Dynamic Dialogue with Danny Matranga - ENCORE: Nutrition, Veganism and Obesity with Eric Helms Ph.D
Episode Date: July 15, 2022Support the Show....
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Hey everybody, welcome into another episode of the Dynamic Dialogue podcast. I'm your host,
Danny Matranga, and today's episode is an encore interview that I did about a year back with Dr.
Eric Helms. Eric Helms is one of the co-founders of Mass Monthly Applications in Sports Science.
He's also a fitness content creator who has put as much evidence-based, high-quality,
applicable natural bodybuilding and body composition out there into
the fitness ethos of anybody I know. Eric is a total badass. He's super, super awesome when it
comes to explaining things in a way that's easy to understand. And we talk about a variety of
really cool topics in this episode. So I wanted to reshare it with you while I finish up moving
from one house to another. I will eventually get back to more consistent regular uploads,
but I wanted to thank you guys for sticking with me and give you some fresh, re-edited content that I know
you'll love. Sit back and enjoy today's talk with Dr. Eric Helms. Hey guys, welcome back to another
episode of the Dynamic Dialogues podcast. Today, we get to sit down with one of my favorite people in the space, Dr. Eric Helms.
And not for the reasons you might think.
Yes, Dr. Helms is an incredibly established, accomplished physical culturist, professional bodybuilder, competent powerlifter, Olympic lifter, PhD in strength and conditioning.
Very, very smart human being.
But today, we're talking all things nutrition, but not just nutrition. We're
talking big time topics. We're talking obesity, plant-based dieting, even nutrition during COVID-19
and how to communicate effectively with others about nutrition. In a space that's become really
politicized and overloaded with dietary dogma, the ability to communicate clearly is important,
but not just communicate
clearly, communicate in a way that people are receptive to and that will hopefully help them
change because that's what we all want as coaches. And hopefully if you're just a fitness enthusiast
listening, which most of you are, you will learn a lot about how to communicate to friends and
loved ones if they're willing to listen. So give this one a listen.
It's a great chat with Dr. Eric Helms and I couldn't be happier with how it turned out.
Have a good day and enjoy the podcast with Eric Helms. So Eric, how's it going, man?
Doing really well. I guess all things considered, you know, so trying to make the best of a less
than ideal situation, but trying to do my part
so yeah man how about you same same making uh making the most of the time i've been spending
more time creating digital content because i'm away from some of my in-person clients kind of
continuing to enrich the virtual client relationships i have even doing some stuff on
zoom but mostly trying to, um, create content
like this, which is why I reached out to you actually, I think before this happened, but it
ended up working out perfect because, uh, we're going to weave a lot of what people are going
through now, hopefully into the, the, uh, the focus of today's discussion anyway. So it'll be
nice and very applicable. So for those of you guys who don't know much about Eric, Eric is somebody who I've been following the space for
quite some time. He's a PhD. He's also a professional bodybuilder, but he's one of the
people in the space who I think does the best job of communicating nutrition and training strategies in a way that's very, I guess you
could say, people would be more receptive to. A lot of people are very emotional, dogmatic,
and they pick sides which can shut people down. And I think that you do a tremendous job of
kind of conveying what it is that you're trying to say in a way that I think people are very
receptive to. So that's why I kind of chose to bring you on to talk about some of these potentially
more tender topics. But for those of you who don't know Eric, that's kind of a little bit about
him, but I'll let him expand more on what he's doing, what his kind of road to where he is now
is, and then we'll dive into it. Yeah, that's one of the better compliments I've had is someone who fashions himself or
takes on the mantle of trying to communicate science.
It's, I would say it's more important in many cases in the science itself to be able
to communicate in a human way and respecting the people listening rather than coming across as condescending or
assumptive or really exclusionary, which I think comes across if you don't communicate correctly,
intended or not. So anyway, my whole thing is I'm just a dude who loves to lift and loves to train.
And that has become an expression in every aspect of my life, whether
that's my education, my career, my businesses I've started, and the partnerships I've formed
to my own personal physical expression. And I would even go as far to say the way I connect
and my quote-unquote spiritual connection with the world myself and people I care about.
So yeah, there's creative elements, there's intellectual elements, there's physical elements,
and it is the way I put food on the table, which we're going to be discussing a lot about, the food on the table.
So kind of a little bit about all that, essentially what I do today on paper.
If it was to give you the virtual CV, I'm a research fellow here at the Auckland University of Technology which is in New Zealand
and our biggest city of Auckland and I came out here in 2012 to do the research portions of my
extended education so I did my master's thesis here and then my PhD, specifically looking at topics relevant to
strength and physique athletes. So I'm very much a, what I call myself is a sports scientist in
the realm of strength and physique sport with a specific focus on helping people have a sustainable
career with their sport. And sustainable, I don't mean like making sure they drive a Prius to the
gym. I mean, having a relationship with the sport or with their fitness pursuit, that is something
that enriches them in the long term rather than burns them out or causes problems. So I've
actually got a lot of interest in the psychology of eating, body image, and things that can often, unfortunately, come with the
pursuit of sport and fitness. And that's kind of our vein in coaching with 3D Muscle Journey. We
take a holistic approach. We want people to compete as a master's three if they desire to
do so rather than burning out to junior or in the open and having kind of the sour grapes experience with the iron.
And then as far as science communication, I have books that are written about training
and nutrition.
My co-author is Andy Morgan, Andrew Valdez.
And I also work with someone you've also had on the podcast, Eric Trexler, along with Greg
Knuckles and Mike Zerdos on our monthly research review for strength and physique sport mass.
So that's kind of my deal. That's, that's, that's what I do and who I am.
Yeah. I think all of that really kind of speaks to how you developed from somebody who was probably
just a fitness enthusiast earlier in your career and actually a trainer, if I'm not mistaken,
you spent some time training, even educating trainers, and you're still doing quite a bit
of that with the projects that you have now.
The passion hasn't burned out at all.
And it actually, I think, shows quite a bit in the way you communicate that you spent
that early part of your career as a lifter and even a trainer in the way you communicate
to people.
You don't communicate exclusively like an academic, which I think is something that
is a lost art amongst people in academia to some respect.
You have the ability to condense things to the layman that maybe would fall through the cracks.
So I'm certain we will see quite a bit of that as we move into today's discussion about nutrition.
But the first thing I kind of want to talk about, and who better to ask than somebody who has dieted a tremendous amount for physique reasons, but where did the dieting industry as we know it kind of arise?
And not just dieting to get lean, but dieting as a social norm, something that was expected for,
you know, women to do. You got to be on a diet if you're not on a diet. You're, you know,
it's very much become a normal part of society, but I'm sure at one point it wasn't. Where did it emerge in and why did it
emerge? If you can expand on that. That's a great question. And I will first put a big old fat
disclaimer stamped on the screen that, you know, I grew up as a dude, I'm a dude, right? And I was actually a skinny dude. So I was very much and I was also
an only child. So I didn't have sisters. And I of course, I had a mother like, like most of us.
And I definitely am someone who likes to think I'm aware of other people's experiences and talks
them and all that. But I would say that my exposure to dieting
almost purely came as a consequence of competing as a bodybuilder, which for those who don't know,
it's not just about bodybuilding. You build your body and then it becomes a phasic period
of competitive starvation to maintain as much as what you built while being basically fat-free.
And there is a lot of potential psychological issues and physiological issues that can go along with that.
And that is what aware to me more to the reality.
And like you said, I was a trainer.
I was a personal trainer.
That was my first career after I got out of the Air Force.
So I did that until 2011.
until 2011. It was my 2012. Actually, it was when I finally completely stopped doing any in person coaching, shifted completely to online coaching of bodybuilders and powerlifters and lifting
enthusiasts online. But yeah, I was a trainer for about seven years in person. And then I spent
about a year and a half as a personal trainer educator in person, actually teaching them and
taking them to the gym and helping them through their certifications. And then also, you know, I still do that in various
forms online. But anyway, so that's the big disclaimer is that whatever I state, A, I'm not
a sociologist or an anthropologist, and B, my personal experience with this all came a lot
later in life, and it's not as ingrained. So I was able to be a little more conscious of my experience.
And I think the juxtaposition I had was someone who had pretty much a neutral relationship
with food and my body to then jumping into the world of bodybuilding and feeling those
pressures.
I could step outside of myself and really be aware of it.
But from my reading, my experience and conversing with other
people, that I think is very much not the case. Like, I took a cool course in my undergrad called
Women's History. And, of course, you know, having significant others in my life and being straight,
you know, having deep connections with my now my wife of 14 years. I think I've come to understand
both looking at historical documents and that experience,
that it's a deeply ingrained part of our, unfortunately,
part of our culture and many other cultures around the world of, you know,
don't let things go. You need to stay tight.
You need to look a certain way.
Social acceptance comes from meeting a certain body image norm.
So I think you could trace that back a long time.
And there are body image norms for men as well.
Don't get me wrong.
I would say they're probably not as pervasive or aggressively enforced.
And in the Western world, it's only changing recently.
We've actually seen a huge increase
in the number of eating disorders among men. So I think fortunately, not fortunately at all,
we're getting to experience a little more of what women are experiencing now through the joys of
Instagram. Like if you look at Luke Skywalker over the years, that's a really cool, like he
originally looks like just a guy holding a lightsaber.
And then he gets increasingly more muscular, smaller waist, broader shoulders.
And now he looks like a Mr. Olympia competitor.
Same thing with Superman, Batman, all of our toys.
While the history of, say, like Barbie started with having an impossibly small waist.
So I think there are some cultural factors that have been there.
There is a pressure to look a certain way. And therefore, that trickles into what you do with
your nutrition. Now, as far as why has dieting culture been like a thing or a place of authority
or while our clients get filtered into it, I think this came from the obesity epidemic.
obesity epidemic. And to see the world growing in terms of waistline and the lifestyle,
quote unquote, diseases that come from that, the rise of type 2 diabetes, you know, the fact that we start to see type 2 diabetes even happen in children, etc. I think there was this panicky
moment of, oh my God, like all hands on deck, starting in the eighties, we've got to get nutrition researchers to solve the obesity
epidemic. So I think if you combine these two factors, the, uh, the historical sociocultural
pressure to look a certain way with the rise of the obesity epidemic and the, the, the action
by the academic community and nutrition and public health to try to do something about it,
the rise of the personal trainer, all of a sudden now we have a whole industry dedicated to getting people to not gain weight
and ideally to lose weight ostensibly for health, but that tying into a lot of their body image, self-esteem, self-worth, self-efficacy.
Yeah, I think that's actually a fantastic point.
We choose to often be myopic with how we look at things,
and particularly obesity as being, even I'm guilty of this myself,
but a lot of us in the fitness space for parroting the move more, eat less,
just move more, eat less, when in fact much of this is quite multifactorial.
It's biological, oforial it's biological of course
it's sociological right going back to things like toys and action figures that were exposed to super
early on and how that can change the way we look at food dieting our own body image something that's
changed a lot with nutrition I've noticed in the last couple years in particular it's it's probably
bigger it's certainly bigger than nutrition.
You needn't look very far. Everything has become politicized. But there's certainly been
an increased politicization, if that's even the word, of nutrition. People seem to want to pick
sides. People seem to want to debate quite regularly about different aspects
of nutrition to the point of some people even calling it nutritional tribalism. Do you think
that this one actually clouds the waters? Do you think it's possible for this discourse to be
valuable? Or do you think that it actually damages the nutritional narrative and helping people find healthful ways of eating that are actually
adherable? Yeah, I think, for one, I think we just need to acknowledge that kind of the in-group,
out-group aspect of human sociology is just the way we operate.
And then it's a question of how much do we fan those flames or we make ourselves aware of it?
And what do we value in those groups?
It's kind of like, because it would be very easy to sit here
and just say, hey, the two-party system has been destroying America
for longer and longer and longer.
You know, the concept or, Hey, like, you know,
nutritional dogmatism has been causing all these issues.
And Hey, as soon as things become in group out group,
all of a sudden you're no longer trying to hear the other people and see that
as people you're trying to dehumanize them and look for a way to argue with
them. And all of this is very destructive.
But the answer is kind of like for anyone who's been on the planet a decent amount of time and started to see these in-group, out-group space kind of interactions that started.
I remember it in high school and before that.
It ain't going nowhere.
And old news.
We know that.
And speaking to the woes of that is kind of just like being just a pessimist saying well humans suck
and then leaving it there it's not very that that in and of itself is not very constructive it's
good to vent don't get me wrong um and uh and you know that that's it's definitely something we need
to be aware of but i think understanding that it probably won't change, but we can be aware of it and we can reward certain things and we can ironically kind of invert that situation.
Like the quote unquote evidence based community done right.
If we elevate rational skepticism and all elements of it philosophically to the highest level, it kind of like self combats that.
elements of it philosophically to the highest level, it kind of like self-combats that.
So rational skepticism being where we try not to use logical fallacies and some of those things like the principle of charity, like we hear the best version of what someone's saying.
And if we take on board the whole concept of Dunning-Kruger and that we can always be wrong,
that perception is inherently fallible, we can only know so much that should build in humility and respect almost across all
sectors and that we should be valued being correct more than value being right, if you
will.
So if like, like, for example, the evidence-based community absolutely is an in-group.
People will hashtag science, hashtag evidence-based, you know, treat me like I'm a guru, things
like that.
Even though I'm inherently saying don't have gurus, like, yeah, you're so smart for saying
that you're not that smart and that we're all fallible.
You know, it's like there's this endless loop of creating cults.
So it's not going to go away.
But if you have the right values within a group, it can lead to being as more facilitative
rather than debilitative.
So I think one of the reasons why we see what we see is human nature.
As to the question of is it useful or can it be useful,
only if those kind of things are in place,
and that creates a certain level of awareness.
I think you kind of have to get off the bus of saying, you know, we have the light and
the truth and we've come to proselytize and share. And that's difficult, especially like I would say
in America, a great example is politics. At some point in the last 20, 30, 40 years, you could argue
there was the acceptance of that this is a war. This is a culture war,
you know, whether you're on the quote, unquote, left, quote, unquote, right, which supposedly
represents, you know, 50% of the country versus the other. It's not about compromise or coming
together or finding a solution, which it necessarily must be in the two party system.
But rather, it's about we're going to suppress the other side because they are wrong. Every
political argument pretty much devolves into you're a bad person if you don't agree with me. And therefore,
you don't get to the same things I do, at least respect at the very least. And we're just going
to move ahead without you, whether you like it or not, because we have to fight in the truth.
And I'm going to purposely mishear what you say and paint it in the worst light possible, because
we need to win. So it's a means to an end. And I think that's a really, and I'm not trying to be political in
discussing that, but I think it's something that people on the right and the left would agree with.
They both feel this way, largely about the other side, you know, and feel that it's them doing it.
But I think if we could acknowledge that exists and that's a problem. And that's not been going well for us as a maybe not so much longer first world country with the way we're mishandling ourselves, that that's a kind of a nice example to see, oh, this happens in all aspects of life. And with nutrition, it's an interesting thing where, you know,
training is optional. You know, I would love it if everybody found some form of physical activity
they could express themselves through. But there are people who live their whole life as working
desk jobs, and maybe video gaming or whatever they do for recreation that requires them not to be
active in any way. That's not necessarily a healthy way to live, but you won't die.
If you do not eat at all, you will die.
So this is something that I think everyone engages with to some degree,
and therefore everyone feels a connection to.
And it is something that necessarily becomes moral for that reason,
because insert in the name of any culture and then you
think about rituals in a way of connecting celebrating and and signifying moments it has
a nutrition component you insert any culture with the word grandmother after it and you know they're
going to feed you you know you know and so food is how we celebrate birthdays, events.
We have it at funerals.
We have it at baby showers.
We have it at new getting a new job.
We have it when you leave, leave a job and go on.
We have going away parties.
It's how you sit down and connect with your family.
You know, you don't show up to family dinner.
There's something wrong with you.
You're a bad teenager, or overworking, you know, father, we can think of all the cultural means that we have,
so many of them are tied into nutrition. So I think the mistake we made with the obesity epidemic,
when it became an academic pursuit to find a solution to it, and that trickled down to the
quote, unquote, evidence based community was we were very much focused on, like you said, move more, eat less, right? Eat less, move more. And there's a huge difference between the literal physics way that things operate and what is a useful way to communicate a solution to a problem.
to communicate a solution to a problem. And that is where the disconnect is. And I think it comes down to taking a very, I would say, quantitative approach to something that has qualitative
cultural elements, emotional elements. And, you know, because food is such an integral part of
our society, that means it's going to have, on morality, politics, the environment, which therefore in the States at least gets politicized as well, etc., etc., etc.
So nutrition is a non-optional part of life. It in fact is the cycle of life in and of itself. And therefore, it gets wrapped up and built into everything about us. And I think it's very easy.
Um,
once we've seen it out of that context,
as this is the cause of the obesity epidemic and over nutrition,
I am a trainer.
I'm going to solve that.
Here's the literal solution is to have a higher calorie expenditure than you
have as an intake.
And I'm going to have,
you know,
solutions to,
to solve that you're operating outside of what the reality of
nutrition is for people trying to fix a problem in a vacuum and invariably
causing sometimes more harm than good.
And I think that's the root of the issue.
I agree.
I think that way in which we communicate things as an industry has perhaps
been less than ideal for the people who need to receive the message most.
And I can't help but go back to the political comparison,
because one of the most common phrases, particularly amongst people in my age group,
when it comes to politics, is, oh, dude, I don't talk politics.
That shit is too crazy. I just don't.
Like, I don't even want to go there.
That shit is too crazy. I just don't. I don't even want to go there. And I can't help but see a massive correlation in the way a lot of people look at nutrition. There's so much
clouding of the water. There's so many people who are very opinionative, very loud voices,
right? Even the same way that you've got people arguing on Facebook about political things,
you have people arguing about nutritional things. You have people arguing about nutritional
things and the people who probably most need to be educated on, you know, the bare bones political
system or the bare bones nutritional system, just throw their hands in the air and defeat because
it seems like the voices that are the loudest are clouding the water. So where would these people go?
And again, this is great for
coaches too, but where should people look if they just want to build a solid foundation of
understanding basic nutritional principles in a space that's become overwhelmed with,
you know, there's no shortage of diets you could look into or follow or YouTube videos you could
watch or podcasts you can listen to or gurus you could find, you know, where should they look first to build that base?
Yeah. And the good news is I think there's a lot more hope than there is in politics.
Yeah. I don't want to sound exceptionally pessimistic. I mean, we are in a unique
political situation here in America, but I'm much more optimistic and pragmatic about our nutritional future.
Same, or I wouldn't be involved at all.
Because the reward mechanisms for politics are such that you will purposely misunderstand other people to then paint them in a bad light to win.
And I think sometimes people get into those loops where they want to be right or they're digging their heels in, especially in public confrontations or your ego's on the line, et cetera, et cetera.
But there's not necessarily reward mechanisms in place in the same way.
So there is absolutely a chance for just one of two people interacting to be compassionate. And that almost diffuses almost, I can't tell you
how many times I've interacted online with someone who might align themselves with a specific
nutritional group. And because I carried myself in a way that was not trying to speak to them the
truth, correct them or whatever, but asking them, well, how is that working for you? What do you
think about this? You know, here's some information, hey, take it or leave it, you know, like, and even
taking a few steps back with what your question is, is getting down to how do we know what we know,
you know, and, you know, just them understanding that, that their anecdote may only apply to
themselves is sometimes as far as you can take it, but it's such an incredibly important
understanding for someone that, oh, hold on.
So someone else could be socially and physiologically different enough for me that me telling them
to do what I'm doing or using my system or the echo chamber that's created from other
people who, like me, have had the same experience.
And we just talk together and we've talked this into being the truth and the light for
all nutrition problems.
I could actually be hurting someone else.
If they just understand that, all of a sudden their language changes drastically,
and they go from being a missionary and a judger to someone say, hey, here's what worked for me.
Hopefully it's useful for you. And that's 100% fine. So where should someone go? I think
this is a great case for just some pure academic nutrition courses.
You will see it in certain academic courses, kind of the assumption that you're learning
nutrition for X reason with the obesity epidemic.
That's starting to change.
But I think just understanding like digestion, the energy content of foods, like not even,
I don't want to say the big bad word biochemistry, but nutritional biochemistry in its basic sense.
How do we generate energy?
What are the energy systems?
Which of the macronutrients do what?
There's a lot of really basic, straightforward stuff.
Then you can juxtapose that with any type of nutrition goal.
For example, the muscle and strength nutrition pyramids that I created are
that basic information in a prioritized hierarchical structure, but through the lens of
muscle, right? So someone who wants to get as much muscle as possible, improve body composition or
improve their physical performance, which changes the lens a bit, which is totally fine. Because
ultimately understanding kind of the basic biochemistry without it being
in the context of anything applied, uh, for a lot of people makes it very difficult from
the pay attention, understand, or put those concepts into something of use besides just
memorizing information.
So, um, yeah, there's, there's a ton of great online courses, uh, now that we're all kind
of on lockdown.
Uh, like for example, I just took a Coursera course
that was free and that was on like nutritional biochemistry
at a higher level, which I wouldn't recommend at all
for someone who's not like a trainer
or a science communicator.
But for someone who just wants to learn
kind of the basics of nutrition,
taking one of the many nutrition courses that is online
that is from a university,
which means it's gone through a certain accreditation process and all that.
I would highly recommend, uh, you just need to, because the beauty of it is you've got a lot of
time on your hands. Maybe, you know, I don't want to say that to, you know, like a mother of three
who are normally in daycare and now they're just pulling their hair out all the time.
But for a lot of us, we are stuck at home and we do need some things to do.
but for a lot of us we are stuck at home and we do need some things to do and i think looking online and finding some of these courses from actual universities and then just basically
window shopping you know see how the lecturer does while they're while they're talking on your
video screen if you start to find yourself distracted or if they're they're bland or
monotone go to the next one you know look for the ones with the highest ratings like you would with
any product really i think you can find good good free course on nutrition. That's probably
where I would start. Some of the things that I would really recommend, given that we've started
this conversation with Hank saying, hey, nutrition has a lot of dogma. It has a lot of in-group,
out-group stuff. It has become politicized, is you want to identify the language of someone
who is in those circles versus the language of someone who is trying to communicate information
to the best of their ability and is using what is more of a default rational skeptic approach.
So you want to look for basically someone who is not using hyperbole, who is not speaking in black and white, is not trying to sell you something that is not information.
If they're trying to push a supplement or a specific food plan or something that's like coaching, not in all cases, there's nothing wrong with coaching.
ulterior motives, if it reads like a sales page or sales copy, if they make it sound like there's only one solution or one way to go, or if they give you very, very specific numbers and outcomes,
like, well, if you follow this, you'll lose X percent of weight in the next amount of time.
If they tell the all too common story of here's the conspiracy, here's why everything you know
is wrong. And guess what? I have the solution I've seen behind the Wizard of Oz curtain.
That is always a red flag.
That's almost the standard appeal to the nature of the way humans think
and a way to get you to buy something.
So I think if you're aware of all those things,
you can parse the language and then
you can find someone who is, is, is worth listening to in most cases.
I think that's really valuable information.
A question that I get asked often, and I think it's something that's really close to home
for a lot of people.
And I think you've laid the foundation really well, uh, especially now that we've kind of,
we've, we've laid the foundation that there's a human being
involved with every nutritional exchange whether it be from an academic whether it be from a
trainer whether it's on facebook that the person receiving that is a person is a human being and
there's emotion it's it's social there's a lot built into that what are ways that a fitness
enthusiast who's listening to this a trainer who's listening to this, a trainer who's listening to this, a coach can communicate more effectively with friends, family, loved ones, potential clients about making
nutritional change because it's very difficult. I'll speak for myself. I've earlier in my career
had a very difficult time understanding why people didn't prioritize or care about nutrition as much as I did. And if you don't
grow and you don't understand people and mature, you might actually miss the opportunity to give
somebody life-changing advice because you aren't seeing that there's a person there and you're just,
oh, they just don't get it. What are some ways that people can actually, you know, break down
those barriers, communicate effectively, and distill the nuts and bolts to somebody that they care about that perhaps
is just hopping from diet to diet and not getting anywhere and there's frustration and
maybe they don't want to talk to them about it because they know that they're going to
be judgmental.
What are some ways we can get to those people?
Because I think they're the people we all know and care about the most.
Yeah, and that's a tough one.
And this is why a doctor isn't supposed to operate on their son.
You're not supposed to like therapize your own family members, et cetera.
Because the closer we are emotionally to something, the more we can lose our sense of perspective, let bias creep in,
and essentially have a conflict of interest, right? And even if it's for good reasons, like in those
examples I gave, that conflict can still cloud your judgment and lead you to overreacting or
pushing something because you have a fear for the person, you know, or their well-being.
And in the end, you're almost making the person feel like you're taking away their agency or you're telling them that they're not competent enough to solve their own problems.
So I think the first thing to do, especially if I'm speaking to people in the quote unquote evidence based community, is don't give unsolicited advice.
is don't give unsolicited advice.
That's the biggest problem I see in the in-group that we're both part of is that when someone learns all this stuff, when they've got their –
and this is not staged, I promise.
I've got my personal training handbook.
I've got my – dude, I swear to God, this is not staged.
I just was using these books for stuff.
I've got my, dude, I swear to God, this is not staged. I just was using these books for stuff. I've got my precision nutrition principles.
Were you doing additional range of motion pushups with those books or what?
I was, 100%.
You nailed it.
And I was also waiting down my chairs for dips.
So when you've got this information, you have these tombs, you've got these followers,
you've got my books, you've got the NSCA books, whatever, whether the whether the information is correct or not and if it's my books of course it's correct i'm just
kidding it's it's you know things that are intended to be accurate are scientifically
valid based on what we know now and have been you know tried and true principles of uh of science
you see someone post something that you feel is in conflict with that or is incorrect.
And your first thought, and social media makes it really easy to not have any impulse control, is just to correct them or to tell them that's wrong or what about this or don't you know.
And I think that almost always goes poorly.
You know, like, can you imagine like you're learning to ride a bike for the first time and
some random person on the street runs up to you and you're eight and you're like trying to get
and you go don't turn the handles to turn lean into it don't you know you're supposed to do that
haven't you read this pub med study on riding a bike and you're like i'm eight years old and with
my dad i'm just trying to do this i was having a great day and you ruined it, you know, let me scrape my knee. So I think people understanding that
unsolicited advice, no matter how good it is, it almost is never well received.
And that you need to think about how would you want to be approached with new information.
And even if you are a robot who just likes facts, that's probably not most people, like you said,
you know, there's, there's, there's at least 7 billion experiences on the planet that are, none of them are more or less valid or others. It's just an
experience. It's qualitative. Um, and I think, so I think we have to understand that, um, the person
who you are potentially trying to help is the one who is eventually going to help themselves.
You are providing resources, right? So this goes back to like client led coaching. It goes to autonomy. It goes to our understanding of human
motivation, you know, self-determination theory. It's all comes down to in the end, the only person
who can get you to your goals is you. There may be mentors, there may be teachers, there may be people who are partners in that. You know, the way I like to envision a trainer or a coach's role
is not as the captain of the ship, and they've gotten on it and saying, hey, would you help me
get to Antarctica? They're sorry, not as the passenger on the ship, who says, hey, I'd like to
get on your ship, you're the captain trainer, take me to Antarctica, but rather, Hey, I am the captain
of the ship. This is my first time as an officer. I've never been to Antarctica. I know it exists
and I know I want to get there, but I'm looking to hire a seasoned navigator to help me help guide
me there. And that's the trainer. It's the navigator. So it's, it's the, uh, you can get
fired by, by your client. Uh, you can also quit. Essentially you can fire that captain and be like,
listen, you know, I've done my best to navigate here and we just keep slamming into icebergs and
maybe it's my fault. Maybe it's your fault, but this isn't working and I'm going to go crazy.
Um, that's something any trainer has experienced. Uh, but that, that, that's a really important
philosophy or standpoint to have as someone who's trying to help others is that you're helping
others help themselves. Um, you can't force someone to have the right who's trying to help others is that you're helping others help themselves.
You can't force someone to have the right information, you know.
And are you trying to dunk on somebody in a one-on-one game of PubMed?
Or are you trying to use science to help them understand
something closer to the closest we can get to knowing the truth. So I think that just that philosophical stance is the hugest, most important, but also first initial step
towards not running into those same traps, people talking across each other and becoming
in-group, out-group. Yeah, I really like that. I think that kind of, again, just going into the
conversation, whatever that conversation
may be, not with the attempt to win the argument, not with the attempt to be heard, but simply
with the attempt to listen, see where somebody's at and see if they're receptive first and
foremost goes a lot further than just giving or parroting unsolicited advice.
Something that I've wanted to ask you for quite some time, and it has to do with
how quote unquote woke you are. It's an only child thing for those of you who don't know.
Only children are exponentially more woke. There's tons of data on it. Don't bother googling it. It's
just a known fact. Just take our two opinions on that. I'm imagining you might be an
only child as well. Yes, I am an only child, which is usually met by the phrase, and I'm sure Eric
can second this, that explains so much. Official response from anybody who has a sibling to anybody
who is an only child. But given that Eric is woke, we've kind of touched
on politics a little bit, and he has a lot of experience with dietary manipulation,
changing things, teaching things. I think I'd be remiss if I didn't talk about,
clearly we're living in the midst of some interesting, to say the least, climate things
going on. There are things going on in the planet which
project to potentially cause pretty exponential if not irreversible damage and a lot of people
are making an effort to do their part by making nutritional choices. Maybe that's
going to a completely plant-based diet. Maybe it's doing X, Y, Z. And then on the other hand,
you have people who are like, hey, I don't care. I just want to make my gains and get the hell out
of here before this whole thing goes to shit. Is there a middle ground here? If there is a middle
ground, what are some ways that people can perhaps respectfully include animal products, animal
byproducts into their diet?
And are there practices that you would recommend implementing
for somebody who says, hey, I want to try to get the best of both.
I maybe want to consume meat,
but I also want to be aware that I want to do my part.
Man.
Loaded question.
I mean, and there's a lot of groundwork to be done
before we can even get to those
specific aspects of it.
So as soon as food enters the realm of ethics,
climate change,
and you could also even argue economics,
which is almost invariably tied up with the environment,
it gets really complicated.
And I think we need to go back to what we first said,
is you don't have an option to not eat, right?
Yeah.
So when I think a good example...
Granditarians just unsubscribed.
That's okay.
Some people we're probably not going to reach.
Actually, the one thing I do want to say say to square the circle of what I was saying before
of philosophically making sure that you are seeing it as I can only help you help yourself
and I'm only going to help you if you're legitimately looking for information.
I'm not going to try to force you to change.
That first step is how you begin a conversation.
The next step is then basically finding some ground where you're
on the same page. And I always find myself basically going, so what do you agree is good
evidence? And if someone is like a complete denial of science or they believe science is fundamentally
a bad thing, which is rare. Hey guys, just wanted to take a quick second to say thanks so much for listening to the podcast.
And if you're finding value, it would mean the world to me if you would share it on your social
media. Simply screenshot whatever platform you're listening to and share the episode to your
Instagram story or share it to Facebook. But be sure to tag me so I can say thanks and we can
chat it up about what you liked and how I can continue to improve. Thanks so much for supporting the podcast and enjoy the rest of the episode. If we get to the place where, hey,
if you're ready to learn, I will teach you or share information with you or discuss things
with you. So it's not that kind of top-down view. And then two, we've agreed on what we might be
considered as evidence. And then they can kind of understand in between an anecdote and certain levels of science.
That's where you can actually make progress with someone.
But if you don't get there, then you're going to be talking across each other.
So as this connects with the whole morality of food or climate change and how it all relates, politics is something that you can disengage from.
all relates. Politics is something that you can disengage from, you know, and we talked about how it's very common to be like, hey, I don't talk politics because they know it's so difficult
to have those discussions without finding yourself being called a bad person or damaging
an otherwise perfectly fine friendship because you both tend to escalate quickly and become very
charged. Yes. So when someone takes, when nutrition becomes an
aspect of climate change or an aspect of any kind of morality, even if it is, I think it's really
important to remember that people don't get to opt out of nutrition. That people have grown up a
certain way. They have been fed a certain way when they were actually incapable of getting their own food. There's a lot of ingrained behavior and you're asking someone, I'm basically
speaking to people who think people should be eating a certain way. You have a moral
judgment about someone else for the way they eat, either based on how, you know, the suffering
of animals or based on the effect on the climate or the effect on economy, et know, the suffering of animals, or based on the effect on the climate,
or the effect on economy, etc., etc., etc.
Even if those things are true,
remember that the way you change hearts and minds
is not through judging people,
and people can't necessarily opt out.
They have had ingrained behaviors.
So compassion goes a long way like the
whole concept of shaming people into change is proven to be really really not
not only just harmful mean and false but doesn't work you know this is a strange
thing that's come up in politics and and done on purpose for political and social
change even in modern times which surprises me because we have so much thing that's come up in politics and done on purpose for political and social change,
even in modern times, which surprises me because we have so much data showing shame-based change
doesn't work. Like if you look at teen pregnancy rates in places that have abstinence-only education
and basically saying, hey, you know, like you're a bad person if you engage in sexual intercourse
out of marriage or when you're underage
hat didn't work just objectively, just looking at the numbers. Right. So why do we think that
would work for some other, uh, it's not the way humans operate, you know, shame just makes us
feel like crap and then try to hide and feel weird about the things that we're trying to change.
And I would argue it hasn't worked for the obesity epidemic either. Right. Yeah. So, so why would it work for, for climate change? Why would it work for, um,
humane treatment of animals? Why would it work for anything like that? It won't, it'll actually
become part of the problem. So I think that that's kind of step one and we have to agree on that.
Um, and, and if, if, if we don't, you're probably going to be, that's fine.
You're welcome to your opinion, but you're going to find yourself continually talking across people, uh, or your goal might ostensibly be to influence people and make changes to
make the world a better place.
But all you really do is identify people who are the enemy, you know, and you go, well,
then these people are bad and well, I'm going to write them off, and I'm just going to attack them or vilify them or position them as the problem.
But that's a really hopeless battle considering, like if you are a militant vegan who sees someone who eats meat, and even when they've been told for you know, forcibly and aggressively about the facts that if they don't eat as a vegan,
then they're a bad person.
Now you're looking at more than 90% of the planet who is now a bad person.
And that's a pretty difficult fight for social change, right?
So something we talked about off air is that the carnivore diet is a great example of what happens when you try to
force something down people's throats, no pun intended. In this case, it would be like, you
know, chickpeas and broccoli. I literally was joking sometime 10 years ago that I was like,
you know, with how extreme, you know, the vegans can be and just the way the pendulum always shifts
because I've been in industry long enough at this point i guarantee you there's going to be a carnivore diet and we
would all be like ha ha ha ha in the nutrition community because it was so funny because it
was absurd the idea that um someone would go all meat only was ridiculous to us because if there
was one thing that everyone seemed to agree upon all the different various clicks of nutrition at the time was vegetables are good, you know, go keto, and what are you eating higher fat meats?
You know, basically, all your quote, unquote, carbs or vegetables, you know, if you're traditional,
of course, you know, vegetables are good. If you're a bodybuilding diet, broccoli, asparagus,
you're eating vegetables. If you're doing paleo, vegetables, whatever it is,
vegetables were good. So the concept of there being this reactionary diet completely because
of vegans being too militant was something that I jokingly predicted. And I'm unfortunately right,
you know, like, I wish I wasn't. So that's just an example of it. Uh,
that, that if you push people, um, like that, and if you make them feel like an out group,
that out group will bound, bound together and create a group, you know? So, um, yeah. So,
so getting back to this, the question is, is all right, if the way food is made has an impact on the environment,
um, which we, I think, I think it's very difficult to argue against that. I'm not a climate change
expert by any means. I'm like a muscle doctor and not even like an in vitro real muscle doctor,
like basically like a guy who likes to lift weights and learned about mobile. So don't take
my, my, uh, my statements as facts about the environment. Uh, climate change science is something that I am not well versed in
at all, but we do know that, um, different manufacturing processes, uh, have different
carbon footprints. Um, we know that it may or may not use sustainable, uh, you know,
manufacturing processes, packaging, you know,
is that plastic, et cetera, that there may be more or less fossil fuels involved in transportation
and in the creation of that. And I think you completely not argue against the fact that many
practices have different levels of humaneness to them, depending on how you define it. Most vegans would say that using animals,
which have just as much of a right to life as humans, this is their position,
is there's no way to do that ethically. That is starting with a false premise. It's like,
how do you be a nice slave owner, which is basically their perspective, which I don't
think is necessarily an invalid perspective. It's just something that is,
it's very difficult to walk up to somebody who's just been eating hot dogs
because they're an American and they grew up that way and saying,
you're a slave owner.
It's essentially kind of what some vegans will approach that with that level
of,
of judgment.
Exactly.
And that is their position.
And it's a logically consistent position for them as well.
But I think probably what is more useful if we're looking to have a positive impact
on, you know, reducing animal suffering and, you know, potentially reducing emissions that are
harmful for the planet is not looking at it as black or white, because black or white is very
difficult to institute.
Just like getting back to that cold abstinence only kind of comment, right?
If people can understand that the decisions they make with the food they buy does not only impact
their own health and potentially performance, but also impacts the suffering of animals and impacts the climate, and they make different choices,
I think that's quite respectable. And I think it just be being someone who is aware and thinks
about those things and thinks about what changes can they make in their life in a gradual fashion,
in a way that still respects their goals, in a way that respects the fact that they have
really difficult to change ingrained behaviors.
Like you couldn't change your nutrition for your health.
You know, you've been being yelled at in society that your BMI is too high
and you're going to die and you're a bad person.
And you still struggle to do that despite the fact that maybe you have,
you know, pre-onset like diabetes.
Like you have metabolic syndrome right now and you're struggling to change your diet.
Now all of a sudden you're supposed to change it again for another way you're a bad person
because you're hurting the environment or you're hurting animals.
Now, guess what?
You're a bad person for three reasons.
You hate the environment.
You hate animals.
You're also a healthcare thing, and you're not a good person because your BMI number
is too high.
That's just a whole lot of shame with very little change.
So I think that whole approach needs to be turned on its head.
Normally, I think education is probably where you start.
Just having an understanding that your food choices impact those elements outside of your own body is important.
those elements outside of your own body is important.
And I think another thing that people need to realize is that changing your nutrition sometimes has economic costs that can't be, you know, it's a first world problem to be
able to be like, oh, I had all these great vegan cheeses and these meats that I got from
Whole Foods, you know, and I drove my Prius there because I care about like, you know,
like, come on, you know, like some people are buying whatever is cheapest because they
have very little money and it's only getting worse right now with COVID.
So your high horse is not appreciated in some instances.
It doesn't pay respect.
It at least shows a certain unawareness of what someone else's life could be.
So I guess my overarching point is before you start having ethical,
moral discussions with people about their nutrition,
realize that they don't have an option to opt out.
They have deeply ingrained behaviors.
Judgment and shame is not the way change occurs anyway.
And it doesn't have to be black or white.
You don't have to go completely vegan there is simply
you know decreasing the amount of process like if we're looking at it from the health perspective
if we're looking at it from a performance perspective or looking at it from an ethical
perspective there's very different stances so anytime i get into a discussion about plant-based
diets i have to figure out where is this person coming from do they believe that a plant-based diets, I have to figure out where is this person coming from? Do they believe that a plant-based diet is inherently more healthy? And then I have to go,
okay, what do you think is a plant-based diet? Normally the misunderstanding there is that it
is the absence of meat, which is healthy rather than the presence of vegetables, which I would
say the collective data would suggest that the inclusion of lots of multicolored fruits and vegetables and plant-based foods is healthy.
But general, including animal products, is not unhealthy unless you're talking about
charred red meat, processed meats that have a lot of preservatives and nitrates in them
and things like that.
And then it's a small increase in risk.
that have a lot of preservatives and nitrates in them and things like that.
And then it's a small increase in risk.
Like, you know, if you have a lot of vegetables,
but you're also having like a ton of sausages and bacon and salami and stuff like that,
maybe they cancel each other out, but it's not that unhealthy of a diet. So first we have to understand that for the most part,
a health conscious person would be well to include a lot of fruits and vegetables.
They don't necessarily need to remove animal products.
And in fact, removing all animal products, if we go to the nth degree,
requires actually more nutritional knowledge and more care
to ensure you don't have any micronutrient deficiency
or you aren't missing anything else because we are indeed omnivores.
So that's the health perspective.
And that's where that conversation needs to start. If we're looking at it from the performance perspective, this is
a conversation I often had to have until Game Changers, you know, the documentary, which has
more of it, right? Yeah. So more and more as nutrition becomes a moral discussion, people
are willing, not even necessarily willing, but it's much more likely that if you have a moral discussion, people are willing, not even necessarily willing, but it's much more likely
that if you have a moral belief for something, you're going to have a biased perspective when
you hear information about it. If it is morally correct to not eat meat, any information will get
elevated to a higher degree of evidence that supports that position. And you'll find a way
to dismiss stuff that's the other way. You know, if you want to test yourself on that, think about how you would respond to a supposed study
that suggested that an ethno-state was a good idea. You know, that we should actually only have
one ethnicity per state and we need to, you know, castrate people or remove people or deport them
or kill them. Like, what if you saw research that
suggested that the Nazi party was right? You would immediately find a way to figure out why that's
wrong. You're like, no, that's morally reprehensible. So I don't want to believe it's
true. There's nothing wrong with that, by the way. I would also have that reaction. I don't think
that's true. But the point being that if you have even 20% of that response to something about nutrition, you're not going to objectively evaluate the information.
So game changers, in my opinion, is, and there may be also be some conflicts of interest there in terms of financial stuff.
But let's just say, assuming that's not the case, if someone makes a quote unquote documentary pushing a certain position,
If someone makes a quote-unquote documentary pushing a certain position, they're much more likely to make intellectual shortcuts and use low-quality evidence as proof that this
is good because they already have a conclusion they're working towards.
They're not following the scientific method.
They're working backwards.
Exactly.
They're working backwards from a conclusion and trying to find the data that fits that
narrative.
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 a truly tailored one-on-one experience with a coach like myself or a member of my coaching team, someone who is certified, somebody who has multiple years
of experience working with clients in person, online, somebody who is licensed to provide a
macro nutrition plan, somebody who is actually good at communicating with clients because they've
done it for years, whether that be via phone call, email, text, right? This one-on-one coaching program is really
designed to give you all the support you need with custom training designed for you, whether
you're training from home, the gym, around your limitations and your goals, nothing cookie cutter
here, as well as easy to follow macro nutrition programs that are non-restrictive. You'll get
customized support directly from your coach's email, or they'll text
you, or they'll WhatsApp you. We'll find the communication medium that best supports your goals
as well as provides you with the accountability and the expertise you need to succeed,
as well as biofeedback monitoring, baked-in accountability support, and all of the stuff
that you need from your coach when you check in. We keep our rosters relatively small so that we can make sure you get the best support possible.
But you can apply today by going over to corecoachingmethod.com,
selecting the online coaching option.
And if we have spots available, we'll definitely reach out to you to see if you're a good candidate.
And if we don't, we'll 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. The performance thing. Truly the question is,
how can you perform without, how can you follow a plant-based diet without hurting your performance?
And that's the conversation I have with someone. is a plant based diet necessarily better for performance, which has become like a new
conversation because of the muddied waters from game changers. And then it's basically how plant
based are you? Vegans have to think about it a little more. If you're like, you know, the person
who says they're vegetarian, but that actually just means they eat chicken and fish, you're fine,
you don't need to do anything. And then if you're lact lacto-ovo, if you're lacto-only, if you're along that spectrum, there's a little more attention
you have to have. So that's the performance discussion. I talked about the health discussion,
understanding that it's not necessarily the absence of meat. The moral discussion
is really one of inquiry, in my opinion. I don't tell you what your morals are. I provide you information,
right? So if someone, and I'm not the person who's going to tell them about the environment
or about humane treatment of animals, because I'm not an expert in that. I would need to go
do another 10 years of study for me to be comfortable telling them about that. What I
would do as a nutrition professional for performance and body composition is I would
ask them, okay, what are your nutrition and body composition goals? They tell me what they are. And I go,
okay, cool. So what, what have you landed on for what you are ethically comfortable with,
with what you want to do with your nutrition? Do you want to reduce your food intake? Do you
want to do this? Do you want to do that? Okay. Given those constraints, here's how to optimize
your body composition or training goals. But that's a very, very different position than me telling someone what their morals should be, what their
ethical decisions in their life should be for something that they cannot opt out of. And I think
that is a position that gives people empowered choice. If the only choice is become a vegan,
or you're a bad person, that's going to be a really hard sell.
But if we can acknowledge that eating like 10,000 pounds a year of animal products versus 2,000 are different degrees of negative impact on the planet and on the total global quote unquote suffering.
Then now, if you acknowledge that, then the question is, all right, well, how can I be useful to create
the least amount of harm and the most amount of benefit? And now you have a much more graded
discussion. It's much like the data on black and white thinking for food causing issues with
dietary adherence, weight loss, and eating disorders. We know that flexible restraint,
not seeing being on the diet or off the diet as black and white, not seeing foods as good or bad, but rather having a more holistic, non-dichotomous view of foods and
nutrition tends to result in better weight loss, people being lighter, healthier, and having less
psychological issues going through the process of changing their nutrition compared to the black
and white mentality. That also applies to this.
So having a more nuanced view and having more options gives someone more choices,
therefore more empowerment, and is more likely to result in change.
I love that. I think in the spirit of continuing the discussion of de-weaponizing or de-escalating a lot of the dialogue existing in nutrition and respecting where people are at right now. You brought up COVID. It's something that
everybody's been impacted by essentially regardless of where they're living.
I've seen a lot of content in the space coming from coaches, fitness professionals.
And again, it goes back to much of what we've talked about today where we dehumanize things, but now is a great time to work on your diet. Now all of your excuses should be out the window. Now you can cook from home. Now's the best time to get shredded, which again, effectively makes sense for somebody who has been living in that framework for years. But for a lot of people,
it's an instant shutdown because it doesn't take any of their grieving into account or any of their
circumstances into account. And as somebody who is quite good at creating hierarchies around
nutrition, particularly triangular shaped hierarchies, but you're somebody who is very good at giving people a lens with
which they can look at nutrition. What's a good way to approach eating, whether that's for body
composition, health, or even just survival during COVID that's respectful of what people are going
through and what can even more so like what can coaches do to communicate to clients for family friends and loved ones about how to handle this in a way that doesn't
shut people down or or lack uh tact if you will yeah i think that i've done this myself like i
have um i have definitely seen some of the silver lining of a bad situation in that, um, you know, as someone
who writes, uh, does, does podcasts, does webinars, um, and now can't travel, you know, normally I
spend, I do like six or seven conferences around the world and that takes a lot of time off my
hands, but I love it. And it's a great opportunity to connect with people through this crazy thing
called lifting weights who are from different countries, backgrounds, et cetera, which I love
can't do that, but it gives me more time to do that other stuff you know um so i have had more time on
my hands but i've also been stir crazy there's some negative effects and i don't want to be
i think it's very easy for someone who isn't financially negatively affected by covid to the
same degree that other people are whether their their place of work or their place of business is closed, cannot operate, and they're just hemorrhaging money from rent.
That is a very different reality. And imagine you're that person. And also your kids who are
normally at school or, you know, with a babysitter or at afterschool daycare, and you have three of
them and they are super,
like you think you're still crazy. Imagine if you were, you're eight,
you know, they're all home. Right.
Now do you have more time on your hands or do you have less with more stress?
So people's situations are quite different.
A single person who loves video games and has an online business right now,
they, if they didn't watch the news, they might not even
be aware. They've been living that quarantine life no matter what, right? So I think there's
going to be a different experience for a lot of people. The interesting thing about this situation
though, and I was actually reading a paper on the etiology of obesity, and it's basically targeted
towards public health and what a society can do at the top,
from a top-down perspective, to try to improve portion control as it relates to the obesity
epidemic. And they had this list of more intervention by the powers that be. And at
the very top, the most crazy one was restrict choices. Basically, in a magical society that, well, not even magical,
let's say an authoritarian society where we could make high calorie foods illegal, or you'd limit
or portion control for people, like you only get to buy this many calories per person. That was at
the top of the list, you know, basically enforcement by restriction of choice of portion control. And the crazy thing
right now is not on purpose. In many places that are on full lockdown, like here in New Zealand,
there are no restaurants open period. And if we look at the data on consuming food away from home
and energy consumption, whether it is a fast food restaurant or a sit-down full-service restaurant, both are
equally to blame for higher portions. And a lot of this has to do with the psychology of being
given food rather than preparing it for yourself. And also the fact that it's hyper palatable,
you've paid for it, it's a value transaction, there's a social expectation of what they've
given you. They've told you this is a reasonable portion, even if it's not. People around you are eating, etc. There's a lot of complex things that go into
portion control, but being provided food is a huge component of that. And there's some data that
suggests just shy of 200 calories is consumed more on average eating out versus eating at home
when you look at that at the population level over time,
and that you can predict or have a reasonable correlation and association between increased BMI, increased energy intake, and the number of times eaten out away from home, regardless of
where you go, whether it's a restaurant or fast food. And there's also data to show that if you
give someone increasingly large portion sizes,
whether it's on a plate that you give them, or if it's in a dish and they serve themselves,
if it comes from a larger portion and they see that, they eat more. So if you give someone a
1,000 gram portion of macaroni and cheese in a dish, they'll give themselves more if that dish
was half that size. About 30% more energy they will consume on average, which is very interesting.
Now, some of this comes down to the auto-regulation of food intake. If you're at home and you make
your own food, you're going to make the amount that you predict is going to satisfy. And that's
based upon your hunger going into it and all that stuff. And also typically the foods we have at
home just don't taste quite as good
because they're not designed to be a dining experience, right? So food consumption at home
is going to be far less. That's the silver lining of the situation. And if we're looking at this
from kind of like the weight control or weight loss perspective, which may or may not be valid
or may or may not be someone's goal, even if it is their goal, maybe it's not helping them holistically, which we can talk about in a
second. But assuming it is, assuming someone was doing great and was crushing it, and they were
eating healthier, they were seeing their body composition improve, their health markers improve,
and all of a sudden COVID comes around, it's very easy for that online personal trainer or Instagram influencer whose business is doing just fine, who just sits at home and trains in their house now and makes videos and sells e-books on home training, to be judgmental and not understand why all of a sudden they've gone off the rails.
And it could be those environmental factors.
It could be they've lost a loved one and they're an emotional eater.
environmental factors. It could be they've lost a loved one and they're an emotional eater.
But there's another piece that is kind of affecting everybody here is that if we're going to talk about the auto-regulatory intake of food and portion control, there's what's called
the J-shaped relationship between activity, appetite, and then body weight. So there's a
classic study from Bengali mill workers where they have the managers and then they have light, moderate, heavy and very heavy workers.
So not heavy in terms of their mass, but heavy in the amount of work they do.
So various positions in the factory and you will see much higher levels of activity in each one of these categories.
And if you look at just the moderate, heavy and very heavy, like basically the people
who are not the managers, it's a straight line.
Their body weight's stable.
However, their activity goes up, as does their food intake.
So there's this auto-regulation of food intake that matches energy expenditure, and therefore
there's body weight homeostasis.
You extend that graph out to the left, and you look at the managers, and they're taking in as much as the heavy or very heavy workers and they themselves are heavier. They
have a higher BMI, they weigh more and they are dysregulated in terms of their appetite,
meaning that we're built as humans, which we've overcome with the modern food environment,
to maintain our weight by eating an appropriate amount of food. But when there's constant food
availability, it's hyperpalatable,
and we don't have to move to get it.
Now, all of a sudden, appetite and activity become dysregulated.
And that's when you see waistlines rise, metabolic disease,
higher BMI, and the obesity epidemic.
So that is something that is also changed with COVID.
Sure, you can cook your own food.
Sure, you can't even
go to a restaurant in some countries or some states, and you're more likely to have, you know,
healthy food options and be able to stick to your diet. You know, people often, you know, how many
times have we as personal trainers, you know, we've got someone who's decided they want to try
to lose weight, we help them, we set up a good food plan, they're on top of it, and then the
weekend they go out to eat, and then it turns into this kind of house of cards that collapses because they they have fajitas and chilies and then all of a sudden
it turned into ice cream that night and then they weren't motivated to get back on that on monday
because screw it you know um that ostensibly shouldn't be happening right so therefore it's
easier yeah but what if you're hungrier than normal and you're stuck at home? You know, and I think that that's kind of the other flip side of this coin is that while we have some pros in our corner, we've essentially had the public health inevitable, like, or sorry, not inevitable.
The never thing that would never happen.
The restriction of choice has actually occurred.
You know, the hypothetical in this paper that I was talking about has occurred.
Now we,
we, it's much easier due to a restriction of choice to eat healthy. However, our activity has also been slashed. So some of the advice that I would give someone in this scenario would be to
really make sure that you leverage what you can do. I'm not going to tell anyone to do something
that may not be legal in their given state or country. Like for example, I was talking to a
friend of mine who's studying his PhD in France,
and there was periods of lockdown where he wasn't allowed to go on a walk outside of one
kilometer from his home. Here in New Zealand, on the other hand, we're actively encouraged to go
on walks, stay healthy and exercise, but you're on lockdown. So if you're out of the house,
there's ostensibly two reasons. You're going to the grocery store, you're an essential worker, or you're actually going out to get some vitamin D
and go on a walk or go on a bike ride. So exercise is encouraged. And that's a totally valid reason.
You're just supposed to keep it local, but there's no like one kilometer restriction or anything like
that. So if you're in a place where you're allowed to, and I would encourage you to get outside
and try to be similarly, if not more active than you
normally were.
You're going to have more time on your hands and you're going to get stir crazy.
You're going to want to get outside of the house.
It's a great opportunity to connect with loved ones, listen to a podcast.
If it's snowing, obviously it's a different story.
I know it depends on where you live, but finding a way to get your activity levels back up
may help you regulate your hunger.
And then you can benefit from the supposed upside of being able to control your food environment. But I would say, for people
for whom the food environment was the biggest challenge, this could be a huge silver lining.
For others, where the food environment was not necessarily the challenge, or COVID has presented
even greater challenges, you're very right that that could be a very non-empathetic way of looking at things and just being like,
hey, you should be able to solve this now. It's like, yeah, well, my grandmother just died from
COVID. Like that's not really what's on my head right now. Or I've got, I got to feed three kids
and they're, I'm like, I'm pulling my hair out, you know, or I'm, I'm spending eight hours a day
on Zoom for my job working from home.
When am I taking the second walk, Eric?
So I think we need to be very sensitive to the reality that people are operating in because it's not homogenous by any means.
I think that being sensitive to the reality might just be the take-home message
for today's entire podcast because if you think about what we've talked about,
we've talked about diet culture, body composition, social norms, social expectations for what each gender should look like. We've
talked about nutritional politicization, tribalism, veganism. We've even talked about COVID. And
the general take-home point, if you're listening and you've made it this far,
is that you have to zoom out and look at the entire
person with the effective attempt to communicate in a helpful manner rather than to be right and
to try to in some way shape or form make a positive difference through education so long as
that person's receptive and that's why I had you on Eric I just think it's something that not a lot
of nutritional authorities are woke enough to have. It's not their fault. Their parents had siblings.
But, you know, it is something that I think is grotesquely missed in our space, which is
the empathy that comes from having actually, I don't want to say that it comes from this, but
I've noticed people who have
trained clients for seven years, you train for seven years before you do what you do now, there's
a degree of empathy that you develop. And you understand how to communicate with people. And
you understand that the most effective way to communicate with people requires a little bit
of empathy, a little bit of understanding, and coming from the right place, a place of helping them rather than a place of being right. And I think that that tone
was really present in our conversation today. I would encourage people to try to emulate that in
the conversations they have with clients, friends, family, loved ones. And hopefully they, you know,
get better results in doing that. I'm sure that they will. And if they want to find more
of your work, Eric, where is the best place for them to do that? Well, dude, I think you,
you summarized the points I was, I was hopefully making that were, you know, understandable,
hopefully, and in a really concise way. So thank you. I think that's, that's really well said.
If you want to find more of my stuff, and I don't just write about science, although you can find that as well. If you go to 3dmusclejourney.com, it is definitely the
perspective of someone speaking to bodybuilder strength athletes and lifting enthusiasts. But
again, with that perspective, hey, informed consent, you know what you're getting into,
you love this stuff, despite all of its potential shortcomings, and you want to do it for as long as possible in the healthiest way possible. That's the kind of the tilt on it. I've got blogs,
we've got podcasts, we're on I think our 150th 3D Muscle Journey podcast. And you can find articles
that I've written going back four years, things on philosophy of coaching, that are very pertinent
to this discussion and stuff that's a little more
nerdy on the SNC or nutrition side of things. So yeah, definitely 3dmusclejourney.com is the
one-stop shop. And then also you can check out me on Instagram at Helms3dmj.
And also, I know that many of you, we talked about it a little bit with Eric
Trexler. And then of course, Eric brought it up recently, but mass is something
that I quite enjoy just as a trainer, but also as a fitness enthusiast. It's just a tremendous
amount of content and research reviews might seem daunting in the same way that research might seem
daunting. But there's really no barrier of entry with mass I've, because again, all of the studies are presented in full.
They're accessible. You can read the review of the study.
You can read the bullet point review of the study, and you can even listen to the audio roundup of the study if you just genuinely have a disdain for reading.
So that's something that Eric is a part of, along with a couple other really special dudes that I think is also worth checking out. But yeah, I noticed you didn't bring it up. So I just wanted to
highlight that because I tremendously enjoy that product. I appreciate that plug. And it's kind of
unfortunate that there is such a strong market for science communication in that way, like a
research review, because it speaks to the inaccessibility of science itself yeah hopefully will change but in the meantime
it's created a cottage industry out of um explaining what scientists mean um which
as someone who got into science after being a trainer i think i'm pretty all right doing along
with trexler zerdos and uh and knuckles who are all very good at that as well so thank you it is quite
good and uh you're also doing something with eric the nutrition and gab fundaro the nutritional
coaching global mastermind i want you to expand a little bit upon that uh i think we'd be silly
not to bring it up because a lot of the people who are listening to this are coaches and they
probably just felt the seismic activity of the knowledge bombs you
dropped and they're looking to continue to grow more in the space. So I think it's a beautiful
segue to talk about that before I let you hop off and play with your adjustable dumbbells.
Absolutely. Well, thank you so much for that. And yeah, it's like Christmas here that those came.
Yeah. So Dr. Joe Klimczewski, who if you don't know who that is, he's been less active in the last couple of years, but he's essentially the very first online coach that I'm out of high school. He was having people track macros
before the term of future macros was a thing. And he was incorporating science into practice
a long time ago. And him and Corey Probst, who is a psychologist and a coach have done a great
job with the diet doc franchise. But anyway, someone I tremendously respect. He's kind of
the progenitor to me, Dr. Joe. He's a competitive WBF
pro bodybuilder back in his heyday, became a coach, started very scientific, and then became
much more holistic and behavioral oriented, and has been really just trying to enact positive
change for years. He approached me with the idea of the Nutrition Coaching Global Mastermind,
and then we expanded out and formed a board, which consists of like who you've had on,
and then we expanded out and formed a board which consists of like who you've had on gabriel findero and eric trexler but others and it's basically us having webinars with guests and
the facilitators and the board specifically related to the direction the industry is going
what professionals need to know how to keep your ear to the ground and how to make sure that you
are doing the best you can in terms of scope of practice, evidence-based practice, and quality of care, if you will, as a nutrition coach, which is something sorely lacking
and directly related to everything we talked about, especially people in the evidence-based
community. They have a very quantitative bias, but not a great bedside manner or communicative style.
And that's something we're trying to change. And now that everyone is operating online through COVID, there's going to be more regulatory
awareness from the powers that be on nutrition coaches.
And we are seeing, you know, prosecutors state that people saying that they can cure COVID
with supplements or certain diets or things like that could be prosecuted.
And we've seen successful litigation in the States against people defending the scope of practice of a registered dietitian.
In Australia, we're seeing more and more cases of negligence and lawsuits being brought against personal trainers who are stepping outside of their scope of practice and doing harm with nutrition. trying to create a body that can step in, maybe be grandfathered in or liaise with the powers that
be to make sure our profession is protected, both from those potential changes, but also elevating
our own profession primarily to make sure that we're doing the right thing. So we want this to
be about access, not about, you know, profit driven by any means. So, you know, we actually
gave people access to the first two webinars for a
dollar, which is the lowest you could put it on the nutrition coaching global website,
where you can find us. But, you know, the long term, it is 99 bucks for a year where we do a
monthly webinar. So we're talking very, very low price point, just enough to kind of make make it
worth all the busy time of the people involved. But we have RDs, MDs, PhDs, and licensed therapists on who have all done
and currently do nutrition coaching discussing things like scope of practice,
duty of care, weight neutral approaches, weight loss, society,
the whole nine yards and trying to help the people who are watching the webinars
understand how they can be the best practitioner they can be. Awesome, Eric. the whole nine yards and trying to help the people who are watching the webinars understand
how they can be the best practitioner they can be. Awesome, Eric. Well, that about does it.
Thank you so much for your time. Thanks for coming on. And I'll let you go because I'm
sure you're going to do a quintuple drop set of lateral raises with your new adjustable dumbbells.
Absolutely, man. Thank you for having me on. I truly appreciate it.
So guys, there you have it.
A great sit down with Dr. Eric Helms.
Again, I want to thank Eric for coming on
as I thank all guests,
but I particularly enjoyed that conversation
and I hope you were able to grab some value out of it.
Just to wrap everything up and summarize,
Eric said something that really stuck with me,
which is that we need to communicate with the intention of helping rather than being right.
And remember that extends beyond just nutrition. It extends into pretty much everything that we do, whether that's with friends, colleagues, coworkers, loved ones, whomever it may be.
Communicating with the intent to help and help them is really, really important.
Communicating with the intent to help and help them is really, really important.
So if you guys enjoy the podcast, do me a favor.
Take a screenshot, share it, tag myself and Eric.
That would make a huge difference for me and the podcast as well as getting it out there.
And it would also be great for sharing these really important nutritional topics with the people who need to hear them most.
Thanks so much for tuning in and you have a good rest of your day.