Mark Bell's Power Project - MBPP EP. 602 - Should You Get Fatter To Get Stronger?
Episode Date: October 4, 2021Today we're talking about how that extra 30lbs of bodyweight isn't helping your overall total and how your idea of "eating big to get big" is flawed. Grab the new Power Project "think LESS" shirt, sup...plies are limited: https://markbellslingshot.com/products/think-less-tee?variant=39468915261534 Special perks for our listeners below! ➢Magic Spoon Cereal: https://www.magicspoon.com/powerproject to automatically save $5 off a variety pack! ➢8 Sleep: Visit https://www.eightsleep.com/powerproject to automatically save $150 off the Pod Pro! ➢Marek Health: https://marekhealth.com Use code POWERPROJECT15 for 15% off ALL LABS! Also check out the Power Project Panel: https://marekhealth.com/powerproject Use code POWERPROJECT for $101 off! ➢LMNT Electrolytes: http://drinklmnt.com/powerproject ➢Piedmontese Beef: https://www.piedmontese.com/ Use Code "POWERPROJECT" at checkout for 25% off your order plus FREE 2-Day Shipping on orders of $150 Subscribe to the Podcast on on Platforms! ➢ https://lnk.to/PowerProjectPodcast Subscribe to the Power Project Newsletter! ➢ https://bit.ly/2JvmXMb Follow Mark Bell's Power Project Podcast ➢ Insta: https://www.instagram.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ https://www.facebook.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/mbpowerproject ➢ LinkedIn:https://www.linkedin.com/in/powerproject/ ➢ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/markbellspowerproject ➢TikTok: http://bit.ly/pptiktok FOLLOW Mark Bell ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marksmellybell ➢ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MarkBellSuperTraining ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/marksmellybell ➢ Snapchat: marksmellybell ➢Mark Bell's Daily Workouts, Nutrition and More: https://www.markbell.com/ Follow Nsima Inyang ➢ https://www.breakthebar.com/learn-more ➢YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/NsimaInyang ➢Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nsimainyang/?hl=en ➢TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@nsimayinyang?lang=en Follow Andrew Zaragoza on all platforms ➢ https://direct.me/iamandrewz Time Stamps: #PowerProject #Podcast #MarkBell
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The peanut butter is better.
We're going to be eating some cereal live on air.
And we're currently live now.
Oh, we're live?
Yeah.
The milk is going to be from Fairlife.
You know what?
Smells good.
Come hang out with us.
We're live right now.
Oh, we're eating cereal on the show.
Hold on.
Hold on.
Hold on.
The fun thing about live.
Okay.
Andrew, why do you like eating fruity cereal
I gotta be able to hear myself
I like this one
because it has so much flavor
and it has 13 grams
of protein
13 grams of protein
the peanut butter one that's probably why you like it
it has 14 grams of protein
peanut butter is just my fucking jam, man.
There we go.
I want peanut butter. I want chocolate first,
but I think I'll end up with a mix match here.
Mixing the chocolate and peanut butter
would be great.
Andrew, look at you, tearing the box open right by the mic
to piss the people off.
I'll chew right into the thing.
Andrew, that's a dick move.
It's not.
I'm the one that has to edit it,
so it's okay.
That's true.
I'm curious to see how this,
I didn't think about it
until right now.
Uh-huh.
Chocolate Fairlife
with Frady.
Chocolate Fairlife
with fruit, though.
Magic spoon.
With fruit?
Yeah.
I, uh,
you know, during my power power lifting cereal was a big staple
and it really helped me get real real big but it was regular cereal lots of sugar
and uh and whole milk and sometimes even sometimes i'd even throw some heavy cream in there too
how's that taste by the way? Chocolate on chocolate.
And I've done the heavy cream and cereal before.
I've not,
I've only done straight heavy cream and shit all over the place.
Heavy cream and cereal rocks.
Heavy cream with magic spoon would be, would be heaven.
That would be amazing.
Our friend Allie made me this creamer for coffee,
but since it's sober October,
I can't use this almond milk creamer in coffee, but I can
use it in my
cereal.
What is
this?
Girls just making stuff for this guy. What's going on?
Okay, Allie's actually married, and she's
happily married. No, I know, but still.
And super nice, but she didn't make
me anything.
Well, it's because I gave her advice on fasting.
Oh.
So I helped her with Brig 20 movements once, and it was a few days ago.
So your creamer is coming.
Okay.
I'm waiting for Allie to knit me a fucking sweater, you know,
something like that, but probably not going to happen.
She's so nice.
She was so good with Aurelius.
This is so good. Okay, so so guys this is magic spoon andrew um let me just give you guys the calories on this real quick there you go
14 grams of protein four net garms zero grams of sugar so it goes right in line with what we're
doing for silver october um let me try some of this peanut butter and my chocolate oh my god
okay and why is instagram not loading
instagram's mad at you yeah i want to i want to are you in the middle of suing them because of
body image issues oh my god are we about to do that oh it smells good yeah it smells like peanut
butter but um andrew how can people get magic spoon by the way just so that they can understand
so it's at magic spoon.com slash power project so, by the way, just so that they can understand? So it's at magicspoon.com slash powerproject.
So you're seeing three of the four that you can receive with a variety pack.
We're missing the frosted one, which is actually my favorite one, I think.
Anyway, you can get all four flavors for $5 off.
I don't know the total price, but at checkout, your coupon is automatically applied.
You just got to go to the links down in the description as well as the podcast show notes.
Again, magicspoon.com slash powerproject.
No code needed.
You get your $5 off applied automatically.
What were you just thinking?
Just chewing into the mic.
Oh, Lord.
Was I chewing into the mic?
I couldn't hear myself.
This is amazing.
But, we do have to get this
episode rolling, because people can't just watch.
What's that thing called when people watch
you eat?
Not ASMR, but...
It's a type of ASMR. It's a Korean
thing.
Oh my god. People are way Korean thing. Oh, my God.
Mukbang.
People are way into it.
People love to watch people eat food and the sound of people eating food and the chewing and the food sloshing.
People are into that.
It's called a mukbang.
So people will get a whole table of food, and they'll just eat and chat into the camera.
And that's it.
And they have millions of views.
Lots of these channels.
That's it. And they have millions of views. Lots of these channels. That's amazing.
If you want to see more of this,
hit the like button,
subscribe,
and comment below.
It's just making OnlyFans
where we just have lots of food
and we just eat.
I just wanted to eat.
In our boxers.
Yeah, I was going to say,
with our shirts off.
With oil on our bodies.
Is that a problem?
That's not problematic.
MCT oil.
MCT oil instead. Keep keep it healthy keep it kosher
i'm gonna go back oh my god this is so good with the fair life milk
oh yes this is amazing what's uh what's the heaviest you've been in seem like 275 or something
275 yeah that was 2000 2015 2016 end of 2016 i was 275 like yeah, that was 2000, 2015, 2016.
End of 2016, I was 275.
Yeah, record breakers at 272.
I weighed in with Jesse.
And for you at that time, were you a fatter version of where you normally are or what you normally were used to?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I was used to being quite a bit heavier 30 40 pounds heavier than
kind of normal 30 pounds for me normal bulking at that point was 255 to 260 um and i was like
let me push this because i'm trying to put on as much muscle as possible that was when i still had
the goal of getting back on the bodybuilding stage so i was like okay i'm gonna push the
weight because i've never pushed the weight this far and it's gonna help me with competing in
powerlifting so let's just see where we. And it's going to help me with competing in powerlifting.
So let's just see where we can take it while trying to be relatively healthy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And in accordance to like your height and stuff, it just doesn't make sense for you to be lighter.
I think that's a big factor for people to think about when they're trying to think about how do I get as strong as possible.
You're going to want to find like a fighting weight.
Like what's your best weight going to be?
How can you best represent yourself on the platform?
But I see a lot of people making the mistake of just thinking that that's like the first thing they should go to is just to gain a lot of weight.
And gaining weight is good and bulking is good.
But ending up with like a lot of excess body fat might not be the route that you want to go.
And there's a bunch of different reasons for it,
but maybe you do want to reach for it for a bit,
but maybe it's just a little bit over your normal comfort zone.
I've seen people over time toggle back and forth between weight classes and
then ultimately end up kind of just ending up in some bad habits with their eating and they end up being a lot fatter than they'd like. And on top of that, they're not quite as strong as they probably should be for that particular weight class. So while it is the fastest way, there's not a faster way to get stronger, in my opinion, than to lift and to gain body weight.
than to lift and to gain body weight,
you're going to get, you will get stronger.
But I don't think it's the first place that people should look.
I think that people should be trying different programs
and trying some different things.
Try to gain your leverage through gaining muscle,
through gaining, getting hypertrophy.
Just having bigger lats
is gonna make your bench press easier.
Having bigger biceps is gonna to make your bench press easier. Having bigger biceps is going to also make your bench press easier.
Having a bigger back and bigger traps and stuff is going to make your squats easier.
So you want to try to think about it from that perspective
and not just from a gaining body fat perspective.
It begs the question for you.
Obviously, you got up to 330 and you moved some weight when you were 330 you also had quite a
bit of body fat on you at that point if you look back on it what do you think would have been the
strongest for like for competing in powerlifting but also like the healthiest weight to be where
you think you could have maybe still aim for those numbers in a better way, what weight would that have been? Somewhere between 275 and maybe on the high end, 290.
Okay.
I didn't ever need to be any heavier than that.
Okay.
I didn't notice any benefit in strength.
My biggest bench was done in the 275 weight class.
Really?
Yeah.
When I did my squat, I think weighed three like 300 even something like that
rather than like i later i weighed 330 and so i didn't get and and also too like when you're
talking about starting to push that far and start to be just really for anybody to be over 300 pounds
other than some some exceptions of maybe a couple athletes that are really tall,
once you start getting into that category, it's very unhealthy.
So every 10 pounds is even unhealthier.
So you want to be, you know, I think it's a good idea for people to be cautious.
Now, if you're Big Ray, if you're a boy Ray Williams,
and, you know, you're 325 and you're squatting a
thousand and it's like you're breaking these records and you're doing some like legendary
stuff that no one else has ever done before and you feel like it's a good idea to continue to
bulk even when you're already big i say hey man go for it big ray you know people like that should
go for it but a lot of other people aren't in line to do that kind of stuff.
And so I would say, you know, push your body weight up, but find a comfortable weight class to kind of, I guess, like lean into for a while and let your body get used to that new weight and kind of grow in that in in the in that weight class for a while.
What what you said about, you know, if you just have bigger lats,
it's going to help your bench.
It's going to help.
It'll help everything.
But kind of like the old saying, you got to eat big to get big.
So how do you tiptoe that line?
Or, like, do you need to, in fact, eat a little bit more to get that muscle
or to get that size and then, you know, either cut or, like,
what's the strategy there? Well, you know, either cut or like, what's the, uh, what's the strategy
there? Well, you can't make something out of nothing, right? So you're going to have to eat
more. You know, you're going to have to, you're going to have to either be like in a, uh, something
that would be really close to maintenance calories or, or, uh, you know, a positive, uh, energy
balance of some sort. You might have to be in a caloric surplus of some kind.
And making sure that you're eating a good amount of protein to add muscle.
And SEMA's drinking his leftover milk.
That's always the best part of cereal is the leftover milk at the end.
It's got the business.
But yeah, to tow that line,
you know,
you're,
you're going to want to make sure that you're in order to get bigger.
You have,
you do have to eat more food.
I mean,
you have,
you have to have,
if you're trying to get stronger,
it doesn't really make a lot of sense to be in a caloric deficit.
And that's probably another topic for another day,
but that's also something that I see people do often.
I'm not saying that you can't get stronger and be in a caloric deficit because we've seen all kinds of different things.
And you can do things for short periods of time.
People can find ways around stuff like that.
But for the most part, the bench press is going to be easier.
The squat's going to be easier.
The deadlift's going to be easier.
All these exercises will be easier when you're bigger to a certain extent.
And so a way to get bigger is eat more food.
Absolutely.
But then that's the thing, though.
It's like, how much more food do you need to eat?
That's the thing.
You know, you see a lot of people.
Not everyone is Ray Williams.
Not everyone is going for records.
Some people are doing powerlifting and they're competing because they enjoy the sport of powerlifting.
They enjoy competing.
Maybe they have some personal goals for themselves, but we need to outline, okay, the personal
goal of hitting this total, right?
What do we need to give for that?
Do we need to put on 20 extra pounds of body fat to be able to get to that goal?
Or could we take a little bit longer, right?
Not put on all the excess body fat, not get to actually looking and feeling and being unhealthy.
And can we get there in a healthy way?
That's why I asked you, what do you think you,
what do you think would have been the healthiest weight,
but also allowed you to move the most weight to what weight,
what would that be?
And you were like 275, 275.
Yep, exactly.
So you could have done,
do you think you could have squatted a thousand 80 something at 275?
I squatted over a thousand pounds many times at 275. Yeah, exactly. And that's what I'm thinking about here because you know, you see some people, they're training gym, powerlifting gym, you look at them and you don't want to be thinking it, but you're just like, you don't need to carry that extra weight to be strong.
just as strong, if not stronger, if you just drop 40 pounds of fat, right?
And it's rough to say, and it's rough to think, but at the end of the day,
we're doing this sport because you enjoy it,
but you're also doing this whole thing as far as lifting so you can be healthy,
so you can walk around well, so you can be jacked and strong.
But having extra body fat isn't doing nothing for you.
One of the better people that communicates really well on this is Jeff Nippert.
He's got great information.
Extremely strong guy. You know, he's got great information. Um, extremely strong guy.
Um, you know, he's not like a full-time power lifter. He's more into bodybuilding,
but he'll go back and forth and he'll bulk up. He'll gain some body fat.
He's not nearly as shredded as he is in some photos for a little while. And then he gets stronger and he works on his deadlift and he works on uh some of the power movements and then sure enough he'll chip away and he'll get leaner that is also something that
i've recommended for many years for people to do after every single competition that you do whenever
you compete because it does make sense for you to it makes sense to me to for you to maximize your
weight class and he makes sense to i'd'd rather see, especially young people, gain a little weight going into
a competition rather than lose weight.
People are like, oh, I'm going to go to the 198 class.
It's like, no, man, just fill out that 220 class.
You know, weigh 228, 227 during training and miss a meal and make weight.
The other thing that happens too, when you train, when you're a little heavier, you get a stronger training effect.
Like that training effect sits in your body.
So if you go through a whole entire training cycle weighing 250 pounds and you're going to compete at 242, that's going to register in your body.
As opposed to if you did the whole training cycle at 230 and you compete in the 242 pound weight class it doesn't necessarily mean
just having the extra weight is automatically going to allow you to handle more training volume
because that's not necessarily true but having the extra body weight on you sometimes can allow
you to lift more weight after every competition though i think it's really important that people
work on some sort of recomp you should like change your goals like you just did a bunch of stuff to express your one
rep max in bench squat and deadlift well now it's time to shift gears and do something else maybe
maybe doing sets of 10 for a while maybe you're going on more walks maybe you
lift one day a week less you know you you're going to have to figure out a way
to get away from yourself for a little
bit in order to still do the sport for a long time if you look at ed cone's career he probably
did it better than anybody else because after every competition he would rebuild his base every
single time as boring as it is he would start over every time. And there he was doing leg extensions, leg curls, sit-ups,
the neck machine, you know, the four-way neck machine, training his forearms, training his calves,
all the stuff that no one trains. But Ed would spend weeks and weeks and weeks working on these
things because he knew that he couldn't you can't just power lift
all the time he would do a lot of bodybuilding stuff and every time he lifted every time he
competed on the platform he'd look bigger and bigger and bigger and sometimes still even only
be in the same weight class and and that's the thing one thing that you don't realize is that
you can adapt to you can make gains games while holding onto the same weight,
right?
Um,
I've been doing that for multiple years now and people can see the track record.
Like I've been two 40 to two 45 for the past,
maybe since 2017,
two 40 to two 45.
Cause I saw some photos from there and maybe I was like two 50 a little bit,
but I've been the same weight.
Okay.
But my body composition every year has gotten better.
I've been gaining a little bit of muscle every year better.
And I've been also feeling better.
The big thing is that I've been feeling better at this weight because I didn't always feel
as strong or as competent at this weight.
I used to feel much stronger at 260, but that's the thing.
It's like a lot of people are like, oh yeah, I feel stronger when I weigh 20 or 30 extra pounds.
Okay.
How long have you given yourself to be like, let's say you're usually 230.
How long have you given yourself actually at being 200 pounds?
Because when you initially get to 200 pounds, it's tough.
You don't feel as strong.
You don't feel as good.
But if you train at 200 pounds for a few years and if you improve there and you get used to being 200 pounds or 210 pounds, whatever, you will get very strong at 200 to 210 pounds and
your body composition is going to be better. And you're probably going to move better without the
extra body fat. A great example of it would be, you know, everyone always just says you're a
genetic freak, but whatever they want to throw at you, if we all of a sudden said, look, man,
we're going to make you 220, you're going to go into a competition, and we want to see what kind of weight you can deadlift, you would feel weaker.
Much weaker.
You wouldn't feel stronger.
Now, if we did it over a period of time and we're like, hey, man, you know what?
At the end of 2022, it would be really cool if you were like freaking 4% body fat or something wild.
And if you pulled 700 pounds or something like that, you know, and we tried to figure
out how to get you to like a certain body weight, which who knows if we can even figure
out a way to get you that light.
But the point being is if you did it over a longer period of time and you owned the
weight and you stayed at the weight for a little while, you're going to be able to
generate a lot more force.
You're going to get used to training at that lower body weight.
I have so many people who ask me all the time, like, well, doesn't your strength feel like
shit when you're training?
Like, doesn't it's like, no, I, I lost a hundred pounds, but it has been like 12 years.
You know, it's, this process has taken a long time.
this process has taken a long time. I'm sure I lost 30 pounds and maybe even more like 50 or 60 pounds, probably pretty quickly. Like that probably came off in a year or, you know,
handful of months. And I, I think I went back up a little bit and came back down and
messed around with some different things. But for the most part, it's been slow and steady
over a long period of time the point now where
i'm kind of ended up in your category where i'm losing body fat i feel like i'm gaining a little
bit of muscle i'm getting in like just it's just a little tick it's like a just tiny tiny tiny bit
better shape all the time and i'm gaining access to being able to move a little bit better,
which is getting to be really fun, but it's all, it's all very, very slow. But as I get used to
this lower body weight, I can continue to get, I can already feel it now. I feel like I'm getting
stronger right now. That's probably the reason why I feel like I'm also putting on some muscle.
And I was going to say like that you are getting stronger right now,
but if you really chose that,
you're like,
I want to really work my way up to a bigger bench for myself.
It would take some time because you're still somewhat getting used to this
body,
but you'd absolutely be able to,
you'd be able to do that.
You'd absolutely be able to do that.
But that's,
that's the thing,
you know,
it's hard to give yourself enough time to get used to that when when you're
training and you have a competition six months from now you want that now so to do that now
you're like okay i'm gonna put on 20 pounds you'll gain that 20 pounds fat back or you'll gain that
20 pounds fast but the thing is the majority of that weight is going to be body fat okay um so
it's it's it's a tough one because like, when you look at a lot of the
really top level power lifters, USAPL or any of these orgs, um, a lot of them have really great
body compositions. Okay. But then when you look at a lot of other power lifters who just train,
or maybe they're, they're in the middle of the, they're in the middle of the pack. Um,
a lot of people just let themselves gain a bad body composition where you can tell, okay, maybe you're moving some weight, but outside of that, you're having trouble walking up the stairs.
You're having trouble walking a few blocks.
Not healthy, right?
And it's still a sport, you know, and I get in sports, sometimes you have to do things that aren't healthy so you can get to another level.
But I don't think, especially if, you know, you're not at that spot, I don't think you need to be sacrificing your health to try to get certain numbers.
Yeah, and you look at some of the stronger power lifters.
You look at Russ Swole.
Oh, shit.
He just won again.
And you look at, yeah, he's unbelievable.
You look at guys like Bryce Lewis and all these different lifters.
People come in different shapes and sizes.
But in my opinion, like those two guys I just mentioned, I mean, Bryce is not, Bryce used
to do some bodybuilding, but he, um, he doesn't look, he doesn't look like Russ Swole, right?
But I think all of that's fine.
I think all that's acceptable.
Those are in powerlifting.
You might find like ideal body
weights. You might find it common to, for some lifters to, uh, want to be actually, you know,
in a 16 to 18% body fat, not every lifter, but in accordance to like your height, your genetics,
how well you put muscle on certain areas that might be a kind of ideal. And for a lot of other lifters, it won't be a great thing for them to be under 10% body
fat.
But we do know some, we know some guys that can figure out ways of managing that, but
it's normally pretty damn rare.
I think like if you were just to try to throw a number out there, it would probably be a
good idea to work towards not being over
20% body fat as a power lifter.
Like that would just a good rule of thumb.
If you are currently over 20% body fat, I think if you work over a period of time, you
work on it slowly, but surely you'll find yourself 16 to 18% body fat and stronger than
ever.
It's like, why wouldn't you want that for yourself?
I think that's a, I think that's a reasonable goal you know um better work capacity too most likely yeah
because like your heart capacity get way better um i've done that in my powerlifting career a
couple times i remember getting body fat tests done when i was real big going holy crap what
was the peak you know i i i don really remember, but I want to say it
was like 19 or 20, you know, at some point. Um, but I also remember being like two 75 and, uh,
two six, two 65 to 75 and being like 10 or 12% body fat, you know, having to be like pretty,
pretty, uh, pretty ridiculous for little periods of time not
i could couldn't hold on to that weight but that gives you another example
of what we're talking about here today where because you're not used to it it's harder to
hold on to it's harder to like gain anything it's hard to hang out there so for me i might get in
shape for like a photo shoot or something like that, that I did back in the day. And then that, and then that would be that, you know, then I would,
you know, gain a bunch of weight back and I would get ready for another powerlifting meet.
Then I would recomp and I'd start over again. But every time you're at these new body weights,
every time you like lose weight, you're going to feel a little bit weaker, but once you stay there
for a bit, you'll get used to it. You'll it you'll get stronger again from meat to meat would you sorry power lifting
meat to power lifting meat goodness and seem you know that have you ever heard that um that sound
meat to meat there's a song no it's like the fuck that all meat to meat meat to there's a song that
goes like that so when you said that
i was like okay are you trying to say okay no that's fine we got to find i probably would
have never even known it existed to meet sound to meet would you go so would you finish one meat
and then have your eyes on another one and then would you decide right then and there
what like weight class you were gonna like aim towards or would you just train and then by time you got a little bit closer be like all
right i'm going to end up in this one i would usually uh you know train for a competition and
as i was training for a competition i would usually get bigger you know going into the
competition but i found that like that had a limit too. You can't just, I mean, that's what ended my powerlifting career.
That's how I ended up falling with 1,085 was I was, uh, I was trained.
My training was awesome.
I squatted like 1130 or something in training.
It felt like just everything felt so light.
It was just, everything was just, everything was just ridiculous.
Like the form came together really good.
The strength came together.
The program came together.
Everything was just going on all cylinders.
And I weighed like around 303 pounds or 305 pounds.
And I don't know, you just,
you just, you think more is better of everything
all the time, you know? So, you think more is better of everything all the time. You
know, like I, so I'm weighing this weight and my squat suit and stuff like doesn't fit quite the
way it used to fit and things like that. And so, and my belt isn't on the same notch. It's like a
notch tighter than normal. And, uh, I'm like, well, the meat is still a couple of weeks away.
I might as well, I should gain weight.
But the weight that you gain in that short period of time like that,
it's not a good idea.
And it just throws everything off.
You don't even know.
Like, I didn't train that way.
So looking back on it, it didn't make any sense.
Anyway, fast forward to the competition, and I probably weighed on, like, game day, you know,
being, you know, very hydrated and everything probably weighed
like 325 or something or 320 so i packed i packed that weight on when i was already huge um and then
as i'm warming up for my squats i'm like oh my god i think my leg is like and the leg is getting
pretty numb i'm like i think it's like fucking falling asleep, you know? Whoa.
And my opener was pretty hefty.
My opener was like 1,030 or something like that or 1,020.
And I was like, well, even if my leg is asleep, I can smoke that way.
So I'll go out there and do that.
So I did that.
While your leg was asleep?
While my leg was pretty much, yeah, taking a nap.
Then I went to a thousand eighty five and I'm like, this is a bad idea. But here we go.
Like, this is this is a competition.
This is what you do, you know.
And so I just didn't have that's why I fell is my leg was asleep.
But it was also just because I got too big.
I got so big that the pressure of my squat suit was the reason why my leg was uh falling
asleep i mean my leg i think when i got out of my squat suit my leg was like black and then
everyone's like like damn you really like fucked yourself you know like you're everything's bruising
right away i'm like it's not it's not necessarily bruised i'm like it's just it didn't have oxygen
for a long time or blood or whatever the hell the
case was so it got to be kind of it got to be kind of wild yo wow wait dude i've never heard
that shit before have you ever talked about that i never talked about it before damn that okay
i'm sorry but the fact that you like you you, ah, let's do it.
When your leg was half asleep and the 1,084 was on the bar and you were still like, no, let's do it.
Man.
Goddamn, Mark.
That's wild, dude.
Oh, my God. That's where I was, man.
That's where I was at the time.
Yeah.
Okay.
Well.
I'm sure if you're at Worlds and you break your hand.
No, you're right.
You know what I mean?
Like you break your foot and then you whoop up on one of the guys still and then you go to the next round.
I'm sure you'd just be like, they'd be like, hey, man, you're limping.
You okay?
You'd be like, I'm good.
Not that I mentioned that.
That makes sense.
Like throw a little tape on it.
Plus there are people around you, you're not wanting to bow out of what you set your mind to do.
That's the other, yeah, that's a huge, I mean, look, that's a huge factor, right?
Am I going to just, then I got to answer to everybody, oh, what's wrong?
What happened?
You know, oh, you're not feeling strong today.
Or it's like, and I definitely didn't want to try to take the suit off and let my leg try to come back because it just, that would have been too distracting.
So that thing has to stay on.
Like you, you can't, you don't take it off between.
No, you can't.
Yeah, you can't.
And yeah, it's on there pretty tight.
And then plus you're putting knee wraps on.
So imagine putting a knee wrap on a leg that's half gone already.
Well, there we go.
But another reason not to get too fat.
Yeah.
And you really do, you know, back to this kind of point of like owning your body weight.
We've seen it happen so many times in the gym.
And we've also seen it happen with athletes getting leaner.
with athletes getting leaner.
If you get down to 180 pounds
for the first time and you were
previously 220 and you had
some body fat on you, when you're at
180, you're not all of a sudden going to look peeled,
especially if you never did that before,
especially if 180 doesn't necessarily
represent 5% body fat or any of those
things. But even if 180
pounds did represent a very low body fat
percentage, I would actually say that even without being a very low body fat percentage, I would actually
say that even without being able to like really truly measure it, I would say that someone that
could stay at 180 for like a year, you're going to see that person lose fat in areas that they
previously complained about. They're like, oh man, this is a stubborn spot. I can't lose any weight
off of here. People talk all the time about stubborn body fat. And I think everyone gets upset that they have spots on their body or,
or parts of their body that they hate or they don't like.
Well,
if you want to know the secret to losing stubborn body fat,
it's,
you got to be really stubborn with your diet and you have to,
you have to live in that pocket for a long time.
And it's uncomfortable because you've never done it before.
As in Sma points out
he's a lot more comfortable at the body weight that he's at now at the body fat percentage is
at now but years ago for you to be probably continuously under 10 might even not feel
comfortable now you're at seven percent and if you wanted to you could probably be fairly
comfortable even a little lower.
But then it might negatively impact your jujitsu.
There's some give and take there.
But the point being is, whether you're trying to get lean or whether you're trying to be strong,
you have to own the body weight that you're trying to get to and own that body fat percentage that you're trying to get to.
Power Project Familia.
How's it going?
This episode is brought to you by our sponsor, Merrick Health.
Now, if you know Derek from More Plates, More Dates, which you obviously do, he owns his
TRT clinic and Merrick Health is the premium telehealth TRT and HRT clinic where we have
something called the Power Project Panel.
If you're just interested in getting labs for men and women, 26 different labs that'll
give you everything you need to know. But if you want to work directly with somebody
who can give you advice on exactly what treatment you should get, Merrick Health has those doctors
too. So check them out. Andrew, can you tell the people how to get it?
Yeah, absolutely. So we have links down in the YouTube description as well as the podcast show
notes. But you need to head over to MerrickHealth.com. That's M-A-R-R-E-K-Health.com.
And yeah, if you are interested in TRT, you can actually contact them.
You'll hop on the phone with them.
And when it comes time to actually start paying for some of these panels, just let them know
that you've heard it through us and you want to use promo code PowerProject15.
And that's going to save you 15% off all the recommended labs that they give you.
Again, links to them down in the description as well as the podcast show notes.
Highly recommend it.
They are the premium telehealth HRT clinic, TRT clinic.
They're really, they're second to none.
So head over there right now.
And one thing that comes with that territory
is a regression initially.
Because when, like, for example, when I was dropping,
when a lot of people find that
when they're dropping body fat,
they'll hold on for a bit as far as strain's
concerned but there's a point where they start to actually regress as far as their lifts they
start to maybe feel a little bit more fatigued and then once they where do you feel at the most
like have like do you remember when you were losing weight for shows and stuff do you remember
like a particular lift where you're like that kind of sucked yeah yeah yeah i would like especially
for shows it'd be when i got dipped into the 230s.
And even when I was in the 240s before, I didn't like being at 240 before.
I felt weak.
I didn't feel nearly as good as when I was like 250, 255, et cetera.
But for shows, you have to keep digging into that.
It's like you don't have a choice to get out of it.
You're just like, okay, well, I'm going to be getting leaner.
With powerlifting, though, when you're trying to shift your body composition and you're trying to lose body fat, there's a
point where your bench starts to feel a little bit heavier. Deadlifts take a little bit longer
to leave the ground. That's what I was kind of getting to. It's like bench feels like the worst.
I don't know why, but that extra weight, like just maybe off of like your upper body a little bit or
shoulders or something. I know like my whole body will shake or try to grab dumbbells.
You know, you grab a hundred pound dumbbells. Now all of a sudden you feel every ounce of those
things. Whereas when you're bigger, you're just like, you just grab the hundreds and it's nothing
throw them around. But so you start to lose weight. You start to like shake and stuff.
It's horrible. Absolutely. So there is going to be a regression there, but if you don't
just run away from it and you stay there and you have to stay there for a while, you will start to feel better and
progress there.
But most people aren't willing to stay within that place where they are currently a little
bit weaker, a little bit weaker than they were when they were 20 pounds heavier and
progress with that new, new, healthier body composition.
And I'll say this, you can, you'll notice this and I know people are going to say, well,
he's, he's on drugs or whatever, but Larry wheels, Larry wheels. If you look at his body composition years ago,
you look good. Right. But he wasn't as lean as he is now. And right now he's extremely strong
and he's leaner. And it took like his, his strength dipped. And then he started getting
used to being as lean. And then he started getting stronger. It's like that happens to
everybody. It's the question of, are you going to be patient enough to allow yourself to progress at that new weight?
Are you just going to be like, I don't want this. I don't want to lose this strength right now. I'm
going to gain 20, 20, 30 pounds back. That's a great example, Larry wheels. Cause I think that
he's probably, I mean, I don't want to speak for him necessarily on this topic, but he's probably
been on for like a decade. He's probably been on for eight or 10 years or so. He'd been on for a while. So there hasn't been any other changes. And I don't even
think, I don't even think the guy really cares about like trying to get like leaner. I'm sure
he's got good discipline with his diet and stuff, but I don't think he's like outwardly like trying
to get leaner. He also isn't really outwardly, he's just such a mutant. He's not even outwardly
trying to get stronger.
He just kind of does these like strength things.
I saw him like bending a bar over his head the other day and his people were like, his bicep has a bicep.
And he's had all these kind of injuries, but he's been able to kind of plow through all these different things.
And I think that, you know, when you look at an individual like that, it is easy for people to be like, oh man, that guy's on the juice.
And that's what they always want to point out.
Yeah.
But still,
how has he made all the progress?
You know,
you don't,
you don't just take more and more stuff like that trick only works for so long.
He continues to make progress and it's been over a long period of time.
And he's already,
I mean,
he's probably the,
he probably,
now that I think about it, he's probably the
greatest strength athlete ever, period. I mean, I've never, I've never seen anything like him
before. He's, he's, he's the freak of all freaks. So anyway, if you hang in there and you stay at
these body weights, you're going to continue to look better and you're going to continue to get
stronger. You have to find the weight that you think is most appropriate for you.
I have a cool question from, I suck at reading names. Sorry, everybody. It looks like Daniel,
but it's with a K. So like can you, I'm not sure. I don't know if that's made, whatever.
Can you ask if I bulk and reach a set point weight too quickly and get fat,
will I have wasted potential gains or will I recomp at that higher body fat just as effective as like a process right so he's saying instead
of doing it slowly and kind of gaining the whole way doing it right away and then staying there
do you guys think there's any benefit to doing that i personally don't see the reason i don't
see the reason to so the only this is this is what's going
through somebody's head when they do that let's say they're 180 i want to be 200 they rush towards
200 it's a lot of body fat now they're like i'm 200 i'm gonna hold on to this you can continue
you can eat at maintenance maybe increase performance and you can recomp but you are
you're for a long period of time you're probably going to be unhappy with the amount of body fat that you've put on.
So it's somewhat of an unnecessary thing.
You're literally putting a lot of body fat on, and then you're like, okay, now I'm going to slowly gain muscle and slowly lose this body fat.
So then why not just allow yourself to slowly gain muscle over time while limiting the amount of body fat you gain and getting to 200 a little bit slower rather than rushing towards the number and having excessive amounts of body fat on your
frame yeah i think there's kind of like um like real weight uh george lockhart talked about it
on the show before um even if you were to take this scenario and you were trying to lose weight
if you lost weight quickly that's not your real weight. It's like fake weight. Like you fakely weigh 180.
You know, if you bulked up to 220, you fakely weigh 220.
You don't really weigh 220.
Like you got to weigh 220 day in and day out in order to receive all the benefits of being 220.
And also to program into your body how training feels when you're 220 pounds.
When you're bench pressing and you
weigh 220 versus when you weigh 180. Everything that you do is going to be a little bit easier.
You should be able to handle a little bit more weight on everything that you do. Therefore,
that should be more volume. You might even be able to handle more reps and more sets.
Maybe your overall conditioning fades out a bit because you gained, gained some weight. But
if you're trying just to jump up to a weight or you're trying just to dive down to a weight,
those are not real weights that you actually weigh at the time. And really detrimental is to do that
with losing weight because you will really feel like crap and you can't push through. And that's
when you go and you say, man, that diet didn't work for me. Like I couldn't, I tried to lose weight a bunch of times
and power lift and I couldn't do the two simultaneously.
And it's like, actually you can do them simultaneously
and they're actually, they work synergistically together
if you can allow them to,
but they just, it just, everything takes a long time.
Absolutely, yeah. so another question again
there's i don't have full context but uh voodoo's just asking because he wants to know what to aim
for uh how much weight should he try to gain per week or even per month how much does he weigh
uh that's a good question maybe you can hit us back up. Probably want to gain weight fairly slowly.
What, a pound or two a month?
I mean, same thing with losing weight.
We don't want to really like, you know, it depends on your age and stuff.
If you're 15 and you've never eaten like a bodybuilder or trained like a bodybuilder or a powerlifter,
then you're going to be able to slap weight on like there's no tomorrow.
But in most cases, I think we're just talking about a couple pounds.
That's one to 2% a month in terms of your body weight.
Um, so yeah, like most people, you don't want to be gaining for most people.
Like you're 180 pounds.
I honestly would say don't gain more than two pounds a month.
And if it's more than two pounds a month and you're not a new lifter, that's the thing.
If you're new to lifting, you can manage that.
You can manage three or four pounds for multiple months,
but if you're not new,
not more than really a pound or two,
right?
Yeah.
Uh,
160 pounds.
Yeah.
So like,
yeah,
you want to be on the shy end of two pounds,
like maybe a half a pound and a half a month or maybe even a pound.
And also too,
if he's never really tried to gain weight,
he might notice that he gains four or five pounds in the first couple of weeks, you know?
But so he might get a little surge because maybe he was under eating before and not paying attention to what he was doing.
But I agreed a hundred percent, just a couple of pounds a month.
And one thing to think about too, if you're not a new lifter, homie, like if you've been doing this for a while and you're 160 think about this a year from
now you're 173 or 174 or maybe even 175 think about that right um and that that would be good
weight but if you were 190 that you would you'd probably be you probably have a good amount of
body fat on your frame okay so in a year if you may be able to do that, that's very impressive.
It just doesn't look that exciting from month to month. But after the year is done, you're like,
oh shit, you know, you look different. You're stronger. You're probably not crazy body fat.
Maybe you're maybe you have the same body fat that you did when you started. That's very possible.
So yeah, I'm, I'm just happy that he, he asked because he's pretty young. He's 20 years old.
Claims that he's skinny.
I've been there too, man.
And that he's eating 3,500 calories a day.
So I would say maybe some of those food choices could probably get cleaned up and then maybe that will help with like bulking up and getting a little bit bigger.
But that's great because like we can set this guy up for the future,
like really,
really properly.
And you know,
if you're eating 3,500 calories a day and you're not gaining anything right now,
that's number one,
it's interesting.
You might have a fast metabolism,
but number two,
maybe I don't know how much cardio you're doing.
Some people they,
and they're actually doing a lot of work.
They're doing a lot of lifting and they're doing running and they're doing
this and that.
But I would say that make sure that, doing running and they're doing this and that. But I would
say that make sure that
yeah, take walks, do things like that
but have a majority of your expenditure
come from what you're doing in the gym.
Take walks outside of it
and aim for, yeah,
aim for about a pound and a half to maybe
two pounds a month. Not much more
than that.
Sometimes you don't even necessarily need to lose or gain
weight either i mean back to what we were talking about where you will continue to get in better
shape and you can like oddly recomp pretty well at a similar body weight for a long time so in the
case of someone that weighs 160 who feels they look skinny, I can reference many people that weigh 160 pounds that look jacked.
Chris Elkins is one of those dudes.
There's people that look yoked.
So, I mean, unless you're 6'3", then it's going to be tough, you know.
But if you're 5'7", or something like that, or 5'6", it's probably not a huge deal to figure out ways to look and
jack at that body weight. So I think those are all things to consider. You can, you know, can go the
route where you're like legitimately trying to bulk. But for this guy in particular, if he's
already consuming a good amount of calories and he's not really gaining weight, wouldn't really
sweat it too much. Don't really, you know, don't really worry about it because ultimately I think
a lot of people, maybe with the exception of some power lifters that are like
just really going for it here and there i think almost everybody really cares about the look they
just they want to like just look bigger or look leaner that is the direction of the other yeah
that is idea of owning your weight for example the guy that was mentioning oh what if i just
go up to 200 and recomp there?
You know, we, we talked about like gaining a little bit of weight and then holding that weight for maybe three months. So maybe you go from one 60 and then you get to one 65.
Um, and then you hold one 65 for two or three months, right? You could do that. And then you
could slowly gain again and then hold and get better body composition at that weight.
So it's just something to think about. There's a few ways of re-comping and doing that well but like mark said you don't
always have to actually put weight on the scale yeah sure i'll take a ped question okay all right
so greedy rick oh greedy guy um is there any benefit i won't i guess i won't say the names
wait pause real quick before you ask this question did we have the disclaimer before the video?
No, we did not.
Okay, that's something to think about with this because this is about to be advice on something like that.
So you're not a doctor?
I'm not a doctor, nope.
Nobody should take any of this advice.
No, no one should take any advice from me.
This is entertainment.
Everything is false here.
You're about to hear.
Don't be an idiot. This is entertainment. Everything is false here. You're about to hear. Don't be an idiot.
This is just entertainment?
Entertainment.
Everything I'm about to say is going to be totally false, as always.
Yeah.
I won't go into the actual names, but Greedy Rick is asking, is there any benefit to any of the bulking types of supplements?
He lists a couple.
to any of the bulking types of supplements?
He lists a couple.
For adding extra muscle, it gives lots of wetness,
but does it actually benefit gaining mass as opposed to a dry anabolic?
Wait, wetness?
Man, anytime we can add wetness.
I know, right?
Is he like water weight or something?
Is that what he means?
He said wetness.
He said wetness.
Like, boy, are you?
Can I get a wetness?
Can I get a wetness?
Oh, my God.
Yeah, of course there's advantages to taking some of the performance enhancing drugs that people have utilized before for bulking.
I mean, yeah, they make you bigger.
They help make you more bloated.
And anyone that's ever really crushed a lot of food one night
and had a lot of sodium,
like go to a Chinese food place or something,
crush that shit, and then come into the gym,
you feel like a god you know
a 45 pound plate somehow turns into a fucking frisbee you're like fucking zinging them at
people's heads and shit like that so those compounds will definitely do that for you that's
that's that's what they're tried and true that's what people have utilized them for a long time
and uh the drugs that uh lean you out, they don't have the same benefit.
They're not going to be something that's going to necessarily make you bigger, but they can still help you get stronger.
And it's the reason why Tren is so popular.
I'm waiting for YouTube to take this word away from us too.
But it's the reason why T is so popular because trend hovers
somewhere in the middle where it actually does a little bit of both it can help get you stronger
and it can help it can help make you it can help make you leaner not necessarily it's not really a
it's not really a drug that's gonna help get you bigger but it's it's a weird it's a weird
way do we have coach trevor on we can ask him all these questions about like what the fucking deal is with
trend.
But yeah,
that shit will,
uh,
it,
it,
it's dangerous.
So,
you know,
it's dangerous stuff.
It's funny.
Whenever you say trend,
you like print,
you enunciate it.
So,
how was,
I know it was like a horse thing,
right?
But like,
what was the purpose?
How did it even get invented?
I don't have those details, man.
I don't know, man.
It's an amazing name.
Yeah, I know.
I know that many years ago, you used to be able to go to like a horse feed store, and they had pellets that they would give to cattle.
They would inject cattle with these cartridges that had pellets in them,
and the Trenbolone would disperse into their body over a period of time,
and you'd end up with big and jacked cows.
And I think part of the reason why Trent has so much – there's a couple reasons why Trent has so much novelty.
But I think some of it has to do with the fact that there was a GNC or not GNC, Max Muscle product years ago called Trent.
And we swear to God anyone – like i never took it but i had
i knew friends that took it i knew i knew young people that took it and they got fucking jacked
and they got really they got really strong and they end up with like tons of acne and end up
with tons of problems especially because like there were some teenagers taking it and they were like
roid raging on people and they were going through all kinds of problems because they already you know when you're at that age your hormones
all the good stuff gets canceled yeah so you said anyway it got it got pulled yeah you said agent
orange had trend in it right ultimate orange ultimate orange okay i have a buddy from jujitsu
he was telling me about it the other day right now he's like he's 180 he's tall 63 but he's like
when i was a teenager like i, I took that Agent Orange stuff.
One summer, I got to 220.
And I was playing football.
And everyone was like, what the fuck are you using?
I'm like, I'm strong.
And he got into hella fights and shit.
And I was like, oh, my God.
It was over the counter.
I mean, he thought it was like another.
He just thought it was another pro hormone.
He said they sold that max muscle.
Yeah.
It was great.
Yeah.
Max muscle.
Even though you just said pro hormone., like if that doesn't do anything.
They don't do much.
They do hurt your – they'll mess you up.
They'll do the wrong thing very well.
Pro-hormone will like increase your testosterone levels, but it didn't really seem to yield much other like andrastine dione and all that stuff that
maguire and jose can say go but anyway i think that trend also uh has its weird
stigma around it because people like were so obsessed with it that they would take those
pellets and they would like boil them down and they would turn them into injectables it was a
thing bodybuilders would use yeah that makes sense yeah and also at the time it was underground yeah oh yeah yeah it was sick as yeah
it couldn't get more it couldn't get more underground than that and then the other
thing too is that like it used to come in like it used to come like reasonable dosages like it used
to be like because it was like 75 milligrams right right? And the stuff kind of hurt.
So you couldn't really take that much of it.
It hurt?
Yeah.
What do you mean it hurt?
It hurt.
Who injected it?
It fucking killed.
Yeah.
And it like welted you up pretty good.
Oh, what?
But, uh, it was 75 milligrams, you know, per milliliter.
Normally like testosterone, these things are like 200 milligrams per milliliter.
Just remember, I don't know what I'm talking about.
I'm not a doctor um but then they started making a longer acting ester of
trenbolone because it was originally a shorter ester meaning like the shorter ester you'd had to
utilize it more frequently so it's very normal for people to use like 100 milligrams of Tren a week, maybe on the high end, 100, you know, 150, you know, that would be
like, but then they started making Tren in like 150 and 200 milligram per milliliter dosages.
And then people started taking that like every other day. And then they started taking 600,
you know, 400 to 600 milligrams of that stuff. You got in mind this stuff is Really really powerful it's like really
Really potent I'm trying to think
Of like something I can compare
It to for like normal people but
In comparison to testosterone
Oh
There's not
It doesn't compare to testosterone no no
It's on a different planet than testosterone
Holy shit
It's on its own trendrenbaloney sandwich planet.
You know how people talk about red line?
It's like that.
It's like that.
People are like, oh, yeah, I love Monster, and I love energy drinks, and I love pre-workout,
man, I'm hardcore.
I do two, three scoops.
And you're like, you ever try red line?
They're like, fuck that.
I ain't trying to die.
Tren's like that.
Holy shit. Well, sick. Thanks for the history lesson there. we try red line they're like fuck that i ain't trying to die trends like that holy shit well
sick thanks for the uh the history lesson there uh we have another cool question and seem i think
you can tackle this one for sure from a t-ship 803 uh been lifting seriously for about five years
went from 200 pounds to 220 and now he's stuck uh consumption of calories is tough now so i believe you've you've
kind of helped people in the past where like they've been like running into a brick wall
eating as much as they can and they're not gaining and then when you mentioned something like what if
you took a break what would happen and they're like no i can't do that because i'm gonna lose
everything i think you kind of just answered the question for me my bad that's a good thing okay
i'm so happy you did keep going like yeah well i mean because like
right now what uh i'm gonna this part where i butcher but like insulin's probably way high
right yeah maybe i'm not not even not even getting into anything like that okay it's like the
sensitivity there you go that's what i meant to say no but not even getting to any of that you're
220 pounds you've been lifting for five years at this point it's funny we were talking i was
talking to hannah Eden about this yesterday.
Stop focusing on the weight on the scale and just focus on increasing your performance in the gym.
Keep eating the same amount of food you're eating, but don't rush any more weight on the scale.
I'm also curious how tall this dude is.
But, yeah, you shouldn't necessarily keep pushing the scale forward, especially if your body weight isn't just going up.
Own that weight for a while.
Because, dude, I mean, I've been the same weight for four or five years.
I was heavier.
But at the same time, I've been the same weight and my body is totally different and totally better than years ago.
I guarantee that if you just focus on increasing your performance in the gym, moving more training volume, getting stronger, number one, the weight will slowly start to move. And if it moves slowly,
that's a good thing, right? The weight will slowly start to move. You'll become more dense,
et cetera. But if you really try to keep pushing that weight and pushing that weight,
it's not going to reap you any other benefits than just maybe forcefully putting on body fat.
That's what I would do. Most people that have been training for seven, eight, nine, 10 years, like you, you can slowly see gains on the scale, but if you just
work on increasing your performance and holding the weight or slowly gaining the weight, you're
going to end up with a much better body. The it's not newbie gains anymore. Things aren't going to
happen as fast as he did at the beginning. You're not going to be gaining four or five pounds a
month. Right. Um, and that's the same thing for me. My body's continuing to make improvements,
but it's literally a pound a year. It's a pound. Like for my last Texas scan, one year to this
Texas scan, I've gained 1.2 pounds and that's solid. Right. But the body has also changed in
a very substantial, in a very beneficial way. So that'd be my advice. Stop pushing the weight.
a very substantial, in a very beneficial way.
So that would be my advice.
Stop pushing the weight.
Stop focusing on the weight.
Focus on the performance.
Improve things in the gym and you're going to be smooth.
Moral of the story to kind of wrap this entire show up is, you know, take your time.
If we're specifically talking about weight gain and you really want to gain some weight,
take your time gaining weight. As we pointed out, one or two
pounds a month is probably a good place to start. Obviously, if you're younger or newer, like you
might gain 10 pounds in the first month, just cause like you've never done any of these things
before. It might all be new. Um, but for the most part, take your time to gain the weight
should take you like a year to gain 10 to 15 pounds. And if you've been lifting for a long
time, it might take you even longer than that, unfortunately. But for every like 10 pounds that you go up, if you're, you know, if you're a guy and maybe for every five pounds you go up as a female, spend some time there, hang out there for a little bit, try some new programming, see how it works, see how your body feels at that weight, and then you can worry about gaining and gaining.
But there's not a lot of great reasons to just put on a lot of body fat.
To put on some body fat in an effort to bulk
and to get stronger, of course, we are fans of that.
That's probably what you should do,
especially if you're young
and you're trying to get into powerlifting.
I don't see any problems with that.
As we mentioned earlier, if you're a guy,
maybe around a 16% body fat, if you can hold on to like a bicep vein here and there during a training session and you're, you know, working towards lifting some big ass weights, that's pretty damn impressive.
So I think that's pretty much it.
Andrew, want to take us on out of here?
Yeah.
And then just real quick, that guy T-Shep is 6'1".
So 6'1", 220.
What?
Jesus.
Bro.
I don't think he can eat anymore.
I'm going to get more weight.
I'm going to get more.
It's like, fuck, dude.
Like, you're a monster.
Like, just keep lifting.
And that's five years.
That's, god damn.
God damn.
That's five years.
What the fuck?
Bro, slow the fuck down.
That's what you need to do.
He doesn't even know.
He's a genetic freak. And he won't even, he didn't even know about it. Jeez. I love the fuck down that's what you need to do he doesn't even know he's a genetic freak and he won't even he didn't even know about it but i love the questions like that yeah oh yes
hey man i'm really stuck at a 733 deadlift so i can only do it for three and i can only do it sumo
and when i go to pull conventional i got this huge problem of where i can only pull 675 so i was
wondering you know what kind of advice you guys got me.
I'm not strong like
you guys, and I probably never will be,
but maybe you have a suggestion.
I'm always like, what the? Meanwhile, this guy is
the most jacked guy in the room.
Anyways,
I'm actually still very full from those.
I had like a bowl and a half of cereal.
I had two Fair Life
set up. Big bowl of cereal. These are good, man. I had two Fair Life's and a big bowl of cereal.
Dang.
So, yeah.
These are good, man.
They're delicious.
If you guys want to try them out, head over to magicspoon.com slash powerproject.
You guys will instantly get $5 off the variety pack that you see right here on the table.
No code needed.
Just hit that link down in the description or the podcast show notes.
And please follow the podcast at mark bells power project on instagram
at mb power project on tiktok and twitter my instagram and twitter is at i am andrew z and
the andrew z on tiktok and sima where you be yo i don't feel guilty at all after eating that either
like real talk it's it's the the macros are so it's so friendly that i could eat a whole box of
this and still be just cool it's it's funny and it tastes fucking amazing, it's so friendly that I could eat a whole box of this and still be just cool. It's funny.
And it tastes fucking amazing.
Anyway.
It tastes so good.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Four net carbs.
And see my yin yang on Instagram and YouTube.
And see my yin yang on TikTok and Twitter, Mark.
140 calories.
Sounds pretty reasonable, right?
And protein rich.
Delicious.
Add some Fairlife protein and protein cereal.
All right.
I'm done.
Let's go.
Just real quick to wrap it up.
We didn't really mention like types of foods.
Now, if you are going to bulk and for some people, like sometimes you do have to go outside of the realm of like normal, healthy eating, you know, and that on occasion, I think that's kind
of the fun of powerlifting, but just be a little cautious on how much fun you have and how often
you do that. I don't want to see people just all of a sudden just getting super fat, but mainly,
you know, you got whole foods, any sort of meat is fair game, eggs, rice, potatoes, maybe oatmeal.
Some people
like steaks
and things like that, like we do here.
Anything else to add
to that? You can add some
dairy. I was going to say
dairy is good. Fruit is good.
It has a little bit of fiber, but
plums and stuff, honestly, they don't have that much fiber.
So, again, if you're trying to keep it healthy, but sometimes you'll end up having some Ben and Jerry's here and there,
just please don't have too much fun with that stuff because that can really turn into an excuse,
and then you're having fun every day.
Excuse to be fat.
Yeah.
The theme of the whole episode but hey you know stan
efferding is a big like you just mentioned what you have a diet is a great place to always check
out you had some bone broth with uh ground beef and you put some rice in there the bone broth
makes it very easy to shovel that food down that's like that's a good mixture of something
right there bone broth with rice and whatever meat you can just shovel it down and it tastes
great so just a good i keep that in mind at mark smelly bell strength is never weak
this week just never strength catch you guys later