Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1952: How to Bulk the Right Way
Episode Date: November 24, 2022In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin cover what you need to know to properly bulk. If you bulk properly, you really can perform some magic on your body. (1:29) The word ‘bulk’ needs to be rebranded.... (6:58) The body has an interesting way of adapting. (10:58) How to Bulk the Right Way. (16:45) #1 – Eat in a 300-600 calorie surplus. (17:18) #2 – Eat high protein. (28:00) #3 - Focus on easily digestible foods. (32:40) #4 - Focus on gaining strength. (37:13) #5 - Get 8-9 hours of sleep. (43:05) #6 - Minimize cardio. (44:57) Related Links/Products Mentioned BLACK FRIDAY SPECIAL: ALL MAPS Fitness Products & Bundles 60% off! **Promo code BLACKFRIDAY at checkout** (Code expires Sunday Nov. 27th) Visit Seed for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code MINDPUMP at checkout for 20% off your first month’s supply of Seed’s DS-01™ Daily Synbiotic** Mind Pump #1565: Why Women Should Bulk What Makes Tracking Macronutrients Effective – Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump #1830: Five Steps To Determine Your Ideal Caloric Intake Visit Kreatures of Habit: Meal One for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code MP25 at checkout** Mind Pump #1757: The Truth About The Anabolic Window & Protein Timing Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources
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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.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the world's number one fitness health and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump, right?
In today's episode, we talk about how to bulk the right way, how to do this the right way.
Game muscle, not body fat. Speed up your metabolism, not your scale.
It's a great episode.
We think you're gonna love what we talk about here.
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All right, here comes the show.
If you bulk properly, you really can perform some magic on your body, your build muscle,
speed up your metabolism, have tons of energy.
Here's the problem.
Most people do it wrong.
So in today's episode, we're going to talk about how to bulk the right way and how to avoid doing it the wrong way.
Yeah, you know, who's idea of this? Andrews.
No dirty bulk. Yeah.
So I think selfishly he just wants to hear this.
You know, the antelivics says that we should do a bulky episode.
You know what I was thinking about?
Like we talk a lot about, because this is the number one goal, right?
It's the lose body fat.
So cutting and how to do that right and how so many people do it wrong
and what happens to be wrong.
Just as many people bulk wrong.
You know what I mean?
It's also just like with cutting,
there's a right way to do it.
And then the wrong way gets you very little,
if it results at all, in the direction you actually wanna go,
you could be quite, it can be an illusion
in terms of what you think you're actually accomplishing
with your bulk. And it can set you back quite a bit.
I actually think this is one of the bad things.
You know, we talk about the pros and cons of like the bodybuilding industry and how it's brought so many good things to the space.
I love the bodybuilding community, but this is one of the things I think that I blame us for that because when
you look at them as like they're the ultimate cutters and bulkers, right? Where we look
for like who's doing it the best? Like you would look to the bodybuilding community and
in the bodybuilding community, it's still very popular to dirty bulk to because you get
so shredded, you have so much more you can get away with.
So the average consumer,
I mean, this is where the birth of cheat days
and cheat weeks and, yeah, that type of philosophy
came from the bodybuilding community.
It's blood its way into general population of,
oh, it's now got out, that bulking and cutting
is a good thing to do.
So who do we look to?
We look to the people that are the professional in that arena, which is the bodybuilders.
Oh, how do they do it?
And unfortunately, most of them, of course, I'm over-generalizing.
There is always a percentage of people that I think are doing it the better, safer,
healthier way.
But for the most part, it's really, it's so common practice that competitors would be talking about and showing pictures of what they were going to be destroying like after a competition.
Like they go shopping like weeks in advance and they would stock.
It's also, it's also his bodybuilders, especially competitive ones, have really good muscle building genetics.
Many of them die at so hard before a show that they, you know, dare I say, can get away with
more of a dirty bulk, if you will, than the average person, because their body's like basically so.
That's exactly why. It's because they can, they can eat like an absolute asshole for an entire
week straight and still stay leaner than the average person who's trying to lose body fat in the gym.
And then the other part of this is when people do decide, okay, I'm going to try and gain
some good weight. I'm going to try and eat in a surplus. It's hard to not go from, hey, I'm always watching what I'm eating, so I don't gain too much weight to, hey, I'm going to bulk
and build muscle. It's hard to do that without going, oh my god, the, the, the, the rains are all
gone. Let's go. Right. Like I, this, that's the name of the game. And you get away with it for
like a week, right?
Or two.
Where you eat so much food and you're like,
wait a minute, I'm not gaining tons of body weight.
Well, there's a lot more justifying
than I think that happens too.
It's like, well, I just need the calories.
And so it's not really, there's not like a quality control
in terms of a lot of the types of calories you can sue.
I just need more because I need to gain the weight.
And there are seen things move in terms of scale,
so they'll see like some weight gain.
And, but, you know, really assessing what type of weight
they are putting on is, you know,
where they're totally missing the mark.
Well, speaking more towards the bodybuilding community
and the psychology that was going on,
I remember being really fascinated with,
as I was eating this crappy food, you know,
like a day or two afterwards,
it I was feeling and looking better too
because you were so depleted.
I went from starving.
So there's a bit of a psychological phenomenon
that happens too, is that even though-
You get confirmation bias.
You do, you get a confirmation bias,
and oh, this isn't just, okay, this is good for me.
My workouts are better. I look better.
Like you have to kind of stay there
because like we talk about a time, right?
It's unhealthy to be 3% body fat
as it is unhealthy to be 30% body fat.
And so, and the body knows this, right?
And so it totally responds to the like this flood
of calories finally.
It's like, oh, thank God.
You don't feel bad.
Yeah, and so you feel good.
It actually takes a while of eating like that
before you start to go the other direction.
So it is a bit of a confirmation bias.
Totally.
And the other one's giving out the information.
Now the average person doesn't do that, right?
The average person doesn't get down to 3%.
That's right.
That's right.
In fact, the average person may be thinking,
why should I bulk at all?
Like my goal is just to be lean, fit, and healthy.
So bulking when you do it right is actually quite incredible.
Like, if you do it right, you're going to increase your strength.
You're going to build more muscle than you did before.
You're going to feel better.
You're going to boost your metabolic rate.
Like, a bulk done properly
produces some pretty favorable results. Even if your goal is just to be lean.
Even if your goal is just to be lean, having more strength, more muscle and a faster metabolism will only make that easier.
And then of course if you want to build muscle, well, yeah, now this is where you need to go.
But also it feels good. Like being in a good bulk,
you'll have more energy, you'll feel more calm,
and you'll feel better than you did at maintenance or at a deficit. If you do it right, and
if you do it wrong, it'll feel terrible.
Well, you're feeding the muscle. I mean, you're building. Your focus is on building and
gaining strength. And I think that at some point we talked about this as neat, needing
to be rebranded at some point in a bulk, because I know for a, especially
with a female side, it's like, that's another deterrent is just like the name of it.
Why don't you go to a bulk and it just sounds like you're going to turn into this big, you
know, meatball. But really, it's your building muscle. That's the focus. So you're not depleted.
You're not like refraining from feeding yourself, you know, as you're training and being active, you're
promoting the building materials for you to then really kind of utilize that and help to build muscle.
I also think it's another area where I don't actually think that we all the way fully understand
all the benefits of this too. I mean, the metabolism is such an interesting thing. And when
the benefits of this too. I mean, the metabolism is such an interesting thing. And when the idea of eating the same foods all the time consistently, to me, just it seems a bit obvious
that wouldn't be ideal and that challenging the metabolism in ways where you overfeed
it a little bit for small periods of time and you underfeed it small. It would be logical.
To me, like every other system of the body. Yeah, that's kind of what is bit
We've we've started a piece together about our bodies. You're your immune system is like that your muscular system is like that
Like you have all these systems. I would think that it would you know regardless of what you want to happen aesthetically from it
Well, they're you know bulking or cutting is gonna make you look a certain way
I think it's healthy to challenge the metabolism north and south.
If you do a bulk properly and for the right person so the context works, they will notice
improvements in hormone profile.
So in fact, if I worked with a male or female client where they had hormone issues and they
were chronically dieted or over trained, a bulk was a part of the protocol.
And that is, it was a key part of the protocol
to help regulate and balance the hormones.
And I would of it was work with a functional medicine
practitioner in conjunction,
but that was part of the process.
You'll notice improvements in sleep.
You'll notice improvements in mood and libido.
In fact, you know, eating a chronic deficit
or being over-trained, or both, at the same time,
kills your libido.
So when you do this right, you feel amazing.
I still love doing this, especially with female clients
because I think women in particular are more likely
to shy away from eating in a calorie surplus
or trying to, at least planning to.
And so when we would do it, there was a little apprehensive,
but then they were always two weeks into it,
three weeks into it, like, whoa, I feel so good.
Oh my God, this is amazing.
I have so much energy, I feel so great.
But again, if you have to do this the right way,
because it's really easy to go from,
well, I'm eating X amount more calories a day,
I'm eating more than I did before, I feel good.
You know what, let me slide in the,
that's that bag of chips.
So let me have some of that pizza,
let me have some of that burger,
and that doesn't really affect me negatively at first.
So I'm gonna keep going.
And then it's easy, it's very easy to go
from doing it the right way to doing it the wrong way.
And then you get all kinds of,
you get all the negatives that anybody gets
from overeating.
You get lots of negatives.
You don't build the muscle.
You know, doing it right, doing a proper bulk results
in minimal fat gain.
Now, fat gain is basically inevitable with a good bulk.
You're gonna gain some body fat
or maybe not gain any body fat.
Definitely not gonna lose body fat for the most part.
But you could expect to gain some,
but it's gonna be minimal.
Like what you shouldn't expect is that you gain
10 pounds on the scale and half of its body fat.
Like that's not a very good bulk.
Or what I used to do when I was younger, you know, I gained 10 pounds and eight of it its body fat. Like that's not a very good bulk. Or, you know, what I used to do when I was younger,
you know, I gained 10 pounds and eight of it was body fat.
And I gained maybe two pounds of lean body mass,
maybe one of its water.
So I gained like one pound of lean body mass.
This is what happens to a lot of people
when they try to, you know, go on a bulk
and they do it the wrong way.
You know, I'm helping my sister-in-law out right now.
And I'd like to hear maybe how you guys communicate this
because back to my point about,
I feel like we still are still learning so much
about the metabolism, and I still haven't figured out
how to communicate what happens in this case, right?
And tell me if you guys experience this, I imagine you have,
where I have a client like her who's eating a thousand calories a day,
and she's exercising and she's moving like she's moving
Seven to ten thousand steps a day on average
She's eating around a thousand a thousand calories and she consistently stays there
And she just she just can't seem to budge or or move anything and she wants to lose weight
And I've had this happen so many times where I take a client like hers
Slowly convince her that we're gonna go on a bulk,
what she really has never really done.
You know, she's always trying to either,
she's not paying attention,
not tracking, not eating, not exercise,
not doing anything, right?
And putting on body fat, or she's in a cut.
That's like the two modes, right?
Never a scheduled plan.
Yeah, never like a structure of,
I'm gonna increase calories and try and build muscle.
That's never been a part of the strategy.
So trying to explain that to her
and tell her the things that we need to focus on.
Of course, it's like we always talk about the protein
and things like that, because she's way under.
But what I'm getting at is this phenomenon that happens
where I get someone like her to start to be focused like that
for, let's say, four weeks of this like bulking and training.
And we get her calories just say up to like 1500 or something
with not gaining any weight.
And then also explaining to them like,
that's such a huge win for us.
And then bringing them back down to where they were
and then all of a sudden they just start to drop weight.
Like that, how do you communicate what is going on there?
Because we obviously didn't build enough muscle
to metabolize that many more calories.
You know what I'm saying?
What happened?
I've seen this happen time and time again.
And that's why I think this is so important to communicate this because I know there's
a lot of people that listen that they do not have any desire to go up and wait and the
thought of adding calories seem so counterintuitive.
Yeah, the best explanation I've heard, because again, the metabolism is very complex.
Okay. So it's not as easy as going, you have this much lean body mass, therefore you'll
burn this many calories.
It doesn't work that way.
We know this.
We know that you could have two very similar people and have two completely different basal
metabolic rates.
Okay, so the best explanation I've heard is that you have a range of calories that your
body will burn with the same lean body mass.
And your body can decide based off its environment and the signals that's being sent to become
more or less efficient.
You'll break that down a bit.
Meaning like environment, meaning like, how stressed are you right now?
Are you sleeping?
You're sleeping.
You're sleeping.
You're sleeping.
You're up to day all day long. Yeah, you're sleep, you're exercise or the kind of exercise You're sleeping. You're sleeping. You're sleeping. You're sleeping.
You're up to day all day long.
Yeah, you're sleep, you know, you're exercise or the kind of exercise you're doing.
That'll tell your body, hey, be more efficient with calories.
So try to store every single one we possibly can and don't burn in the extra ones, or be
less efficient with calories.
Hey, this is an environment where we could totally be less efficient.
What's more important is that we fuel our bodies for energy, or maybe produce heat, or whatever. So you can be less efficient. What's more important is that we fuel our bodies for energy or maybe produce heat or whatever,
so you can become less efficient.
So it's more or less efficient with calories.
So it's like having an AI car that can decide
to burn more or less gas with the same size engine.
It's like survival mode or thrive mode.
It's like one or the other.
It's like it flips when your body like, it's just not available.
So we have to like keep, you know, this energy,
we have to store it up.
Oh, well, it's been, it's been stressed
from so many different things.
Lack of sleep, stress at work, stress in your home.
Too much stress.
Exercise like crazy.
And so it's under attack constantly.
And then on top of that, you are nutritionally stressing it
by giving it very little calories.
Very low calories also normally equates to nutrient deficiencies because you're not getting
proper new fission or nutrients that your body needs to function properly.
And so it's got this stress all the way across the world.
So what you're telling you is like, hang on to any sort of energy and just get it in for
your life.
Yeah, because you're hitting it.
I don't know how many times this has happened where I actually have just dialed in a few
of those things, feed this person a little bit,
and actually on the way of a calorie increase, see weight.
You're not.
If you ever seen this happen, we're all so,
and I go, hey, training seven days a week
plus the hour cardio is seen today,
we're gonna drop that all the way back
to like three, four day weight straight training,
no intense cardio just walking.
And I actually want you to bump your calories,
and then we start to meet, and they go down and body fat.
Yeah, yeah. No, I've explained that. I've seen that before. And again, it's the body adapting and becoming more or less efficient.
Look, here's the bottom line. The bottom line is the environment of a calorie surplus or the environment of a bulk,
okay, proper bulk with the proper type of exercise is the environment that gives you more energy,
Okay, proper bulk with the proper type of exercise is the environment that gives you more energy,
improves vitality, builds muscle and builds strength.
Okay, so that's the environment.
If you're trying to boost your metabolism,
balance your hormones, improve energy,
if you're trying to build muscle,
that happens in a bulk environment.
That's when that happens.
All of those things are very challenging to create
in a environment where the calories are not at a surplus or almost impossible. Some people argue
it's impossible. I don't necessarily think so because the body has an interesting way of adapting
in some cases, but it's very hard. Try to speed up your metabolism, build muscle,
increase your energy in a calorie deficit. Good luck with that. That's like trying to turn, you know,
lead into goal, right?
It's like alchemy.
Right.
So this is the environment.
So if you're trying to get any of those things,
you're like, look, I want more energy,
I want more strength, I want to build muscle,
I want to fast some of the talisman,
so being lean is easier.
Well, then the bulk is for you.
It's not just for somebody who wants to just
gain weight on the scale, right?
So I think it's important that we talk about
the right way
to do this because although calories are very important
when you're talking about a bulk,
if you ignore everything else,
then you're gonna be in trouble.
What ends up happening is you just look at the weight gain
on the scale and there's really no quality to the calories
and you don't focus on your workouts like you should
because your workouts are gonna to send the right signal
to say, hey, extra calories, turn it into muscle. Otherwise, extra calories turn into body
fat, right? So all these things have to be considered. So I think we should talk about the, you
know, the, kind of the factors of a proper bulk. The first thing is, is the type of calorie
surplus, or how much of a calorie surplus, you know, in my experience, it's about three to 600 calories
over maintenance.
That seems to be right where you get,
if everything else is done right,
you get that sweet spot of muscle gain
with minimal and no fat gain.
Yeah.
And I think there's an individual variance to that, of course,
but I think that's a valid range
because anything in excess of that like a thousand or so,
it's like, you know, your body is just,
at that point, like, we don't want to get to the point
we're gaining too quickly, and I think, like,
drawing it out further is really going to help your body
to process it all and synthesize and, you know,
utilize it for what the work you're presenting it with.
So, to kind of start on a more of a smaller side
and really see how your body starts to kind of trend
with that I think is a smart idea.
Well, here's what's important with that.
It has to be consistent because I know that there's people
out there, especially guys who are like,
well, if I'm not out of thousand plus calorie surplus,
I don't gain any weight.
Well, look, I've worked with a lot of people
and I've had experiences with myself.
The truth is, it's not consistent.
The reason why they think that is,
because they could do a thousand calories surplus
five days a week.
But then two days a week, they're not,
and really it averages out to like 400.
I was just gonna address this.
I was the same thing was going through my head
when Justin was saying that,
and the reason why I don't like giving
like a generic number like this is,
I think the first step before even saying this
is that most people don't do is to actually track themselves for a couple of weeks.
Yeah, how do you know it's hopeless?
Yeah, it's at one, anytime I'm about to go on any sort of a cut or a bulk where I'm intentionally
trying to gain way or to lose body fat, the first thing I always do is recalibrate.
And to this day, 40-something years old
been doing this for 20-something years,
it's fucking different every time.
So to think that you...
Like you knew it was before, so let's do it again.
Yeah, it's almost never the same.
My steps are changing.
My daily habits and routines have changed.
My sleep is different.
My eating patterns have been different.
The amount of lean body mass I have this time
versus the last time that I was 230 pounds different, like there's so many factors that
change that number.
And so I throw all of it out the window and just go, I'm going to eat when I'm hungry,
I'm going to make good choices when I do that, I'm going to be dialed for two weeks and
I'm just going to see where my weight is.
And the goal is to not go up or go down really. And I want a two week shot
because of the ebb and flow of day to day, right?
Because of water up and down.
So you know what your new basal metabolic rate is.
So I have a good starting point of,
okay, when I eat this many calories a day on average,
it maintains my weight, okay, now let's go increase
three or six hundred and two, your points out,
now I probably don't need a thousand calories even for but you're right kind of a generic rule
I always did when I had a hard gainer and he that would tell me like oh I add calories or I eat surplus
I go oh well eat at a thousand you know I'll give a crazy number because they always they always
underestimated what they were moving and they always overestimated what they were consuming.
And so that was a good general rule.
And then it realized that Saturday,
because they slept in or whatever,
that calorie deficit really screwed up the rest of the week.
So that's number one with this,
just like with the cut, with the bulk,
figure out how many calories you're burning to stay at your weight.
And then add three to 600 calories to that every day.
You gotta be every single day consistent.
Cause you could do this five days a week,
Saturday and Sunday be under,
and actually negate the bulk completely
and find yourself at maintenance.
So it needs to be consistent every single day.
Now part of that is meal prep.
Now I'm gonna argue that meal prepping,
I'm gonna make an art,
I think it's so important for cutting as well as bulking,
but I'm gonna argue it's even more important for bulking,
because it's really easy to go off the rails with a bulg.
It's really easy to not have food prepared for you
and where you have your meals, and then you're like,
oh, I gotta eat, well, I'm on a bulg.
Easy to go get that person from.
What was the intensity that you need, you need the food,
you need the calories, and so if it's not there ahead of time
Lots that you'll grab like whatever's the most quick and convenient because it's justified in your pursuit of having to get those calories
By all means necessary. So this is why I used to make this rule for myself that before I were to do a burger or something like that
I have to hit my my macro targets first
so
Because I also if there was gonna be time,
I get some metabolic flexibility.
It's in a time where I'm bulking.
So if there's a time that I get to have burger and fries
or something like that, I'm gonna normally do it
on a calorie surplus type of week, right?
So what I do that though, what I don't wanna do is go,
oh, it's lunch time right now.
Oh, I have an eight for like four hours.
Now the cravings are kind of,
I'm gonna go run through five guys.
It's like, no, I've only got X amount of grams
of protein in for the day.
I need to hit that target first through like good plan meal.
And then, okay, if I'm still hungry later on,
then I allow the additional calories to come like that.
Because I know that's the other thing that people are gonna ask.
People are gonna ask, okay, you guys are recommending
300, 600 calories surplus.
Where do those calories come from?
Do you prefer them from fat?
Do you prefer them from carbs?
Do you prefer them from protein?
I would normally push someone into protein until, in two k.
Until we push over, let's say, you know, one and a half,
yeah, one and a half, I push all the way up to one and a half.
I'd still push towards protein,
all the way up to one and a half grams per pound of body weight,
or until they are digestive issues, right?
So if I have a client, sometimes where I push them,
just up to one or a little over a one,
and we're eating their surplus in protein,
and they come back and they tell me things like constipation,
or they feel like they're just a rock gas.
Yeah, or a gas, or I think,
okay, then I would go to probably carbohydrates
as a source of their calories.
But typically, I like to push towards the protein.
Well, I'll tell you if we're bulking for me, meal prepping was a game changer because when
I did it, I either under ate and didn't realize it, or I'd try to make up for it by eating
these huge, just garbage-filled meals.
And then you didn't hit protein and then you over consumed carbs.
And it just gave tons of body fat.
But when I did it right, I knew like,
oh, 3300 calories, like here's 3300 calories,
here's my meals.
And then the bulk was like, it was muscle
and I felt so good.
So meal prep is really important for bulking,
especially for somebody who thinks
that they have lots of room, like,
oh, I can bulk, I'm gonna go crazy with this.
Like, you know, when it'll end up happening, and this used to happen can bulk, I'm gonna go crazy with this. Like, you know, what'll end up happening,
and this used to happen to me,
as I gained 20 pounds in a bulk, then I'd do a cut,
and I'd go back down to where I was before.
I was like, well, that was a big waste of time.
Yeah, all that effort, yeah, a little bit.
Yeah, here's another thing.
Start your day off early.
If you're trying to eat high calories,
you're really gonna be screwed if your first meal is,
you know, 10 a.m., okay?
You get behind the April.
So having a good meal in the beginning
sets you up. Otherwise, you play this catch up game where you start hitting the end of the day
and like, oh my god, dinners left. I have 1700 cowers left. The biggest hack for me for this as
you know, considering myself a hard gainer and even like talking to any clients that struggle with getting enough protein take was making breakfast always the leftover dinner plus eggs.
Just eggs send it go, like almost every meat.
I don't care if I'm having bison, turkey,
ground beef, chicken, like I just for dinner,
we're making three, four eggs,
the serving them out that I need for dinner that night.
The leftovers then add scrambled four eggs
and some cheese on there if you can handle cheese.
Just throw some rice in your tin.
And you've got yourself a super high protein meal,
that taste bomb and easy,
because eggs are really easy to whip up
and then to heat up the food that you was prepared
with the night like that.
Well, and if that's not first meal, second meal,
like I love, I know we work with creatures of habit now
and that's now become like one of my favorite staples morning.
But those two is a one and two type of meals
to start your projection on protein for the day,
high before noon.
That was such a hack for me to go,
by noon I need to have X amount of protein in.
If I did that, I always hit my protein test.
She's also good for regulating your blood sugar.
Right, totally.
By the way, that's a great first meal,
is either depending on how many calories you need,
one, creatures of habit packets,
let's say 30 grams of protein, 40 grams of carbs,
think eight grams of fat, and some scrambled eggs,
or two packets.
You have two packets of it,
you got 60 grams of protein, eight grams of carbs,
you have a high calorie, you know, breakfast,
and it's easy and whatever. But yeah, start your day off well because what I would always screw up or when I would see
clients screw up with a bulk is when they'd get behind the eight ball and then they get home
from work and they're like, they have to make up all these calories.
Right.
And always turn, it always ended up, you know, turning bad that way.
And a blessed just feel like crap.
Like, you eat a huge meal before you go to bed, which some people would do to try and
make up for the lack of calories.
Then their sleep was interrupted and totally
getting into sleep, which is all part of this whole process
of being able to build.
You need adequate sleep for all the magic to happen.
And so to cut into that with eating too lay,
I know for me is a huge factor to that.
It's going to totally disrupt,
and then you're going to be behind me,
because now you're going to make different decisions the next day too when you get the cravings
when you're lacking sleep. So it's, it's just one of those things that kind of spirals.
Yeah. I want to, as we're going through these, I also want to give like these either hacks
or the piffneys that we had, you know, through going through all the different bulks. Yeah.
And one of the first ones that come to mind, and again, I'm reliving this conversation.
I just have with my sister-in-law,
and we're trying to technically bulk, right?
We're trying to increase her calories.
And, you know, something that is,
I had no idea until I actually really started tracking
like this, was how little of meat you get when you eat out.
Pretty standard, almost all restaurants
and like sandwich shops.
So that's what four ounces of meat is what they serve.
So you get a big old Togo's turkey avocado sandwich
which used to be like one of my favorite sandwiches
to get it.
Like 25 grams of protein.
Bro, it's four ounces.
Not even that.
It's like, yeah.
And it's part of that's from the bread, right?
So I'm going to do the worst.
They're all like that.
So they, all the four ounces is the standard serving size
of meat on a large sandwich, not on a regular or
small on a large sandwich.
So understand that if you go to Chipotle and places like that, four ounces is what's in
the spoon.
So doubling your meat up on on servings that you're having or getting it inside of a bowl
instead of having it on on a bunch of bread, which ends up taking up 800 calories of your
day of carbohydrates,
and then now you're high on your calories,
but low on your protein.
Like, understanding that when I made food choices
for lunch made a huge difference for me,
because I was a big sandwich eater for most of my life
and always struggle with hitting my protein intake.
Totally, which takes us to the next point,
which is the Edehyde protein.
So of the macronutrients,
now they allute to muscle,
gain in somewhere or another,
but protein is directly related to muscle gain.
And if you have high calories, but your protein is low,
you're not going to build as much muscle
than if your calories are the same, high,
but your protein is high.
It just builds more muscle.
And since the goal here is not to gain body fat,
but rather build muscle,
speed up the mat, matalves and dole act great stuff, then we want to prioritize protein.
So really what you do is your meals should be built around your protein.
So if you know you need to eat 150 grams of protein a day, let's say that's your body weight.
So you want to eat your body weight and grams of protein.
And you're going to have three meals that day.
Well, each meal needs to have 50 grams of protein.
So make sure you have your 50 grams of protein there,
and then you organize your meal around that.
What you don't want to do is just look at the total meal
and not consider the protein because, again,
if you eat a 3000 calorie diet in your protein's low
versus a 3000 calorie diet in a protein's high,
one of them builds more muscle than the other,
and one of them results in less body fat.
This is quite proven,
there's many, many studies on this,
so your protein needs to be the kind of center focus
of your diet.
Okay, also an important point around that.
This was also something that kind of blew my mind
when I started, okay, when you say 50 grams of protein,
50 grams of a protein meal,
that's a big protein
meal for the first person.
You need to wrap your brain around what that looks.
An eight ounce chicken breast is only like 36 grams.
That's right.
So think about the eight ounce of those big old boxes.
Yeah, so you need like one and a half of those to hit your 15 grams.
So I was the other thing is you like, you get clients who'd be like, Oh, I eat lots of protein because they eat meat at every serving
or two eggs for breakfast. Right. They have they have exactly they have eggs for breakfast one or two on something and then they have a lunch where they have
chicken and rice whatever that sounds good and then dinner they have steak. Oh, that sounds like they eat a lot of protein.
Not if the servings are four to six ounces. They're four to six ounces and you're not a
about the servings are four to six ounces. They're four to six ounces and you're not a 97 pound little girl
and you actually need 130, 140, 150 plus grams of protein.
That's actually a lot of-
You know, it's funny, use the example of a 97 pound girl.
And 97 pound girl who wants the bulk
is gonna have to eat about 100 grams of protein.
You know, hard that is?
Yes.
For someone who only weighs about a pound.
Which is why I bring that up.
That means she's eating three different meals that have a good six to eight ounces of chicken. That's right. That's a
lot. So, so here's some tips. Here's a, this is a hack, right? This is a great hack.
Is track your calories and your protein. And at the end of the day, an hour after dinner or so,
look at your totals and see how much protein you're off by. And that's when you add a shake.
That's how I, that is my favorite way. It's a very easy way to hit your protein targets.
That is my favorite way to use way, right?
That's my favorite way to do that.
It's to use it as an emergency.
Just that's exactly what's talking about my sister-in-law.
I said, listen, I said, I don't want you
using protein powders and bars.
And she's like, huh?
She's like, I thought they were healthy for me.
I'm like, yeah, I know.
That's how we've marketed to you guys.
Is that they're healthy food? Yeah, I said, it's how we've marketed to you guys. Is that their food item?
Yeah, it's better than you go to the gas station
and getting fire cheetos, yes.
Okay.
And so if that's in it, if that's what I have,
I'm going to pull over, get some fire cheetos
or I have the protein bar.
We'll have the damn protein bar.
But the goal should be actually to eat whole foods all day long.
And then at the end of the day when you're adding
in your fat secret to see what and you're like
Oh shit
I'm still 30 40 grams from my protein tank go make a shake real quick and now I'm now I'm either closer or I hit my protein
That's how I want to make it easy and usually when people are off they're off by anywhere between 30 to 50 grams of protein
That's a shake. It's a shake makes it a water if you, if you want to be real precise. And many shakes today are almost only protein. So it's really easy way.
It becomes really crucial for someone like her to do that when you're even further in
the whole, right? You talk about quality of protein when you're, when you're, and like,
if you look at your day and you're at, you know, 60 grams of protein, and I'm telling you,
you need 150, like, yeah, you definitely need to make sure you have that shake before you go to bed because you're,
you're missing out on all the potential from all this weight
training that we're doing.
It's the other part that was hard to help her make that
connection is like, you're, you're working out five days a
week. And then you're wondering why you're not getting
rewarded for it because you're not giving your body the
building box to go do any, go do any with. yeah, all you're really doing is burning calories right now.
You're getting an exercise for your heart. So good job exercise for your heart.
Good job. You're burning calories, but you're sending the signal for the
body to build muscle, but then you're not giving it the building blocks.
And we're gonna have that. And so the metabolism is not going to speed up.
That's right. So the next point, this is really important because one of the
biggest hurdles for anybody
who's on a bulk, especially when you're eating high protein in a calorie surplus, are digestion
issues.
Like, if you start to feel bloated or overstuffed or full or gassy, it's going to be very,
very hard for you to hit any more of your targets.
It's going to be really hard for you to eat, more calories and more protein.
Then it just feels like you're stuffing your face
and that doesn't feel good.
That leads to inconsistency and also leads
to a poor relationship with food,
which I don't like to promote,
even in the context of,
hey, we need to bulk type of deal.
So eat foods that are easily digestible.
You're eating more calories anyway.
You want to be able to assimilate these calories.
Now for most people, the worst offenders when it comes to digestive issues include gluten,
so wheat and wheat containing types of foods, dairy, that's another common one. And then
typically it's just really greasy or ultra-processed foods, Like fast foods tend to fall in this category.
It's like you could eat 700 calories of foods
that you prepared yourself that include things like rice
and chicken thighs or some high quality ground beef
and some vegetables, or you could buy something at a restaurant,
don't know what oils are using, what they're frying things up
and what they're cooking things in,
and then you could feel dramatically different
depending on what they put in the food.
And when you feel bad, it's really hard to continue down this path.
So really focusing heavily on easily digestible foods makes a huge difference.
Here's another one.
I hope my poor sister-in-law doesn't mind me throwing her up.
I mean, this conversation is just so...
I just have this conversation and she she does represent
A lot of clients that I used to have and the in the typical challenges
So I'm telling her she we need to we need to increase her proteins
We're at a thousand calories. We're only getting 60 grams of protein, right?
And she's not a 90 pounds, right? So she tries she's way underneath and
The the thing that I'm looking at is I'm like, okay,
we have to at least get you up to like 110, 120. So we're way underneath that. Well,
then her response to me is, you know, at every time I eat protein, though, I feel like
it sits like me in my like a rock. So any guesses on what was dramatically off in her diet,
what I can look at her fast secret for two weeks.
Not enough fiber?
Five grams of fiber on average a day.
So what her size should be?
You need to find where to move that.
20 to 25 grams a day.
She's, and you're five times under
about what normal should be for where you're currently at right now.
So it ain't the protein, but she has made the connection
that it's the protein.
Because it happens, yeah, and that's it. That's right. It happens after she eats it.
So and of course, you know, and that's explaining that to her. It's like, that's because you're
your fibers, unbelievably low. So talking about digestive issues, that's also one of the most
common things I would see with somebody who feels like a high protein diet really backs them up.
They have a time. It's well, what ends up happening
is you go high protein, you end up doing low carbohydrates
and you're eating healthy.
So there's not a lot of fiber in the food that you're eating.
If you're grossly under consuming fiber
every single day, you're gonna fill back up like that.
You know what it's some good,
kind of like some really good foods for this category.
Well cooked vegetables.
So if you really cook them well, boil them,
cook them so that they're even mushy, easy to digest, and they help the digestive process. White
rice is an excellent source of carbohydrates, easy to digest. Most proteins or meats are
good for or easy to digest for some people. Some people have issues with really, really
fatty cuts, so then maybe go towards the kind of leaner cuts.
Fruits, for the most part, berries are an excellent size.
Bberries the best.
Strawberries, blackberries, blueberries, blueberries.
Yeah, they're really great.
As berries are the best.
They are the highest on antioxidants.
They have a great source of fiber.
They're low calorie.
So there's some of the lowest on calories slash sugar,
but the highest on fiber and antioxidants
in relation to the
calories.
So you could have a big old, you know, like she was already eating the, you know, the
meal one from, or protagonists is what it was back then, right, for creatures of habit.
And I'm like, you can throw a whole other cup of berries in there, blueberries in there.
Throw that in there.
Like we need to get that fiber up five times of where it's at right now.
So that becomes it, and it's not going to add
a ton more calories to their diet.
Pretty huge, huge bang for the buck,
is what you get with something like that.
All right, the next important point,
is the focus on gaining strength.
So here's a deal.
If you're on a calorie surplus,
and your body weight is going up,
and you're not getting stronger,
we have a problem.
You're probably not gaining muscle.
You should be getting stronger in a bulk.
If you're not getting stronger, the odds that you're gaining body fat and not muscle are
high.
If your weight is going up, but your strength is going up a lot, the odds that you're
gaining muscle in that process are very high.
Strength is my favorite metric to look at when bulking.
Because I know this with clients and with myself,
if I'm on a bulk and we're doing this
and you're not getting stronger and your weight's going up,
I'm like, okay, this back off for a second.
Let's figure out what's going on.
And usually it's the workout,
usually the workout sucks.
So you have to have good workout programming.
You still have to amplify that strength building signal.
I mean, that's all part of the process of building muscle,
which is, you know, the bulk side of it is our focus
is really is to build muscle.
So if I'm gonna gain weight, I wanna to consist
of muscle mass as much as possible.
So that includes weight training as a big part of that.
You know, and we'll get to sort of like cardio and all that,
but that is definitely something your metrics
is strength in the gym and then how can I feed myself to fuel that one?
You should see really good strengthings.
My bulking guys get this.
My girls struggled with this.
My female clients that I would try and explain this to them again, my sister I love you if
she's listening to this and I think that she's just a classic example of the challenges that I think these clients have.
And I'm talking about her training now,
we get to that portion.
And she's been following maps programs for months now
consistently, and she's having a real hard time
in this area, right?
And I go, when was the last time that you increase the weight
on your squat, or increase the weight on your deadlift,
or increased the weight on your shoulder? She goes, oh, I pretty much do the same weights that I always do.
And her, you know what she said back to me was, well, don't you always say that my mobility is more important.
So I've been really trying to focus on that. I'm not trying to put a bunch of weight on. I'm trying to get, you know, deeper in my squat, right?
So she, and I said, okay, I said,
she misunderstood a little bit.
Yeah, yeah, I said fair enough.
I said, and I don't ever want to say,
oh, don't worry about mobility more.
Just put lots of weight on the body.
I'm not sacrificing for it.
Yeah, they're equally important,
but when we are talking specifically
about speeding your metabolism up, building muscle,
it goes in the order of what we've already talked about.
The way we need to feed it, the way we need to take care
of your body, that's first and foremost.
Now we need to send a good signal inside the gym.
And if you're doing the same weights, the same kind of,
even though you're changing your maps routine up,
but you're not challenging yourself weight-wise
to get stronger in the gym,
then the body, you're not demanding that the body
adds muscle.
If you throw more weight on it, and afterwards it goes,
whoa, that was new or that was harder,
that was more than I've ever done,
you send a loud signal to the body to say,
hey, we need a adapt, we need to build muscle.
If we're not sending that loud signal,
then even if we're eating in this calorie surplus,
not much is going to happen as far as building muscle.
This is when you hit PRs.
When you hit PRs and lifts,
or when you get to your strongest ever, it's when you're in a bulk. So that's what you should expect. Not that you're going to hit PRs. When you hit PRs and lifts or when you get to your strongest ever,
it's when you're in a bulk.
So that's what you should expect.
Not that you're gonna hit PRs every time,
but rather you should expect to feel like you're stronger self
when you're in this particular...
That's exactly what I said to our said.
Don't get so hung up on how much I'm telling you.
But your goal should be, hey, you squatted last week.
And let's say you were working on depth and range of motion.
Don't, now neglect that, still do that,
but now, you put a little more weight on them
than they would you did last week.
Yeah, four pounds.
Yeah, you said add some weight to where it was before,
and then just slowly, but your goal each time
we come to these sessions should be challenging
yourself a little bit more.
Now, here's a mistake some people will make.
So they're on a bulk, they're doing everything right.
They start to get stronger, they have
more energy, obviously, because they have more calories, then they just start ramping the
volume through the roof with their training.
This is a big mistake.
This is one that I always run into myself personally, and that'll stop your progress right
in your track.
You over-train while you're bulking, you're just going to get fatter.
Be very careful to not add tons of exercises in volume just because you feel good.
You're supposed to feel energized and good.
That doesn't mean you necessarily need to do more.
And the other thing is get strong at the big lifts.
Like that's really what I care about with my clients.
So if I'm training someone and I'm putting them in a bowl, I don't care if they're
cruel, went up or they're trying to press down, went up or, you know, okay, that's fine
if it did.
What I care about is your bench higher? Are you rowing more?
How's your squat and your dead,
what about your overhead press?
That's where you'll see the big strength gains
and that's where you get the most bang for your butt
because you go up, you know,
you go up 30 pounds in your squat.
That's a lot of potential muscle that you're doing.
I actually think that's really good.
I think that's actually really good general advice
for the, you know, general pop that's listening
to this amount of bulk would be like,
I look at those big lifts, those four or five main lifts and just focus on those and even to your
point, even if you're just adding the two and a half pounds each week, just incrementally a little
bit more, but just stressing and challenging the body a little bit more is going to send that
loud signal to build more. They make weights that are magnets, and I experimented with this where you're
not having to have right.
No, less half a pound.
You literally, you literally, the strategy was, and I've done this before, where I just
add a half a pound to every lift, to every major lift every week.
And at the end of the week, or at the end of the month, I should say, you know, you're
up two to four pounds on a lift.
You do this over the course of three months, and your strength gains have gone up quite
a bit. Yeah, just incremental progressive overlords three months and your strength gains have gone up quite a bit.
Just incremental progressive overload.
It's pretty interesting to see what happens.
Yeah, so I mean, that's not a be all end all,
but my point with this is if you get stronger
while you're bulking, you're probably going
in the right direction.
If you're not getting stronger and you're bulking
and the weight is going up on the scale,
you gotta reevaluate everything
because what probably is happening
is you're probably gaining body fat.
All right, here's the next one. This one's really important and that is to get
8 to 9 hours of sleep, not your normal 7 to 8, but 8 to 9 hours of sleep. This one is
huge like huge. I want to revert back to like being a baby.
Dude, I've worked with clients where all we did, we had them, you know, eat a little extra calories
or lifting weights, and we're seeing some progress,
and then I hammered the sleep thing,
and within a week of them getting, like,
making sure they get eight to nine hours of sleep every night,
their straight gains went through the roof.
I've experienced this myself.
This, by the way, is old school muscle building wisdom.
The old time lifters used to talk about this.
They would talk about getting
a full seven to eight hours at night and getting a nap in the middle of the day. So they're, you know,
totally eaten. This is what I think the right way for us, Modern Times is the the sun and caffeine.
Yeah. Making sure that you get some natural light outside for 20 minutes or so a day early on
in your day. To set that circadian route. Yep, just set that up. Minimizing the amount of caffeine you do,
definitely shutting it down well before or at noon
for your day.
Otherwise, those two big things I feel
is like some of the biggest culprits disrupting sleep.
And just getting my clients to kind of tune those in
made it more of their cool.
So caffeine, which is interesting,
caffeine, one of the things I would do with people
who had trouble bulking is I'd have them cut
their caffeine in half,
mainly because they'd slept,
because they were tired and they'd sleep so hard,
and we'd save a little bit of caffeine
for before the workout.
And even though it was kind of hard,
you'd see their muscle gains go up.
That's a big one, even if you have caffeine as 6 a.m.,
people don't realize it's, oh, I have a head 6 a.m.,
it's not a big deal.
It's still a fexor sleep, try.
In fact, try going down to 130 in normal caffeine
and see if you don't sleep like a baby, you know,
that night.
It makes a huge difference.
And then what you said about the sunlight is,
I think, so important, especially with the,
in the era of working indoors on computers.
All right, here's this next one.
Minimize your cardio.
Okay, now before everybody freaks out.
Everybody freaks out when we talk about cardio.
You want to have a certain level of cardiovascular health
and you want to have activity.
What you don't want to do is fall into this trap that a lot of people would fall into.
Back in the day, especially when I was a kid, which was, I lifted weights and then I
didn't move at all all day long for fear that I'd burn calories and potentially rub my
muscles of gains, right?
That was terrible because actually that was detrimental.
It actually causes a decline in health mobility and you actually don't build as much muscle as when you're healthy and moving.
Now, I say minimize cardio because there are people who go from cut to bulk and they go from their
hour cardio day to their hour cardio day in addition with the higher calories and all that stuff
and they get some effects from the bulk but they're just doing way too much damn cardio. Like cut it down and make the focus, the strength training.
And in my experience.
I was just competing signals.
Yeah.
If you're really trying to maximize the benefits of the bulk,
it's a competing signal to the body.
You know, one of them is being efficient,
and with calories, there's been less efficient with calories.
So it's, I wish we came up with like a baseline recommendation
that we think everybody should be able to do cardiovascular-wise
is like, so that we have this fallback.
As long as you stay in your game.
Right, like let's say you would say something,
like run a mile under eight and a half minutes,
like you need to be able to do that.
You should be doing at least seven to 10,000 steps a day.
And if not, you should be doing at least 30 minutes of moderate to.
So I like a seven to 10,000.
That's what I tell people.
Seven to 10,000 steps.
I don't care how you get it.
Just if you hold that every day.
That's the biggest thing is activity.
And I think that that's that's where this kind of goes.
In a different direction for me, if I'm talking to somebody that just sits all day,
and then only has that one hour a day to get any kind of activity.
Yeah, that's a necessary thing for you to do to keep promoting the fact that your body
needs to move and build.
Otherwise, you're not going to get the good effects of the bulk either.
So to remain active but have it benefit you in terms of recovery is sort of the focus.
Well, I like that suggestion too because just the benefits too of the
having facilitate recovery faster.
Yep.
Just getting up and moving and pumping blood and oxygen.
And study show that's a little bit of cardio, like an appropriate amount that keeps you healthy,
helps the muscle building process.
Yeah.
So it doesn't hurt it.
It helps it.
It's when people, when their workouts,
when you look at their workout plans,
and you notice they're doing as much time
doing cardio as strength training or more.
That's when I go, uh-uh.
Your strength training needs to be the corner step.
If you're trying to gain,
it's another good, generic way of saying it.
I think that's a good way of saying it like that.
If it's the cornerstone, where it, in other words,
you've spent three hours lifting weights
and three and a half hours of cardio, and you're trying to bulk, you've got this upside down.
Yeah, no, I would typically tell people 10 minutes after breakfast, lunch, and dinner,
of walking 30 minutes a day.
And then if you want to do a few days a week or a couple days a week, a 30 minutes of cardio,
that's totally fine.
Or if you like to be athletic, I see no problem in throwing some sprints or some conditioning
in your workout, like driving
the sled or farmer walks or stuff like that, which gives you some cardiovascular conditioning.
It's when people do that, like, and again, this would tip me, I'm stereotyping, but usually
this would female clients where they would do their 45 minutes of strength training,
you know, good focus routine training, you know, compound lifts, trying to get stronger,
everything looks good.
And then they follow it up with 45 minutes or an hour cardio.
And I go, the majority of work out with cardio, this is going to hurt us.
So that's okay, you're doing 45 minutes of strength training, 20 minutes of cardio.
Let's do it that way, at least half the time doing the strength training to the cardio.
Let's do something like that.
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