. And so it's like, I don't know, man, like is a 12 rep set of tricep
extensions. That's hard from reps three to 12 going to be quote unquote worse for your joints than a 30 rep set of cross body
extensions where you reach the absolute end range position and you really squeeze the shit out of it
i don't fucking know it probably feels better in the moment but to just kind of lead with oh it's
better for your joints to lift light i don't necessarily know how it's probably
other just more important buckets to to look at if you're like joint friend if you're like
trying to like not fuck your joints up like this is this is a relevant discussion but it's not like
to me it's not like the biggest box in the world um you know the most i've seen i've seen myself
programming lately is like is like in the 15 rep range but again the the time to flex this is for
those who don't have a lot of load who are are doing at home training with body weight, who don't own heavy dumbbells.
This is like a moment. Yeah. This is when you lean into that. This is when you flex that. This
is when you're like, this is when you talk your client up to still be excited. Oh my God, I'm not
training with super heavy weights. Like, okay, great. You can mitigate the lack of loading,
loadability, load capacity for just work really, really hard. And that actually gets you,
if not exactly the same results enough, the same that we don't need to be down on ourselves.
Cause we only have dumbbells up to 25 or something like that. Yeah. I love that. Anything else in
the training realm before we transition over to nutrition? Uh, the, the periodization stuff maybe,
but we don't need to go into that too much. I mean, uh, yeah, no, let's talk about it.
The most recent educational
platform that I have assumed
and been certified by, I guess, is
N1Guys, Coach Cass, MMM, and
super smart, love Cass, just really
appreciate his work in the industry, all this stuff.
There's literally no way,
shape, or form that I would say that I
know more than Cass about probably anything.
Yeah.
That guy is essentially from the outside
looking in i haven't dabbled in as much of his content as yours but i do have the biomechanics
certification but you know that dude is a missionary who's very clearly dedicated his life
to essentially creating a greater opportunity for a bunch of nerds to learn as much as they can
about building muscle by literally going on a lifelong pilgrimage. So there's nobody like him.
Yeah, I agree. And there's certainly a ton that I love that I've learned. I'm infinitely more a
better coach because of the whole experience. But just, just the idea that, um, to put it very bluntly that if your goal is hypertrophy, I would recommend spending vast
majority of your time specifically training for hypertrophy. And I'm, I don't say that as if,
you know, the N1 slash cast position would be to spend a lot of time not doing hypertrophy.
I think that he would be like, yeah, you should spend most of the time doing hypertrophy.
a lot of time not doing hypergry i think that he would be like yeah you should spend most of the time doing hypergry i'm just not sold so much so on um how much uh potentiation there
is available via some of these other pathways um especially when you apply it to a practical
setting of like just regular people trying to get pretty jacked if you have an extremely adherent
individual like the idea of switching modalities like even relatively often
it just brings in a whole uh tracking error uh the ability to or just this this this potential
error in trackability and uh in a world where most people's one of their big issues is a lack
of continuity a lack of keeping things most of the same so they can learn the movement and work hard
and get better at it over time and get away from like every week i do something different every workout i do something different every
program i do something different i think getting away from that is going to give people better
results you know and then it maybe that hits a point in the curve where you have such an adherent
client that's really fighting in the margins where maybe there's room for improvement just
have taken one small step back with like you got to do a sarcoplasmic phase and then you have to do
a systemic phase and then you have to go into a mechanic transduction then you got to do a sarcoplasmic phase, and then you have to do a systemic phase, and then you have to go into mechanotransduction, and you got to go into a neuro phase, and then
you got to, you know, it is probably the case that I'm not just, I'm just not sold that that's
something that is necessary. I know necessary isn't the word that is relevant here. It's like
better or not. Yeah. It's just, does it turn an A into an A plus? Because if it does,
but that comes at the cost of, substantially larger amount of investment, it might not be worth it, which isn't to say that in theory it doesn't make sense. let's call it made this a little bit more practical and approachable in my own training and the training i do with my clients is i absolutely especially when i work with athletes
you you really do have to periodize quite tightly based on the needs of the athlete
and what the athlete needs based on where they're at in their competitive season
but for those who want to optimize their physique and it's my opinion that the ability to elicit myofibular hypertrophy through
mechanical tension-based hypertrophy training that could represent 60 to 65 percent of the volume
that you do all year round as it probably should based on what we know has the greatest likelihood to influence muscle growth.
Occasionally adding in neurological or strength-based work to keep yourself strong so you can have greater volume.
That doesn't necessarily have to go away or dominate seasons of your training.
It can be injected sensibly here and there.
It can operate as a mesocycle. I think a month here and there can be really valuable for a strength block. And as for the metabolic stimulus that we get from that higher rep training, again, I don't know if I would dedicate an entire block to that so much as I might look to include one or two movements that elicit a metabolic specific effect at the end of my training. It's like, Hey,
you know, I want to grow my delts. And I did some mechanical tension based work where it was like six to eight reps, pretty heavy. And I'd like to see if I can, you know, add another layer to this
by getting a metabolic effect by making that last set, uh, drop set, triple drop set. I don't know.
You know, like I think that how, I think that all
of those ways of training to, to optimize the muscular response are brilliant, but whether or
not I would weave an intricate, you know, macro cycle around oscillating between them, uh, versus
maybe oscillating between nervous system, strength-based and hype and more mechanical
tension-based, and then just
intelligently dropping opportunities for metabolic stress along the way.
That to me is more enjoyable. My clients tend to really like that.
Don't know if it's better. Probably not. Maybe not. Just easier for me as a coach, a lot easier
for my clients because then they don't end up with a block where they're
like oh fuck it's that block that i hate and i'm gonna have six weeks of training i don't like so
much you know i thought it's just that like just like the interesting discussion that goes on in
my brain is that like if you have a goal which is hypertrophy any time spent not doing that and
pursuing an alternative
goal in order to be valid would have to potentiate greater gains greater uh benefits towards that
goal than than specifically training for that goal during that time so you know you said it more
enjoyable and and clients really like it i love that i think there's something about you know
right now in my in my group we're doing one exercise, more pyramid style, style, more like top set and more strength, like intent.
Um, and I think that just, there's something in us that is enjoyable that we like that.
It's like, you know, whether it's better for hypertrophy or not, it's probably a net neutral, but it's an opportunity for you to like express that like part of you.
That's like, fuck, I ask the question, do you prefer a high rep set that leaves you with a vicious pump?
Or do you prefer a low rep set where you hit a PR and like 85% of people select the PR?
There's something visceral about it.
And that's just where I'm at, where it's just like, you know, it's like someone's like, oh, it's really great for this.
And I'm like, yeah, it's really great for that. But in order for it to end, to end up making me
more Jack, it would have to be if that benefit I'm getting would have to then potentiate a net
greater gain in hypertrophy over the longterm. Then had I just done more hypertrophy? Yeah. Um,
and I just think it's an interesting discussion. Again, I actually don't even feel like there's
one true strong answer on either side. And so, because I don't feel that I don't even feel like there's one true strong answer on either side.
And so because I don't feel that I don't feel that there's a strong on either side, I feel like there's a bit of mental masturbation and intellectual flexing that goes on.
And I'm a smidge bitters a little bit in the application of this by some of our peers a little bit.
Both of us are you and I both have group programs.
We both do one-on-ones like in some ways we're competitors and sometimes it's difficult to compete with the, uh, not difficult to compete. Sometimes I stick up my ass about people who talk about like fat loss
programming. Um, and it's a real, it's a real, uh, I don't, I don't lose sleep over it, but I
just kind of think like, there's, there's a reason you're saying that. You could provide maybe a mechanistic reasoning by
why you're saying that. Nothing makes me more physically ill than watching somebody try to
justify the overcomplication of fat loss. Fucking 70% of people are fucking fat and don't move.
They can lift weights in a way that's even
somewhat tolerable so that they can hold on to some contractile tissue and then fucking get the
food under control if they're lifting listen if you're lifting if you have a program that's four
days a week four or five days a week decent volume moderate volume like like not a crazy program it's
not like you look at this you're like wow, wow, people are just going to die. That program is just fantastic for fat loss.
It's a fat loss program.
You're going to be fine.
You're, you know, this, you know, a lot of times what will happen is it's like, oh, we
should do more work in the short position.
It's like good for, you know, nutrient partitioning, or it's easier to recover from.
And then first of all, let me like a couple of things.
One, every single person who is not in great shape will get all of those benefits from
basically every training modality.
Like you'll get neurologically stronger, you'll get better nutrient partitioning, you'll get
better, like muscular endurance, you'll get all of these adaptations.
And if your program is not death defying, then you don't need to be like, then people
will still survive just fine.
Now, somebody might be like, oh, they could do a little bit.
It would be a little bit easier to recover from when they have less calories and they could retain just as much
muscle with less training fatigue. Like I'm just not so sure that that is an amount of micromanagement
that is relevant in any way. It has not been something I've experienced with one-on-one
clients that are like, oh, we're going to go do a bunch of short position work. And all of a sudden,
everyone crushes their deficit. It's like the success or failure when I, and I don't want to
put such binary absolute terms on it because it's not the case, but like whether or not you
succeed in air quotes in accomplishing the goal that you had in your fat loss phase,
it's fuck all to whether or not you switched out a length of position work for a short position
exercise. And this, like, I'm not, it is what it is. I focus on what I could do. I'm proud of my
group. I love what I do, but I just, I get it sent to me by like, Hey, is your program good for fat loss? Or should I go do
this fat loss programming? And I'm like, this is just a, it's just really a, it's like people,
I believe, I don't know, not to be too bitter. It's just like people hiding behind a little bit
of a mechanism that they could spot and then they get to use the words fat loss training.
And it's good for business. I couldn't agree more. I think it is a, uh,
fat loss training and it's good for business. I couldn't agree more. I think it is a, uh,
you're reverse engineering a product based on some assertion you've made that is wildly irrelevant and won't matter at fucking all to people who aren't already heavily invested in their training.
And you're ready for this, those people aren't signing up
for your fat loss program. The people that need the most help with their body fat reduction
need as much simplification as possible, not because they're incapable of learning and growing,
but because it is substantially more challenging to make the right food decisions all day
than it is to get bombarded with whatever
level of educational outline needs to be, let's call it whatever level of rationalization we need
to reach to tell somebody that the preferential use of shortened position exercises will help
them better manage fatigue and a deficit. Okay. That's fucking great. But guess what?
You could also quite literally in five seconds with no thought be like, yeah, well, lengthened position exercises are generally
better for muscle hypertrophy. So you could just do less exercises in the lengthened position.
So how's that for recovery, asshole? Now I have a fat loss program.
That's really well said. And then it's really well said. And then there's an argument. There's
a very valid argument that I'm not, I wouldn't propose. I wouldn't stand behind of like in in a reduced calorie state.
I don't think we I'm not necessarily would say this 100 percent, but there'd be an argument of like, you know, calorie reduced state with like the biggest anabolic thing that you could do just to eat enough.
You're not doing you have the biggest catabolic stimulus you could give yourself is a calorie deficit you are now also reducing the training stimulus and so i actually think that
that i wouldn't stand by that i think both people will be fine because i'm actually not a big
advocate about worrying about a ton of lean body mass lost in a fat loss phase what i mean by that
is i'm not i wouldn't worry a ton about the small amounts of lean body that you'll lose if you're
doing some resistance
training and eating a half decent amount of protein. And so this, this, this level of
micromanagement to me just feels like a business choice. And it is a good one because it's
real easy to, you know, it goes in the bucket of like somewhat preying on insecurities as if like,
it's another notch in the, how I train has to do with my fat loss results benefit, which might steal bandwidth away from where it should be.
Um,
yeah,
yeah.
So not,
it isn't the end of the world.
So discussion I've been having actually like very,
very recently as of this morning,
I'm like,
yeah,
it's probably irrelevant.
Um,
I don't mind as long as people add context though,
I'm thinking of one person in particular,
this person adds some context and I appreciate that.
But if it's just like said blanketly,
like this is your fat loss programming, got to do it this way. If you want to lose fat,
it's like, fuck off. Yeah. You know, sometimes I wonder if just fitness being something that
generally is attractive to people who are probably score relatively high on the personal
responsibility spectrum and who are maybe a mildly above average intelligence. There's just this
ridiculous tendency to over-intellectualize
everything to the point where we're arguing about or talking about things that are so,
so unimportant in the long run based on the people that need the largest majority of help
with their fitness. I think that anybody who found your fat loss program, who decided to sign
up for it because you sold them on the idea of doing more work in the shortened position just because it just self-selects for
semi-insecure men because that's what got almost everybody into the fitness industry in the first
place is being like, I wish I was bigger and cooler. I don't know. I love being able to
over-intellectualize things in a quote-unquote safe space, but doing it in a way that's designed to make you money. And it's
not necessarily always disingenuous, but oftentimes it's like, oh, you're really
grasping at straws here. It's pretty easy to see through it the longer you've been into it.
So let's wrap things up quickly here with something in the nutrition space
that you've changed your mind about recently, I'll lead off.
I'll keep it very simple.
And it has to do with saturated fat intake.
I think that I was relatively susceptible to the notion that blood cholesterol and saturated fats were not something that I needed to worry about as a normal, healthy weight adult male.
And, you know, there's all these dudes on the internet who get their panels run and yeah,
their LDL is really high, but their HDL is good. And, you know, it's the right kind of meat. And,
um, I was able to kind of justify eating what I would describe as high amounts of saturated fat and not be particularly
concerned about it because of the intellectuals in the carnivore keto space who brought a very,
very honest and real discussion about how we look at blood lipid panels. It's an honest discussion
worth having. But if you look at the most long-term mechanistic randomized clinical trials about high levels
of saturated fat intake and high levels of cholesterol, not necessarily looking at the
subparticles, just high levels of blood cholesterol, whether you got like bang on HDL through the roof and like low as LDL. I've just been a little bit more mindful recently of my saturated fat intake
and just trying to be smart in the long run about how much red meat I'm eating and how much
saturated fat I'm intaking. And I think for a good six to eight years, I was eating unlimited amounts ad nauseum without any even remote attempt at buffering or managing it.
And that's something that I've changed a little bit on and gone from what I would say is like fitness industry fringe.
Oh, we're out in front of this because we get the labs and i've i've gone back to the
you know maybe the cardiologists were right about the cardiology stuff and maybe the bros were wrong
about the cardiology stuff yeah i was full-blown keto for a long like i did a keto experiment and
i was like i'll just do it for a couple of months.
And I got in deep and was like really starting to like consume some of the fringe content.
And my LDL was like 290 at some point.
It was wild, wild high, like very close to this.
Like people.
And the funny part is like it's a point of, you know, it's one of those things where you're like uh contrarian to to sound
cool into you know polarizing and contrarian people were flexing how high they could make
their cholesterol go because it didn't matter because i'm you know whatever xyz other things
um there's there's the problem is with all these things there's shreds of truth and so things you
just said about like cdl is relevant some particles are relevant they are relevant but it is not
just said about like, GL is relevant. Some particles are relevant. They are relevant, but it is not making this not, it is not trumping the relevancy of, we see almost a linear scale of
all cars of cardiac events and LDL cholesterol. It's like literally still linear correlation here.
Um, even accounting for a lot of that stuff. And so, yeah, there's, I'm with you on that. I love
that too. Totally something that maybe hasn't changed the way I've been eating, but certainly
the way I've been communicating that if I look not that i'm a doctor but if i
check a client's labs it will be a discussion that i will ask what their doctor's discussion
has been with this stuff and that might be just a two cents that i would throw in for sure yeah
i just got admittedly lazy about it and i just you know it was like easier to i heard good
shit about yeah my fucking stuff's good don't't worry about it. And it's like,
it is, but it isn't. And the people that are saying it is juxtaposed against the people that
are saying isn't, if I were to lean into that, it would not be an evidence-based decision.
It would be an ideological one. And so I, I, I've really
pivoted off of that. What about you? You have anything specific in the nutrition space that
you've really changed on? Yeah. Protein requirements. And funny enough, the guys
at Stronger By Science just reviewed the, I think it's the Morton and colleagues paper that,
that looks at, you know, like again, same thing with this, like 10 to 20 sets per muscle group
a week. It's like this one study that was admittedly, as far as high quality goes, it's an unbelievable study.
As far as I think it's a systematic review of meta-analyses. It's like talking about top of
the pyramid stuff. Um, and came to this conclusion that, that if you, if we looked at, you know,
benefits in terms of lean body mass accretion that at roughly 1.6 grams per kilogram of body weight,
below that, we start to see a drop off above that. Um, we start to see diminishing returns.
So it was almost like this, like get your clients to this spot because, uh, you know,
maybe you could encourage a smidge above that if they like it, but getting here is an evidence
based defensible position of like, you're checking almost all the boxes, but below that number,
you're missing out yeah and if
you ask any fitness influencer coach whatever that's the number they get point 1.6 grams per
kg up to 2.2 grams per kg which is roughly 0.77 grams per pound up to one gram per pound um and
me too that's what i say i usually i usually you know for the longest time it's like 0.8 grams per
pound to 1.2 grams per pound and for for a while i started to be a little bit skeptical of that just in my own viewing of like um just some anecdotes with
clients and recently um just this idea that i have some clients who are fucking super jacked and
adhere really well and have made amazing strength and muscle gains unless and there's been many
years of that happening where the training stimulus like if you
had to correlate which you might you know whatever it's just one sample size here just totally my
lived experience but like you had to correlate which clients i think are like have gotten more
have gained more muscle have made more body composition changes it won't scale linearly
like who eats more protein yeah there are it'll be like who's lifting harder whose training's in
check who's sleeping more whose calories are in check, genetic factors.
And so recently, the guys at Stronger by Science re-looked at that Morton and colleagues paper and kind of just like took out one study and was like, take out this one study that, again, you can't just fucking do that if you want.
But it was on the cusp of being an outlier.
And they did like an all but one analysis where they were taking out each study and kind of looking at if that changed the summation of the data and the trend line. And it just like, it's so funny
because I watched on YouTube and they put a plot of all the studies. So they were basically on the,
on the Y axis was like how much lean body mass gain and on the X axis was how much protein intake.
And they plotted all the studies. And if you just look at that, it's not compelling. You look at the
dots on the graph and you're like, this that it's not compelling you look at the the the
dots on the graph and you're like this doesn't look to me like all of a sudden like i need to
be super hard lined about a 1.6 gram per kg this looks like there's not a big drop off across the
board here and then they took out this one study and it kind of reshaped that nothing again not
that you can just pluck out one study but in so, taking out this one almost outlier, it really looked like it was closer to this 1.2 grams per kg, where we see from there up is
a big diminishing return.
And from there down might be some missed gains.
And I think that that's, we don't need to have a whole podcast on that, but I think
that that's really encouraging for people who don't love a ton of protein and we're
feeling really bad about it.
I love that. And if you talk to anybody who works with clients on their nutrition and you're trying
to identify common themes of struggle, you probably run into eating enough protein as being
one of those common themes. And so if you're able to increase the acceptable range, particularly bringing the top end down a bit, gosh, it can really put a client in a position to feel like they're doing better from the jump.
Because if you get somebody, like let's say they're a 150-pound female and you're like, I'd like you to eat a gram per pound of body weight, and they were eating 75 grams a day, That is a really big jump. But if you're like,
I'd actually be totally cool if you could just get it to 100. And like, oh shit, okay, I can do that.
And then maybe they can scale it up from 100 to 125. And you could be like, do you feel any better?
Do you feel any differently? Are you recovering differently? To me, this just expands the range
of what's acceptable. It gives me less to be anxious about, gives my clients greater opportunity to succeed, which is phenomenal. And if you assume that not all
proteins are created equal, some have more leucine than others, it's pretty sensible that if you were
to eat, let's say you ate, instead of 0.7, you ate 0.55 from extremely leucine rich foods and somebody else ate 0.9 from extremely
leucine devoid foods, it might seem equivalent, if not better gains, so to speak, from the foods
that are higher in leucine. So if you're eating protein of high quality and you're getting
somewhere between a gram per pound of body weight all the
way down to a little over half your body weight, slightly more, take a little bit of some stress
off your plate. I know a lot of people who have a really hard time hitting those 0.7 thresholds
just because of dietary preference and pattern. So that stuff's huge. And, and I, I, I didn't watch that podcast.
I listened to it. So, um, you know, I, I think that's great, man. And, and I think that's a
good place to probably wrap it, huh? Sir. So where can they find you, buddy?
Uh, Instagram's a good spot. Uh, podcast is a good spot. Um, yeah, that's about it. Jordan
lips fitness on Instagram where optimal meets practical is my podcast. You can find everything. Instagram's a good spot. If you have a question, shoot me a DM, ask's about it. Jordan lifts fitness on Instagram where optimal meets practical
is my podcast. You can find everything. Instagram is a good spot. If you have a question, shoot me
a DM, ask me a question. There's good. Yeah, guys, Jordan is one of the good guys. Somebody
who I learned a lot from somebody I enjoy bantering with talking to, uh, you know,
relationships in the fitness industry are oftentimes challenging to foster because it's
such a competitive space, but, uh, Jordan's just one of the good dudes out
there. And I really encourage you to follow him, join his group programs, uh, you know,
join his coaching programs. He he's a guy that I really trust. So, uh, give him a follow,
check out his pod and we'll be sure to catch up again soon, man. Thank you.