Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1367: The 5 Most Powerful Signals That Tell Your Body to Build Muscle
Episode Date: August 27, 2020In this episode, Sal, Adam & Justin discuss five different ways to signal your body to add muscle. Piecing together the adaptation process and sending the RIGHT signals to your body. (2:08) The 5 Mos...t Powerful Signals that Tell Your Body to Build Muscle. #1 – Get stronger. (7:50) #2 - The pump. (15:32) #3 – Learning to increase your workload slowly over time. (22:20) #4 – Increasing calorie and protein intake. (29:27) #5 – Balancing your hormones by getting healthy. (34:54) Related Links/Products Mentioned August Promotion: MAPS Performance ½ off!! **Promo code “GREEN50” at checkout** Visit Felix Gray for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Stop Working Out And Start Practicing – Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump TV - YouTube Mind Pump #1295: Four Ways To Get A Stubborn Body Part To Improve How to Improve Weak and Stubborn Body Parts – Mind Pump Media BUILDING MUSCLE: Is There REALLY A Best Rep Range? - Mind Pump TV 5 HUGE Mistakes Skinny Guys Make with Workouts – Mind Pump Blog The Myth of Optimal Protein Intake – Mind Pump Blog How To Eat If You Want To Pack On Muscle – Mind Pump Blog The Breakdown Recovery Trap, Why You Aren’t Progressing – Mind Pump Blog MAPS Macro Calculator Mind Pump #1345: 6 Ways To Optimize Sleep For Faster Muscle Gain And Fat Loss Mind Pump Podcast - YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Stan "Rhino" Efferding (@stanefferding) Instagram
Transcript
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salta Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
In this episode of Mind Pump, the world's favorite fitness health and entertainment podcast,
we cover the signals that you can send your body that tell it to build muscle.
Your body doesn't build muscle just because it needs a reason,
a good reason.
And so we find the five best reasons.
We start out by talking about strength.
Then we talk about the pump.
We mention increasing workload over time
or your body's capacity for workload.
We talk about calories and protein.
And then finally, we talk about your hormones, by the way,
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Hey, do you guys remember when you started
to really piece together that the workouts themselves
that you were doing were really just a signal.
It was just a signal to get the body to adapt
in the case of, in our case, you know, build muscle
or become stronger or more fit.
You remember when you started to kind of piece that together, because then it was a long process for me, but. in our case, build muscle or become stronger or more fit.
You remember when you started to kind of piece that together?
It was a long process for me, but...
It was like just last week for me.
I mean, it's been...
I don't think there was a single aha moment.
I think I had to learn many lessons
over and over before it all kind of came all the way together for me.
Yeah, I remember reading an article as a teenager and I think it was Iron Man magazine and
in there there was somebody talking about the adaptation process and how, and I had heard
you know that the recovery process is when muscle builds, that it's not the workout itself,
but it hadn't really 100% clicked and then he did this analogy in the article where he talked about how you
develop calluses. And he said, you know, the callus doesn't develop when you're handling
the rough, rough object. The handling the rough objects sends a signal to the body that
tells the body, we need to toughen up this part of the hand so that next time this, if this
happens again, you're not going to cause any damage.
And then it started to kind of make sense to me like, okay, this workout, the entire goal
of this workout is to send the right signal, get my body to start to adapt and change.
And it's really all about adaptation.
The workout itself is just sending those signals.
And putting this together for clients
was a big thing too, like talking to clients about this
because many clients, oh, I'd say probably all my clients,
would say things like, oh man, I had a great workout.
And it's made it a great workout.
I was so tired.
I couldn't walk.
I was super, super sore.
And I'd say, okay, but what's the goal?
What is the goal of the workout?
Well, the goal is for, you know, and whatever their goals were.
And I said, okay, what makes it a good workout then is if it's doing that more than anything
else, right?
It's that signaling process.
Well, I think it took a long time to really piece all of these things together.
In terms of, I just knew I had to keep working out.
And I knew the frequency was definitely a factor to that
in terms of me just trying to work out as consistently
as possible because I would lose whatever work I had put in.
But over time, I just started to realize that,
wow, there's so many different factors to this
that I don't have to work as hard as I am working every time in the gym
And there's a different way to do this. That's a lot smarter and that's when I started to kind of figure out
Okay, if I incorporate this if I hone in on my nutrition if I you know pay attention to my sleep all these other different factors
I like it made all things a lot easier. Well, I think there's first of all I mean we listed off
the five most powerful signals,
right?
One, I think there's somewhat of an order of operation.
And then two, I also think that it's important to note that it's not just the more you do
of the signal or the harder you do the signal.
I think there's a sweet spot for everything that we're going to talk about today.
I don't think it's as simple as like, oh, here's the five signals.
I'll do that.
It has harder as much as you possibly can.
That was the lesson I feel I kept learning over.
100% because back to the analogy of getting a callus,
there's a right amount of stimulus on my hand
that'll create a callus too much.
You just tear it.
It'll be a blister all the time.
I'll tear it through my hand, not enough.
And my body feels like there's no reason
to build new tissue, to utilize energy to create new skin
and strengthen my hand.
Another big part of this was understanding,
and here's a big one, and I know experienced lifters,
this one blows their minds,
recovering and adaptation are not the same thing.
They often happen simultaneously, but recovery is healing. Adaptation is
super compensation or overcompensation, okay? So again, if I if I damage my skin,
first my skin is going to heal and get back to where it was before. It's the overcompensation
of the supercompensation process, the adaptation process that then strengthens the skin. This is the same thing with exercise.
If I overdo any of the five signals that we're going to talk about today, or I overapply
them to frequently or too hard for my individual body, by the way, that's what's important.
The right dose for you is not going to be necessarily the right dose for the next person.
If I overapply it, then my body's primary concern is healing.
It doesn't have the time, the energy, or the resources,
or nor does it want to worry about adapting
if all it's ever doing is worrying about healing.
Adapting is totally different.
Again, they happen simultaneously.
And what it looks like, by the way,
if you get stuck in this trap, is your workout,
apply the wrong workout, you get sore,
and you're like, oh wow, I'm sore,
and then you wait for the soreness to go away.
Oh wow, I recovered, you go back to the gym,
no improvement, and the cycle continues.
I think like the biggest factor in the beginning
is to find what's homeostasis for you.
Like to really narrow down, you know, where you're currently at. I don't
think a lot of people put a lot of time and energy in really understanding what their
body needs and like to be able to get closer to that right dose in terms of all these different
things we're going to list. Like that's so crucial to then not be able to overdo it, to
underdo it. So you kind of really have a clear vision of how to just tweak these things
to make it all work for you more effectively.
Well, when I look at the first one that we list, right,
which is get stronger,
I also think it's important that each person
that's listening to these five that we're gonna cover
that you recognize which ones you focus on the most
or the ones that you do, and then the ones that you do not.
Because this first one getting stronger for me,
this was actually one of the last ones
to really come full circle.
And the reason why that was was because I never really
identified with a power lifter or an Olympic lifter.
I wasn't chasing PRs, I wasn't in a crossfit,
I wasn't in anything like that.
So I actually didn't really care about getting stronger.
I cared about the way I looked.
I mean, I was driven by aesthetics
for most of my lifting career.
Show no go.
I used to say that, you remember that?
I mean, I used to, my trainers would always try
and get me to do some crazy workout.
And I just, you know, I'd scoff at them
and say, I don't care how much I lift.
You know, I'm all show no go.
I don't give a shit. You know what I'm all show no go. I don't give a shit.
You know what I'm saying?
As long as I take my shirt off and I look fast,
that's all that matters to me.
And so I trained accordingly.
I chased the pump and I cared about technique and form,
which are very valid and important points to lifting
and you can definitely build a great physique focusing
on that, but I completely lost the importance
of really focusing just on strength,
not just for myself, but also for my clients.
Like I started to realize, once I started to realize that
for myself, I also realized the importance
of focusing on that for like a female client
who came in and said, hey, Adam, I just wanna lose 15 pounds,
you know, and I wanna maybe build my butt or whatever. want to lose 15 pounds, you know, and I want to
maybe build my butter, whatever. I don't care about, you know, getting super strong. I
don't want to lift heavy weight and get, you know, quote unquote, bulky. All I want to
do is look better. But what I realized was helping them focus on strength contributed
greatly to their aesthetic goals also.
Absolutely. Strength is the most closely connected signal to muscle building. In other words,
if you consistently get stronger, you will build more muscle. It's really the bottom line.
Now here's the thing with strength. It's not linear. You don't always get stronger. That's
impossible. And you can't always forever get stronger. At some point you hit a ceiling.
If that wasn't true, of course,
everybody in this room would be lifting, you know,
thousands of pounds with their list,
but it doesn't work that way.
But that being said,
the placing the requirement on your body
or telling your body needs to get stronger
means it's going to thicken its muscle fibers.
Bigger muscle fibers contract harder.
Now of course, strength is also a skill.
There's also coordination involved.
There's also muscle recruitment patterns and all that stuff.
But when you look at the brute force of it,
like the bottom line of it,
bigger muscle fibers simply contract harder.
And so telling your body to get stronger,
eventually, if you are getting stronger,
we'll yield more muscle every single time.
And typically, it's what it looks like, by the way,
if you do this, and this is especially important
for people who are beginner to intermediate.
As you get more advanced, you gotta get more creative.
But beginner to intermediate, strength is the goal.
It's always the goal.
This is typically what it looks like is you'll work out
and month after month,
you get stronger, stronger, stronger,
and then all of a sudden, boom, muscle appears on your body.
And then stronger, stronger, stronger, boom, muscle appears.
This is usually what it looks like
when you're noticing strength gains.
By the way, when we're saying getting stronger,
I'm not limiting it to what people tend to think
getting stronger is, which is max lifts, one rep.
I mean broad strength.
That's where you're gonna get the most muscle.
What I mean by that is you're stronger
and you're one rep max is you're stronger,
your five rep lifts and your 10 rep lifts
and your 15 rep lifts, okay.
All of that, that's what's gonna yield you
the most muscle gain, but strength is definitely
the most important one.
This was the key one when I started
really figuring this out
for clients because I figured this out for myself early on, mainly because I loved strength.
Strength was probably a little more important to me than aesthetics
when I was a kid.
But when I trained clients, it wasn't initially.
It was like how many calories can I burn and, you know, and they're
diet and that kind of stuff.
Later on when I really started to understand
the importance of this, this was the number one thing.
I don't care if you came to lose weight,
gain weight, increase mobility, improve your health.
Of course, appropriately, I would always try to get you
consistently stronger at a multitude of lifts
and a broad range of rep ranges.
And when I was able to do this,
my clients got the best results,
regardless of the goal, the best results.
Yeah, and you brought up sort of like the big four,
big five lifts.
Like, I think that we've brought those up
so many times on the podcast because it really is
a good representation of how well the body is doing
in terms of being able to stabilize all the joints, be able
to allow the central nervous system to create this force, to be able to lift weights effectively
and have this harmonious signal kind of throughout the body.
And so, to be able to kind of focus on the major know, the major ones is a telling sign that everything
else that you're doing is working or not working.
And so it is a goal of us trainers to get clients to be very versed in these types of lifts
because it really is like a representation of how well the body is doing strengthwise.
Well, it's not only that, it's also the carryover
that you get from those four lives
for total body strength and total body building muscle.
I was just this past weekend, I was with my family
and I had my brother-in-law and my mom's recent husband
that she just married this last year,
that they've been kind of intermittently listening
to podcasts, they have a handful of
programs, and we haven't ever really lifted together, and we were at the house with the
PRX set up, and they were saying, hey, Adam, could you take us through deadlifting?
I'm a little nervous about how to do it, and so they were kind of avoiding it in a lot
of the programs, and I'm like, no, you do not want to avoid this. So let's go in there and let's do it.
So we worked on it.
And one of the things that I was explaining to them is like, you know,
you could, you could literally come in here and just focus on deadlift, you know,
for months and months and months and avoid a lot of these other exercises
and still get incredible benefits.
It's for example, we're working out right now with 135 to work on technique.
You know, you can work on this technique by manipulating many different things as far as tempo and
rest periods before you start to add load.
But then once you get really good at it, you start to add load to this.
And not only do you get good at the deadlift, but also you'll see your biceps build, your
shoulders build, your hamstrings build, your glutes build, your calves build, like your
traps build.
All these other muscles that you aren't directly hitting
are getting all this great carryover
because this movement is so incredible.
So I was explaining to them that,
you know, the mistake that a lot of people make
when they come to gym is they come in,
and they're doing all these isolation exercises like crazy,
and they're avoiding the big four
or they barely ever do the big four.
When if they just focused on that,
the carryover to all the muscle on their body is tremendous.
Yeah, great point.
The best exercises to get stronger at
that give you the most muscle gain, the big four include,
deadlift, the squat, the bench press,
and the overhead press.
But I'll even throw barbell rows in that, pull-ups in that, dips in that, at least
compound movements, or the ones you want to get stronger at.
The next one really has a different type of muscle building signal.
This is one bodybuilders have identified for a long time.
This one is the pump.
Now, this is what the pump is if you've never experienced it.
So you're doing a workout,
let's say you're training your biceps,
and you feel them get tight and engorged.
Okay, what's happening is your body is pumping more blood
into the biceps because of the exercise
than can pump out.
So the muscle itself enlarges, you get this cell swelling effect
as the muscle fills with fluid, like water and blood,
and it's this tight feeling and it feels really good.
And then when you're done with the exercise
about anywhere between 10 to 20,
maybe 30 minutes later, the pump goes away.
Now the pump itself also stimulates muscle growth.
There's a few different ways it does this.
One is through the cell swelling process,
similar way to how crating can help build muscle.
This crating is converted to ATP,
which is muscle energy,
and every ATP molecule attracts water molecules.
So when your muscles have more ATP,
they have more water.
This cell swelling effect, this hydration effect,
also tells the body to build muscle.
Here's the thing you wanna consider.
At least 70% of your muscle size,
if you were to flex your bicep and look in the mirror,
70% of what you see are non muscle fiber structures.
Okay, so the majority of your muscle size is not muscle fiber.
It's mostly fluid.
It's fluid and capillaries and other structures
within the muscle that help feed the muscle, that
help the muscle contract that provide it with energy, that support the muscle fibers themselves.
And training for the pump allows those things to grow.
So you actually get bigger muscles through getting better pumps.
It places a slight stress on muscle fibers and causes those to grow as well.
Now training for the pump typically is higher reps, supersets, you're looking at maybe isolation
exercises. Here's what those isolation exercises, excuse me, come into play, right? Doing a lateral
and doing it properly can really give you a really good shoulder pump. So aiming for the pump is also important for building muscle.
And this is why body builders, this is the reason why body builders tend to build more muscle
than just strength athletes.
Although strength athletes have a lot of muscle, the body builders kind of utilize both.
And this is why like a guy like Stan Efferding, right?
He was a power lifter for a long time. Could lift incredible amounts of weight.
Then he went and worked with Flex Wheeler.
In Flex Wheeler, Adam focused more on the pump,
added more muscle to his body.
They're both very, very important.
Well, this is an example of what I was saying
when we first started talking about this,
is that knowing how to recognize what you tend to gravitate towards
and then trying to play with these other signals.
The people that are most guilty of this are
like what you would just alluded to, the strength athletes.
If you're somebody who all you care about is how much weight you live for the bench to
squat, the delft, these big compound lifts, you can build a tremendous amount of muscle
focusing on that and staying focused on that.
But you can also benefit from switching over and training hypertrophy.
I also think about my clients with form and technique.
So one of my favorite things about teaching hypertrophy is typically when you teach hypertrophy,
you are going to lighten the low tremendously.
You're going to be doing probably 40, 50% less than what you would be doing when you're
chasing singles,
doubles, triples, or five by five routine.
This gives me the opportunity to really slow down the technique and really work on the
form and the movement.
I love teaching clients to chase the pump because it gives me that opportunity to lighten
the load and really critique the way they move the weight.
That's a great point.
That's when I was thinking about immediately because it gives you that opportunity to actually
feel and understand that mind muscle connection.
So it's great to teach beginners how to get more familiar with how their muscle being involved
should feel in that lift and that exercise.
You can really break it down, join by joint and assess and see where there's deficiencies.
This is another great training method to be able to then isolate and bring up certain
body parts, certain muscles that you feel need a little more attention, need to be developed a little bit further.
See, this reminds me of,
I used to get, it's very, very common,
to get somebody who wants to develop their butt,
and they hear people tell them,
you got a squat, you got a deadlift,
and they do these exercises,
and they're like, Adam, I just don't feel it in my butt.
They're quad dominant, they don't tend to engage their glutes as much as they should in those movements, and so they don't feel it in my butt. They're quad dominant. They don't tend to engage their glutes
as much as they should in those movements.
And so they don't feel like they're getting much developed.
And they're, I used to love to get a pump
in their butt first before they go squad or deadlift,
like a pre-exhaust.
So taking them over and doing some floor bridges
and getting them to feel their butt
and try and pump some blood and fluid into their butt.
And then take them over to the heavy compound lift
like a squatter of deadlift,
and the benefits of that is tremendous
because to your point Justin,
it gets them to feel the muscle
that they're supposed to be working.
And sometimes we take this for granted,
especially being guys that have been lifting
for a really long time,
how hard that can be for the average listener to feel the muscle
they're trying to work.
I mean, how many times have you guys had clients do even something as basic as a tricep push
down or a bicep curl and they're like, they feel it in some other muscle, or they ask you,
where am I supposed to feel this?
That's the common one.
Right.
Yeah, the pump is a great way to get a non-responding body part to respond by finding a way to get
the pump.
In fact, I'd say probably 80% of the time
I've worked with a client who had a weak body part.
In other words, other body parts responded well,
but they had this one body part
that just didn't seem to.
They also had a difficulty getting a pump
in that weak body part.
They could get pumps around it and other muscles,
but that one body part that wasn't responding,
they couldn't get a pump.
And so the way that we would help them build that weak body part was first seeking out,
finding a way to get them to feel the pump. And then it became much easier. By the way, Adam
mentioned the word hypertrophy. Hypertrophy just means growth, okay. You can have muscle fiber
hypertrophy. And then you can have what's called sarcoplasmic hypertrophy.
Sarcoplasm are the fluids and non-muscle fiber structures
within muscle, so you can grow that as well.
So muscle fibers can grow,
and everything else inside the muscle can grow
leading to bigger muscle.
Now the third one, this one's a really good one,
and this one requires a little bit of tracking, okay?
So I think people like to feel this one out and tend to judge it based off on how
they feel and I'm going to tell you this right now.
Trying to feel this one out is like trying to feel how many calories you're eating every
single day.
It's never going to be accurate.
You're going to be off.
I'm talking about learning to increase or workload slowly over time.
This is a very effective way of, let's say you're not necessarily focusing heavy
on strength. The pump is there, but it's not your super focus, but you want to focus on
getting your body to increase its workload. What you do is you look at each exercise,
look at each body part, how many sets, and how many reps, and how much weight have I lifted
over the course of a week for this, and then next week, increase it just a little bit.
You don't need to do a dramatic increase, but just increase it just a little bit and do
this over time.
This over time, and I'm talking about a year or two years or so, or even longer, leads
to something that's amazing called muscle fiber hyperplasia, or at least we think it does.
Hyperplasia is when muscle fibers, when you actually grow new muscle fibers,
and this is great because muscle fibers can grow and shrink,
so you work out, they grow, you stop working out,
they shrink, but it's theorized and largely believe
that if you actually add muscle fibers,
those new muscle fibers, they don't go away.
And so over time, if you teach your body
to increase its workload slowly,
it leads to more, dare
I say, permanent muscle growth.
But again, you got to track.
This is a tough one.
Yeah, it's almost like what we call muscle memory.
I know a lot of lifters who've been in the gym for a long time for years, it gets easier.
It gets easier to respond again and to be able to get back in shape because your body
sort of remembers and responds to the process accordingly.
So, yeah, this is one of those important factors is over time just slowly doing it.
So, you know, a lot of people like to overwhelm their body a lot.
And I was guilty of this when I was first training
was like more is better, always more.
Like I always tried to do one extra set
and push myself to new heights,
but as I got older, I finally started to kind of realize
that this is a longer process.
This is something I could draw out a lot further
and it's gonna be way more effective.
I think of all the signals that we're talking about today.
I think this one is the most abused.
And because it just, it sounds like,
okay, the more work I do, the more results I'm gonna get.
And so many people, they start off with their routine
and they have that idea in the back of their head.
And so they do as much as they can.
It's day one and they get after it
as until they can't get after it anymore
and then they go home and they come back the next day
or they do the most amount of days in the gym
that they can potentially do at that time.
Like, oh, I have five free days or five days
where I know I can dedicate an hour in the gym.
So I'm gonna start there and do that.
And they throw everything and they, you know,
plus the kitchen sink at their pot body to get it to respond.
And they see initial results.
So it can be deceiving.
It's like, oh, wow, I piled on this muscle or I burned all this body fat.
And so this must be the recipe.
But and I'm glad we talked about that this could be like one of those things that if you're not tracking,
it you're probably off because for years,
I didn't really track volume and pay attention to it.
It wasn't until I got into competing,
did I actually really diligently start tracking all my sets,
my reps and my total weight, my total volume
that I was lifting in a week and tracking that over months.
And what I realized when I first started doing that is, oh, I'd have this great week
where I had good volume.
And then something would happen the next week
or I just wasn't feeling it or I missed a workout
or I workout got shortened.
And then the volume would dip a little bit
then I'd have another good week and then it would dip again.
When I pulled back and I looked at my total volume
over the course of two or three months,
what I realized is
I had these kind of patterns and it all averaged out to be about the same volume.
And this is what was responsible for me hitting this major plateau is even though I thought
because I had these days or sometimes weeks in the gym where I was getting after it, I
knew I was doing more work.
And evidently I would come back down the other direction a week or two later, and so that it would average out to be about
the same volume.
And so trying to first track to see that, and I always know like if I understand all
the science, right, it's not like this is new information to me, but I never really sat
down and tracked it.
And I know if I make this mistake of thinking that I'm adding workload, thinking that I'm adding volume,
if I do that, my clients have to be doing it also.
And so this is one of the areas that I think is,
is so important to first track to see where you are,
and currently yourself.
And then the goal is, like we've said before,
on this podcast, to do as little as possible,
to elicit the most
amount of change.
So the goal for me is, okay, X amount I did this week, I want to just incrementally add
a little bit more volume every other week or every week to make sure that I stay on
and not throw a ton of extra volume the next week and then have a hard time keeping up
with that.
No, it's increasing your body's capacity for workload.
It's not just adding more stuff.
Does that make sense?
It's like getting my body to the point where it can do more
without feeling worse, okay?
So I'll give you an example.
When I used to train Doug early on,
and Doug was not somebody who was a beginner,
he had worked out in the past.
He wasn't, definitely wasn't at a shape.
He worked out on his own. It was active.
We started out two days a week.
Two days a week in the gym got great results.
Within those two days a week,
we slowly increased his weight.
So that's more volume.
Then we were able to increase the amount of sets.
Slowly, that's more volume.
After about a year, a year and a half,
then Doug added a third workout during the week.
Maybe two or three years later,
he added a fourth workout. And week. Maybe two or three years later, he added a fourth workout.
And the entire time his body was progressing
and he was getting phenomenal results.
Notice how long that took.
It wasn't like, oh, we did two days a week for a month.
Let's go to three days a week all of a sudden.
You got to count it all, sets, reps,
and the amount of weight that you're lifting.
And that's why tracking is so important.
Well, intensity is included in this too, right?
So many people abuse the intensity.
This was one of those ones too, or, you know, I would get after a workout so hard and I
would feel so sore for two, three, four days later that I wasn't realizing that when I would
go back to the gym and workout because I was so sore, it was hindering the amount of
volume I did.
When I backed off the intensity,
it allowed me to increase the frequency,
which over time actually added more volume,
even though I was training less hard,
like I was going into the gym, not trying to kill it as much,
I actually ended up doing more work.
So until you start tracking and paying attention to that,
it's really hard to see if you're falling into the same traps.
It's a long-term approach.
Now, the next one is an interesting one,
and this one can also be abused.
Believe it or not, increasing your calories
or increasing your protein intake.
If your protein intake is low,
and if your calories are too low, okay?
So that's the caveat, right?
Calories are too low.
Protein intake is not optimal, optimal being 0.8 grams per pound of body weight,
maybe a little more for some other people.
If it's below that, just bumping protein and bumping calories,
by itself actually sends a muscle building signal.
Now it's a small signal, but when you combine it
with all the other stuff we're talking about,
it becomes very complimentary.
Now if you're gaining lots of body fat,
and you're like, I'm not getting stronger,
I'm just gaining body fat,
I don't think you should increase your calories,
probably not a good idea.
You can still look at protein,
but I don't think you should bump your calories.
But this is another signal.
Believe it or not, feeding your body,
if your calories alone, your protein's low,
feeding it a little more,
does spark a little bit of that muscle building signal.
The people that I see that tend to be guilty of this one,
the ones that need to work on this one,
in my experience, were typically women
that were super body conscious.
They were constantly worried about not gaining weight,
they wanted to be thin all the time.
And so we would do the get stronger,
we'd focus on the pump, we'd increase the workload,
but it was so hard for them to increase their calories
or eat adequate protein.
And so because they didn't do that, it was very difficult.
Once we threw that in,
then we saw things really start to take off
and what it led to was a faster metabolism,
which allowed them to eat more and stay leaner later on.
So this is another one, it's interesting,
just like the other ones, they'll can be abused.
Well, I definitely think this is one of the other top ones
that gets abused.
I remember as a kid,
I'll never forget this conversation.
I walked in with my best friend
and we were getting a gym membership at gold at the time
and we were both, I don't know, 140, 150 pounds or so
and we're skinny, you wanted to be big and we're both, I don't know, 140, 150 pounds or so and we're skinny.
You wanted to be big and, you know, we're telling the guy that.
And so he calls in, you know, the trainer to come over and come talk to us, you know,
the call in the big dude, right?
So here comes this guy who walks around the corner and for sure, probably on anabalk
steroids, it's probably 240 pounds of just a ball of muscle and he sits down across the
desk from us and he's asking us about,
you know, our training and our diet and he says, if you want to look like a bull, you've got to eat
like a bull. And I'll, I'll never forget that statement. I remember right after that my buddy and I
I think we swung by McDonald's after our workout and we bought, you know, like two big Macs, 20
piece chicken McNugget and we piling on the calories.
And this is like the volume thing where it's one of those things that you can also easily abuse
and overdo it. The body doesn't need that much more calories. It just needs a little more calories
to send that signal for your body to build. And if you overdo this what ends up happening is you
put 10 pounds on the scale which for for 140 pound a kid at the time,
sounds amazing and I'll take it.
But then when I actually do my body fat tests,
I realize that I only really added two or three pounds
of muscle, the other 78 pounds was actually body fat.
So I'm really not making that much progress
because if I decide I want to lean back down
and go the other direction,
I end up losing the three pounds of muscle
on a back where I started or even further back.
Yeah, it's very misleading.
I remember that.
That was the sentiment back in the day.
It was just, you know, if you're a skinny kid, like, just the more you could consume the
better.
And so that was where all these shakes came out, where it was like, you know, 2000 calories
per city, you know, and we just as much as possible. And, and to be honest, it was like a difficult to, to eat quite a bit when you're super
active and, and, you know, and you're doing all these sports and you're working out and,
and then trying to add in the, the right amount of calories was something that was a bit of
a chore. And so, to, to not track that though, like you could easily get away from you. The other client that I think that suffers from this too, because I, I had a bit of a chore. And so to not track that, though, it could easily get away from you.
The other client that I think that suffers from this too,
because I had a lot of these,
is my female client who came in and would say,
Adam, I wanna lose four or five pounds,
I wanna or a flat tummy,
and I wanna build my butt.
And you tell somebody who wants to lose some body fat
that you're going to increase their calories
in order for you to build some muscle on them or build.
And the butt is a muscle, okay?
So just like a guy who wants to build his bicep
or build his chest, we are going to need a calorie surplus
in order to put size on the butt.
And so this was always a hurdle
that I always had to come over as a trainer
with a client that comes in and says they do not want to put on any extra weight or they
don't want to get big and bulky, but yet they want a bigger butt and they want a flat tummy.
It's like, listen, if we're going to build your ass, if we're going to build that muscle,
we need the extra calories to support that. Otherwise, you're just going to keep tearing
and breaking down and being sore all the time and getting stuck support that. Otherwise, you're just gonna keep tearing and breaking down
and being sore all the time and getting stuck
in that recovery trap, never giving your body enough calories
to support or tell it that it should build more muscle.
Right, so this signal works if your calories are too low
or if your protein is not optimal.
By the way, if you wanna figure that out for yourself,
we do have a macro calculator.
You can find maps macro.com. You can go in there.
It'll tell you what your maintenance is and then you can add a little bit to that so you can hit
that number and get that muscle building signal. Now, the last one, this is an interesting one.
Hormones. And I say it's interesting because athletes have been using
anabolic steroids for a long time, which are essentially hormones. And those hormones do signal the body to build muscle and to improve its performance.
Now most steroids are based off of the hormone testosterone.
Testosterone is a muscle building signaler as a hormone.
Growth hormone does this as well.
Insulin, believe it or not, is the most anabolic of all hormones.
It also can tell the body to build muscle. And then for women in particular, believe it or not is the most anabolic of all hormones. It also can tell the body to build muscle.
And then for women in particular,
believe it or not, estrogen.
If your estrogen is too low because your hormones
are at a balance, you're gonna suffer with muscle gains.
And you might even suffer from some bone weakening effects.
So testosterone, growth hormone, insulin,
and estrogen are all important hormones.
Estrogen believe it or not, even important for building muscle and men.
In fact, I know bodybuilders, when they take anabolic steroids, oftentimes they'll take
estrogen blocking drugs to prevent side effects that can come from taking steroids because
some of the steroids that they take will get converted to estrogen.
But if they take too many estrogen blocking drugs, they actually build less muscle.
And they know this. If you talk to anybody, they'll tell you,
you need a little estrogen to build muscle as well.
So the key here is, how do we maximize the signaling
from hormones?
Well, I'm not gonna tell you to take hormone shots.
That's not at all what this episode is about,
but we're gonna talk about how to get your hormones
to work for you.
And the best way to balance out your hormones
is to be healthy.
Be healthy.
Be healthy.
Hormone and balances are a clear sign that something is off.
And man, if testosterone levels are low,
it means it can mean many different things.
It can mean your stress levels aren't good.
It can mean your sleep isn't good.
It might mean that your fat intake
or your calorie intake isn't appropriate.
Usually, those are the reasons why your testosterone may be low.
Growth hormone gets affected by lack of sleep and poor diet.
Insulin, here's one, if your diet is not good,
if your stress levels are high, your body loses its sensitivity to insulin.
So your body starts to produce more insulin to give you the same effect. And sometimes you develop insulin resistance, which can look like or turn into
eventually diabetes. So get healthy. That's how you, that's how you get your hormones to
balance, which then will send the muscle building signal signal that you want.
This one, this one's paramount because it can be, you could be doing everything right. And
if this one's horrible, it can completely ruin all of your gains.
If you're a hormones or off,
and I don't, I hate saying something
like as generic or as broad as just be healthy.
Because I think the average listener here is that,
I think they think they're healthy.
I don't, very few clients that hired me
that had hormonal issues actually didn't know
that they weren't healthy.
And it's because I think we,
there's a lot of common things that we just accept.
And so I want to address those.
Like clients almost always high stress, lack of vitamin D, poor sleep.
When I look at the three biggest offenders when we're talking about one,
and there's other things that you'll be causing, you know,
hormonal distress to your body and creating you be in an unhealthy environment.
But when I think of the most common and the ones that people don't really look into or focus on, I would say those three.
They've got high stress type jobs. They don't sleep very well and they lack invite them and do those will crush your hormones every single time.
I had a guy once that I trained who when when he came to hire me, we, through
the assessment process, I recommended that he do a full hormone panel. I thought it would
be a good idea. Well, he brought it back and his testosterone levels were in the 300 range.
Now, typically the normal range that you'll get in the lab is anywhere between like 250
to 1200. It's a huge range and I don't necessarily agree with that whole range. I don't think 250 is
normal. I think that's pretty low, but he was on the low end of that. Now, when I looked at his lifestyle,
it made sense. The guy was cycling for hours and miles on most days. He was doing a lot of running.
He slept horribly six hours a night. He was an executive. His diet wasn't good. He ate a very low fat diet, so his essential fats
were not as high as they needed to be.
So I said, okay, here's what we need to do.
We gotta get you healthy.
So this is what it's gonna look like.
I know you think it's healthy to ride as much as you are
and run as much as you are and eat as little as you are,
but obviously it's not, your hormones don't lie.
So here's what we're gonna do.
We're gonna dramatically decrease your workload.
We're going to create a sleep routine in prioritize sleep.
The goal is to get you to a point where you get eight hours of good quality sleep.
I'm going to bump your fat intake.
Your fat is way too low, especially for a man, your age, and especially for a active
you were.
And we're going to slowly focus on getting you stronger and all that other stuff.
And here's what happened over the course of three months,
his testosterone levels more than doubled.
In fact, his doctor was shocked
that he could raise his testosterone levels that high,
naturally, in fact, the doctor recommended
that maybe he should go and look into
working with a testosterone replacement therapy,
facility, didn't have to do that. He's got his testosterone levels more than doubled into working with a testosterone replacement therapy, facility.
Didn't have to do that.
He's got his testosterone levels more than doubled
just from becoming healthier.
Now, what do you think the side effects of that were?
Has libido improved?
His sleep was easier to get good sleep.
His recovery got better.
He felt stronger.
And here's the kicker.
When he would go ride his bike, he was faster.
He was actually faster than he was before.
This is so counterintuitive. If you're working with a client like this, I've had multiple
clients like this that are type A, like overachievers, that everything that they've done previous
to that has been successful because of the amount of work and the excessive amount of energy
they've put into that direction.
And so for me to then assess this and see,
hey, we need to back off on the training schedule.
We need to bring in two times a week
and you need to do more therapeutic style,
active recovery in the days in between
and not overdo it the cycling, the running,
and all the different classes that you're involved
in. We need to back off a bit, let the body fully recover, get focus, our attention
more on sleep. These are things that are, it's a hard self for somebody like that, but
it made, it was the key that really unlocked our potential now to then build muscle again.
I don't know if this is just because we live in the Silicon Valley and we have a lot of
tech people that work on computers or not, but I've had clients where just giving them
a simple tip of, listen, I know you work late on the computer, I know that's something
that I can't ask you to stop doing and I want you to prioritize sleep, simply putting
on a pair of blue blocker glasses just for them to block out that blue light at night
time to improve their sleep would improve them building muscle
Absolutely because it improves and we know it's the fact improves melatonin production
Which melatonin production is related to some of those hormones that we talked about if your melatonin productions low
chronically
Stress hormones tend to go up growth hormone tends to go down you lose insulin sensitivity and men testosterone levels drop and
women start to get an imbalance between estrogen and progesterone.
So that is a very important thing to focus on and it does make a big difference.
Sleep, sunlight, make sure vitamin D levels are adequate, get your vitamin D levels tested
if you're not sure because when vitamin D levels are low, you can kiss your anabolic hormones goodbye.
In fact, some scientists say that vitamin D acts more
like a hormone than it does like a vitamin.
I've also seen people just take vitamin D
and see their hormones balance out.
Look, MindPump is recorded on video as well as audio.
Come check us out on YouTube.
You can also find all of us on Instagram.
You can find Justin at of us on Instagram.
You can find Justin at Mind Pump Justin, me at Mind Pump Sal,
and Adam at Mind Pump Adam.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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