Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1955: Gain 10 Pounds of Pure Muscle in 90 Days With Mike Matthews
Episode Date: November 28, 2022In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin cover ten steps to adding ten pounds of muscle in 90 days with Mike Matthews. Is it possible to gain 10 pounds of lean muscle in 90 days? (1:29) Why would anyone... want to do this? (2:43) Building muscle is hard. (3:16) More is NOT always better. (6:38) Ten strategies to Gain 10 pounds of muscle in 90 Days. (18:22) #1 – Eat A LOT. (18:38) #2 - Aim for over 1 gram of protein per lb. (26:30) #3 - Take creatine. (36:56) #4 - Eat carbs. (42:17) #5 - Don’t be afraid of fat. (55:55) #6 - Throw in occasional “junk.” (1:00:28) #7 - Master excellent, consistent sleep. (1:06:56) #8 - Reduce stress. (1:14:05) #9 - Get strong at compound lifts. (1:23:48) #10 - Train full body 3 days a week. (1:32:41) Related Links/Products Mentioned Black Friday Sale EXTENDED: ALL MAPS Fitness Products & Bundles 60% off! **Promo code BLACKFRIDAY or CYBERMONDAY at checkout** (Code expires Friday Dec. 2nd) Visit Drink LMNT for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Mind Pump #1852: The 4 Worst Ways To Judge Your Workout Success Mind Pump #1952: How To Bulk The Right Way Effect of nutritional intervention on body composition and performance in elite athletes MAPS Macro Calculator Mind Pump #1830: Five Steps To Determine Your Ideal Caloric Intake Research Review: Leucine vs whey for building muscle Mind Pump #1757: The Truth About The Anabolic Window & Protein Timing Pros and Cons of Creatine – Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump #1920: The Best Foods To Build Muscle, Melt Fat & Fight Chronic Disease With Stan Efferding Mind Pump #1345: 6 Ways To Optimize Sleep For Faster Muscle Gain And Fat Loss Mind Pump #1402: Good Stress Vs. Bad Stress & How To Know The Difference Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources Featured Guest Mike Matthews (@muscleforlifefitness) Instagram Website The Muscle for Life Podcast Visit Legion Athletics for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code MINDPUMP at checkout**
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.
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?
Today's episode, Mike Matthews, back on the show, one of our best friends in fitness.
And in today's episode, we talk about how you can gain 10 pounds of pure
muscle in 90 days.
We actually give you exactly what you need to do.
Also, this is black Friday sale time.
In fact, this sale is going to get extended to the second of December.
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Go try them out. All right. Here comes a show
Mike Matthews
What's up friends? Is it possible to gain 10 pounds of lean body mass in 90 days?
Yes
With an asterisk
Because like who are we talking about? Did we talking about somebody who's brand new to strength training? That's pretty straightforward, right? Male versus female,
we'd have to make that distinction too. But your average guy just getting into strength
training, I think that pretty much everybody can do that. Now, take a guy though who's
been lifting weights for several years. He's pretty strong now. He's gained a fair amount of muscle. I
think it's probably still possible, but it's a lot more difficult. And even with that
more experienced way, I left a rift to talk about, well, when we say lean mass, we're
talking about actual, like, contractile muscle tissue, or we're also talking about fluid
expansion as well.
You also have to talk about where he's at in his journey, because actually, that guy that would also be the most
challenge because he's been lifting for years,
had he just come off of a break of not lifting
for like three to six months,
he actually would be at an advantage
because he had built that in the past to gain that.
So.
The before and after scam.
The detrain.
That's a good one.
I mean, before we even get into that, it's first off, why would anybody even want to
do this?
Well, aside from the obvious, people who want to build muscle, it's a great way to boost
metabolism.
Lean body mass looks good.
It improves insulin sensitivity.
It sculpts and shapes your body.
Of course, I've talked about how it increases your ability to burn calories.
So if you want to get lean,
so anybody listening who just wants to burn body fat,
this strategy in the short term
is a great way to improve your odds
at long term body fat.
Now, what I think I want to add to what you were saying
earlier is it's hard.
Building muscle isn't easy at all
because of all,
most of all of what I mentioned,
but primarily because muscle is expensive tissue,
so your body's not trying to become more calorie dependent
unless it thinks it has to.
So this is why building muscle is so hard.
And once you build a certain amount of muscle,
it gets harder and harder.
Like if I gained 10 pounds of muscle,
you know,
geometrically harder.
I mean, yeah, it's like and harder. Like if I gained 10 pounds of muscle, you know, geometrically harder. I mean, yeah, it's like significantly harder.
The longer you strength train,
and the longer you do this, like I said,
in the context that you are consistent at the time.
Right, right, right.
So it's really hard, but there's a lot of things
that play a role in this.
You know, male versus female,
how experienced you are, genetics.
Boy does that play a huge role.
I remember the first time I was exposed
to superior muscle building genetics.
I was managing a gym,
and I had this guy that worked for me,
he was the clean, the gym.
So he cleaned the gym,
and he didn't make a lot of money,
and he was super muscular,
and I'd watch him every once in a while,
go out and work out,
and he would do skull crushers with 225.
And I'd watch him eat,
and he'd eat like at $0.99, she'd burger,
he'd eat a couple of pop tarts.
And this is when it dawned on me.
Oh, there's a whole other level
of muscle building jeans out there.
So, but that all being said,
what I think what I wanna say here is what we're gonna talk
about, anybody could apply to build the most amount
of muscle
that they can personally build in that 90 day process.
Is that sound fair to you guys?
And to give a little bit of context to that.
So somebody who works with me, he did,
I think he lasted, maybe he made it eight weeks
on this program.
So it pretty experienced way,
if you're when he did this,
he had already squatted 405.
So he's a strong, and at a body weight of probably like 170, he's not a very big guy, you know, he had already squatted 405. So he's a strong and at a body weight of probably like 170.
He's not a very big guy, you know, he's not very tall.
But pretty experienced weightlifter.
And in about eight weeks, he gained about eight pounds.
A little bit of a little bit of body fat, of course.
There was definitely more fluid.
I mean, he was eating about 1,000 grams of carbs a day, and he was keeping his fat under
80 grams a day, which is, that's a feat.
How did he do that?
He ate a loaf of bread every day, and he would eat a huge bowl of pasta every day with
like low fat, gross taste like nothing, watered down sauce, right?
And lean protein.
So he was very meticulous with his diet
and his training program though,
he was doing two a days, five days a week,
and that's simply because to get in enough volume
to grow like that,
I mean, he had to be in the gym three hours a day.
And so we did that.
And again, about, I think it was about eight pounds gained. Let's
just say six pounds of that probably was quote unquote lean mass, even though some of that
is just going to be extra fluid in his muscles. And what adds to the size and shape your muscles?
Yeah, for sure. For sure. But you know, often when people think gaining lean mass, gaining
muscle, they don't necessarily think, oh, I'm just gonna stuff some more fluid in my muscles
to make them look bigger.
Like they're thinking this is...
The solid, the control.
Yeah, contractile.
Yeah, no, I'm glad you said that.
But he massed.
But after that, everything was hurting.
And this is when he was in his, he was like 24.
So he was invincible, you know, physically.
And he couldn't do it for more than six, seven, eight weeks
because everything was hurting.
Yeah, lean mass refers to anything that's not body fat.
Right.
So, okay, and now I wanna touch on something
without getting too deep in the weeds,
but I do wanna touch on something.
You said he was doing two workouts a day.
You know, it's interesting about that.
We just created a program called Maps 15.
This is, and we put an advanced version in there,
but for the average person trying to work out
it's 15 minutes every day,
which equates to like two, 50-something minute workouts a week or whatever, we have an advanced version there.
But what we found is, when you take, what we found and also data seems to support this,
when you take your total volume and just break it up in a smaller workouts, you seem to build more muscle.
And bodybuilders and strength athletes have known this for a long time.
I know Olympic lifters have done this forever. Now, first,
originally in the Soviet Union when they would just kick our ass and waitlifting. Have you
experimented with anything like that? Where you, instead of doing your whole workout? I know
you have a crazy schedule. You're one of the hardest working people I know. Have you ever tried
something like this? Not to the degree that you're talking about, and they're certainly...
So my position on frequency and my understanding of the research, at least as it stands right
now, is that, particularly with experienced weightlifters, higher frequency, it wins to
a point like training each major muscle group two or three times per week is probably
better than training, let's say one time a week.
Although that's not, that's hard to do if you're doing compound lifts, right?
Because you're training multiple major muscle groups with those lifts.
But to keep it simple, I would agree that two to three times per week for major muscle groups
that you want to grow, if you're an experienced weight lifter is probably superior to one, you
also kind of have to do that because of the amount of volume. So take my body, right?
If I want to get bigger and stronger, and my genetics are not going to allow for much more of
anything, but if I really, and I have been pushing it pretty hard for two years, although I dialed
a back a little bit recently, it takes, let's just say 15 to 16
hard sets per week for any major muscle group
to make any progress.
For me, to gain any strength, for example,
and gain any size, to get anywhere.
You figured that out for yourself?
Yeah, 10 sets per week, for example.
Let's say my chest, I just want more chest.
10 sets per week will not do it.
I can maintain, of course, what I have.
But if I want to make any progress,
I have to do upward of 15 or 16 hard sets for my packs, right?
Now, the interesting part,
have you also pushed the opposite into that spectrum
and know that, oh, once I start going in the 25 to 30 sets,
I mean, you just get hurt.
I mean, that's one of the hardest things
about what we're talking about right now
is finding that sweet spot.
It's because a lot of times people hear something like that
and they go, okay, more is better. And it It's like that's not necessarily true because there's definitely,
you know, like this bell turn.
Finishing returns.
Yeah, for sure.
Yeah, after you get that's probably 20 or 25 is, you know,
a lot of the Dalmaton old has been saying this for at least a decade now.
He's been saying up to 20 to 25 hard sets per week if you're an advanced weight lifter and you're
really going for it beyond that, you you're probably just gonna get hurt.
So even if more volume,
even if there were a linear relationship
between volume and hypertrophy,
you're just gonna get hurt
and you can't build muscle on your hurt.
So to that point, a frequency,
okay, I'll say I'm gonna do 15 hard sets for my pecs.
I'm gonna really go for it per week.
Should I do that in one session?
Right.
No, because for a couple of reasons.
One is research shows that once you get beyond probably 10, 8 to 10 sets for any individual
major muscle group in one workout, the hypertrophic response, the muscle building signal gets
muddied.
And you are not going to get the response that you would get if you were to take, let's
say, those 15 sets and do them over two, three workouts.
Right.
Now, someone like Menohenselman's is big on very high frequency, even six to seven days,
training a muscle group, six to seven days per week.
So you might do the same amount of volume, but now you're only doing a few sets per session.
Right.
Right.
And that's an approach I have not tried myself.
And that's closer to what he's talking about.
Correct.
That's a shift to me.
Yeah, I'm just, I'm three months into experiment.
It's fascinating.
Yeah, yeah, it's really, it's,
It's interesting.
You know what it feels like, Mike?
I'd love your opinion on this.
Because like, you know, like, we've talked many times.
I've been on your show many times.
You're one of the smarter people in our space.
It feels like long rest periods.
So I'll do three sets for chest today, three sets tomorrow. So it's like I do the three sets. Those three sets have long rest periods. So I'll do three sets for chest today, three sets tomorrow.
So it's like I do the three sets,
those three sets have short rest periods.
The next day, it's almost like a long rest period
to the next workout.
And I almost feels that way when I'm working out,
it's very, very interesting.
It feels different.
And I almost feel like there's two things.
One, I can get away with more volume.
If I wanted to and two, I can also get away with less volume
if I wanted to because of the increased frequency.
I would love for you to try experimenting with that
because I'd love your opinion.
You're very objective.
Yeah, I mean, I think there are good evidence-based arguments
for increasing frequency beyond that two to three times per week.
That's kind of the traditional, I would say, currently evidence-based approach
to training frequency is to look at it more
as a tool for increasing volume.
So if you need to get to 20 hard sets for,
let's say you're like a natural body builder
and you are really trying to gain every last ounce
of muscle and strength available to you,
your legs are big, but they need to be a little bit bigger.
That's a weak point according to the judges, and you're going to have to blast
yourself. 20 hard sets for your lower body per week. And let's say with fairly heavy weight,
like you're never doing more than 10 or 12 reps per set, that's difficult. And you're going to
have to break that up into several workouts, trying to do that in one workout is maybe rabdo territory. You might end up in the hospital, right?
So that question of, okay, should you do 10 sets twice a week?
Should you do like six or seven sets three times a week
or should you do what you're talking about?
Maybe you're gonna train lower body four or five times
per week, but you're only doing four or five sets
per workout and I know that there are, you know,
smart people in the evidence-based community
who would say that there's evidence to suggest
that the higher frequency approach is superior
to the moderate frequency approach.
You know what else is interesting about that?
Now, taking a side, we're talking about like advanced
lifters or ourselves, very experienced.
You talk about the average Joe, average J and Joe.
Here's another thing to throw into the mix that complicates things a little bit, but
in my opinion, actually makes things a little bit more clear.
It's easier for the average person to exercise consistently when you give them short daily workouts
versus infrequent longer workouts.
At first glance, it doesn't seem apparent, right?
Like, well, I mean, take two days a week and do an hour, two days.
That should be easier for you to do.
But in practice, people tend to do better when they do that.
These little tiny workouts every single day, that add up to roughly the same amount of time.
So when you add that into it, it starts to become clear like, oh, I wonder if we're prescribing strength training to the average person who isn't necessarily
a fitness fanatic who doesn't love working out. Like maybe we've been prescribing it wrong
all along. Maybe instead of saying, you know, do two or three days a week in the gym, what
we should be saying is, do, you know, two exercises a day.
Yeah, we're talking about adherence, right? Yeah.
In terms of behaviors, like what's really going to stick and that's really what's going
to move the needle closer towards getting our goal of 10 pound of muscle at the end of
the day.
We could have all these techniques that, you know, we might see in a study that will
play out that way, but if it's not going to play out in your lifestyle, it's not really
it.
It's also most likely to stick like a habit that way too.
Yeah.
And if you don't hit it a day or two, it's less detrimental than missing a full one hour
work.
Missing your upper body day.
Yeah, completely.
You only do once or twice a week.
Totally, totally.
Now, what about, what about, it's talking about adherence though, you know, and I've
actually heard this over the years with some of the shorter workouts in some of the
programs that I have, right?
Where I would ask somebody to go to the gym
and do a 30 to 45 minute workout.
Ironically, I would hear from people fairly often,
one, they would say they didn't feel like they did enough,
but then two, they're like, I drove to the gym,
that's, that's, I should just spend more time here.
Yeah, I don't wanna drive drive a total of 75 minutes.
So what year, maybe 60 minutes
to do this short little workout and leave?
They're right.
What you're addressing was one of the greatest challenges
that I went through.
You know, somebody who loves the train, trains hour, hour and a half
workouts all the time to cut down to something as short as 20 minutes
like that.
I would finish and feel like I have so much
more or I should do more. Oh my God, am I even going to feel that the next day? And so there
is that little bit of a mental struggle that you have to go and trust the process. Because
then what you end up finding out is over time, not only do you feel okay, what I noticed
the biggest thing that I noticed was I was less likely to overreach. If I have an hour to train, no matter how long I've been doing
this, I still tend to want to overreach. I'd rather my theory was always, I'd rather overreach a
little bit than to fall short type of attitude where this is a total different philosophy and because
of that, what I've noticed, especially being in my 40s now, my joints don't hurt, my body feels good. And so it's kept me more disciplined
about doing, you know, not going over, over doing it,
which I had a tendency to do when I'm doing like,
it's like, I've been in the catalyst.
For the last couple of years
and I've had to dial it back a little bit.
Yeah, it's, it well, okay.
So first off, it's always a mental hurdle.
Long-term fitness is more mental than anything.
And one of the biggest hurdles is how people think
they're supposed to feel after a workout.
People are led to believe that they should feel
like they just survived battle at the end of a workout.
In fact, some people, they use that,
like that's the metaphor.
Yes.
Come on.
We picked some things up.
We put them down.
We didn't exactly engage in hand-to-hand combat,
mortal combat.
Yeah, absolutely.
And so, and I know you've experienced this,
well, you've been at this for a long time now too.
You're a businessman, you're a father,
you're very involved.
The real way you should feel after work out
is you should feel better than you did going into it.
You should actually feel more energized.
And it should, and now why is this important?
Well, two reasons, one, you get better results at rate.
It's a fact.
If you consistently work out and feel better
after your workout consistently,
you're more likely to have trained appropriately
over long periods of time.
So that's number one.
But number two, you're now making this something
that is easier to develop a good relationship with.
If I always feel great
after my workout, I'm more likely to look forward to it for five years, 10 years, 15 years.
I don't care who you are. Yeah, you that initial three-month period of motivation where you're
hating your body and you feel you're so fat and whatever. It may be cathartic to leave the
gym and want to throw up and your legs are shaking, you got to go take a nap because you just killed yourself at first, but I guarantee you're
not going to develop the kind of relationship with exercises going to last you forever.
At some point, you're going to wake up in the morning and be like, oh, I don't want to
do this crazy hard workout.
It's way too much and I didn't get good sleep or whatever versus, oh, man, I'm not feeling
too good.
Oh, thank God I get to go to the gym and then I'll feel so amazing afterwards. So it's a total mental shift,
but I think that's where the answers are there.
It's not necessarily,
and we'll get to the mechanistic aspects
of what we're talking about,
but really the juice,
really where the real answers are,
it's in the mental aspect.
And how do we work around that?
Well, let's get to that.
I feel like we've talked about all the nuances
and takeaways.
Yeah, okay.
We are now trying to build the most amount of muscle
in a 90 day period.
And if we have to list off all the things
that we find very important, like where do you focus on?
I would say the first thing is you gotta eat a lot.
Let's talk about that for a second, Mike.
What do we mean by when we say we need to eat a lot?
More specific place. Totally agree. That means a consistent calorie surplus.
Yes. That means consistently eating more calories than you burn. Now, there is a debate about
how much more, right? Are we talking about 5% more, 10% more, 30% more, and if we look at,
there isn't too much research available on this.
Unfortunately, there are some studies underway. I'm helping fund one that hopefully will.
Oh, really?
Yep. With Eric Helms being done out of AUT University.
Wow. That's awesome.
On lean bulking in particular, right?
That's cool.
However, the evidence that we do have available suggests that more calories beyond
a point does not mean more muscle. Unfortunately, it just means more fat. And so I've always
recommended, let's say, 5 to 10% more calories than you burn every day. And I like 10% more
than 5 because 5 doesn't give you much wiggle room. And
we never know exactly how many calories we're burning or chloric intake usually unless we
are very conscientiously weighing and measuring every single thing that goes into our body,
our actual intake also fluctuates. So if we are trying to maximize muscle building, we
do want to err on the side of
maybe a little bit too much food rather than a little bit too little.
Well, especially with this avatar we're talking about right now because we're not talking
about like general health or the average person.
We're trying to build a much muscle.
Yeah, this is like I came to you. I said listen, and if I'm coaching that person, I'm
definitely going to air on the side of, you know, over, I'll worry about the couple extra pounds of body fat
we put on later because this person is struggling
with putting muscle on and they're trying to put on
as much as they can.
I'm so glad you said that.
You are going to gain a little bit of body fat
through this process.
If you go into this saying,
I'm not gonna want to gain a single ounce of body fat,
you're not gonna build the most amount of muscle
you can build within this 90 day period.
Now we're not talking about that.
Unless you're new, right?
Because then, that still might be true to a degree.
But when you're new, your body is so responsive to the training.
Yes.
I mean, how many over the years, how many amazing body recoms have you seen from people
in their first year?
Yeah.
People where?
People build muscle almost doing anything in that first month.
And draw fat.
Yes, which is why I think there's so many shitty programs out there.
Yeah, because so we're like, we're trying to do it work.
Yeah, a lot of things can work.
It's a lot of that way.
One thing you said that was really important is you emphasize the word consistently,
have a caloric surplus.
Yes. This is the challenge because in my experience,
working with people that are struggling to pack on muscle,
when I talk to them about eating and I go,
okay, are you eating more than you're burning?
Well, yeah, I eat a ton and then we actually go
and break it down and what ends up happening is,
you know, commonly, Monday through Friday,
they are eating 300, 400 calories above their maintenance.
Then Saturday and Sunday come along
and what ends up happened is they sleep in,
they wake up two, three hours later,
now they're behind the eight ball
and then they try to make up for it by eating a little bit.
But anyway, when you end up at the end of the week,
you end up with a barely a surplus
over the course of a week
because Saturday, Sunday,
they actually, their calories weren't high enough at all.
And this actually happens for people
trying to lose weight as well.
They'll be in a great calorie deficit,
Saturday and Sunday.
Selective memory.
They remember the thousand calorie Mondays,
but they forget the 4,000 calorie Saturdays.
Yeah, and because of that,
wouldn't you guys say that this is another example of two
where it's almost mandatory that this person tracks for me?
Like, if I'm coaching you,
if you're trying to maximize,
yeah, specifically. Now, we're talking about that. Why else. If you're trying to maximize, yeah, it's possible.
Now we're talking about that.
Why?
Some people they ask me why, why, why track?
And my answer to be curious to hear your thoughts is
because unless you naturally just have a very big appetite,
consistently overfeeding is actually kind of difficult.
It is, you quickly feel like you are force feeding
yourself because you kind of are.
And you know, we've all done it and I can tell you
I remember the last time that I I did a lean bulk
I was eating two dinners just because I needed to eat 4,000 calories a day. That's where I was at in it and
So I mean I was full all of the time. I didn't really enjoy any of the food. I was eating
Especially with forcing myself to
be specific and nutrient dense foods.
Yeah, because you know why?
Psychologically, they all go like,
I'm not gonna have a problem eating 5,000 calories
because I think of the time they crushed
the whole bag of candy or the,
you know, pizza.
Yeah, pizza or like that.
You're not thinking about chicken thighs
and white rice and sweet potatoes and vegetable.
You're not thinking like-
Gain your fiber and your new-
Yeah, when you eat like that, it is-
We're trying to build muscle here.
It is way more difficult than you think
to consistently day in and day out, stay in a surface.
And that's one of the strategies, I would say.
One of the most important strategies
with being able to consistently hit your caloric targets,
which in this case, Mike, I think you said it so well,
about 10% over
what you're burning. So if you're burning 2000 calories, you're going to try and eat 22
hundred calories to give you an example, is to hit that number every day. Because what ends up
happening is if you're off three days, you're going to try and make up for it now on another day,
and now you run the risk, and here's a big challenge, I'd even highlight
where when people try to make up for the fact
that they missed a few days or whatever,
they really overeat, they mess up their digestion,
they get bloated, try eating in a surplus
when you're bloated.
Good luck, that really sucks ass.
So the key here with the system is-
And you end up just gaining more fat on those days
than you need to.
So go ahead and just make up for it like that.
It just doesn't work like that.
Thank you.
Go ahead and that for a second.
So explain that a little bit.
So you can't make up for the fact
that you didn't work in a calorie surplus
for three days by adding all those calories up
and then doing it on that fourth day or whatever.
Yeah, and that is, that is unfortunately,
unfortunately the truth.
I commented on that just in the beginning
of this discussion that, again, research shows and I commented on that just in the beginning of this discussion that
again, research shows, and I'm thinking of one study in particular that showed that
a 30% calorie surplus, so eating 30% more calories than you burn every day, does not produce
any additional muscle growth compared to 10%.
So this is a day to day thing. Yeah, so, so it's just, you know, you can
a small calorie surplus. We know that that aids in muscle building in different ways. I guess
you could kind of say like your body's muscle building machinery, everything that goes into
that just works best when energy is abundant, but going beyond that, let's say 10% surplus, the machinery
can't work any faster.
All that happens is you just gain more fat.
It's a bell curve, we have one point and one place, it's peak, but as you start to go
over that, your body's just trying to capture excess energy at that point.
So you can't make up for those days that you did not provide it, the energy it needs
to run that machinery at full tilt, so to speak.
And in a sense, those days are lost opportunities for muscle growth.
And if you try to compensate for that by eating a lot of food
over, let's say the weekend,
let's say the week what you didn't do so great,
the weekend now you're gonna try to really stuff
your self full of food.
You will gain more, let's say at Saturday and Sunday,
you will gain more muscle on those days,
then let's say the Monday or Tuesday
when you were actually in a slight deficit on accident,
but you also are gonna gain quite a bit of fat.
Overall, weight less effective, and it doesn't feel as good.
All right, so what makes up calories obviously are the macronutrients.
I think we should talk about the most important one when it comes to muscle building, not
that it's the only essential one, but it's the most important one, which is protein.
And I typically will tell people the aim for one gram of protein per pound of body mass
in appropriately weight individuals.
So, if you're obese and you probably want to use lean body mass,
how do you feel about that?
Can't go wrong with that, right?
And you could go, especially if you're in a calorie surplus,
you could probably go down to, let's say, 0.8 grams per pound of body weight per day
and see the same results.
There's research to show that going above one gram per pound
probably does not help you build more muscle.
Unfortunately, it'd be nice if it were that easy.
It's just that point, it's a stupid number.
I'm sure it's even, yeah.
I'm trying to make it as simple as I can for a client,
just telling them a one to one.
Plus people typically miss it.
And I actually heard someone say this in a day that I thought was
a better way of saying it, the trinx plate, because you saying something like, oh, a pound
for every lean body mass, the person who doesn't understand it, no, so a similar way is
your goal weight.
So even if you want, so even if you're 400 pounds, you, my goal is to be a healthy body
time.
Yeah, where's my goal weight?
So that works for both weight.
Yeah.
Oh, I would be 180 pounds. It's great. You'd 180 pounds. That's right. Oh, yeah, where it's my goal weight. So that works for both ways. Yeah, I would be 180 pounds. Great. You'd 180.
That's right. Oh, very nice. That's a nice. Yeah.
I've also seen it relevant to height. So one gram per centimeter in height seems to work.
Oh, I'm never seen. Yeah. Which seems a little more. I think that I think nothing can be the goal weight.
I agree as a is about as you go. And it and it works.
As long as they understand what goal weight means, we're talking about body comp.
Let's look, okay, you're 400 pounds,
you are 62% body fat, you're a man.
All right, where would you be at?
If you were at 15% body fat,
we put some muscle on you.
Great, you would weigh 180 pounds.
Just coming back to that number.
Cool, there we go.
I like that.
Okay, so we're hitting roughly a gram of protein
per pound of goal body weight.
Yep.
At that point, it's a lot of protein.
Does the type of protein matter
or does it matter more when the grams of protein
are below that?
Yeah, good question.
And I'll make one more comment about the calories
just because it might be helpful to people
to understand if the range that they have come up
with makes any sense.
Most people, let's say they're physically active, this is not walking, but this is like formal
exercise, vigorous activity. Let's say it's five-ish hours, three to five hours a week.
For that person, they're probably going to have to eat somewhere around 17 to 18 calories per
pound of body weight per day if they're in a normal body comp. So just putting that out there,
that's not a hard and fast rule,
but if somebody's trying to work out their calories
and it's coming in at like 12 per pound,
that's almost like cutting calories.
Something's off.
So just one.
Which I think is, I actually think that's the algorithm,
both of our calculators use.
I think we both companies have a calculator that you,
if you're at this point and you're trying to figure out
where should I start.
Although I always recommend figuring out your own baseline.
Oh, I agree, I agree.
Because it's just sometimes people that,
if you have no idea whatsoever,
I think this is a great way you use the calculator,
give you kind of a general idea.
But then I really think you should take a week to two weeks
of consistency and go like, what's happening?
Yeah, I'm going up oh, down in my amazing.
Well, coming back to protein.
Yes.
So I think there's no question that the majority
of that protein needs to be highly bioavailable.
It needs to be rich in essential amino acids,
thickly in losing.
And so that's primarily animal-thrived protein.
Plant-based proteins are,, are not missing amino acids.
Some people claim that they're not incomplete, but many plant proteins, they're essential
amino acid profile, which these are the amino acids that we have to get from food.
Our body cannot create them in any way, is lackluster, especially compared to animal proteins.
And interestingly, research shows that even when you combine
different sources of plant proteins to match the essential
amino acid profile of way protein, that the total amount
of amino acids that make it into your blood,
which is ultimately what matters,
is significantly lower with plant protein versus way.
Like 30 to 40% lower, matched
for leucine, matched for total essential amino acids.
So there's probably something else going on here that we don't fully understand yet.
And that's not to say that you can't do what we're talking about on a plant-based diet,
but you actually might need to eat quite a bit more total protein than we're saying.
I was just gonna say, so is that to make up more?
If it's high enough,
then it'll make up the difference.
But let's talk about bioavailability
because that's probably what's going on there, right?
It's probably has to do with bio,
what does that mean?
What is bioavailable to me?
Just available for your body to use.
Now with protein, again,
what we really are interested in is the amino acids,
particularly the essential amino acids.
Lucine is very important.
That's an essential amino acid that stimulates protein synthesis
that actually like kickstarts the body's
muscle building machine, so to speak.
And so those amino acids are digested, broken down,
but they need to make their way into our blood
so our body can use them.
And so there's a lot of research on the bioavailability
of different types of protein.
Like for example, beef is quite high.
It's, I think it scores in the range of like 80% to 90%
of its bioavailable, whereas hemp is pretty bad.
It's, I think it's like 40% or 50%.
And so you have a spectrum of bioavailability
and total protein, if you don't know that,
total protein can be a little bit misleading because if you're
eating, let's say you eat a lot of hemp protein for whatever reason, like that's your protein
powder and you're supplementing, let's say you're getting 50% of your daily protein from
a supplement and it happens to be a hemp protein or it's like a failure.
Yeah, or it's hemp and it's maybe pumpkin seed, which is also not very good.
Maybe there's some pea protein in there, which is a bit better, rice protein, a bit better. But you're eating, let's say, and I'm thinking of women I've heard from
over the years who are not naturally drawn to a high protein diet as it is. And they, so let's say
you have a woman, she's a smaller woman, she wants to gain some muscle. And so she's like,
I don't want to do the
one gram per pound per day. I'll do 0.8 grams. That I'll, let's say for simple math, she's a small
small girl. She weighs 100 pounds just for simple. 80 grams. Right. So she goes, all right, I'll do
the 80 grams. But let's say 80% of that protein is low bioavailability. that can get in the way.
And to fix that she there's gonna have to work
in some higher bioavailability protein.
So again, a lot of that's animal derived.
Or she might have to bump that up to 1.3,
1.4 grams per pound of body weight predate to give her body
to make sure enough of these essential amino acids
are getting into her blood so her body to make sure enough of these essential amino acids are getting into her blood
So her body can use them. How would you say to like digestibility in terms of like with the protein source plays a big factor in that?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I mean that's that's you know, there's the
What is it? It's a PDCAA is the acronym, but that's part of
Ultimately, I would say that comes under the heading of bioavailability, right? is the acronym, but that's part of, ultimately,
I would say that comes under the heading of bioavailability,
so the body has to be able to digest it
and absorb it well enough to get what it needs.
You eat a protein that causes digestive issues,
your bioavailability, you're not doing so good.
This is where, especially if you're trying to gain, I think supplementation, protein powder
can be so invaluable.
For two reasons, one, because especially if you're not taking in protein that is very
bioavailable and super high quality, maybe you can maybe speak to women, maybe you don't
really like meat, for example, of any kind.
Well, I just wanted to highlight the scenario that your building is't really like meat, for example. Right. Of any kind.
Well, I just wanted to highlight the scenario that you're building is actually way more
common than people think.
It's very common.
And not just women.
I've seen plenty of guys that were hard gainers, and part of the reason why they were hard
gainers was that consistently didn't get enough good quality protein.
And usually low appetite.
That's right.
Yeah.
And okay, so that's so there's two pieces, and that's one of them.
One is, if I'm not eating all from these animal sources,
or I have digestive issues, or whatever,
I'm gonna need to eat a little more than one gram
of protein per pound of target weight,
protein powders and supplements make that possible.
And then two, what you just said,
it's not easy when you're trying to eat in a surplus
and eat a gram of protein per pound
of body weight because it's all whole food because it's filling.
It's the most satiating macronutrient.
Try doing it.
You might be able to do it for a few days, try doing it for first 90 days in a row.
You'll find real quick that you ate your, you know, if I'm trying to eat 200 grams of protein
a day and I'm eating five meals of 40 grams of protein after the third meal.
I'm like, oh, with maybe more food,
you know, mixed meals or even just filling.
That's not just protein.
Yeah.
Yeah, you had some fat into that.
It gets more filling, you had some carbs,
you get more filling.
Yes, yes.
I know, I've been, it's tough.
Yeah, so I think protein powders are,
I wouldn't, they don't have a central,
but I think that they're very important piece.
Well, it's, again, going back to,
and I wanna keep, because I know people are gonna
Like jump wait you guys don't say that for this or that it's like this this person that we're talking about right now
Who is struggling with building muscle and wants to build the most amount of muscle?
This is a scenario where I am gonna push a client in this direction. We just know it's gonna talk about overall health and long journey
And this and that I'm not really sweating if we have a week where we didn't really gain much as we are consistent
with our other behaviors.
You ate well overall, we must start protein
and take a little bit, so fucking what?
But this person who's like,
I wanna build the most amount of muscle in 90 days,
like you're buying that.
You need to have that as just a backup plan
at the bare minimum, you need to have that.
That's how I like to do.
And I like weight protein in particular
because it's less filling than say casing.
It's less filling.
Is that true?
I don't know that.
Yeah.
So collagen, casing, egg, more satiety producing,
which is good to know.
P as well.
P, which is good to know if you're trying to lose weight,
but if you're trying to gain way protein,
so long as you digest it well, right?
Because if you, you know, like I can't have dairy protein,
but for people who can, way is the least satiety, one of the least satiety
producing. So for building, it's actually a really good protein. You can add it to a meal
and it won't necessarily affect you quite much. Speaking of supplements, aside from, you
know, protein powder and all that stuff, the one supplement, I'll make a statement that
has not controversial, but I know everyone
in here is going to agree because the data, the decades, now it's been over two decades
or so of the data really clear with this.
It's awesome.
Yeah.
Yeah, stay tuned.
That too.
It's creating.
Crating is one of the most, if not the most, studied,, ergogenic supplement that exists on the market,
and it consistently aids in building muscle.
How do you feel about creatine and what does that look like?
Yeah, creatine now, and I know you guys talk about this.
Creatine, I think at this point,
it's a supplement that everyone can be taking.
It's a supplement that everyone can take.
It's almost like a fish oil now. that everyone can be taken. I mean, it's a whole, we can say everyone's in a multivitamin as far as like, that's how it's all happening.
It's almost like a fish oil now.
Yeah.
You're not going to be getting enough creatine in your,
well, that's not, maybe not enough, but
let's say you supplement with five grams of deads,
the standard dosage for body comp and performance.
However, research is showing that upward of 10 grams per day
can benefit cognition, benefit brain health,
in healthy people, too, not people who have problems, and heart health.
Yeah, try, try, try to get 10 grams a day through food.
That's, that's not happening.
Yeah, because I think it's like a pile of, maybe Liverpool King can do that.
Yeah, I'm not Liverpool King.
It's, you're only getting like one, it's one to three in like, in like a whole pound of meat, right?
Think it's three to three in like a whole pound of meat, right? So I'm like that.
Three grams, if I'm not right.
One sounds, that sounds.
That's one to three, right?
Sounds about right.
Yeah, so you'd have to be.
Yeah, Crating is several pounds.
Several pounds.
Yeah.
Well, okay, so Crating is,
your body can synthesize Crating through amino acids.
I can't remember which ones they are,
and methionine, and I don't remember the other ones.
Yeah, the ones that comprise it.
Yeah, but to get it from food,
it's got to be animal sources,
because it's found in muscle.
It's found in muscle, animal muscle tissue,
so fish, beef, eggs, you'll find it in turkey chicken.
So for the vegans out there,
Crateen is, in my opinion, essential, must.
In fact, the data on vegans with Crateen
is they get a consistent cognitive boost
from taking creatine.
Now, this is probably because they're at a cognitive deficit
from not eating creatine.
So that's a, I agree with you 100%.
I think it's a must-have supplement for most people.
And not only for vegans,
but for people who just don't eat much meat.
My wife is like that.
She doesn't really like meat.
She's not a vegan or even a vegetarian,
even though she just kind of tends to eat vegetarian because she'll do some fish,
a little bit of chicken here and there. Red meat just doesn't have a taste for it. And so I finally
got her to just start taking here. Swallow a couple of these creatine pills every day. It's good for
you. Trust me. You're into riding horses. You want to get better at that. You have to get stronger.
Yeah. Here. That's what got her. That's awesome. You know, I put my parents on Crate team because of it's health benefits.
It's, you know, well, the biohackers talk about like mitochondrial health.
That's a big thing.
Keep mitochondrial health, you know, reverse is aging, whatever they like to say.
Crate team is essential for mitochondrial health.
It's the fuel that runs the cells of our body.
So this is supplementally recommended, everybody.
Let's talk about types of creatine.
There's like 50 million types of creatine on the market.
Which one is the one?
You should say.
Monohydrate.
I mean, that's the gold standard.
That's the one that has been studied the most.
And there are other forms that have shown to be about as effective
as monohydrate, but you're just paying more money
for nothing. Like, oh, creat you're just paying more money for nothing.
Like, oh, creatine malate, creatine citrate.
Why?
And then there are forms like Eslethor that are probably inferior,
actually, so you might be paying more for something fancy
that's actually less effective than just monohydrate.
I do like micronized monohydrate.
It mixes better with water, which also means it tends
to be easier to digest.
That's not generally a problem,
but some people do have that issue.
Creasing will upset their stomach.
Micronized can help with that.
And that's, I mean,
anytime a day.
I wish, as somebody who has a sports nutrition company,
I wish I could say otherwise.
I wish there were some breakthrough, you know,
form that can live up to some of these claims I wish I could see otherwise. I wish there were some breakthrough form
that can live up to some of these claims
that are made to sell some of these more designer
kind of creatines.
But it's not considering you are biased
because you are a supplement pusher.
Is there a...
I'm for sale.
Is there actually, because when we wrote this list,
we actually didn't ask your opinion on that one,
and I'm curious, is there something else
that you would push on this particular client,
or do you think a protein powder slash bars,
which I'd fall in the same category,
and creatine really is the bulk of what you would recommend?
Yeah, that's really the 20% that's gonna give you 80%.
If somebody,
unless you're lacking a key nutrient.
Sure.
Yeah.
And so I guess you could say, eat plenty of nutritious foods, add in a high quality multi-vitamins
supplement, but that's not really for the purposes of muscle building per se.
I would say that's just kind of smart living.
And if somebody had the budget in the inclination, you probably can make an argument for adding something
like beta-alene, adding BTE, adding citrilline,
but now we're into that, you know, 80%
that can only give you that remaining 20%.
Yeah, very well said.
All right, what about carbs?
Carbs, a lot.
Yeah, so what role do carbs play in muscle building?
Obviously carbs will help you hit that caloric surplus.
Carbs are the least satiety producing macronutrient. So when you get to that point where you feel like...
I would say fat.
Actually, if you look...
If you look interesting.
So tell me about this.
Right, calorie for calorie.
As an individual macronutrient,
I've gone through some of this research just in my writings
and in my podcast,
protein is at the top, my understanding of the research protein at the top,
followed by carbohydrate, followed by dietary fat, when they are separated. So if you are having
like a pure protein, which you can basically do with protein powder, like,
high protein powder has zero grams of fat per serving, maybe one gram of carbs,
basically just protein, right?
Or if you looked at just kind of a pure carbohydrate food
or something that is basically pure fat,
and that pure fat is going to be the least filling.
So think of like olive oil,
if you're just like drinking a cup of oner calories of olive oil.
Now, now okay, so now maybe this way,
this is why fat, we start to mix it though.
There you go.
This is why I think fat in the past was considered to be the second most
Atiety producing macaroni drink because rarely you usually fat by itself
I heard the hell and research me some Italian who the hell drinks olive oil
I mean people people will eat
I'm a delete avocado by itself. It's avocado taste, you know
So so it's it's a good point and there's some you know, it's avocado taste, you know. So it's a good point.
And there's some, you know, it's not just fat.
It's primarily though, you know, I don't know the macros
is off my head.
Oh, I do probably, avocado's got decent amount of carbs in it.
So yeah, it does.
So then it's debunked myself.
Yeah, yeah.
A lot, but it has, it's definitely not just a pure fat.
Research, butterleaks, other example.
Yeah, good example of that.
Yeah, research definitely shows that adding fat to a meal increases satiety. Yeah, good example of that. Yeah, research definitely shows that adding fat
to a meal increases satiety.
Yeah, there you go.
That makes a lot of sense.
Because fat by itself, pure fat,
maybe we think it's satiety because it sounds gross.
No, let's just say butter.
And I'm like, oh, I don't know.
Let's talk about some strategies though
with carbs in particular,
because one of the things I remember
when being in this situation,
trying to build as much as possible is,
you wanna eat as ton of carbs,
I think we all agree on that.
But what I have to be careful of
is that I don't fill up on that first before I get my protein.
So I still have like this order of operation there.
I go, when I look at a meal,
I go, okay, let me get my protein in,
and doesn't mean I don't enjoy a little bit of my carbs with it,
but it's like, I gotta, I got to accomplish that.
And then I want to like pile on my carbohydrates kind of after that.
Do you guys feel the same way?
Or like, how's your...
And supplementation helps with that too, to your point where you're like,
all right, I wouldn't recommend somebody,
my general recommendation about you guys,
but is don't get more than 50% of your daily protein from powder.
Like, make sure you're eating food.
But let's say you're going to do that, right?
So that becomes easier, especially with way protein, because it's not very filling.
But as far as like sitting down for a proper meal, yeah, exactly the same.
So we're going to your...
But then you have to engineer those meals, too, to this point of satiety and how fat affects
things.
And even in general, I'd be curious to hear your guys' thoughts after
we wrap up on carbs. I would say ideally we would keep our fat not low, but we would
keep it certainly not over 100 grams of fat per day, probably in the range of depending
on the size of the person if it's a smaller woman, it might be 50 or 60, if it's a medium sized dude, it might be 80-ish, but trying to go high protein, very high carb,
moderately maybe a little bit lower fat.
We'll get to that,
but I do wanna make a comment around that.
If you're trying to gain,
and you're getting a lot of your protein
from whole natural foods,
tip, it's easier to get fats
because they tend to follow along the protein.
I actually don't spend a lot of time focusing on it,
be honest with you. I feel like they kinda, if you're doing a good job of getting your protein source from
whole foods and you're eating like just, and you're eating carbohydrates, like,
rice and sweet potatoes and quinoa and, you know, pasta thing, if you're eating them
like that, then fats kind of, yeah, especially if you're trying to make food that you like
to eat because fat gives flavor
and so any recipe of anything worth anything
has some oil in it.
Right, and I feel like that's between that
and some avocado here and there.
I feel like it kind of naturally falls into
a car protein with olive oil.
Yeah, so let's go back to the carbs.
You mentioned a few, Adam, what have you found
might to be some of the best sources of carbohydrates
through the people that you've worked with and even your own experience in this context. Adam, what have you found might to be some of the best sources of carbohydrates through
the people that you've worked with and even your own experience in this context?
Now, how many carbs, maybe we should just, I don't think we've given them that.
What are we talking about here?
I think we're all in agreement that a high carb approach is good, but how high is high carb? Something that I get asked about and why?
Why am I eating? My recommendation, and I'll be curious to hear your guys' thoughts,
is it needs to be at least two grams of carbohydrate per pound of body weight.
I would agree.
You might even want to go as high as four grams, depending on how active you are,
and personal circumstances.
I would agree.
Now, there's always an individual variance,
depending on how they make them feel and digestion.
I'm one of those people where too many carbohydrates
affect my digestion negatively,
so I can't necessarily push them too high.
But generally speaking, I agree with you.
I think the more carbs, part of the value of that is they provide the energy and the strength
that you want when you work out.
And you're going to be fueling some heavy hard workouts.
And I'm stronger when I eat more carbs.
And I'm not the only one that I'm going to eat.
You have your best workouts on.
You've got the calories surplus and high carb.
Yep.
Good sleep. You have your best workouts. Yeah, you get the best pumps, you get the best fluid in your muscles, which we talked about
earlier.
That's part of your lean body mass, but besides that, when you can drive more fluid in your
muscles, that also sends somewhat of a muscle building signal.
The cellular swelling effect.
Try getting a good pump, even on a calorie surplus on a low carb diet, it sucks.
You just don't.
So higher carbs just seem to work better for most people.
So I completely agree with you.
So I mean, I like this conversation because I actually,
I couldn't even tell you what my actual grams were
when I'm in a bulk.
When I'm in a bulk, it's basically protein and calories
and then I allow myself to split carbohydrates and fats.
How my day feels really, and yes, I can take into consideration.
I've got a big workout coming in a couple hours,
so I want to eat a few hours,
normally two meals is what I like to have before that workout,
but I would allow myself to basically go back and forth on days,
on maybe one day I'm more 30 percent, got more fat
that day, next day it's down to 10. So I let it ebb and flow like that. So long as my calories,
and that's where I'm really focused on my total calories and my protein intake when I'm trying
to gain, I allow that flexibility to happen. I really get into carbon manipulation in the cut more
than I do in the bulk, just personally. I have found more success. I really get into carbon manipulation in the cut more than I do in the bulk just personally.
I just, I have found more success.
And I've actually found more success with that
with my clients because they don't have like this number,
they have to hitch, is listen, hit your protein take,
hit your calories.
And then, you know, well.
Well, the carbs and fat fall where they may.
Yeah.
Now, I'll say though, for speaking to somebody
who is trying to gain that 10 pounds or gain as many pounds of muscles they can in 90 days,
I would still recommend that they pay
a little bit more attention to their carbohydrate
and take them that simply because if we are on a deadline
and we do know that high carb is better for building muscle.
I mean, this has been shown in research
and there's tons of anecdotal evidence to support this as well.
A lot of people who have been successful at this stuff
will tell you, more carbs is better
when you're trying to gain muscle.
So in that case, would you,
because then I'm always trying to think
it was the simplest way for my clients to do,
would you give them like a bottom threshold, basically?
Like make sure, yeah, I think ranges are always
the way to do it.
So the two grams per pound of target body weight
as I was just full.
Probably that would be a bare minimum
and I would like to see them closer to four than to two.
There's a few theories just to why, by the way,
when the calories are controlled,
why higher carbs tends to build more muscle.
One of them is the energy that you get for your workout,
so the workout you're able to train with higher volume
in terms of weight and reps.
Another one is just the fluid that flows into muscle glycogen.
You store more of it, you tend to hold more water.
That sends muscle building signal.
There's some theories that revolve around insulin.
Insulin is, believe it or not, the most anabolic hormone that exists in the body,
even more anabolic than testosterone.
It literally drives tissue growth,
including fat, but also muscle.
So there's a few theories as to why,
but anecdotally, I mean, weight lifters,
bodybuilders, strength athletes have known this.
They've known this for a long time.
It's always been kind of what they've seen
that they just build more.
And I'll attest to this.
I mean, when I eat more carbs, I just stronger,
and I build more muscle.
But I do tend to, as a lifestyle, do what you do at them.
If I'm trying to cut, that's when it becomes more important.
But if I'm on a deadline, and we're all in here,
and we put mine on the table,
let's you could build the most muscle in 90 days,
then I'm gonna do what you're saying.
Yeah, I think what mine looks like is,
it's still, I just give myself a bare minimum.
Like I know that, like, I've learned that kind of,
you know, total grams for the day where that needs to be.
Like in order to hit like, so for me,
let's say it's like 150 grams minimum,
I need to to feel those, feel that way when I work out.
It feels like my body's building.
So I still allow the cards to fall however,
however I keep in mind that this is my bottom threshold.
As I would do with fat too, like fat,
I don't want to be under 20 grams of fat
for a total for the day,
like you get an unhealthy territory.
So I have this like, okay minimum grams of fat,
minimum grams of carbs, let the carbs fall wherever.
Yeah, I find that as a,
and as long as I'm pushing those calories
in that protein intake.
That's generally my advice too.
Because usually I'm not in a situation
where I'm like 90 days, maximize muscle growth.
Well, even in that, I mean, so that's, I mean, I like that mics bringing that up, because
it's an interesting point because you're right, like if we are trying to maximize every
day, that does make a little more sense to be at least have like bare minimums, because
if not, then we potentially are.
Yeah, slow down your process.
Yeah.
So as far as carbs sources, I've always, because carbohydrates make up the bulk of the food
that you're going to eat, just volume-wise, digestibility for me is number one.
Like, like, what source of carbs to?
Because remember, volume is really, it drives satiety.
And that's great when you're cutting, and you're thinking, okay, I'm going to have a big
salad every day.
And, you know, I'm going to I'm gonna get all my carbs for broccoli.
Yeah, or I'm gonna, you know, I'll recommend people,
make some vegetable soup.
Zucchini seems to work particularly well for this, right?
When you're cutting, it's a lot of volume,
not a lot of calories, it fills you up.
And you can use, you know, drink plenty of water.
There's some research to show
that carbonated water might even be better
for producing satiety.
Now, we're gonna have the opposite problem though
with what we're talking about,
that if somebody, if they try to eat,
quote unquote, really clean,
let's say it's a guy and he needs to eat,
and I've been here myself, 4,000 calories a day.
That's where you're at at this point
to continue gaining weight,
continuing muscle and strength,
and you try to eat nothing but relatively unprocessed,
highly nutritious food, all 4,000 calories every day.
You can do it, but it is not enjoyable.
You know, I've done it, it is not nice.
So you might want to swap that whole wheat bread for white bread,
or you might want to swap that whole wheat pasta for white pasta.
Yes.
I wouldn't recommend deleting vegetables and fruit from your diet,
but you might not want to have
that three servings of fruit and six servings
of vegetables every day.
You might want to go down to one or two servings of fruit
and maybe two to three.
Here's some of my favorite sources of carbohydrates
coming from somebody who is sensitive digestive issues
when it comes to carbohydrates.
I found white rice.
Now I find that for most people to be one of the easier
digesting sources of carbohydrates.
Very dense, very starchy.
So I like white rice, buckwheat, and I like buckwheat
cereals, what I mean by that's hot cereals.
Grits, really easy to get.
Lots of starchy carbohydrates.
Potatoes can be good, but believe it or not,
feel some dairy.
Yes, you push the potatoes and you're like stuffed
and a lot of people don't realize potato.
White potatoes, sweet potatoes, not so much for me.
I don't feel as much like I put them.
Easier to digest.
Yes, sweet potatoes, I feel like I can eat a lot of them.
Isn't that funny because they say,
we tend to think it's the opposite.
I agree with you.
Right, sweet potatoes I can digest more
than I can with white potatoes.
Oatmeal has worked well for you.
I can eat a lot of them.
Oatmeal, rice, sweet potato, quinoa, yams, and then when I'm on the bulk,
I do allow bread, even though like sourdough bread,
like it becomes like a staple for me in the morning
with my breakfast.
Yeah, I can, as you can supplement, so to speak, a meal,
you can add 50 grams of carbs pretty easily with bread
and not feel all that much fuller than without the bread.
Yeah, now unless you're someone like me, right, where gluten containing carbohydrates blow
the shit out of me.
So if I threw bread in, I'm going to ruin the next couple of meals.
GF, bro.
I'm legit.
I legit will have issues.
I'm not saying, do the gluten.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, sour, sourdough, yeah. Sourdough does that when you're doing it.
Real sourdough.
I feel a major difference in like freaking wonder, break.
Yeah, absolutely.
It's not easy to add to breakfast or lunch.
Yeah, right, absolutely.
Alright, so let's talk about fats.
Let's go back to fats.
I like to tell people with fats to not be afraid of them.
Basically, so not necessarily aim for like all these fats.
Although it's easy to add calories and fats
and from things like butter and especially olive oil.
Like when you eat your evegetables,
if you're having trouble hitting your calories,
like one tablespoon of olive oil,
which is nothing is a hundred calories.
You can throw four tablespoons on there, no problem.
It's great fat, very healthy fat, easy to digest,
great for the body.
So I tell people, don't be afraid of fats in this case.
You're trying to build the most amount of muscle.
Don't worry about limiting your fats.
I'm not necessarily saying aim for super high fat targets,
but don't stay away from them.
So when I'm eating my protein targets,
like we said earlier,
I'll, instead of telling people,
I'll gain lean sources of proteins,
like look, we're trying to bulk.
Instead of going for chicken, breast, go chicken, oh, lean sources or proteins, like look, we're trying to bulk. Instead of going for chicken,
breast, go chicken, thigh, right?
Instead of the 90, 10, get the 80, 20.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And that's the main thing that I like to say with fats.
How about you, Mike?
Don't say fat, phobic, Mike.
Oh, that's what they meant by fat phobic.
There is one.
I have phobias, but fat is not one of them.
The one thing though, I would say to challenge that a little bit, because what I have to see, and I've experiencedobias, but phasenolinem. The one thing though I would say to challenge that a little bit
because what I have seen, I've experienced this myself
and with clients that can get out of control really quick.
And for some weird reason, we justify it as this health food
and we also think it's a protein when really it's a fat
and that's nuts and seeds.
Can get out of control really quick.
The butter is a horrible source of protein.
Unfollow anyone who says otherwise.
That's a diet hack right now.
No, you're right.
And even something that is a better choice like almonds,
I mean, if you've ever seen how much you need,
you mean like all you need is like one snacking all day.
Oh yeah, you can easily crush, you know,
four or five hundred calories on that of mostly fat.
Oh my God, five minutes.
Yes, really, really quick.
Yeah, so that would be my one.
It's a few handfuls. I, really, really quick. Yeah. So that would be my one. It's too handful.
I mean, you're 100%.
Yeah.
I mean, I remember when I first figured this out, like why I was having this problem, I'm
like, why am I just getting so fat?
Like I'm putting my way too much body fat for muscle.
And I was, I used to keep this jar of peanuts, and that was like my way of, and that was
my, my excuse was, oh, it's a healthy fat and has some protein.
And so to help keep my calories up. 300 calories my excuse was, oh, it's a healthy fat and has some protein and so to help keep my calories up.
300 calories later.
Oh, yeah.
You can all vividly remember the disappointment of the moment when we realized how little
a tablespoon of protein of peanut butter actually is.
Yeah, yeah.
Because it's so good.
Yeah, whatever it's a, it weighs whatever like 18 to 20 grams, right?
And then our tablespoon previously was like 50 grams.
Yeah.
And then you're like, shit, that's like three tails for the actual.
I know.
All right, so let's talk about something a little more controversial.
This is something that I communicate.
One thing with fat.
Yes.
No, I think we should at least mention is saturated fat.
I do recommend this is the standard recommendation
to not let your saturated fat exceed 10% of your total daily calories,
especially when your calories are quite high.
And the body of the evidence.
Boy, thank you for saying that because it doesn't make as big of a difference when your
calories are low.
Hard health.
Yeah, when your calories are low, this doesn't make that big of a difference.
When you're in a surplus, the types of fats that you eat in sugars, for example, actually
make a difference.
Your calories are under what your maintenance is,
if you're losing weight, man, doesn't make that big of an difference.
Now, I will say this, there's a pretty wide genetic variance with this.
Like, for example, me, I'll go on a bulk, I mean, I eat,
shit, I eat 10 eggs a day, I only eat, that's beef is my number one sort,
it's rare that I eat anything other than beef. I eat butter and stuff like that.
My cholesterol, my blood lipids are like,
every time I get them done, the doctor's like,
this doesn't make sense.
I'll tell you what you're telling me.
This is incredible.
So there is a bit of a genetic variance,
but generally speaking, the data is clear.
The key is you're getting blood work done
and you know that.
Right.
If you don't know that, you know,
it's a bell curve, right?
So whatever that is in the middle of the body.
I believe the distribution, that 60 to 70% of people
are not going to respond like that.
Right.
With their saturated fat intake going up, up, up, up LDL,
cholesterol goes up, up, up, up.
Risk of heart disease goes up, up, up.
So, yeah, yeah, absolutely.
Most people, they just can't get away with that.
That's right.
Now, things like grass fed meat,
the not free range eggs, what do they free-range eggs, but what are they
called, pasture-raised eggs? Actually, when you're eating a lot of calories, it makes a
bit of a difference. If you look at the types of fats that they have, you see that grass-fed
meat has a little bit of a better fat profile, and pasture-raised eggs, a little bit better
of a fat profile, and then fish. Fish is great. You want to eat a nice protein, good,
fatty calorie source.
Get some omega-3s in.
Yeah, and you can throw that in there.
All right, now let's get to something controversial.
I was gonna say, which is, this is when I recommend that
people can throw in the occasional quote unquote,
I hate to say this, junk food.
Okay, here's why.
Treat meal, that's what I call it.
Yeah, here's a treat meal.
Right, that's right.
Now here's why it's hard eating in a consistent surplus day in day out.
We're doing this for 90 days.
This gets really hard.
This is where the bad part of junk food, the fact that it's so, that it overrides the
tidy that they've designed.
So many calories back into so little.
Yeah, they've done such a good job of engineering this food
to make us over this basis.
My number one reason, this is why I think number one reason
why we have obesity in modern societies.
Well, now we can use that.
That's not the patriarchy.
No, I'm pretty sure that's not the bad things.
I was like, can we do a whole episode
without my sense that we almost made it?
Impossible.
You know, he's like the unbehaving,
you know, I'd you've seen super troopers, right? Before I was like the unbehaving, I'd use these super-tubers right before,
or you'd insert like that, that's what I was like,
oh, I'm gonna get it in there.
I'm gonna get it in there.
She can put my gittin' it as my,
but that's for sure.
I was directing this way, I'm gonna keep them way.
No, so this is where I think the dangers
of ultra-process foods, you can utilize
to your benefit a little bit.
If you're struggling on some days to eat extra calories,
well, the ultra-processed whatever,
so long as you're hitting your proteins
and your calories are good,
well now it's easier to hit your,
like you were doing 4,000 calories a day.
I don't think people realize how hard that is to do
on a day and day basis.
Do you have any favorites?
Before I would go there personally, I would drink calories. Like I would, and I was
doing that. I was drinking a few cups of milk every day, for example.
This is like 120 calories per cup whole milk. Yeah. And, and, and, and, and, and,
Ultimate hack. Yeah. And, and so I would, I would prefer that over, um, fruit juice, but, I think for about like 16th mom
Literally yeah
They have a part man in one of the
I just made it a rule
I just made it a rule that I had to hit my my protein and take first before I would indulge in something like that
So that was like what I didn't want to do which which I see people do when you give a client or you
give someone this option is they now build in.
This goes the first thing.
Yeah, or they build it in.
It's like, oh, you know, I need 50 more grams of protein.
I'm going to give myself that, you know, double bacon cheeseburger from five guys with
the french fries and the milkshake and all that stuff like that.
And it's like, no, I want to try and hit my protein and take my healthy fats.
I want to get that in a good amount of cars,
like the minimum we were talking about.
I want to get that from all my whole foods,
foods I have prepared for myself.
And then once I hit there, okay, go ahead and...
Yeah, this is where I, this is like my cheek,
this is like where I'll use my little cheat code,
where, you know, I'll get a client that's like struggling.
Man, so I can eat 3000 calories day in and day out.
Some days it's almost impossible. Then I'll say, okay, what's a food that's like struggling. Man, so I can't eat 3,000 calories a day in a day out. Some days it's almost impossible.
Then I'll say, okay, what's a food that is irresistible
to you, something that is really hyper-palatable to you?
And then we'll see if we can use that as a strategy
to hit those caloric targets.
For me, it's a burger.
I can almost always eat a burger.
French fries is up there as well.
Now, they're obviously not great, the best foods,
but if I'm really struggling hitting my calories, you know, I can almost always eat a burger
and fries and be, and I'll be able to eat them no matter how full I feel. Do you have any
favorites for yourself? Burgers, pizza, pasta. I really like a good pasta. Oh man, after my,
my heritage. Yeah. Especially if you make it the way you like it.
But even that, that was my second dinner that I mentioned previously when I was last
lean bulking was pasta that I normally love.
And after though, even a month or so of doing that every day, my second dinner of pasta,
I was forcing it down.
So maybe, maybe
a better strategy would have been to rotate through some of these other foods as opposed
to just sticking to one that I normally really like and then just kind of beating the joy
out of it, you know.
No. How about things that you guys would actually like avoid? Like, so something I did when
I was younger that I wouldn't do now is I would in the past justify
a box of my canite candy, where I would want something
that at least like a burger and fries is great
because there's some serious nutritional value in this.
Especially if you, I mean, I don't know if we're talking
about the drive-through or I actually prefer.
Makers.
As far as the burger goes.
Yeah, I think you can make a better hamburger at home
than you can get at a drive-through.
Yeah, great point.
You know, make a homemade, incredible grass fed beef burger
that you got avocado and bacon and everything on that engine.
And you're getting some really solid nutritional value
versus drinking a thousand calories,
alcohol, or soda, or candy pop,
or something like that, so yeah. So that was kind of my breakfast cereal. a thousand calories, alcohol, or soda, or candy pop. It's a pretty good deal.
Yeah, so that was kind of my breakfast cereal.
Right, that was kind of my rule.
It was like it needs to have some-
What a great point.
Some good nutritional value, but I can also enjoy myself.
I go about burger and fries, it's amazing.
Here's one of my, one of mine that, you know,
I don't know if you could, you would consider this junk or not,
but it's, you don't necessarily think of this as like you know
Quitting what healthy food, but like homemade tacos. I could eat that crap
I think that that's bright in line with homemade hamburgers. Yeah
You got your ground beef rice. You can even make a bowl. This is a nice bulking meal rice
Ground beef, you know some salsa some avocado
Yeah, and it's like 800 pounds over that too. Yeah, and you got like 800 calories right there,
good amount of protein.
So I like to use those types of hyper palatable meals
when you're struggling, when you're struggling
to hit those calories, not every day,
or not as just, oh, this is how I'm gonna hit my calories
brother, oh, I'm having a challenge.
Now we'll throw those in.
Well, I actually will never actually do
any breakfast foods I thought,
because it's in the beginning of the day,
and I haven't proven to myself,
I'm gonna have a good day if any of my targets.
So my quote unquote cheat,
or whatever meal we wanna call this, comes at the end always.
And I could do it with your pasta.
Yeah, it's the last meal of the day
that I'm getting to enjoy this.
And it's my last thousand calories.
That's right, and it's my reward for being on on top of things
Really like like if you you give someone the green light to go have what have these somewhere in the day
And they start their day off that like the likely
They're gonna execute just not there. So it's always late. All right. Let's talk about sleep
This is something that I wish I knew in my twenties because when you're in your twenties
You can make some gains and you could could, I guess, live your life
in spite of having terrible sleep,
but you have no idea how much you're missing out
when you finally do get good sleep.
Sleep is such a big factor when it comes to muscle and fat,
muscle gain, fat loss, that it's as important as diet
and training, and dare I say,
can definitely be more detrimental with how shitty people's sleep are.
So this and this is something that took me a while to figure out.
Once I got older and I had to figure it out, then I was like, oh man, I wish I knew this when I was younger.
Any strategies for you? I know this is something you struggle with as well with sleep.
You know what I've talked about this?
Yep. Yep.
I mean, just to comment on that.
I mean, research shows that sleep deprivation, sleep
insufficiency directly reduces protein synthesis.
Yeah.
So, I mean, coming back to that, it'll kill your muscle-building machinery metaphor.
The machinery simply does not work nearly as well.
And I'm thinking of one study.
It only took four or five days of not enough sleep.
It was not much in the study.
I think they limited them to four to five hours per night.
But many people only sleep six, six and a half hours per night.
So we're getting close to that.
And they do it for long, period of time.
Exactly.
Not just four days.
Exactly.
And so there are other implications related to recovery and performance and other things that are
problematic when you're not getting off sleep, but then there is the direct effect of
what you are getting out of that work that you are doing in the kitchen and gym. You're getting
a fraction of the gains simply because you are not sleeping enough. I know that we didn't order these in any sort of priority,
but this is one that I did not really understand
in my 20s that, you know, if I could go back
and tell my younger self, like this would need to be
towards the top of your list because...
Sleeping enough is like a life hack.
I mean, if you wanna see what you're really capable of,
start sleeping eight hours per night.
Yeah, really.
Yeah.
It sounds silly, but it's 100% true.
No, I mean, it feels like we have a baby.
And I remember, it's something I didn't hear that back then.
I remember hearing that.
Yeah.
So it's not like this is like new science.
You know, oh, by the way, we've known this for a long time.
It's just when you're that age, you're so stubborn and you think,
well, it's like, that's an old, You're also kind of invincible. You are right because you don't you don't think you're that affected back
You know you don't think you're that affected by it by the way you think you're invincible
You're not because it is impacting right by the way what you you mentioned to study with four nights of sleep on protein synthesis
One night of terrible sleep
dramatically affects testosterone. They'll show you one night of sleep, you'll lower your testosterone by a quarter or more,
the next day,
because you know,
men's testosterone levels react on a day-by-day basis,
or you can even say on a schedule of an hour
by hour basis,
one night of sleep guys,
in your 20s,
you have one shitty night of sleep.
Add some alcohol.
Oh, well, now you're really screwed, right?
Alcohol has got negative impacts on that as well.
So any strategies for you to help with your sleep? Yeah. So we've talked about my sleep journey.
When I was, let's say 10 years or I'm 38 now, so 10 years ago, I had a good run. I mean,
I was very busy. I'm still busy now, but I was even busier then. So I was getting up
probably about 6.30, go to the gym, work out, work all day, go home. I was doing cardio usually
around 7 pm. I would have caffeine before the cardio. Sometimes you're a him being if I was
cutting as well. And then eat some dinner, get back, this was most weekdays, get back to work,
put in a couple more hours, get off the computer at probably 11 or so, get ready for bed,
I'm in bed by 11.30, fall asleep in five minutes, blackout unconscious for maybe six and
a half hours, seven hours, wake up before an alarm, and that was it, that was my life.
For five or six years, no effects that I was aware of.
And if I look objectively in that period,
I mean, I gained plenty of muscle,
I was able to get for a lean, staleen.
I had a period of like, I had swallowed the star
in Super Mario, I don't know, I just had it.
I had invincibility for a bit, right?
Then first kid comes, it starts to get a little bit shakier, but still was pretty good.
Second kid comes, and I remember it, it's like a flash-bowl memory because I have PTSD
from whatever, of when it changed.
It was after my daughter came, and there was a point I was in Virginia, and it was just
one night, I woke up several times at night, and I was like, that's where it doesn't normally
happen to me.
And from that point forward, it was never the same.
And now I'm a lighter sleeper.
I don't sleep through the night literally ever.
I'm always going to wake up at least probably two times.
Let's say anywhere from one to three times average is probably two.
Often it was, I'd have to pee and one thing that has helped with that in particular
is I realized that I was drinking more water
than I actually needed to drink.
It became a habit, I sit on my computer,
and if I'm, my water was always there,
something just to sip on, right?
And that's not necessarily bad for health,
but it does train your body to have to pee.
I mean, I had to pee every hour, just because I was drinking a lot of water.
And by being a little bit more conscientious with my water intake and not drinking too
much water, now I don't have to pee every hour, too, which has helped my sleep.
So I'm not like waking up having to pee.
But, so, you know, for years now, my sleep has gone in and out of being
okay, not okay. I mean, there would be some nights where I would wake up every hour, every
hour. I'd be up, right? And you can stay in bed for eight or nine hours. You still, I
wouldn't be a good podcast guest if that was the last night, right? And so I've tried everything, every evidence-based thing
you could try, I have not tried sleeping drugs
because those can mess you up and I don't want to do that.
But I've tried every supplement you can speak of,
every, you know, all the standard things
that people talk about.
And those things I think are definitely the checklist checklist like, okay, are you getting off
screens at the appropriate time? Are you dimming lights at the appropriate time?
Some light during the day. Yeah, are you doing some light during the day? Are you, do you
have some sort of pre-bed routine that allows you to relax? And are you trying simple supplements,
melatonin? Are you trying Valerian, are you trying, sure,
chamomile, glycine, blah, blah, blah, I can go down the list, lavender.
And so what I found is for me is all of those things, they would help to a degree, and then
sometimes it was just as bad as it ever was, right? And so really, and I've only really discovered this recently, is for me, it was actually just an imbalance between
total stress in my life, including my training and
recovery. I was simply going too hard and and where it started and this is kind of dumb that I didn't think of this before
is in my training.
So previously, I would have a certain amount of training volume and I then increased that
training volume, which is fine.
I increased it to, let's say, about 15 to 16 hard sets per major muscle group per week,
a lot of compound lifts, a lot of dead lifting squatting,
puts a lot of stress on the body,
but I also was wanting to stay lean.
I also was wanting to keep my six pack,
coming back to what we've been talking about.
I was unwilling to eat as much food as was required
to recover from all of that training.
And this is a separate topic.
I won't derail us onto this tangent.
But people sometimes might think that they are over-trained
or they are excessively over-reaching
when they're actually just under-eating.
That's actually the only problem.
And trying to keep their body fat levels too low,
which have negative implications.
Can't have negative implications
in various aspects of health and performance.
There's a healthy lean.
There's an unhealthy lean.
Right.
And so, for me, that combination was what was causing the problem.
It was pushing too hard in the gym, not willing to eat enough food, because if you want
to stay lean, the supplies to men and women, if you want to stay pretty lean, like if you're
a dude, you want to stay between 8 and 10 percent body fat, which is okay, but if you want to stay lean, this applies to men and women. If you want to stay pretty lean, like if you're a dude,
you want to stay between 8% and 10% body fat,
which is okay, but if you want to do that,
if you're a woman, you want to stay between 18% to 20%
quite lean, really what that means is
you are going to be in a slight calorie deficit
more often than a slight calorie surplus.
Because that's just, you have to air on the side
of under-eating, not sugar-eating to stay lean.
And that gets in the way of recovery. That calorie deficit alone gets in the side of under-eating, not sugar-eating, to stay lean. And that gets in the way of recovery.
That calorie deficit alone gets in the way of recovery.
And so I was pushing myself harder than I could recover
from in the gym.
And then outside of the gym,
what happened over the last 10 years
is my life has gotten more complicated, quote unquote.
I have two kids.
I now have businesses and employees and
I'm not complaining about any of it, but I actually just wasn't aware of the amount
of stress that I was putting on my body because psychologically I felt fine. I could deal
with it. And it was more of a physical thing. So what I did was I cut my training volume
down by 25%. So very simple in my workouts, instead of doing four sets per exercise,
I cut it down to three.
And within a week or so of just making that change,
I was immediately starting to sleep better.
I was feeling more rested in the morning.
I had fewer wakings at night.
And I started to restrict my calories simply
because I wanted to see how my body now dealt
with being in a calorie deficit
with this reduced training volume,
a little bit less cardio.
Some days, if I wasn't, I would just go for a walk or two
instead of hopping on the bike
and doing a higher intensity, not necessarily hit,
but higher intensity cardio workout.
And so by just bringing down the physical training stress,
it immediately improved in my sleep.
So for me, that's what it was.
So that's much stress.
That's really the next point.
So sleep and stress, which are both connected
because historically speaking,
if you didn't get good sleep for most of human history,
it was very stressful because what does that mean?
Well, it means you're probably not getting enough food
or you're probably worried about predators.
And so your body senses this and what it does is it says
and what your body's very good at this.
Okay, we're under stress historically throughout most
of human history that meant we didn't have enough food.
That's what we probably stressed about the most.
And so what it does is it says store body fat
and don't build so much muscle
because muscle burns a lot of calories.
Body fat is safety, it's money in the bank.
And so not having good sleep and being too stressed
tips the balance towards fat storage
and it moves away from muscle gain.
So.
And particularly through increasing appetite
and then there's research on that.
In reducing movement, it'll make you and not want to move as much.
And you know, you may think you're moving as much,
but when they actually follow people around,
when they stick them in a lab.
Yes, they find that, yeah, you're still doing your hour workout.
You actually sit around and don't move as much as you normally do.
Well, I want to add to what he's talking about
with the reducing stress in regards to like training volume,
because, and if you've listened to the show a long time,
you've heard me talk about this, but that was one of the the biggest paradigm shattering moments I had was in my,
I think it was around 24, 25. It was the most muscle I ever I ever built over summer and what it was
was simply reducing my training volume and frequency. I was just, I was training seven days a week
getting after it. I was playing basketball every single day for like an hour or more. I was wakeboarding.
I was snowboarding like I was just do it. I was also in my 20s. So I was going out on
Friday or Saturday night sometimes. I mean, I was just, and again, thinking that I was
so resilient, fine, but not figuring out why am I not building more, why am I in this
hard plateau? I'm putting the work and effort in. And I think that when you talk about this, in particular,
client, sometimes less is more, sometimes backing off
the intensity and or volume or frequency of your training
and prioritizing sleep and just limiting or bringing down
the stress, total stress.
Yep.
And total stress is, it's important.
Yes, right.
Many people, for talking fitness,
they think of just training stress.
Right.
And they don't think about the emotional
and psychological stress that they're
under outside of the gym,
and that our body can only take so much stress
of any variety.
That's right.
It's all, everybody registers it all a stress, right?
It's all in the same way.
And sometimes this has been the one little thing that has unlocked it for people that
have hired me for this exact thing that just cannot figure out.
I train hard, I do it.
I do it.
It's like, oh, well, you're doing too much.
And you actually just, you're backing off a little bit and then boom, also in the body
research.
By the way, not to get to side ways with this,
but there's lots of strategies to reduce stress.
One of them is to cut stressful things out of your life.
Sometimes that's not possible.
You got two little kids at home.
You're not gonna be like, well I'm outta here.
I'm not gonna raise these kids anymore
because I need bigger biases.
Yeah, so now studies will show this.
Study shows that reframing
and I'm gonna be jack yeah reframing how you perceive the stresses of your life
Make of profound impact on how your body perceives the stress
What is the data show that is a great strategy for that, spiritual practice. In spiritual practice, and this is gonna be meditation, it could be prayer,
it could be as simple as turning everything off
and being quiet in nature.
Some people can treat that as a spiritual practice,
but that can make the stresses that you already have
less stressful on your life.
And they find this, they actually find that people who,
for example, attend church regularly
and are around groups of people and have good
relationships with other people who have similar stresses.
So, like, I got kids, it's so stressful, but I have lots of friends, I have lots of kids.
That same stress now registers is less stress in that person because of how they perceive
it and how they frame it.
So, there's different ways to reduce stress, not just cutting things out of your life.
And I want to say that because I think sometimes people are like,
oh, it's my wife, I knew I should have left her or whatever.
Well, yeah, good luck thinking that's gonna cut your stress
out by getting divorced.
I've done that.
That's way more stressful than you think it is.
It's a better way to just lose half of your net worth.
Yeah, thank you very much.
All right, so the next point is.
Just a comment on that.
And because, you know, again,
just putting in the context of what I shared,
I totally agree with you,
but, and I'm this guy,
and I know there are other people out there
who are kind of like the hustler grinder type of people.
Like, they, I didn't want to accept
that there still is an absolute limit.
Yes, 100% no matter how many, and physical there still is an absolute limit. Absolutely.
100% no matter how many, and physical stress is pretty black and white.
Yes.
And I'm glad you said that.
You're not going to put your weight on.
You're not going to put your weight on.
Again, going back to this avatar, but this person that we're talking about, they're
more likely to be the, trying to do more.
I can do more.
I can do more.
I can do more.
And so I think that conversation is even more important.
I'm referring more to like life stresses that you when you examine your life and you're
like, okay, my life is too stressful. What can I cut out of my life?
A lot of times is chaos, right? You just need to add more disciplines in your life to open
up freedoms to create that kind of a de-stress.
Such a good point because again, you may look at your life. Now, training stress is very
black in my opinion. I'm working out too much for everything that's going on my life.
Let me cut that down, see what happens.
But when you look at your life, you're like,
well, I got a job.
It's not realistic for me to quit my job.
I have kids.
It's not realistic for me to not take into school
and take care of them, do that kind of stuff.
And I'm in a long-term relationship
that can be kind of stressful.
Like, it's probably not a good idea to break that up because that's probably worse.
So my point is the other life stressors, there's a couple ways you can approach it, and it's
usually a combination of things, cutting some stuff out and then reframing stuff.
And the spiritual practice is the data just shows that that 40,000 foot view of your life
that's what spiritual practice is.
You can give you perspective.
Very good perspective and really make a big difference on how your body perceives stress.
Okay, so it's part of the training.
Next point. Okay, yes, thank you very much. Get strong at compound lifts. They just
bang for your bugs and you'll spend like you'd have to do three exercises to equal the benefit of
one of these big gross motor movements in terms of time spent and what you get out of them.
And these exercises are multi-joint movements
and they tend to be things like squats
and dead lifts and presses and rows and that kind of stuff.
This is something that I think people need to hear more often
because there's so many exercises,
so many strength training exercises.
You're limited on the total stress you could put on your body,
you're limited on time, and it's like, yeah, you could do
those four, you know, leg exercises.
Yeah, you know, leg exercises,
oh you could see.
Look at the deadlift, I don't know if you guys have seen this,
but this is like kind of a talking point these days that
the deadlift is, it's not good for hypertrophy.
That's my biggest pet peeve.
And if you're not a strength athlete,
you have no place deadlifting.
Yeah.
The risks are far greater than the potential.
Don't worry, I disagree with all of that.
I all of it.
Look at the deadlift trains every muscle
on the backside of your body.
Period.
Which arguably is one of the most important things
that the average person needs to focus on.
Most of the questions are those two. average person needs to focus on. Right.
Because we're so anterior driven.
Especially guys.
I've actually tried to make the case that the deadlift is more of the king than the squat
is for that reason.
If I could do only one exercise, it would be the deadlift.
Right.
To counter what you're doing.
I like it.
Some days, I don't like it.
But I'm choosing that not just because of my feelings, but like objectively speaking.
Right. I think that it is the probably single feelings, but like objectively speaking. Right.
I think that it is the probably single best exercise
that people can do.
And anecdotally, the carryover,
I've seen this time and time again.
Somebody gained strength on a deadlift,
they get stronger at roasts,
they get stronger at pullups,
they get stronger at curls,
they get stronger all the exercises that fall.
Overbody too?
Yes, and they're lower body too.
So these compound lifts, if you're looking at your workout,
and you're like, where should I place my focus within my workout, what exercises should I place
my focus on? What exercises should I try to get strong at? Making those compound lifts,
the isolation movements are great. They can add some volume. They can be fun.
They can be fun. You get a biceps pump. Yes,, I don't care if my curls go up as much as I care if my squat goes up
or my bench press or my barbell row.
Exactly.
So, okay, good.
I'm glad you, and I know I've seen your programs and your workouts and they're very
well written, and you play a strong emphasis on compound lifts.
Do you remember when you figured that out, by the way?
Yeah.
That's also one of those.
It's, you know, you have these moments that are epiphanies and like understanding energy balance.
That's one that once you have that epiphany and you understand that body composition, it
really actually does come down to calories in and calories out.
Then you learn about protein, a little bit of macros, and that's it.
And now you know exactly how to manipulate your body composition in whatever way you want.
That's an epiphany compound lifts.
That was an epiphany for my first probably seven years of lifting.
I don't know if I ever, I don't think I did one set of the deadlift for seven or eight
years.
I remember squatting now and then if I really felt up to it on the Smith machine, let's
not even say squatting.
Let's say like quarter, maybe half squatting.
And so then now I remember, so I'm starting to learn
about the importance of barbell movements
and dumbbells well, but compound lifts
and training to get strong on those.
Not resting one minute in between sets
and just doing drop set, burnout sets on barbell rows
or something.
No, you're training to get strong.
It's a little bit different.
And so I had been doing these quarter squats on the Smith machine.
I think I got up to 405 for quarter squats on the Smith machine.
Cool, cool.
I'm getting that right.
Yeah.
And so I'm learning about, I think I first learned about this from Mark Ripeto, starting
strength and learning how to squat properly. And there are some different methods, but I think his method learned about this from Mark Ripeto, starting strength, and learning how to squat properly,
and there are some different methods,
but I think his method is tried and tested for sure.
And so, okay, this makes sense to me.
I'm now, off the Smith machine,
I go over to the power rack,
and I had no understanding of like how difficult
a proper squat is compared to a quarter squat
on a fucking Smith machine.
I load up for O5.
No, I know you did it.
I did not.
Oh my god.
I do know.
Completely different animal.
Buried.
And I'm gonna do my, this is literally probably my first proper rep of squatting ever.
I'm gonna squat.
I'm gonna squat to hips, you know, and I'm gonna get my femurs parallel,
I'm gonna get those hips a little bit lower
and realized, oh, I fucked up.
I get down and under, and there's no way, I mean,
you put the gun to my head, you're gonna have to kill me.
I cannot stand that weight up, of course, right?
And unfortunately, I was able to bail without hurting myself.
And that, I think, was actually the first time
I ever bailed on a squat.
So I didn't really know even how to bail
on a back squat properly.
But I put it over me instead.
Oh my God.
But I didn't get hurt.
I didn't get hurt.
Wow.
And so that was a moment.
And then from there, I went down to 185 pounds on the bar and barely got eight, I think.
And so that's how my 405 quarter squat, Smith machine fiasco translated to a proper squat
on the barbell. Well, and you also highlight, I think,
why a lot of young men in particular,
why they don't, and we gravitate towards the machines,
because it's hard.
Correct.
It's hard.
And it's a bit more technical.
Yeah, yeah.
And so I know that was the reason why I get people
out of them pretty easily.
Yes.
And this is also why I feel like doing it.
No, all right, not doing it.
This is why I can't stand this movement
like the one you mentioned with the deadlift
and then people trying to push the hack squat
and leg press instead of squats.
I'm like, that's such a terrible message
for the young man growing up who's trying to build
as much muscle as possible
because I attached myself to those people
back in the days.
And that's what kept me from squat. I was like, oh, I need to. Yeah, I can just leg press or spin machines squat and I'll
get all the benefits and it's not that you can't build muscle on those things. It's just you
are missing out on so much more by not doing that. Like it's that's a that's a must for me that
if you want to build the most amount of muscle in 90 days. I was I was a signal. I was fortunate because
it's like 15 or 16. I worked out next to a group of power lifters and I was leg pressing and working real hard and
admiring these super strong dudes, you know lifting all this weight and
One of them, you know say hey, what are you doing kid? And I'm like, oh, I'm trying to build big legs
And he's you know kind of chuckle. He's like, why don't you come over here and work out with it and it changed my life
I squatted and deadlifted and that summer, I remember I'm a kid, I'm, you know, height
of testosterone, puberty, I'm probably going to grow anyway.
But I gained like 16 pounds of lean body mass that summer from squatting and deadlifting.
And I remember all my pants got tight, you know, I grew an ass and legs, all of a sudden,
and I never looked back.
So I was lucky that I didn't benefit a lot from deadlifting too. Oh, I I mean tremendously, right? So do you remember the gains you got? Yeah, after starting
to do it. Blue your mind. Yep. I mean, again, we were kind of, that is just one of that
epiphany moment, like, oh, this, this is the way to do it. And yeah, you can find fringe
cases of like, all right, well, what about this advanced natural body builder who is now
struggling for his last three pounds of muscle?
Here's an example.
This guy doesn't deadlift.
Well, yeah, for that guy, deadlifting actually might not be the best use of his energy and
his effort for what he is trying to do.
It might make more sense for him to instead of deadlift break that up into four different isolation exercises.
There are scenarios where I think the deadlift would be contraindicated.
That's way the exception. Exactly. Definitely not close to the role.
You also avoid it then because this kid also wants to build muscle and they normally have
specific chest, back arms, wherever they want to. And when you do the big compound lifts,
it's harder to feel in a specific muscle
and see the pump the same way I would if I were to go,
just pump up my quads on leg extensions.
I'm gonna pull more packs on your side.
I don't really feel the bench presses much.
Yes, the pack deck.
Right, so that's the other challenge is because you start
to connect the, oh, I feel it more in this muscle.
Therefore, it's working that muscle and I'm getting more benefit.
And that was a myth that I think I fell in love.
Even though I'm weak as shit actually.
I just get a pump, nothing really changes.
I look good for about an hour after I train.
And I look like I don't even lift.
That's fine.
Alright, so the last point, we kind of covered in the beginning, but I don't know if there's
anything else you want to add, which was training your whole body.
And when I say this, I mean, in terms of frequency of body parts, there's a few different
ways to do this. You could do three full body workouts a week or you could train with a
split, but kind of hitting every muscle group about three days a week is what I found to
be the probably the right amount of frequency for most people for gaining the most amount of muscle
It allows you to practice compound lifts more often
It you know over you know you don't train in this endurance state as much as you would if you're doing it in a one session
And this study seemed to back it up. Is there anything else you want because I know we covered this quite a bit
The beginning of the episode is there anything else you want to add to that?
Yeah, I would say that
before thinking about frequency, we would want to emphasize progressive overload. There needs to be some type of progression in the program. We have to be continuing,
we have to be generating larger amounts of tension in the muscles over time to drive growth.
And so you could have frequency set up properly, but if you don't have a good model of
progression in the program, then you could actually not see much of a difference at all.
So progressive overload, I would say probably number one, then volume. Research shows that
progressive overload is the primary mechanical driver of muscle growth, but a second number two
is probably volume. And you can look at volume
in different ways, you can look at it total reps, total poundage.
I like the hard sets model, I guess you could say, which is a hard set is simply a set
taken close to muscular failure.
You don't have to go to failure in every set.
Of course, some exercises like on the deadlift, I would not recommend that, but you do got
to push hard in your sets.
You do have to get to a point where maybe you could do one or two more good reps on most
exercises.
If it's your first set of deadlift, maybe it's two or three good reps left, but you are
getting close to failure, it is getting very difficult.
That's a hard set.
And so again, research shows that the total amount of hard sets that you do for a muscle group
per week is a major component, a major factor of muscle hypertrophy.
So what that means is, and I've experienced this myself, and I've heard from many people
over the years, you can have great programming.
You can do everything that we're saying.
But if your program does not provide enough volume, if it doesn't,
if you're just not working hard enough in the gym, you are either going to gain less
muscle and strength than you could have, or you're going to gain, you're not going to
see much of a difference, you're just going to be stuck.
Well, it's a difference between training and exercising.
Right.
You can go to the gym and exercise and do the same volume, same intensity all the time
and your exercising still.
But if we're training for a goal and we're trying to progress, then I like that.
I've never tried that.
I've always just added total volume.
I just found that easier for me.
And I actually only would only pick like my big major lifts.
Like I pick all my big major lifts, track sets, reps, weight, multiply them all together,
get this total volume number.
And then my goal was just to, I mean, by one to five percent, I don't even have to go
that much long as I'm increasing by that one to five percent week over a week.
And I would see that nice, you know, consistent, you know.
Now, of course, there's always diminishing returns.
You can't do that forever.
Right.
At some point, you have to change the stimulus.
That's how you get the body to grow.
You also, you, you can't increase volume forever. Right. Like we said, there's a point where you try to change the stimulus that's how you get the body to grow. You also, you can't increase volume forever.
Like we said, there's a point where you try to do more
and you just get hurt.
So you have to think about progressing in terms of total reps,
adding weight to the bar and then-
Exercise selection.
There's a lot of different ways to tempo down,
I mean, where you squee,
I mean, there's a lot of different ways to do this,
but generally speaking, it's lifting more,
doing more volume type of deal.
Now, if you want to do it,
it really is the key.
I think we should emphasize that.
Absolutely.
In these 90 days, our primary goal is to get you stronger
because research shows that when you're new,
in your first year, you can gain a lot of muscle,
almost irrespective of how much strength that you gain, there's not
as close of a relationship between strength gain and muscle gain as when you are more experienced
weightlifter and research shows that relationship becomes much, much stronger in that it becomes
really the primary method of continuing to get bigger is to continue getting stronger and so yes
This is why we want to emphasize the compound weight lifting and we should also probably mention that we want to emphasize
You need to be lifting heavy weights. That doesn't mean you have to be doing twos three fours and fives only
But it wouldn't be appropriate and who wants to do this?
But to try to do sets of
20 reps 30 reps on the squat,
for example, and again, who wants to do that.
But I think a good general recommendation is probably something between and research shows
that heavy weight that is effective for muscle building probably starts around 65% of one
rep max.
So maybe that's like about 15 reps.
And then if you can work in some heavier work, particularly on the compound
exercises, which also is, it's more fun. It is more fun to do sets of four, sixes or
eights on a squat than 12 or 15.
Well, here's the thing too, though. We've set this up as a 90 day kind of a challenge.
So I would even make, I would make simplify it for the listener as one month,
I'm running a block of, you know,
10s.
Yeah.
10s, another time, five, and then 15s.
Yeah.
So I mean, that would be a real easy way to do this.
First month, we're going all, we're doing fives,
second month, we're doing 10s and 50s.
And you could order that however you want.
I personally recommend ordering it,
starting with your higher reps and then progressing into
lower reps simply because my reasoning for that would be curious what you guys think
with your experiences is that my understanding of research on fatigue, just the amount of
fatigue that accumulates in your body is that that's driven more by volume than load.
So they build the endurance muscle during the in the beginning of your training block, when you're fresh, you want to do your high
volume, that's your hard training on, that's just hard on your body.
And as you get deeper into a training block, you want that volume, you want the reps
per set.
So let's say you start with your tens, right?
You guys know how hard a true, a good set of 10 on the squat,
like taking close to muscle, muscle,
that's nasty.
That's hard.
A good set of 10 on the deadlift
is that's the hardest thing I ever have done
in the days.
Sets of 10 taking close to failure on the deadlift.
I mean, it's cardio by the time you're in your third set
or whatever, right?
So you would start with your tens
and then maybe progress into your eights or sixes simply
because even though it can be counterintuitive because like while I'm putting more weight
on the bar, that can be harder on your joints, but as far as systemic fatigue and systemic
stress goes, the high volume training is actually harder on the body.
Yeah, now I could make the argument and I think there's very valuable what you said.
I could make the argument in the opposite direction
in the sense that I tend to build my capacity for volume
as I continue on a training block.
In other words, when I start with lower reps,
my ability to handle more volume starts to improve
and then I add the reps and then I add more reps.
But honestly, there's really no wrong answer.
Well, to add to that, though,
I think that you both would agree
is what would be the most valuable is to know
what that person was currently doing
when you got a hold of them.
100%.
I was just gonna say that.
And we would all agree about that.
You can't just double your effective volume.
And one of the easiest ways to start them
on the path of seeing results would be
to move them out of where they currently are.
So if I have somebody who's training in the list,
if you make it 10 or 20% harder,
not 50, 100% harder right away.
Yeah, and also when it comes to intensity,
I know we're talking about higher intensity,
but the more of a beginner you are,
the more detrained you are,
the less intensity is required to get the body to respond.
The harder or the more experienced you are,
the more intense you,
so if you're a total beginner
and you're listening to this and you're hearing,
oh, get close to failure,
like that's gonna mess you up the first few weeks.
Like that's really high, from going from nothing
to lamino squat, 10 reps, that almost to failure.
You probably wanna go about like 50%.
And you'll gain, you'll gain strength,
you'll gain muscle like an acclimation.
100%, 100%, because intensity can be very, very easily
overdone on somebody who's, you know, untrained.
Anyway, it's been a lot of fun.
Mike, great podcast, pure fitness,
we almost kept it pure fitness,
it's a couple of comments.
Only a couple, only a couple.
Yeah, no, great time.
And then you have a book, right?
That's out, what's the title of it?
And we're gonna give a book.
Yeah, yeah, muscle for life is the title of my newest book.
And that's particularly for men and women,
40 plus who are very new to strength training,
new to all of this stuff.
Whereas my previous books, like Bigelome or Stronger,
Thin O'Line or Stronger, are meant for a little bit
of younger crowd and people who are ready to get in the gym
right away, start squatting, start deadlifting,
that's appropriate for some people,
but it's not appropriate for a 55 year old woman
who obese and has never done any strength training.
You're not gonna tell her to go deadlift day one.
And so that's obviously the biggest group of people,
that 40 plus male, female, brand new,
they probably have a lot of weight to lose,
they're not very healthy, they've never really done any
of this stuff before.
There are a lot more of those people who need help
than like 25-year-old guys who want to go from fit to jacked
so they can get laid more.
Yeah, yeah.
And so that's the newest.
Good deal.
Well, thanks, man.
We always talk about you as being one of the best people
in our space, so appreciate you coming on the show, man.
Yeah, thanks again for having me.
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