Dynamic Dialogue with Danny Matranga - 254 Q & A: How long between rest days, "natty or not", fat loss with ONLY weights?
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Hey, everybody. Welcome into another episode, the Dynamic Dialogue podcast. As always,
I'm your host, Danny Matranga, and this is our very first question and answer episode of the year, our first Q&A of 2023. I love doing these Q&A episodes because it gives me the best opportunity
to interact with you, the listener of this podcast, and those of you who choose to follow
me on my various social media platforms. It makes sense, of course, to plug those here.
You can follow me on Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube. All you need to do is search for
Danny Matranga. I also have a Facebook page and you'll find this
podcast, the Dynamic Dialogue podcast, where we discuss fitness, nutrition, wellness, longevity,
productivity, and life optimization. Pretty much anywhere you'll find podcasts, but the majority
of our listens come, of course, on Spotify and Apple podcasts. If you'd like to have a question of yours featured
here on the podcast, it's actually quite simple. You can leave a rating or review that includes
your question. If you leave a five-star rating and review that includes your question, you will
guaranteed have it answered here. Additionally, on my Instagram, that tends to be the platform I
spend the most time on, it is a little less toxic than Twitter, where you can also find me. And I'm just kind of burnt out
on Facebook, not a huge fan of TikTok. And I do actually quite like YouTube. But if you want to
have your question answered on the podcast, go to danny.matranga on Instagram, be sure to follow,
pay attention to my stories. And at least once per week, I try to pull questions
directly from my audience over on Instagram. And again, if you want me to answer it specifically
here on the podcast, you can guarantee that by having a five-star rating and review written
on Apple Podcasts, that is the easiest place for me to find them.
We have a variety of great questions today, ranging from mental health, physical health, fat loss,
performance habits in the new year. You guys are going to like this one a lot. As I was looking
through the questions in advance of these episodes, uh, to put it in perspective, I will
like screenshot these from Instagram to make sure that I don't lose them. And then I'll throw them
up in notes on my iPhone and I'll pull them from my iPhone before recording to see which ones make
sense to answer. And I usually answer several more just off the cuff to make sure that I'm one
touching base with as many of you as possible. And then two, I want this to be an authentic,
non-scripted opportunity to provide fitness advice, health advice, performance advice,
productivity advice to you the way I do my personal training and
mentorship clients. So I hope you guys do enjoy the episode today. We will start off with a
question from Pam Baldassari. And the question is, is it okay to work out four to five days in a row?
So on the podcast, we've discussed the various training splits that an individual might engage
with total body training splits, upper lower training splits, push pull leg training splits that an individual might engage with, total body training splits,
upper-lower training splits, push-pull leg training splits, individualized training splits.
And more generally, those are going to be chosen by a lifter based on how many days a week they can train. And it is very rare that you find somebody who is capable of training seven days
per week. But let's say you can train five, six, seven days a week. Does it make sense
to do four to five sessions consecutively? Or should you have a rest day in there somewhere?
I would say more often than not, you want to take a day away from weights every three to four days
at the most. Right now, I'm training Saturday and Sunday when I take Monday off. Then I train Tuesday, Thursday, Friday.
Then I would train Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, taking Friday off.
So I don't work out Monday, Friday.
So I will train two days in a row off day, three days in a row off day.
On occasion, I will train Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, take Friday off.
That would be four days in a row.
I almost never do five anymore, but what I will tell you is I think it's okay, but I don't think
it's optimal for most people. And I think when you are training very hard, having a 24 hour break
away from hard resistance training to allow your central nervous system, joints, mental well-being to kind of recover and
bounce back from the hard training, you'll be okay. I think five days in a row is more than okay
if you have the volume allocated appropriately. That's important too. So for our elite physique
training app, we do Monday through Friday programming. Now the group has the ability
to move it around and I'd imagine that most of the girls in that group do. But that programming is split up and set up in such a way
that you can train five days a week or five days in a row, taking the weekends off. I believe that
women tend to be more tolerant to consecutive training sessions than do men. I also believe
they tend to generally recover better from higher volumes, but they don't do
well, the harder the intensity and the greater the proximity is to failure there. So that's
something that I think is worth considering. Yes, you can do it. The split in the routine have to
be really thoughtful and well-planned out. If you are going to do it, if you'd like to train four
to five days consecutively, I think you'll have absolutely no problem doing that if you follow
something like the Elite Physique app or get coaching or you really keep your volume low.
But if you're going to just go to the gym in the new year and go ham, which I think is worth
noting because of the time of recording of this podcast, four to five consecutive days is going
to probably be counterproductive. All right, this question comes from Kat Farinac. Great question here about supplements and fat loss. It's, should you take
creatine in a calorie deficit if you are cutting? So it's important to note there that cutting is
generally a bodybuilding terminology or phrase, or it's a phrase born out of the bodybuilding
subculture specific to cutting away at fat to
reveal physique. If you are in a deficit, you are in all likelihood doing this with the goal of fat
loss. So you could in fact say you're cutting, if you're not preparing for a bodybuilding show and
you don't want to refer to your fat loss efforts as cutting, you can just say, I'm looking to lose
body fat or I'm looking to be in a deficit. So this person's asking if they should take creatine if their goal is to lose body fat.
And they're using the phrase cutting.
So I'm going to also assume they want to hold on to as much muscle as possible.
In that context, I'd say you should be taking creatine almost assuredly.
Because when your energy is restricted and you're not eating as much and you're training hard,
it becomes substantially easier to be deficient in nutrients that are important for muscle preservation, specifically
protein. Now, if you are mindful of your protein intake, you will preserve a good amount of muscle,
but this is where the trade-off comes in and the creatine really becomes important.
You'll probably be making sacrifices and concessions around your carbohydrate and
fat intake level to create the deficit.
And carbohydrate specifically is really important for training intensity and muscle preservation.
We call that protein sparing.
Creatine helps with both of those things.
Creatine will help improve workout quality, and it will definitely help you retain muscle
whilst in a deficit.
So if you have a athletic goal or a physique-based goal and you're losing body fat for aesthetics or for performance, I would supplement with creatine. If you're not weight training and you are just trying to lose body fat and you are not in a situation where you take a lot of supplements, I still think considering creatine makes a lot of sense. very valuable for anyone with an exercise-specific goal, and the emerging literature showing it
to be beneficial for long-term brain health, at least to me, is really exciting.
So if you have healthy kidneys, you're an otherwise healthy adult,
you've cleared this with your physician, I think you can take creatine at almost any point.
I've even talked to Dr. Darren Kandao about creatine specifically on
this podcast. And we discussed creatine safety profile being so robust that you might even
consider it for pregnant or breastfeeding women. It's at least considerable. This is not a
recommendation. I am not a physician. I'm merely speaking to the safety profile of creatine,
highlighting how robust and impressive
that safety profile is. And when you look at the benefits and weigh them against the trade-offs,
I think for anybody who's doing anything athletic or who wants to maintain muscle
and strength across the lifespan, or who is interested in optimizing brain health
and cognitive performance, creatine should be something you consider.
brain health and cognitive performance, creatine should be something you consider.
The primary demographic for whom creatine does not make a lot of sense is going to be individuals who have kidney specific issues because the kidneys do have to work to clear various metabolites in
the body, creatine and creatinine being one of them. So it's just oh so safe, very, very effective.
And when energy is at a premium and you're dieting and you're training and your goal is holding on
to muscle, I cannot see why you would not want creatine. The one rationalization I can think of
is that there still remains this stigma around the fact that you will hold on to water weight.
And that is water in your muscles weight. You want to water
in your muscles if you're looking to diet and lose body fat, especially if you're calling it
cutting. I can assume that you're saying cutting because your goal is to have an aesthetic outcome
at the end. You want muscle fullness. You want muscles that look full and hydrated, and you'll
have a better opportunity of having that in a nutrient-depleted state if you're taking creatine. How much creatine should
you take? Well, generally I will recommend five grams per day for adults, but I have noticed over
the course of about six to seven years coaching and regularly prescribing clients creatine,
prescribing being a loosely used term here, I'm not a physician, that smaller women tend to be
able to tolerate less creatine before they start to see the rare, although most common side effect
of gastrointestinal distress. So for women who are more petite, smaller, or generally don't have
as much muscle tissue, you might want to start with two to three
grams a day and know that most of the creatine supplementation research has been done on men,
not necessarily something I'm willing to draw too many conclusions about. I'm not willing to say
it's not safe for women. It's obviously safe for women. There's a shitload of research on
creatine in women. There's more creatine in
women research than there is almost any other supplement. But my point is that clinically
effective dose of five grams is probably something that was standardized and reached on upon studying
normal weight men. So if you are a specifically smaller woman and you deal with gastrointestinal
distress when supplementing with creatine, start with two to three grams a day, start with capsules, spread them out. If you're somebody who's
generally a normal size, normal size woman, normal size man, you have a good amount of muscle,
you have no gastrointestinal distress when supplementing with creatine, I might recommend
just jumping right to Legion's Recharge, taking that post-workout so you can take advantage of
the mildly elevated creatine utilization and uptake that comes with that post-workout window.
I've heard many people talk about how it really doesn't matter when you take your creatine,
which I believe to be true. But if you are going to take it at some point, you get slightly better
uptake and utilization when taken post-workout because of, it might be myokines that are released from training.
It could be the GLUT4 sensitivity that's associated with that post-workout window,
especially if you're eating after you're training something with carbohydrates.
I don't know the exact mechanism behind why, but I've been taking my post-workout creatine,
my creatine post-workout when I do train and it works great. And I take Legion's Recharge. I love that it
contains L-carnitine because that can also really help with DOMS and Bonaba, which helps with uptake
of the creatine. And it also has five grams of micronized creatine monohydrate, which is what
you want. All right, next question. This one comes from Nico Karts. And the question is,
This one comes from Nico Karts. And the question is, can you lose fat by just resistance training?
So the answer to this question is yes. And it comes down to understanding that it's not exercise specifically that enhances or predicts or is required for fat loss. It's the deficit that
you are in and the intensity of that deficit usually
gets greater the more you do cardio and the more you exercise. But in theory, you can lose body fat
without exercising whatsoever so long as you're in a deficit. The higher protein that deficit is,
the more muscle you'll hold on to. The more you resistance train and stimulate your muscle,
the more muscle you'll hold on to. The more cardio you do, the greater the deficit will be in all likelihood because of the amount of caloric expenditure associated with
most cardio. You're going to burn calories when you do cardio. So it would make sense to exercise
if you're trying to lose body fat, specifically because exercise actually has an appetite
regulating effect. You might hear otherwise on the internet, but it has an appetite normalizing and regulating effect with most adults.
Exercise is not going to make you more hungry. It's not pointless when you exercise
and you try to lose fat. I heard a very popular podcast platform, somebody
recently who was making the claim that exercise when trying to lose body fat could be
counterproductive
because it increases appetite so much. And it's like, well, if you look at the
majority of the data, it shows an appetite normalizing effect. And for people who do
see a spike in appetite, if they're mindful of where those additional calories come from,
and they're making normal food selections for somebody who's looking to lose fat,
I don't see a problem there. So you can lose fat with just lifting weights so long as your food is tight and dialed. But if
you'd like to add cardiovascular exercise to burn more calories, you can expect to lose fat faster.
Okay. This question comes from Suriel Castillo. And the question is, what stuff can you take
and still be considered natty? So this is a bodybuilding
slash physique focus question. And it begs the question for those of you who aren't initiated,
what does the term natty mean? So the term natty refers to natural or a natural athlete.
A natty athlete would be an athlete who is using substances that are perhaps performance enhancing.
This could be caffeine. This could be electrolytes. This could be creatine. But they are explicitly
not drug-related ergogenic aids. They are not injectable or hormonal in any capacity.
They are non-steroidal, nor do they represent something that could be considered a form of
doping like EPO or erythropoietin. What we're talking about when we say natty athletes or
natural bodybuilders, we're usually talking about regular resistance training athletes
who might take vitamins, fish oil, even creatine, which has a performance enhancing effect,
even caffeine, which has a performance enhancing effect, but they are explicitly staying away
from hormones that have the potential to adjust your physiology. This could be obviously
testosterone and various anabolic steroids. This could even be things like growth hormone. This
could be things like insulin,
right? There are even certain stimulants that are so powerful, like Adderall, that they can be
considered performance enhancing. Okay. I think you get the picture. So a natural athlete or what
you can take and stay natty is everything, in my opinion, below the lines of shit that adjusts your hormones. There is a gray area around things like SARMs or prohormones. And I would say that you can't
take those and be natural because they are explicitly either with, in the case of prohormones,
you're taking them as something that's illegal to sell and they are metabolized into the desired
steroid in the body, but they're not the desired steroid
upon purchase. And SARM, selective androgen receptor modulators, are so rife with fraud,
oftentimes the products actually do contain real steroids or real performance enhancing drugs,
and if not, they are selective androgen receptor modulators, meaning they're actually binding to
the androgen receptor and modulating or changing're actually binding to the androgen receptor and
modulating or changing the way it behaves in the body. That doesn't seem very natural to me.
If you want to be natty and get the most out of your lifting, I would definitely start with
creatine and I'd go from there. 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 way 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.
What's going on, guys? Coach Danny here,
taking a break from the episode to tell you about my coaching company, Core Coaching Method,
and more specifically, our one-on-one fully tailored online 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
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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, everybody, but I have a favor to ask you. If you're a regular listener or somebody
who gets value out of this podcast, somebody who's learning from me on your health and fitness
journey, whether you're a trainer, a high-level athlete, or you're just getting
started, other people need this kind of advice. And the best way for you to help me grow the
podcast is to take a little bit of time, literally one to two minutes max, to leave a rating and
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a short one to two sentence blurb about what you like, not only will it help more people reach the
podcast, it will help me to continue to refine what it is I bring you each and every week. Thanks so much for doing this. It means the world to me.
It helps me achieve my dream of helping more people live a healthier life. Enjoy the episode.
This question comes from Adelka Stone. And the question is, does bouldering,
that's rock climbing, build muscle similarly to weightlifting? So you can
definitely build an impressive physique with rock climbing, specifically forearms, upper back, arms,
biceps, and core. It doesn't work your legs in a way that would be enough to develop them in
synergy with your upper body. You will always probably develop your upper body more,
but it does challenge them. You'll have strong legs. You'll have great dexterity. If your goal is bodybuilding or developing as much muscle
as possible, rock climbing is actually a pretty bad choice. The stimulus to fatigue ratio is
terrible, meaning it's an incredibly fatiguing sport, which doesn't have a super direct stimulus
for muscle growth. You will build muscle. But the
amount of time you would have to apply to bouldering and rock climbing to get good enough
and actually do it long enough to cultivate muscle would be less efficient than something
like exercising in the weight room, doing resistance training or powerlifting.
Okay. This question comes from Ryan G. Moore. And the question is any programming for Brazilian jujitsu? So core coaching method,
my fitness coaching company offers obviously one-on-one coaching. We have app-based programming
for those of you training at home and for women who want to develop their best physique at the
gym. But we also have a variety of PDFs and eBooks, including Foundations and Power Build.
Foundations is a fantastic program that I see as a superior alternative to CrossFit
with a big focus on stability, aerobic base, and power.
And Power Build is a hybrid powerlifting slash bodybuilding program.
Both of those would probably be nice to do in conjunction with Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.
Next question. This is a nutrition question I quite like from Jeff Starmer1, and the question
is, on rest days, should you drink a protein shake, or is it better to drink one after a
workout? So I see what's going on here. I understand the calculus. It's, do I need the same amount of protein on the days I'm not exercising as the
days that I am? And we've created the greatest gap here between the immediate post-workout window
and a day where you're doing nothing. And the truth is, you should look at your protein intake
as a kind of daily thing. And you should look at your protein shakes as an opportunity to help you
get them efficiently like a food. But there's nothing magical about a post-workout protein
shake in the same way that there's nothing magical about like a non-training day ribeye.
It's all protein. The nice thing about the shake is it's fast to digest and it's easy to make.
So that might make it easy to take it with you on a day that you're going to
the gym and have it post-workout. But it doesn't mean that it can't be equally convenient on a day
that you're not training, but maybe you're walking around Disneyland and you want to have 50 grams of
protein to start your day because you know there's not a lot of protein-packed options in the park.
A protein shake is an easy-to-use tool that can help you get more protein. And if you want to
build your best physique, you want to. And if you want to build your best
physique, you want to stay lean, you want to be relatively well muscled as you age,
you want to be productive and strong, you need protein. So a protein shake can be a really
efficient and a fast way to provide your body with a very important macronutrient.
And I wouldn't look too much more into it than that. Yes, you definitely want to get protein if you are training.
And if you're not eating enough protein each day,
getting some around your training makes even more sense.
But you should definitely focus on getting enough protein overall
before you stress too much about when it is that you get that protein.
All right, we've got another nutrition timing question from
Dodge City Gal. The question is, what are your thoughts on eating before lifting? I find a two
hour window of no food before works, but I feel weak. So I have a few opinions and I'll give you
a few scenarios. I train in the morning fasted. That works really well for me because if I wake up and get immediately into training,
I cannot have a ton of food in my stomach. If I have something really that sits heavy like oatmeal,
I can run into some trouble. So if I'm going to train in the morning, I will have water,
electrolytes. If I need carbs or didn't have a lot of carbs for dinner, I will have a banana.
Now, mind you guys, you have glycogen in your muscle tissues,
300 to 400 grams of glycogen between the muscle tissues and the liver. So that's enough carbohydrate
right there, even to train fasted. Okay. But if you are training in the middle of the day,
it's never a bad idea to have a little bit of fuel before you train. And a 90 to 120 minute window,
one and a half to two hours is a great opportunity. You know, one and a half
to two hours before you train, if you're training in the mid morning, afternoon, or evening,
you can have a food or a meal that contains a mix of different carbohydrates, particularly glucose
and fructose, and a little bit of protein. You don't want a ton of fat or a ton of oil or a ton
of spice or a ton of fiber because
all of those things can cause gastrointestinal distress.
They can slow gastric emptying and they can just generally bog down digestion, leaving
you with a heavy feeling in your stomach, oatmeal.
Okay.
No fat, not spicy, not oily, but it has enough fiber that its motility through the gastrointestinal
track is sluggish. So you can
oftentimes feel a little heavy. I like to focus on foods that are light. A good example of which
could be a scoop of protein or a Greek yogurt, something that both are very high in protein,
with a bowl of Rice Krispies and sliced strawberries or sliced bananas, fruits that do contain a little bit of
fiber, but not a ton. And then a really simple form of carbohydrates. So you're getting that
glucose from the carbohydrate in the rice cereal and the fructose from the fruit choice and the
protein from the quick options on the go, like a shake or a yogurt cup. Both of that same meal
could go fantastic post-workout as well. I think that's
worth bringing up. But if you are feeling weak while you're training and you are eating before,
you might try eating a little closer. You might try hydrating. You might try caffeinating. You
might try supplementing with electrolytes. That can be really, really valuable if you're feeling
your energy waning. So that's how I would approach
eating around training. But I also think it's important that your weakness be sourced out.
It doesn't seem like it could be food related, could be training competency related, could be
hydration related, could be general fatigue related. So I would try to explore and try a
few different things. This question comes from Renz Fit Kitsch.
Question is, does carb cycling work or does it really matter if calories are equal? So the truth
is for fat loss, it doesn't matter if calories are equal, but that doesn't mean carb cycling
doesn't work. Carb cycling is a really good tool for people to maintain a carbohydrate intake on
a few days of the week that's more consistent with how they'd like to eat while making some
concessions on the other days of the week to eat a little bit less.
It's kind of a trade-off approach. The deficit over the course of the week could, believe it or
not, actually end up being the exact same duration or the exact same length from a time perspective,
like, hey, it's seven days, 500 calories a day in my deficit, and that's going
to be 3,500 at the end of the week. But somebody else could say, yo, I have two high carb days where
I'm not in a deficit at all, but the other days are more steep. You add it all up, we still get
to that 3,500 figure. So it really comes down to, do you do better with that kind of carbohydrate
availability being higher a few days a week? Maybe it's the day before you train legs or the day that you do train legs. Makes a lot of sense to me.
Doesn't necessarily have to go, like you don't have to do carb cycling to lose weight.
And I do think for most people, it's a good idea to lower your carbohydrate intake a little bit
and probably lower your fat intake a little bit while keeping your protein intake high,
aiming to stay hydrated and aiming to load up on fiber. All right. Interesting question here from nalt.diane. And I'm going to
give you an interesting answer. Question is, is it more beneficial for fat loss to eat animal-based
protein for breakfast versus protein shakes? Okay. So here's the shocker answer. It's definitely
animal proteins, but not for the
reason you think. Truth is, the protein is probably going to be of equivalent quality.
If we're talking about a whey protein shake, a nice quality vegan protein shake blend of
different plant profiles that give you a nice rounding of amino acids. But the reason that
the animal protein is top of the list actually has to do with the fact that you chew it, you eat it. It takes longer to digest than a protein shake,
which is in large part already digested by the time you start drinking it. So remember guys,
mastication, not masturbation, mastication or chewing is a physiological, there's a line, so to speak, between the brain
and your appetite and your satiety and your decisions around food all the way down to
mastication. Your brain gets something. It gets a signal. It gets an input when you start chewing.
It gets an input that food is at least present. And when it's able to detect other signals like taste and the actual
sensation of peristalsis or food moving down the food tube into the stomach, your brain is getting
that feedback. So calorie per calorie, you're probably going to get more out of something you have to chew.
And then there's also the volume of the food versus the volume of the fluid.
And if you're eating your protein, the volume effect is probably going to be a little bit
more than that of something you're simply drinking because you could drink the equivalent
amount of water with that protein and get a much greater effect than just drinking a protein shake.
So I would opt for that because if fat loss is your goal, staying full and feeling satiated and
not battling hunger is very, very important. Okay. Next question comes from Jasmine CBL. She's asking, what are the best protein options? So
there's a lot of different foods that are high in protein and many of you will consume animal
proteins. But for those of you that won't, who are vegan or vegetarian, I think it's important to
know that there are a variety of foods you can eat that are high in protein, right? Tofu is extremely
high in protein. There are a variety of plant-based protein shakes that contain brown rice protein.
Of course, brown rice has protein. Pea protein, of course, edamame, peas and beans have protein.
A lot of times you'll see potato proteins, but there are plant-based protein blends on the market
that are quite, quite effective at providing a good
amount of protein. I like Legion's Plant Plus. It's excellent. I already mentioned edamame,
tempeh, quinoa, brown rice, lentils, beans. These are all different sources of plant-based protein. There are vegetarians who eat some animal product like eggs, dairy, yogurt, cheese. Those
are good options. For those of you who eat, of course, meat, starting with red meat, steaks,
ground meats can be good options, as well as cured meats like jerky, which are great to go on the go.
You do want to be cognizant of your processed meat consumption. You do want to be cognizant
of your saturated fat consumption, obviously poultry or fowl like chicken or Turkey.
And then of course the various fish, salmon, tuna, tilapia, shellfish like shrimp are great with regards to getting a high amount of protein.
So there's a lot of different protein options.
The most efficient, effective, and convenient a lot of times is a protein shake.
I'm hugely impartial to a whey protein shake, which is made from dairy.
which is made from dairy. So whey is actually made from, when you're making cheese, you separate the curds, the cheese curds from the whey, and the whey is actually filtered out and oftentimes
sold as a nutritional supplement. So whey protein is fantastic. I like Legion's Whey Plus,
and I think those are probably the best places from which you can source your protein.
All right, this question comes from Athena12. Question is how much water do you drink on a
daily basis? I aim for about half my body weight in ounces of pure water per day. I usually get
close to a hundred to 120 ounces, which is right around that point, probably a little over.
And we recommend at core coaching method for our clients that they aim for that same half
a ounce per pound of body weight. Okay. Question from Abbylicious30. Have I heard of 75 hard?
If so, what are my thoughts? So I think during the new year, you'll always see a huge influx
of people looking to do things like 75 hard, which is a 75 day
challenge that asks for some pretty extreme, but largely beneficial behavioral changes like daily
exercise once inside, once outside, following a diet of some kind and engaging in personal
development tasks like reading, all of which I think are fabulous habits.
And if I felt that 75 hard had any remote opportunity of getting stuck to by the average
person, I'd recommend it more often. But the truth is that shit works better for somebody like me,
who's already very disciplined, who's already got a great routine, who doesn't have a bunch
of kids running around, who doesn't have a ton of extracurricular commitments outside of work and relationships. I keep my schedule
pretty open to create space for personal development, to create space for following
a strict nutrient-dense diet, to create space for exercise. I encourage you guys to do this
as well. But 75 Hard, quite quite literally is a protocol that's more
intense than anything I do as a 10 year seriously invested exerciser, nutrient and nutrition
enthusiast, uh, productivity enthusiast, personal growth enthusiast, right? So my point is, do I
think you should do this in the new year? Uh, I don't want to say no, because I would never
want to discourage somebody from reading daily, from eating well, from exercising twice daily.
But I would warn you that it is extremely difficult and most people fail. And if you're
really resilient to failure, go for it. But if you're not and you're going to fuck it up and
frame it as like, oh, I just can't do these things. Don't. Maybe try to go
three days in a row and maybe break 75 hard up into like 25 challenging three-day sprints.
And hopefully over time, you actually pull these habits out. I mean, yes, you want to get a streak
going. You want to form a habit. I can understand that it would be difficult to form a habit
without doing a considerable number of days consistently. I just believe 75 hard to be a
bit too extreme for most people. The way that most people look at engaging in all of these
different habits all at once, it's very daunting and it can be very overwhelming. Okay. This
question is from Jen dot LK, how to shift training for multiple sports,
love lifting, but have to run for work. So running is a little bit different, but then like multiple sports. But the truth is like most lifting doesn't include movements in the
frontal plane or the transverse plane, which would be the plane extending laterally from the body
and the plane dividing the body in half rotationally. So do you do anything side to side?
Do you rotate? Probably not. So do more do anything side to side? Do you rotate?
Probably not. So do more of that shit. If you're going to play sports for sure, do some low level
plyos, pogos and hops. And if you want to get better at running, you have got to run. All right,
guys, that does it for the first part of this Q and a episode. I'm actually going to be recording
a second part of the episode. So stay tuned for that. That'll be coming later in the week. I want
to thank you all so much for tuning in and tell you that I will catch you on the next one.