Mark Bell's Power Project - Stan Efferding's Best Muscle Building and Nutrition Tips
Episode Date: July 21, 2023 In this Supercut, Stan Efferding shares his top tips on how to build muscle, lose fat, and be healthy.  Check out the full episodes:  https://youtu.be/4JBbGIVHiFkhttps://youtu.be/bDo6BNZ69fIhtt...ps://youtu.be/u8MEafE3DDwhttps://youtu.be/_1xlvcuE3VU  Stan Efferding's Best Muscle Building and Nutrition Advice  0:00 Trailer 0:48 There's no such thing as a vegan diet 1:58 Stan's thoughts on carbs 7:13 Red meat is the only superfood 9:49 Why you should utilize all styles of training 18:33 Does anybody need any supplements? 21:04 What you need to know about cholesterol 23:38 Is plant protein the same as animal protein? 26:31 How important is sodium for athletes? 39:19 What even is the vertical diet? 49:57 Why you shouldn't demonize foods  New Power Project Website: https://powerproject.live Join The Power Project Discord: https://discord.gg/yYzthQX5qN Subscribe to the new Power Project Clips Channel: https://youtube.com/channel/UC5Df31rlDXm0EJAcKsq1SUw  Special perks for our listeners below! ➢https://drinkag1.com/powerproject Recieve a year supply of Vitamin D3+K2 & 5 Travel Packs!  ➢ https://withinyoubrand.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save 15% off supplements!  ➢ https://markbellslingshot.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save 15% off all gear and apparel!  ➢ https://mindbullet.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save 15% off Mind Bullet!  ➢ https://goodlifeproteins.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save up to 25% off your Build a Box  ➢ Better Fed Beef: https://betterfedbeef.com/pages/powerproject  ➢ https://hostagetape.com/powerproject to receive a year supply of Hostage Tape and Nose Strips for less than $1 a night!  ➢ https://thecoldplunge.com/ Code POWERPROJECT to save $150!!  ➢ Enlarging Pumps (This really works): https://bit.ly/powerproject1 Pumps explained: https://youtu.be/qPG9JXjlhpM  ➢ https://www.vivobarefoot.com/us/powerproject to save 15% off Vivo Barefoot shoes!  ➢ https://vuoriclothing.com/powerproject to automatically save 20% off your first order at Vuori!  ➢ https://www.eightsleep.com/powerproject to automatically save $150 off the Pod Pro at 8 Sleep!  ➢ https://marekhealth.com/PowerProject to recieve 10% off our Panel, Check Up Panal or any custom panel!  ➢ Piedmontese Beef: https://www.CPBeef.com/ Use Code POWER at checkout for 25% off your order plus FREE 2-Day Shipping on orders of $150  Follow Mark Bell's Power Project Podcast ➢ https://www.PowerProject.live ➢ https://lnk.to/PowerProjectPodcast ➢ Insta: https://www.instagram.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/markbellspowerproject  FOLLOW Mark Bell ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marksmellybell ➢https://www.tiktok.com/@marksmellybell ➢ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MarkBellSuperTraining ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/marksmellybell  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#PowerProject #Podcast #MarkBell #FitnessPodcast #markbellspowerproject Â
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Here's the thing as we go back to bodybuilding.
Everything works, nothing works forever.
You build up too much fatigue on a particular movement,
then you're going to start overreaching
and have a decline in performance or whatever.
You definitely want to not just recover,
but supercompensate and actually build muscle tissue
and strength over time.
Also very quickly dispel the myth
that there is even such a thing as a vegan diet.
Millions and millions and millions of animals
die for growing vegetables as well.
I don't want to say vegetables are bad.
I'm cautious about the whole good food,
bad food conversation,
because I don't want people to demonize certain things
that may be unnecessary and give them more options.
Red meat is the only superfood,
not kale or pomegranate or acai berry
or however you pronounce that stuff
it's the only one where you can not only survive but thrive there's not a reference to dr mitt
launer's research with respect to environment and you can also very quickly dispel the myth that
there is even such a thing as a vegan diet millions and millions and millions of animals die
for growing vegetables as well so So those are difficult challenges.
People present to me, I have vegan clients,
and they present to me if they have health problems,
sometimes I have to try and navigate
just how far they're willing to go
to remedy those health problems,
which I think are caused by the deficiency in the diet.
And we have to have those discussions.
Look, you're not saving lives, okay?
Rabbits and foxes and birds, they're animals too.
And you're not saving the environment.
And we look at arable land and methane production
and with respect to Mitlauner's research.
So there have been times I've engaged
into those conversations,
but only with people who are kind of willing to take a broader look at it.
Folks who are dogmatic or religious about their choice and our virtue signaling.
It's really not worth the cost of the voice.
I talk about that.
Your thoughts here with the carbs in regards to carbs.
Yeah.
with the carbs in regards to carbs.
Yeah, you know, I talked about this, I think,
first on Mike Mutzel's podcast where I discussed the fact that, you know,
you can get to the top of the Empire State Building
taking the stairs, but the elevator's probably
a little faster, a little better idea.
And then subsequently that on Paul Saladino's podcast,
and I kind of went over the muscle physiology as we know it now,
as compared to the way we used to think it.
Again, as Sean said, specifically for that 1% of the population
that's looking for optimum performance, anaerobic training in particular,
I think that the carbohydrates have demonstrated to provide
the benefit of enabling you to get one more rep or do one more set, maybe give you a little more
stamina and endurance in the gym for an anaerobic workout. And we see that there seems to be an
equivalent benefit from getting fat adapted in terms of endurance. We're hard, it's hard, we's hard pressed to see the advantage of carbohydrates there,
except for maybe in that given event over probably 90 minutes
with every 15-minute periodic intake of carbs, salt, and water,
as the ISSN recommends.
But with respect to muscle physiology for that 1% of the population,
the way that Brad Schoenfeld describes it in his book, Hypertrophy, what we see now is that we used
to think the carbohydrates were stored in the muscle as one thing. And they would do that by
grinding up the muscle and looking at the carbohydrate glycogen depletion for any given
workout. And they said, well, you're only depleting 40% your glycogen. So how could it be that big a deal? Well, apparently carbohydrates are stored
in different locations. The sarcoplasm is one in particular that it seems to be the last filled
and the first depleted. And in the muscle, the sarcoplasm, those carbohydrates seem to trigger the calcium channel that is
responsible for firing. That's the tropamine, tropomyosin channel that allows for the cross
bridging for the actinomyosin contractions. So for those who study muscle physiology,
that'll be very familiar and probably somewhat rudimentary but uh that's depleted first
and so that might just like creatine might give you in the creatine phosphate system one more rep
by renewing that that first 10 seconds the first 30 seconds these having these
an abundance of carbohydrates available might help there's also another component to that
and i think that's partly that some hyper some of
hypertrophy isn't just the muscle fiber it's the fluid and in the sarcoplasm as
well and some of the hypertrophy benefits that are derived probably as
much as 20% potentially could be from the the fluid expansion and the
compression of the cells provides a hypertrophy benefit,
which you can obtain from more carbs,
which obviously hold three parts water and then sodium,
so there could be a muscle breakdown benefit.
It's small, and it might help with adding one more rep,
five more pounds, one more set throughout the workout,
and the cumulative effect of that over time.
This wouldn't be anything you'd see immediately, although in powerlifting, we do find that the fuller we are, we used to
intentionally try and get ourselves as loaded as possible right before a meet with some carb and
salt loading, particularly after weigh-ins, would help with some of that compressive force with the
muscles. So there's a benefit there. I also found that when you look at most
of the diet literature, we talked about how important the carnivore diet can be or an
elimination diet might be for initial intervention for things like diabetes, for obesity, digestion
issues, we talked about the FODMAP menu and a whole host of other disorders that people present,
and a whole host of other disorders that people present,
often I see present on your website as well.
It seems that people, like we said, six out of seven people go on a diet, lose weight.
The vast majority of them gain it back within a certain period of time,
one to three years, up to probably 90%. It seems like when they go off the diet,
they tend to migrate back towards a balance of
proteins, fats, and carbs.
We also see pretty good literature to suggest that like a 40% carbohydrate...
I hate to put a number on it.
I will say that 30% or north of protein seems to be the most beneficial macronutrient that
everybody should include.
Where you put fats and carbs, as we saw in the Diet FITS trial out of Stanford, a one-year trial on over 600 people, that where they put
carbs and fats didn't seem to matter in terms of weight loss or insulin output. And we also see
that in terms of these high glycemic versus low glycemic carbs. If you're in control for calories
and protein, if you eat high glycemic or low glycemic carbs, it doesn't seem to affect
weight loss. And so it's really, like you mentioned, it's really a choice. What's your
preference? What can you sustain over time? And how do you feel on the diet?
If you were to take the foods that are the most beneficial to humans, as far as things that have
the most nutrients, we might call them superfoods, right? And we see a lot of these like kale or pomegranates, like the next superfood. Um, but they don't seem to ever give
us the results that we're looking for. If you had to rank a couple of foods, like maybe your,
your top three foods that contain the most nutrients, it would be the most beneficial
to the human being. What would they be? Gotcha. Four years ago, I did a video in Iceland
with Hafthor Bjornsson.
It's got like 7 million views now.
It's probably the most comprehensive
two-hour video on the vertical diet.
And I said in there that red meat
is the only superfood,
not kale or pomegranate or acai berry
or however you pronounce that stuff.
It's the only one where you can not only survive but thrive on. And I said it's really the
foundation for the ultimate elimination diet. And there's a lot of folks out
there who have significant autoimmune disorders or digestive distress, whether
it's IBS or IBD or Crohn's or any of those digestive problems, who need an
elimination diet and would go to a clinical registered dietician and get an elimination
diet as the prescription for remedying significant digestive distress. Sean deals with a lot of these
folks, of course, and I think most famously Jordan Peterson and his daughter.
And both of them said, look, I'm not recommending this for anybody else.
I had some very significant autoimmune issues.
And that would be the ultimate elimination diet. The least amount of food in terms of total food items that provides you the most bioavailable, micronutrient-dense, diverse source of food.
And I put three things together
if I'm going to start an elimination diet.
And oftentimes, again, my co-author is an RDN PhD
who is a clinical nutritionist,
and we often get clients who need this kind of intervention.
And we go straight for the carnivore diet
as the initial intervention.
And it's red meat, whole eggs,
and salmon. And even with the whole eggs, sometimes it might be the yolk and not even the white,
because the avid and the whites might cause an allergy response that the yolks would not.
And the salmon just for the omega-3s, because there's 200 times the amount of omega-3 in
salmon than there is in beef. But that would be my foundation. That would be the three foods I
would start with initially, at least, until we could see if we could get some relief from the symptoms and then reintroduce.
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Yeah, guys.
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Get your glizzy goblet on.
Talking to Matt Wenning last week, he's big on that too.
Even what you said, kind of sprinkling in everything.
Like everything.
You can utilize every style that we just went over.
Because I've tried the, you know, Dorian
Yates style training. I still don't think I did it correct. Cause I just, I just wasn't,
I felt so fatigued. Like my CNS, everything, it was like, I felt like I was powerlifting all over
again, but worse. I'm just like, my body hurts, everything hurts. And then I just felt like I
wasn't making progress. Um, but like John Meadows, who you brought up, i'm a big fan of him um he talked about i know fuad
abiyad i'm not sure if i said his name right but he was talking about john programmed him like two
or two or three like super hard days and followed it with like pump days or like a super hard week
and then followed it with like a pump week which nothing was taken to absolute failure just kind
of push blood in there so i'm like the more people i talk to the more i'm like all right there's not one set way to really do
anything yeah just kind of what works well a couple things on that note uh kind of way louis
simmons trained powerlifters he would have a you know a max effort day and then he would have a
speed day and so more fatigue less fatigue uh when i said that you want to work in all rep ranges maybe if you
train legs twice that week you're only doing a heavy set of five on one of
those two workouts okay as opposed to both yeah and then you get more recovery
for the heavy set of five for you know the subsequent workout when I was power
lifting I would squat heavy one week deadlift heavy the next because they're
pretty similar movements really so i was
squatting heavy twice a month and people would would perceive that to be not sufficient but
here's the thing as we go back to bodybuilding everything works nothing works forever you build
up too much fatigue on a particular movement then you're going to start overreaching and have a
decline in performance or whatever you know you definitely want to start overreaching and have a decline in performance or whatever.
You definitely want to not just recover, but super compensate and actually build muscle tissue and strength over time.
So we'll do waves, just like Louie and Paul.
We'll do waves of exercises.
So I might pick, let's say, a hack squat.
And that'll be my blast set.
I'll do a warm-up on something, whether it's the aerodyne bike
or some leg extensions or
whatever but i'm going to dump everything into hack squat and that's probably the only one i'm
going to measure okay it's the only one doesn't mean anything because every every track week to
week track week to week everything i do after that i'm pre-fatigued so you know right whatever
extra major exercise you prioritize in the workout your performance is going to be best on that and
everything else is going to be which is why we kind of like going from the blast exercise to a pump because i'm not
really counting i'm i'm just mostly thinking about muscle muscle getting as close to muscle
failure as i can and volumizing as much as i can right so now i'll jump on that hack squat
and i'll progress it week week week week week uh maybe i start out two sets of eight reps with five plates on the side. And then the next
week I do a set of eight reps with five plates on a side. And then I do a set of eight reps. I add a
sixth plate to one side, you know, or whatever, quarter each, whatever you want to do. And if I
can't get the eighth rep, then next week I'll come back and try and do that again. As soon as I can
get those two sets, now I'm adding weight maybe to the front end.
And where I can just barely get eight reps on the first set,
I know I'm not going to, maybe only six on the second set.
Right.
I stay there for a while until I get eight and eight.
Okay.
And then I go up and wait again,
either on the second set first,
before I go, you know, add weight to the first set.
But you can see there's some progression over time.
Right.
So I get two sets of eight reps, and that's my blast set at some state at point or depending on what your recoverability is maybe
you do a third set there but i gotta be honest with you just like like dorian's high intensity
you get past two sets this is what i say for people who like you to do four sets of four
different exercises for 16 sets like on chest you're saving yourself there's a lot of junk
volume there and there's diminishing returns as we mentioned so i pick two exercises you generally three sets of each or if i do a
brief warm-up i really dump my i could build an entire workout around those two sets everything
else is just kind of volumizing potentially i say it's six sets for the day yeah but the real
intensity i might only be able to handle two or three of those Okay before I you know have to have to do something. It's
Maybe a little lighter or maybe focused on repetitions and pump. Yeah
Now as soon as I stopped being able to progress that
And that's gonna happen. It might happen in five weeks might happen in six weeks might happen in seven weeks
I'm gonna milk that as long as I can but as soon as I realize I'm not going anywhere with this,
I pick a different exercise.
And I wave that one.
Whether it's a leg press or whether it's a...
What's that one that everybody hates?
The humbler?
The pendulum squat.
Oh, my God.
Yeah, that one will embarrass you.
But same thing.
You build that one exercise.
I don't need to... I'll see people write down every set, every rep. But same thing, you build that one exercise.
I'll see people write down every set, every rep.
I was just going to ask you, how do you feel about people,
every single thing they do in the gym, they're trying to progress?
Yeah.
I'm worried about the primary exercise because I'm not pre-fatigued,
and am I growing that? And when I drop off off on that I'm picking a new exercise I'm
putting that one to the side in power lifting uh for instance I know I'm bouncing back and forth
but that's what I did throughout my career uh if I want to progress the deadlift I can't deadlift
every week you'll crush yourself and you just start getting weaker and so uh much like the
Westside I would pick a couple of exercises that would carry over
to increase my deadlift that were less fatiguing.
The box squat, a camber bar, good morning.
Those would be my two.
You still do those?
I still do those and I'll build those up.
And I might only deadlift it once every four or five weeks.
If I do it any more often, it's going to be for repetitions just for the skill component.
But I'm even cautious about what skill i'm really developing with a lighter weight because strength is specific
and you need to be kind of 85 or north of that to really get the the skill component that you need
for power lifting so i'm not a big fan of 50 loads loads and multiple repetitions. I'd rather do cluster sets with an 85% load than rep out until I'm near failure on a 50% load.
I just don't think it's very specific.
Maybe too far off on the powerlifting.
But again, I picked a couple of low fatigue movements that I can train every single week without draining my CNS or you know just over fatigue and CNS is an interesting thing
you talk to Dr. Pat Davidson a PhD exercise phys and he's like it's really load it's really load
which is why it's kind of nice if you can find an exercise like a leg press and put your feet in and
down and maximize the knee angle you're you're using 60 percent of
what you might be capable of should you have your feet high and wide right and it's just the load
doesn't even matter which muscles are working at that point it's just the total gross poundage
that dictates your level of fatigue whether you want to call it cns whatever they don't really
focus on that necessarily they just focus on how
tired are you and what's your doms and can you recover and super compensate and so anywhere i
can bring load down i benefit from a number of ways less fatigue less potential injury exposure
uh which sounds contrary to the guy who grew up as a power lifter and every you know every week i
went to the gym i just try and max out yeah yeah but that that's today we're supposed to be smarter than that uh and and us old timers you
know we complain because people aren't lifting hard enough you know and hard is relative you
know it doesn't always necessarily mean load your body doesn't know load you know hard is relative
how close to failure are you can you find a particular exercise especially in bodybuilding
where you're exposing?
That muscle and not recruiting three or four muscles to help you do more weight
It might not necessarily benefit your weaknesses and tire you out. Does anybody need any supplements? I don't think so vitamin D is hard to get from food. And if you're in the absence of if you're in a
Some place that's that's not very sunny, Seattle, where you just moved, that area where I lived for a long, long time, Alaska, you see this even in Russian and European countries.
They have a lower vitamin D.
There were some interventions in the UK where they supplemented vitamin D and it actually helped with insulin sensitivity,
which was a problem. They had some actually children that were suffering from insulin
resistance. So in those instances where your vitamin D level is below, say, 30, I think is
the measure of subclinical, vitamin D might be something that you would want to supplement. Magnesium is also hard
to get from food. That might be something you want to supplement. We see pretty good results
from magnesium in terms of vitamin D absorption, sleep benefit. You get past that and it's hard to
say that you need supplements that you can't get from food. And one of the things I'm concerned
about with respect to supplements, we saw this in theus pauling era with the mega dosing especially of antioxidants and
you know vitamins a and e is that it actually was a toxicity created there was actually a decrease
in in an increase in all-cause mortality and and i think it was the was it the physician study where
they they studied like 40 000 physicians and they put them on multivitamins it did not improve
their health
outcomes long-term. Although the author of the study said he still takes a multivitamin just
because why not? What he got to lose. So not a big fan of supplements, particularly not
megadosing in the absence of a deficiency that could be remedied from dietary interventions,
absence of a deficiency that could be remedied from dietary interventions, mainly because like Dr. Baker mentioned, that food has so
many more compounds that we're not even aware of the importance of them.
And so getting a diverse diet with micro-nutrient dense, highly bioavailable,
easy to digest foods, and having sufficient hydrochloric acid.
All those things I think would be better contributors than, than taking a supplement. And that's, you know,
not to say that, that some people don't get some performance benefits from supplements, uh, such
as creatine or, uh, there's a few that, that can provide you some performance benefit, but that's
a small percentage of the population with that, that specific goal.
Like, what is the main reason do you think, like you think like why like what are people looking at when they're concerned about cholesterol?
Is it still is it still attached to heart disease?
Yeah, but it's kind of hard because people don't distinguish between what raises cholesterol in the bloodstream and from cholesterol that you eat.
what raises cholesterol in the bloodstream and from cholesterol that you eat.
So we could take a dive into that today to try and help people understand.
And I'll keep it real simple, but I'll refer to the people who are experts in the industry.
And there's also been, I say this without insulting anybody,
but the low-carb community has probably the best way to describe it is kind of been LDL denialists for many
years.
But I'm seeing a gradual transition.
And they tend to deflect from LDL as a causal factor and then look at all the other benefits
that they realize from their diet
that lower their overall cardiovascular disease risk. And so tend to kind of dismiss
LDL in light of the bigger picture. But I think it's still important to focus on.
So we should dive into it. Low carb people are maybe dismissive because they're like,
well, don't worry about it because you're not eating sugar and it's not going to
be of any negative consequence.
But it still might be, huh?
Yeah.
I mean, and there's an overall risk that's – it's many things that go into cardiovascular disease risk, including obviously your – I wouldn't say BMI, but your body fat percentage.
Yes. your exercise, your sleep, your total dietary pattern, blood markers that we can talk about today, triglycerides, type 2 diabetes or insulin resistance,
all those things obviously influence your hazard ratio for mortality risk.
And so if you can improve all of those things and your total risk comes down,
it's easy to say, well, maybe this isn't as important, but it's also important. Why wouldn't
we address it if it's possible? And we can talk about the ways to do that that still allow you
to be low carb. And that, you know, that would be something that I think would allow people to
get the benefits of their low carb diet,
all of the things that they've realized, which we can talk about some of the benefits are,
but at the same time reduce their long term cardiovascular disease risk.
It's still the number one killer, so we should pay attention to it.
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We did have Gabrielle on.
She did mention how, and he, I think he made a video using her clip,
but she did mention how animal protein is superior to plant protein.
So is that statement, is that false or is it superior in some ways?
Yeah, it depends on how you measure it in terms of the number of amino acids that it provides.
But you look at, and Gabrielle Lyons, fantastic.
She studied under Don Lehman. Don Lehman has himself said when the same thing that Simon just said is that – Simon says.
The same thing that Simon says is – Don says that if you get enough protein, 20, probably 30 percent more than if say you needed 150 grams of protein to satisfy your requirements for the day, maybe you'd need to get
180 grams on a vegan diet. And that would be excluding, say, soy protein or a rice blend,
because those would be kind of on an even par in terms of gram for gram, in terms of their
ability to stimulate muscle protein synthesis. So you eat a little bit more simply because the absorption rate.
Bioavailability is the word you hear all the time.
A little bit less. It doesn't seem to be a big problem. They seem to be able to meet those needs.
Again, compliance is probably one of my biggest challenges to do a healthy vegan diet. You can
do a shitty vegan diet. You can eat a lot of ultra processed foods. And so to do a healthy vegan diet. You can do a shitty vegan diet. You can eat a lot of ultra processed foods. And so to do a healthy vegan diet, I also have a little harder time like with guys that are
trying to gain weight, who may have some digestive distress on top of that, depending on how much
fiber generally is what the challenge is. And you titrate that over time, be very careful to try to
build that up. But ultimately but ultimately becomes really difficult to
eat the volume of food necessary just to maintain fuel workouts and grow that's
another challenge that I have and so I probably have to end up throwing a lot
of white rice at those guys you know the foundation obviously is going to be your
protein it's going to be your your-rich fruits and vegetables, et cetera.
And then at some point, it's just I got to get the calories in order to meet my demands.
How about sodium?
I've been very curious about that because pre-jiu-jitsu, I'll take – so like right when I wake up, I take some sodium.
So I take some electrolytes, so 1,000 milligrams.
When I wake up, I take some sodium.
So I take some electrolytes, a thousand milligrams, and then I'll take another shaker cup full of another thousand milligrams.
And then post-workout, I'll have one of these big guys right here and it'll have two in
it.
So I'm, what is that?
Four already?
Yeah.
I've gotten up to seven and I felt pretty damn good.
And then I've had like six this week and then I would eat dinner
and I'd have to run to the bathroom and I knew right away what was happening, right? Cause these
have magnesium in it. Um, I'm curious, uh, what are your thoughts and advice for a sodium intake
for athletes, specifically jujitsu athletes? Yeah. Well, I'm glad you specified athletes.
Cause when I talked about sodium previously, the medical community went ape shit, uh, well, I'm glad you specified athletes because when I talked about sodium previously, the medical community went apeshit as though I was making recommendations for sedentary, hypertensive, geriatric people.
And they had some issue with the timing.
Generally, well, always, athletes will need more sodium than the general population.
It kind of depends on diet as well.
I also mentioned that if you're not eating a lot of fast food or packaged food that you'll want to supplement the sodium back in.
So I said salt your meals.
I'm not salting a McDonald's or a can of potato chips, but I will salt whole foods that you make at home, buy from the grocery store.
Generally speaking, on average, you lose at least two grams of sodium per hour of training
from sweat.
Huge variability there.
It's genetically determined.
You might use up to, Lane Norton burns up five grams of sodium per hour of training
and he trains two hours a day.
So he's burned up 10 grams of sodium.
We might have talked about this last year, to be honest with you because i went through and i i spoke quite specifically about the fact that lane norton had made a very similar video
subsequent to mine about how he oftentimes will use up to 10 grams of sodium on particular
athletes because that matches their demand we like to weigh our athletes before and after training
and for every this is consistent with the International Society of Sportsman nutritionist recommendations
but we weigh them before and after training and for every kilo of battery two pounds of weight
that they lose during training we replace that with about a 1.5 liters of water and then sodium
and carbs with that dr. Sandra got, who's a PhD in thermal regulation
and hydration, runs the Heat Institute and does most of the sweat testing on the NFL and hockey
players. I just spoke to her a few weeks ago. Matter of fact, she's been helpful for me over
the years getting sweat test patches for a number of the athletes that I've worked with so she can
actually determine what their actual sweat rate is. That can be important at a high level for some people.
She's got a product called a Levelin and it's somewhere between 900 and 1500 milligrams of
sodium that she'll add per liter of water post-workout based on what the individual's sweat rate was or how much they
sweat out, along with carbohydrates for that. It helps with absorption. It helps replace
some of the carbs that you burn. So she puts it all together into one drink.
Now, that's a good recommendation along with salting your meals,
especially immediately post-workout if you're training a second bout that day.
That's when it becomes really important to get that post-workout window satisfied.
I like to put carbs in a post-workout window anyhow because they're absorbed much quicker and stored as glycogen and replenish your system.
You don't necessarily have to, but they seem to minimize muscle breakdown so that can be helpful
with that now pre-workout intra-workout I had always recommended say 500 milligrams per liter
of water pre-workout it seems that some people may as you mentioned running to the bathroom some
people with 500 milligrams per liter pre-workout maybe too much salt and they might end up
running to the bathroom some people who tried to overdose the recommendations
you know one is good ten is better ended up you'll end up throwing up or either
throwing up or having diarrhea it's not a more is better scenario the
recommendation is let's put it in percentages, is somewhere between 1% and 2% sodium.
So that's going to be about 100 or 200 milligrams of sodium per liter of water and about a 3% glucose solution.
So it's about 30 grams of carbs per liter of water.
That's the easiest to absorb. It sets it up so that your gut is able to absorb the salt and water and
carbs together. They work collectively to transport the water as a vehicle. Somewhere
in that range, so you're looking at half of an LMNT, wait, a quarter of an LMNT per liter
of water, because there's about a thousand milligrams of sodium in
an LMNT. Or a liquid IV is only 500 milligrams, probably a half liquid IV per liter of water
would be an example. And then 30 grams of dextrose. You put too much sugar in, like a lot of the
Gatorades, et cetera, it can cause, stimulate the kidneys to release water. You end up overpeeing.
It's what happened at my meet. So it it happened at Larry wheels meet when I worked with him
some years later I was downing was it Pedialyte or Gatorade I think Gatorade
really high in sugar not necessarily nearly as high in salt it's made for
taste more than anything and too high in sugar too low in salt I started pissing
every five minutes and ended up dehydrating myself and
cramping and that's when Mark and Jesse jumped in with nun tablets and got me rehydrated so
there's definitely a benefit I I get extraordinary feedback that people who start to implement this
have much more stamina endurance their performance improves there may be a lot of people that don't come to training
sufficiently hydrated.
And this protocol, it may just be the hydration more than the salt that are drinking sufficient
water.
But at those doses, it's very well tolerated.
Larger athletes can probably tolerate more and may need more.
I'm always cautious about the salt concentration. That's
the biggest problem with foods, packaged foods that are high in salt don't have any moisture,
any water with them. So you're getting a lot of salt with no water. The salt concentration,
the amount of salt diluted in the amount of water, can a really high
salt intake with not enough fluid can have an adverse effect on the endothelial lining.
That's a secondary concern.
Or even potentially increase some cancers of the stomach, which we see in Japanese populations
who eat a ton of fish and tend to salt a lot of their food.
They can, so cautious. not a more is better scenario.
Use it as part of an athletic program responsibly, probably the bulk of it.
Throughout training, I might also mention you want to try and sip.
You're probably better off getting eight ounces every 20 minutes rather than gulping a huge amount of it.
Especially if your bout exceeds an hour and a half.
If it's a really long bout of training, you will and should have some weight loss during training.
You're not trying to stave off all the weight loss.
You don't want to be over consuming water during whatever exercise uh football practice soccer etc some of those sessions go
well over an hour in pads lots of sweating you're better off drinking something 15 to 20 minutes
in a in a six to eight ounce portion okay yeah i was actually surprised at the amount that you
recommended for intra workout because like i you know I'll have days where I'm feeling a little, you know, tired from the morning
workouts and stuff. And then, so I'll pound a bunch of electrolytes and I'm like, Oh, I feel
better. Same thing. If I feel good off of four, then I'm going to have five and six and maybe
I'll have two before or during my workout or whatever. But thankfully I never did that because
I'm like, I just need to slow down. so the thought of taking even less of what I'm
already taking like I'm gonna definitely give that a shot because like I said I
feel great like afterwards when I when I do kind of ramp up the electrolytes and
the sodium but then when I do a little like probably like the one or two too
many that's when it cleans me right out and like
i said what was interesting though is like i did seven i was like oh my god like maybe i really do
need this much and then kind of like what you're saying with the noon tablets earlier it's like
well shit like this is gonna cost a lot but uh what i'm getting at is i did find my threshold
and then even when i tapered back i still kind of had the same stomach reaction to it so that's
why i was like i gotta ask stan worth what the heck we need to do with sodium because –
More isn't better.
Yeah.
And the nude tablets tasted great but I started feeling guilty about my $100 a month habit
along with everything else that I do.
I'm kind of a cheapskate at heart.
So I ended up getting on Amazon and buying sodium chloride tablets.
There's no taste benefit to them.
One of the interesting things that Sandra Goddik talks about is that she likes to have uh it should taste good and be cold she
creates these slushy machines especially like for sports if it's hot out um the that can help cool
the core um but for kids in particular who don't have a very good uh for adults she says you don't
drink when you're thirsty but kids don't have a very good, uh, for adults, she says, you know, drink when you're thirsty, but kids don't have a very good, uh, sense of that and they can get dehydrated. Um,
so she says it should be cold and taste good. They'll be more likely to drink more of it more
often. Okay. And then what if you are peeing a lot? Uh, then I would think it was too much sugar.
That would, that would cause you to start peeing too much. Okay. Cause I I'm on my,
so this is going to be my second one of the day,
and I feel like I'm still – I could handle like another two.
Yeah.
Because I'm just – like I said, this morning was a really, really good session,
like head to toe dripping in sweat.
So that's why I was trying to ramp up a little bit more today.
But, again, I don't want to have that GI issue later on in the day.
Yeah.
But there are some days where I'll have like one
and I'm like running to the bathroom to go pee
and nothing's changed.
You know, my diet's pretty much the same every single day.
Just maybe I guess I hydrated more the day previously
and now my body's like we're good.
Yeah.
You kind of, after a while you get a little better
at not having to run and pee all the time.
Your body gets used to holding on to that water.
There is an adjustment phase.
It was interesting.
One of your lifters yesterday came up to me and he was talking about,
Stan, I get up like twice a night and pee.
Is that a problem?
I'm like, well, what's going on right now?
A lot of times, you know, bodybuilders, powerlifters, strongmen, football players, et cetera,
they have to eat a lot of food and drink a lot of water throughout the day.
And I know the conventional advice would be to you know cut off
your water intake after 4 or 5 p.m. I know as an athlete you don't necessarily want to do that you
know you want to stay hydrated and keep hydrated and you want to go to bed thirsty and so I said
really the only alternative is the story I told you back when flex leader was making me drink two
gallons of water a day which I think was too much and i i had this little uh this little uh uh what do you call
those little plastic uh kitchen aid uh garbage cans next to my bed so i wouldn't have to get up
take my c-pap off walk to the bathroom turn on the light what i would just do the whole
i'm telling you brother i'm telling you the time you get up two times a night, take off your CPAP, walk to the bathroom, turn on the light, it's so much easier.
You just had a catheter installed, man.
No, I'm not doing that.
But my 92-year-old pops, again, I mentioned he lives with me.
He has one of those because he can't get up on his walker in the middle of the night and walk all the way to the bathroom.
So he's got one of those little plastic hospital bed type of things hanging there so he can go to the bathroom.
And then when my 9-year-old son recently broke his leg, same kind of thing.
He couldn't get up and walk to the bathroom in the middle of the night,
and I certainly didn't want to have to get up and carry him there every night.
So he ended up with one of those little plastic bottles.
And so that's what I told your lifter last night.
I said, brother, you get one of them little plastic bottles, your problem's solved.
I said, you hardly even have to turn over, depending.
I mean, you could probably just lay right where you're at and hang it over into the can yeah
no that's the answer yeah amazing
power project family if you're trying to increase your muscle mass if you're trying to lose body
fat if you're trying to stick to nutrition plan if you're trying to get your muscle mass, if you're trying to lose body fat, if you're trying to stick to a nutrition plan, if you're trying to get fit, pretty much if there's anything you're trying to do for your health, we know that sleep is the biggest determining factor to help you get from point A to point B.
That's why we've been sleeping on 8C mattresses for probably more than two years now.
And the main reason is the technology behind the Pod Pro.
Now, the Pod Pro is like the Tesla of beds.
It will change its temperature based off of
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they can have their own temperature settings. We all sleep hot here and I used to wake up in a
puddle of my own sweat. That doesn't happen anymore because of the Eight Sleep mattress.
And I've been getting the best sleep of my life. Now, if you don't want to replace your mattress,
you can just get the Pod Pro cover, and you can put that over your
current mattress to get all the benefits of Eight Sleep. But if you also need to replace your old
nasty mattress, you can get the Pod Pro cover and the Eight Sleep mattress. Andrew, how can they get
it? Yes, you guys got to head over to eightsleep.com slash powerproject, and you guys will
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to them down in the description, as well as the podcast show notes. But you don't want to lose
your intensity. So maybe you got to cut back on volume. Okay. Because once you start lightening
loads, you're going to lose muscle. But if you can keep your intensity and hopefully as much
strength as possible, I want to lose as little strength as
possible going into a show everybody's talking about ronnie's you know oh he lifted those weeks
weight six weeks before the olympia that's when he was his strongest yeah if he had ever lifted
any heavier weight than that six months or eight months before the olympia he'd have shown those
videos yeah he was his strongest six weeks before the olympia right you know probably
had a the largest cycle yeah uh but that that's the point you want to maintain strength as long
as you can going into a show because that is a pretty good measure that's what we do with
nadia as well so i don't want you to lose any strength now does that mean you have to go from
six sets to four?
I'd rather you do that.
Than to do six sets of a lighter weight,
I'd rather you do four sets of the heavier weight.
Okay, that's interesting.
To me, that's the stimulus that matters.
Yeah.
Mechanical tension, intensity,
are more important than volume.
Okay, okay.
Before I ask you a couple questions
on that Olympia competitor you were you coach um i
just wanted to ask about the concentric portion of movements because i hear milos too i listened
to a lot of podcasts with him and he talked about you know training people like regan grimes and he
sometimes is huge on ascent down and up being super slow and controlled but then you know
other people like mike isertel are more so like just the eccentric and the transition of the weight
and then explode john meadows was like that too he was kind of some movements especially he would
super fast up and as long as you control the eccentric, you're good. Perfect. Perfect explanation. That's what the research suggests as well.
I said under, what do we call that pace?
Two to five seconds.
As long as it's under control.
As long as you're not completely relaxing.
As long as you're controlling it.
One, two or one, two, three.
I don't think anywhere in two to five seconds is any different.
Because the intensity is going to be the driver of that.
If you do one more rep because you move the weight a little bit
faster, so you have less time under tension, pretty equivocal.
And then on the way up though, it should still be explosive always.
Yeah. Because eventually that speed is going to slow down as you get,
you know, the closer you get to, to momentary failure,
then you've got maximal muscle fiber recruitment. And then you notice
that some of those muscle fibers start to drop off. Right. And that's when you go from this to
this. You know, once the speed slows down, you're pretty good idea. You've gotten maximum muscle
fiber recruitment. Yeah. Okay. Okay. Sweet. Thank you. And then going into the diet,
sweet thank you and then going into the diet vertical diet um i've tried it multiple times i did it all through high school still eat monster mash on my plan i'm on today and um i just think
it's interesting how i don't want to say you go against everything a typical meathead bodybuilding
coach does but you know i know you're not a huge fan of like egg whites or just plain chicken and stuff like that things that are more nutrient dense so red meats whole eggs
even things like like everything basically everything on your on your plan has a purpose
and you can you can explain why it's going to do this this or that that's why i'm super interested
in it so i guess it's like even when you're coaching an Olympia competitor is it there's no put like do you ever have
them eat like typical bodybuilding foods like chicken or egg whites or do you
stick to the same principles just manipulate the calories calories are
king macros I want to get about a gram of protein per pound of body weight.
Generally speaking, you want to have sufficient fats so that you're not compromising hormones,
sleep or fat-soluble vitamin absorption.
I would say that's at a minimum 15% of total calories.
So I usually start at 30% of total calories or thereabouts 25% of total calories is fats.
The rest are carbs.
Those fuel performance.
They're very important for that dynamic,
you know, that lifting stimulus, okay?
All reduce fats and keep the carbs in
because again, the carbs fueling performance and performance being the primary driver of lean mass retention or gain
There's some good evidence that you can gain muscle in a right in the cut
If you're sufficiently fueled and if you know slept trained
Adequately with enough intensity you can actually gain muscle in a calorie deficit even as an
experienced lifter even if it's modest particularly if there's performance enhancing drugs involved
it's not a time to sleep on on the potential to gain muscle and so that's why we've learned long
ago you don't come in and start doing cable crossovers for sets of 20 with light weights to
rip up yeah that was pretty obvious calories your king macros I just talked
you through what the macros are now we get into micronutrients and if you over
restrict things like egg whites tilapia and broccoli with a scoop of peanut
butter which is I just gave you a pretty typical guru bikini girl diet.
Then we see a whole host of things happening.
At a time at which your body is demanding,
you're demanding so much of your body.
You're utilizing so many more micronutrients
than, say, even a sedentary person.
You have a much higher demand,
particularly for women.
Iron, of course, is very commonly a
deficiency. That's why the red meat's in there. Now you can get, like with Nadia, we started at
New York Steak and then we went to a top sirloin. Then we went to a, you know, a grass-fed sirloin
tip. And those are just leaner and leaner meats. Eventually you get to a Piedmontese beef, you know,
that's got less than two grams of fat in it. But it has all the iron and it has the creatine and the carnitine and the zinc
and the B12 and to a much greater degree as a percentage than say a chicken breast.
Um, so even, even equating for calories, now I'm getting a more
micronutrient dense product.
And if you want to take a, a multivitamin, take a multivitamin, but there's something to be said for the
constitution of food and these cofactors, the way they work together that aid in absorption
and prevent deficiencies and surpluses that might otherwise, like when you supplement
vitamin E and vitamin A, we found know it was actually counterproductive and so I
like to get them from foods especially with women you keep the yolk in there
because it's got the biotin that's for skin hair and nails and the choline is
great for the liver now I might decrease the total fat load by doing an egg egg
white blend but I would never completely take the yolk out because it's value in terms of micronutrients. Um, potassium is another huge one for energy for, uh, and so I would stick with, you know,
the potato as twice the potassium of a banana fruit. Um, a lot of these guru diet coaches will
tell women to take fruit out. They'll tell them to take red meat out. They'll tell them to take dairy
out, um, where they get in a thousand milligrams of calcium from, you know know and this is a woman who's training for a show and a significant calorie deficit
and one of the things we know in particular about women is they often suffer from the female triad
and one of those things is osteoporosis uh along with uh you know amenorrhea cessation of the
menstrual period um and uh iron deficiency and oftentimes now a suppression of of thyroid function which is very
common with weight loss anyhow um so you're gonna need to get sufficient sleep iodine you know
another micronutrient that i purposely put in there either whether it's iodized salt
i know people yeah they love to talk about the the micronutrients in in pink salt but you'd need
to consume a hell of a lot of pink salt to get any
meaningful micronutrient value from that that you could get in spades from all the foods that i just
mentioned that's not the source that you'd go to i put in cranberry juice just because it's very rich
in in iodine but if calories become a concern at some point then back to iodized salt stimulate the
thyroid now we don't got you know hair falling out which is very common in these pre-contest diets. So
yeah, I'm pretty specific about what I recommend. And then the rest of it's really digestion. I,
I have steered towards introducing people towards a low FODMAP menu so they can see which foods
cause them, uh, it might be less likely to cause them bloating. It's not a prescription for everyone,
but for those people with IBS, it's very individualistic.
It's just my experience that whether bulking
or in a significant calorie deficit pre-contest,
that lots of high FODMAP foods
can cause a significant amount of distention
and gastric distress and bloating and that kind of thing.
And so those are, you know, short-term interventions to accomplish a particular goal.
But generally speaking, you know, I don't like to demonize any foods in particular.
I got to be careful going full Monty on just animal products.
I don't want to demonize foods. Best diets are the ones you'll follow. There's plenty of those foods that people tolerate very well. Again, I said it's,
even with respect to the FODMAP menu, it's individualistic. Not everybody has these
digestive issues. It's dose dependent. A certain amount of training is hormetic. Too much could
certainly be injurious. Same thing could be true of any vegetable fruit grain etc
and some of that may be actually beneficial in small amounts we talk about sulforaphanes and
broccoli etc etc i just don't like the idea of mega dosing and i think that a lot of the studies
suggest that there's more of a positive benefit to fruit than vegetables uh when you look at some of
the epidemiology anyhow uh some cautious how it it's prepared matters and it can be cumulative in nature and so
i am i am cautious because that you know is how it affects me
but with respect to and we know so very little about this i hate to bring it up but the gut
microbiome and its potential need for fiber, prebiotics in particular,
so that it doesn't start eating away at your own mucosal layer.
And so I got to be cautious and suggest that fiber in one form or another,
and that's why in the vertical diet I do recommend both probiotics and prebiotics. And I put in low FODMAP prebiotics, such as potato and carrots in
particular, and some spinach and those kinds of things, and yogurt for probiotics and calcium.
But I'm just cautious. I can't go full Paul Saladino here. And God love you, Paul. I love
Paul. I've been on his show. Uh, but sometimes some claims
that are made that might be beneficial for, as I was mentioning earlier, a small portion of the
population who has these, uh, uh, issues. And I'm going to be very careful what term you use.
You can't say dysbiosis or, uh, leaky gut because it's not scientific terms necessarily, but if people do have celiac disease, IBS,
Crohn's, you know, any of those types of problems, you've got to go with a, you know, kind of
a low residue diet that has less adverse impact on the large colon.
So I'm just, I think there's enough evidence out there, even if it's epidemiological in nature and probably is more about the healthy user bias that these populations who tend to eat sufficient vegetables.
It also tends to offset any potential downside of eating too much meat.
It's a primarily meat-based diet with sufficient vegetables as opposed to a vegetable-based diet.
We see equivalent outcomes in healthy populations
when you get rid of the healthy user bias. I think that was the Whole Foods
shoppers who you would presume to be generally healthy individuals, exercised more, didn't smoke,
weighed less, where they weighed in in terms of meat consumption versus vegetable consumption,
they had equivalent health outcomes. And so I'm just cautious.
I don't want to say vegetables are bad.
I'm cautious about the whole good food, bad food conversation
because I don't want people to demonize certain things
that may be unnecessary and give them more options.