Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2287: Bodybuilding 101- How to Bulk and Cut
Episode Date: March 7, 2024The myths surrounding bulking and cutting. (1:06) Who does this episode apply to? (3:01) Defining bulking and cutting. (3:47) Bodybuilding 101: How to Bulk and Cut to Get to Your Current Goal ...(Avoid Mistakes). (5:17) #1 – Calorie surplus vs deficit (how to find maintenance). (7:12) #2 – Training strategies around bulking and cutting. (20:47) #3 - Mental hurdles with bulking and cutting. (26:29) #4 - When to stop the bulk or cut. (34:22) Related Links/Products Mentioned Visit Legion Athletics for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! ** Code MINDPUMP for 20% off your first order (new customers) and double rewards points for existing customers. ** SPECIAL PROMOTION: MAPS Aesthetic or MAPS Split 50% off! ** Code BODY101 at checkout ** March Promotion: MAPS Anabolic | MAPS Anabolic Advanced 50% off! ** Code MARCH50 at checkout ** How to Properly Bulk Without Gaining Fat - Mind Pump Media Mind Pump #1427: Don’t Make These 6 Bulking Mistakes Mind Pump #2160: Macro Counting Master Class Why The Scale Is Not Always The Best Way To Measure Progress Mind Pump #2210: Best Workouts For Bulking & Cutting Mind Pump #1342: The Top 4 Mistakes Skinny Guys (Hardgainers) Make Working Out Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources Â
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind,
there's only one place to go.
Mind pump, mind pump with your hosts.
Sal DeStefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the most downloaded
Fitness Health and Entertainment Podcast.
This is Mind Pump.
Today's episode, Body Building 101.
We're talking about how to bulk and cut
and do it the right way.
We talk about the myths, the mistakes people make,
and how to do it. How to bulk and cut and do it the right way. We talk about the myths, the mistakes people make and how to do it,
how to bulk with minimal fat gain or how to cut without losing muscle.
Now this episode is brought to you by a sponsor, Legion.
Legion makes high performance supplements for people interested in muscle
gain or fat loss. If you go through our link, you get 20% off.
Go to buy legion.com forward slash mine pump, use the code,
mine pump, get 20% off. Also, because of this episode, we put our two most popular bodybuilding style
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All right.
Here comes the show.
This is bodybuilding one oh one. Today's topic,
bulking and cutting how to do either one. Let's go. Yeah. Let's do it.
This, uh, you know,
popular topic it is.
I'm going to go get a sandwich.
We're going to my bulking.
What are you guys doing?
Yeah.
I'll get some coffee.
No, you know, I want to, I want to talk specifically around the,
because as you think about this, right, we've been doing this for a long time.
You think, oh, bulking cutting is very simple, but there's a lot of myths.
Around both, uh, both bulking and cutting in particular, how you combine
training with bulking and training with cutting and all that stuff.
So I think this would be a good episode.
I think that there's one of the things that I thought I was, uh,
that I thought was going to be the norm when I got into the space was like
just this brilliance around nutrition and exercise programming.
And it was not true.
And, and I don't say that to insult everybody.
That's like a bodybuilder because there's plenty of bodybuilders that are
very intelligent, that know what they're doing, that are nutritionists.
Like so it obviously there's exceptions to the rule, but it was more often the rule
that a lot of these guys and girls that were just not dieting properly for a show.
Like they, they extreme bulked and they extreme cut.
And there was a much easier and better approach to the whole process.
And yet they couldn't figure out why each time they went into a cut for a show,
it got harder and harder and they can never bring a better version of
themselves to stage.
And they were, and until what the point where they would run four or five shows
like that. And I forget, there was a saying in the bodybuilding world that they
call like show fatigue or something like that.
And they would blame it on that of just like too many shows in a row.
And it's like, well, that's what that's what it's not, it's not too many shows.
It's not the getting up on stage imposing that causes this.
It's the, it's the extreme dieting and bulking that is causing them to hit these
hard plateaus.
100%. And by the way, I know this is bodybuilding, but bulking and cutting
is important to understand for athletes as well.
Athletes also, and we, as we get into this, the same principles that bodybuilders typically are looking to,
to apply or the goals I should say that they're trying to get from bulking,
cutting art, similar to what athletes would get when they'd want to gain size
or lose size. So athletes would want to gain size,
particularly with strength and some sports size could be advantageous. And it or if they're
trying to get smaller, they're not trying to lose performance. They want to improve their
performance while being smaller. So this episode applies to, and then of course the average person
who wants to, um, you know, approach bulking cutting wants to do it the right way so that
it's both sustainable. They don't have plateaus and they feel good why they do that. So bulking just loosely will define
this as the attempt to gain muscle and size typically with minimal or no fat gain and or the
pursuit of a fast metabolism. In other words, bulking is the process by which my goal is to
gain muscle. And I say typically with minimal or no fat gain because it's very rare where someone's purposely trying to gain body fat.
Now, those cases where this will happen, I can think back to some female clients that would come to me after dieting for too hard and too long.
And we needed to gain body fat to get the hormones to regulate.
But for the most part, when people say, oh, I want a bulk, they're not talking about gaining a bunch of body fat.
In fact, they wouldn't need me for that.
That's pretty easy.
Well, you also say minimal because it's also almost impossible to be eating in a surplus,
trying to gain and not gain some body fat with that.
The goal is that, right?
Right.
And then the other part is the pursuit of a faster metabolism.
Bulking, when I first was a trainer, was pretty much relegated to just people who wanted to get bigger.
Nobody else bulked. metabolism, bulking when I first was a trainer was pretty much relegated to just people who wanted to get bigger.
Nobody else bulk.
Now we're starting to see people use bulking as a way to speed up their metabolism so that it makes it easier for them to get lean, which I think is a
great approach and we'll talk about.
So bulking in this episode, and that's, that's what we're talking about.
We say bulking cutting is the attempt at losing body fat with minimal or ideally no muscle loss and no strength loss.
So when people say they're cutting,
they typically aren't trying to lose muscle
or performance or strength.
That's not what people are after.
So that's the goal.
Now I guess we could talk about how to do it
and get as close as you can
to accomplishing those specific goals.
Yeah, also that maybe some of the common mistakes in, you know,
back to the original point I was making with the bodybuilding
community. And I'm highlighting them because that's their sport.
And so they're, they're the most professional at it. And yet
they still make a lot of mistakes, which just in my, my, my
point is that really highlights how much the average person who's
trying to do what they basically
do for a living, right? These people cut and bulk for a living or for a hobby, and then you have
the average person who is trying to emulate what they're doing, whether they're trying to get on
stage or not, they're trying to emulate what these people have learned how to perfect. But the truth
is a lot of them have not figured that truly out. And we see this extreme bulking and extreme cutting. And what ends up
happening is if you were to actually do, and this is why I love to always tell
people to go get like a Dexascan or a, you know, a underwater hydrostatic way and
find out your, your body fat percentage before you do something like this,
because the scale won't tell you. Yeah. If you, if you, if you're okay with your current weight and you want to go
through this process of, oh, I want to bulk up and build some muscle.
And then I want to then trim down, say for summer and lean out.
And, and if you end up in the same exact position, lean body mass wise.
So it's the same amount of muscle before you go on the bulk and, uh, and,
and then at the end, the end process of bulking all the way up, say 10,
15, 20 pounds and then cutting all the way down. And you're at the end, the end process of bulking all the way up, say 10, 15, 20 pounds,
and then cutting all the way down, and you're at the same lean body mass.
You wasted your time.
Yeah, it was just like a lot of extra calories and a lot of extra work for the same body composition.
This happens all the time.
Yeah, I'm glad you said that because here's what bulking is not, gaining a bunch of body fat with
minimal or no muscle gain. And here's what cutting is not. Losing weight or muscle
with very minimal or almost no fat loss. And that's what ends up happening when people do it the
wrong way. Let's start with diet first. And believe it or not, this is where the confusion,
this is where I don't think there's the most confusion. Now there's confusion here,
but I think there's more confusion in other aspects of this. But with diet, there's confusion here, but I think there's more confusion in other, uh, other aspects of this. But with, with diet, there's bulking and cutting actually have one thing,
strongly in common. Whether you're cutting or whether you're bulking, that doesn't matter.
You still should aim for your target body weight in protein. Both diets need to be high in protein.
A cutting diet that's high in protein will burn more body fat and lose less muscle.
And a bulking diet that's high in protein will build more muscle and will gain less body fat.
Now that, that's true.
But would you make the case when, when coaching a client that it's even more
imperative that we're hitting that or above for my client that's in a cut?
Yes.
Even more important.
Right.
Because if you were hitting your protein intake, 80, 90% of the time with a few
days here and there that are under, and we're in a caloric surplus, the likelihood
that we're going to pair down or lose muscle in that process, saying that
everything else is controlled, that, you know, stress is fine and your
programming is good.
Uh, we probably won't pair down and lose muscle, but in a
caloric deficit and, you know, pushing the body, right?
Stressing the body like that and missing a few protein days here or
there could be a lot more detrimental.
Yeah.
Calorie surplus is protein sparing.
Um, so you can get away with less protein, but still at the end of the day,
if you compared to bulking diets,
everything else identical calories or the else identical, but one's high calorie, high
protein and the other one is it the high protein ones going to build more muscle and gain less
body fat in a calorie.
This is actually how I used to control my dieting of bulking and cutting when I was
competing is I really didn't move a lot of variables because I needed to be so precise
with this and I had timelines and things like that.
I would be like, I would, when in a bulk, I was eating two, two and a half cups
of rice with all my meals and allowing some fats like butter and extra calories
that would come from things like that.
When I would go the other direction, I would pull it from carbohydrates.
I really wouldn't manipulate protein protein would kind of stay consistent
all the time. The only thing I would kind of manipulate is my Protein would kind of stay consistent all the time.
The only thing I would kind of manipulate
is my fats and my carbohydrates.
It would be the way I would manipulate.
And it was just an easy way to do it.
It's like, if I'm eating five, six meals a day
and I'm eating two cups of rice with everything on that,
now I want to cut, say, three to 500 calories out of the diet.
I simply just cut those serving sizes of rice in half
and maybe a little bit less
oil or butter and I'm, boom, now I've got a 500 calorie deficit.
And the other reason why protein is probably more important to cut is because it's, uh,
it's appetite suppressing.
This actually might make it a challenge in a bulk, sometimes hitting your protein targets
and trying to hit a surplus of calories.
And we'll get to what the surplus and deficit should be.
Sometimes it makes it hard to hit a surplus, especially if you're like a skinny kid,
you got fast metabolism,
you're one of those people that's like hard gainer.
You're like, oh my God, I gotta eat 3,500 calories
and I gotta try and eat 190 grams of protein.
But when I hit that protein, I'm like so full.
In that case, liquid protein,
like protein shakes can be quite beneficial.
Because, but with a cut, it's great.
Like you want appetite suppression when you're trying to cut.
So high protein is like super valuable.
I remember when I, when this light bulb went off for me as a young kid trying to
gain weight.
Um, and the other kind of hack to this was too, that when I was, when I was a
hard gainer and trying to eat more calories and I knew I had a protein, I
would just eat everything in sight and that would be burgers for everything.
Right.
And I would get so satiated that I wouldn't, I couldn't get to my protein.
I actually found eating lower calorie leaner meats promoted me to be hungry
again sooner.
And you were prioritizing the protein.
Yeah.
And so it was easier.
I would have never thought that me switching over to Turkey and
chicken and these like leaner cuts would actually help me in a bulk. But I actually found what
would happen is that I could eat that Turkey or chicken. And then two hours later, I was ready
to eat again. Whereas if I had a big old juicy five guys burger, I would be full for the next four
or five hours. And so I had an easier time hitting my macro targets
by actually eating.
Primaritizing the protein.
Yeah.
That's 100% what both of them have in common.
I think that's very different about both of them.
It's not carbs and fats or anything like that.
Those you could play with,
as long as you get your essential fats,
you could play with both of them.
It's whether or not you're eating more calories
than you're burning or less calories than you're burning.
That's the difference between a bulk and a cut.
Now the question is always, well, how do I know
how if I'm eating more than what I'm burning
or less than what I'm burning,
the best way that I know, that we know as of right now,
is literally to track your normal diet.
Don't change your diet, track it for a week,
and then you get your average per day
and your maintenance is probably around
whatever that is. So you just eat your normal diet, breakfast, lunch, dinner, snacks, whatever,
track everything on an app. At the end of a week, take your total divided by seven.
There's your average. Now you know if you eat above that, you're in a surplus. If you eat below that,
you're in a cut and that's a good place to start. What would you say would be like the most common pitfall in terms of like
being in a cut and now you're adding activity in excess or being in a bulk and not having
adding enough stress and activity? I would say maybe putting the car before the horse in this
situation meaning that I would first want to figure out all this maintenance stuff before I started adding any more activity or anything else.
And so, and, and I'll circle the entire, or back to the question that you're kind of alluding to, Justin, is that like, you, one of the
things that's important is that you track and figure this out because most people want to use like an app that guesstimates all this.
And I can't stress how often those things aren't precise.
What's your age?
What's your height? What's your height?
What's your way? Here's your calories and then they add in their exercise component and activity and all these things are
You start doing and now they're having such a hard time figuring out where their maintenance is
So when I recommend the calorie tracking, I also tell them I don't want any
I don't want any act outside of activity that you would normally do. Yeah, keep everything the same
Yeah, I don't want you to go for an extra walk because you're trying to impress me.
I don't want you to get on the treadmill after your workout.
Like if you have been consistently
forever working out four days a week, that's fine.
You can stay doing that, but don't do any extra activity
because I want to truly find this maintenance out.
And so back to your kind of question is,
I think what a big mistake people make is they're excited,
they're pumped up, I'm going to start this diet
and they just start to do everything at once.
And it's not how I wanna do that.
I wanna slowly introduce activity,
and then eventually cardio, and then cutting,
and we're kinda playing this game through the whole process,
versus trying to throw the whole kitchen sink at once.
Now a good rule of thumb, I'm gonna give a general number,
but because this is really very widely,
depending on who I'm talking to,
and in some cases I wouldn't do this.
But generally speaking, a surplus or a deficit
would be in the range of three to 800 calories, I would say.
So 300 to 800 calories above where your maintenance is
would be your bulk, 300 to 800 calories below
where your maintenance is would be a cut.
Now, when would I not do this?
Well, if your maintenance is so low
that cutting you 300 or 400 calories
puts you at 1200 calories or 1000 calories
or 1300 calories, I'm not gonna do that.
I'm gonna put you on the bulk
and do what's called a reverse diet.
So, and now, how do I know
if this is the right bulk number?
I would gauge it off performance.
Here's one of the mistakes people make with a bulk.
If you look at the scale,
lean body mass doesn't come on very quickly.
So if you're gaining two pounds, three pounds a week on the scale,
you're probably not gaining muscle unless you're a complete beginner.
That's not muscle.
So it should be pretty slow.
Like you should see your weight go up a few pounds a month
and have correlating strength gains.
That means you're on the right track.
Don't make the mistake that I always made in bulks,
which was, oh, I'm getting stronger,
but I only gained three pounds.
Let me double my calories, make the scale go up more,
and then you only get a body fat test and you find,
oh, all I did was gain more body fat.
It's crazy to think that we're having a whole,
this conversation centered completely around bulking.
So, you know, building or adding weight
and cutting, cutting down or losing weight.
And the scale is probably one of the worst things that you can use in both situations.
It's not a good indicator of am I going about this the right way,
which is also to back to Justin's point of our question is like,
I want to get a really, and I can't stress the importance of the figuring out the maintenance first and really, because sometimes I'll
stretch somebody two weeks.
If we were really inconsistent for a week, it's like, I want to get enough data
that we can confidently say, Hey, if I just ate at 2,500 calories and kind
of went through my life the way it is, I'd probably stay right around the same.
Right around here is where this is homeostasis for my body.
Okay, cool.
We know what that, we know what that looks like. And, and I'm telling them to track steps too, because I'm going to use
this as a way to manipulate the activity and the deficit. So I know that, oh, this person walks
4,000 steps a day on average, they work out three times a week, and they eat 2,500 calories.
That is maintenance for us. Now comes in. now that we know that deciding whether we're going to bulk or
cut is easy or like, it's just, now that's just a preference.
Like what you said, oh, if it's really low calories, I'm going to bulk them in
reverse diet.
Um, if they're in a healthy place, oh, we might, might, might cut first, but
finding that baseline out is maybe one of the most important parts of this entire
thing so that you know how to kind of like methodically adjust.
Yeah.
If you base it off the scale, here's what you'll do. You'll over cut or
over bulk is what'll always happen. Even fat loss doesn't happen super fast. If you're
losing, you know, three pounds, four pounds in a week, maybe the first week because that
can be water. But if that's consistent, you ain't losing body fat. And back to Justin's
kind of original question, like the biggest mistakes. This is one of the biggest mistakes is it and whether you're in a cut or a bulk,
the initial feedback of the scale tends,
sends a signal that you're doing the right things when many times you're doing the
wrong thing. Yeah. So you go on a bulk,
you add in all these calories and you're going after it and the scale goes up two
pounds. And so you get this confirmation like, Oh yeah, I'm doing the right thing.
I'm bulking. You know what I'm saying? Or the opposite is true.
You're like, okay, it's time to cut to ramp up the cardio, cut the calories, a thousand
calories.
Oh, I dropped five pounds this week.
I'm doing good.
It's like, no, it's like, it's the opposite.
It's like, I don't want to see much movement at all.
Well, on two, with the scale, it's like why it's not even something you should really
focus too much on is if we're going for lean muscle mass and like that's like our target goal of like gaining, but we're,
it's lean tissue with that. Um,
it's, it's a very gradual process to that as you found out. Like you can't,
like you can easily overdo that to the point where you're gaining mass and it,
and it feels like, oh, I'm gaining size.
But then when you actually reduce it back down,
it's almost like you barely move.
So much to the point that, okay, if I, if you're a client of mine and we figured
out you have 2,500 calories is we figured that your maintenance out.
And I put you on your, your, your bulk.
Okay.
And, and Sal's 300 to 800 per person, I put you on 500 calories and you're
definitely eating 500 more calories, but the scale goes down a little bit.
I don't care.
If you tell me you're getting stronger, you're feeling you have, you have
energy and I know that I've added 500 calories to your diet.
Hold the line.
Yeah, that's right.
We're good.
Let's stay on this core.
The stronger part is important.
Yes.
The fact that you're, you're, if you're, and I, and I, cause I know we
figured your maintenance out and I know we're in a 500 calorie surplus right now.
And just cause the scale stayed the same or even potentially went a tiny bit down, I'm not tripping.
You're, you're probably building muscle, just a slow process.
I think it's a good idea.
You want to find out your maintenance.
You want to hit your protein targets, either cutting or bulking.
You want to go in this surplus or deficit and then get a body fat test every two
or three weeks.
That's the best gauge because then you can get a body fat test and then you can
weigh yourself and now the weight is, is a good metric.
Cause now I can relate that to my body fat and go, oh,
I gained five pounds on the scale. My body fat percentage stayed the same or went down. Wow,
it was all muscle or I lost four pounds on the scale, but my body fat went up a little bit.
I might have lost some muscle. I want to add to that. So I never wanted to course correct until I had two negative body fat tests in
a row. So don't swing the pendulum the other way. That's right. A second test. That's right.
Like, so let's say I do my first body, it's two weeks in, I did the adjustment to Justin,
he's got the 500 calorie surplus, we do a body fat test and it's not in the most ideal situation.
He didn't put on much lean body mass at all,
kind of stayed the same or like that.
Oh, should I add a bunch more?
Like, no, let's wait and see what happens on the next one.
And if it still isn't in the positive direction
and it's going the opposite direction than I want,
then I will course correct.
Because sometimes you'll just have an off week or two or
Stale it's just the body's interesting the way it works. The body doesn't just in that's you're right It go it grows and shrinks and spurts. It's like how children grow
It's so it's so funny it emulates it if you ever watch the chart on a child. It's not like it seems like it happened overnight
Yeah, it does have it
Happens like also big study on yeah, the doctors won't see that the kid for six months and he grew five inches It wasn't like he did a fraction all the way every single night. I was like most of, it was a big study on that. Yeah. The doctors won't see the kid for six months and he was like, oh, he grew five inches.
It wasn't like he did a fraction all the way every single night.
I was like, most of it was in a block.
Yeah.
He'll like two or three blocks of these books.
I feel the same way our metabolism.
True.
Like when you're building muscle, it's like, I'm in a surplus.
I'm stronger, stronger, stronger, stronger, no scale, nothing on the scale.
And then boom, three pounds on the scale.
Same thing we're getting leaner, which is why I want two negative tests that, uh, that come in a row before I adjust my plan.
Awesome. All right. Let's talk about training strategies. Here's where I
think everybody has it. I don't think I know everybody has this backwards.
Everybody does this totally backwards. Here's what people do when they're
trying to cut. They're trying to cut. So they ramp up volume, ramp up intensity,
ramp up workouts. I'm trying to burn more calories. When they're trying to bulk, everybody does less trying to conserve calories.
I want to conserve calories, whatever.
Hit the now, now the opposite is true.
If I'm in a cut, if I'm having less calories, my body can handle less stress,
less volume.
I can over train much easier.
I don't want to try to beat myself up to burn those calories.
I want to try and keep my body from over-training.
When I'm bulking, now I can handle the harder workouts.
I can handle more volume.
I could push the weights.
I could push the intensity because I have the extra calories and the extra nutrients.
Everybody does the opposite.
You're looking at cutting workouts.
I know.
They're like ridiculous intensity.
It's all from the calorie burn.
It's seen off the momentum.
Yeah.
A lot of times and that's, people get caught in that sort of a hamster wheel
where it's like, I'm, I want to lose body fat, but really they want to lose weight and they
want to do everything they can and add it all at once.
But they need to preserve muscle.
And the only way you can preserve muscle is, you know, to do the right dose.
The old adage in the fitness world in the fitness world, in cutting workouts was all around
calorie burn. It was, that's what decided if a workout was, uh, for bulking or for
cutting was based off of how many calories it burned.
And so this idea of high intensity, super setting, circuit training, hit training,
all of these modalities where you're burning tons of calories. Oh, that's going
to aid in your cut.
Well, it might aid in you losing weight, but it's also potentially going to aid
in you losing muscle to your point, because you're not feeding the body proper nutrition.
Yeah.
I, I mean, it's, it's anybody who's ever gone a consistent cut or bulk will tell
you like, you don't recover as fast in a cut.
It's harder to push myself.
My energy levels might be, might be lower.
And if you push it too hard, then you start to, uh, push your body
into over training where it's going to want to hold on to body fat.
It's going to want to ramp up cravings to make you eat more.
This is a bulk.
You get away with the volume.
You could train harder in a bulk and that's why you're stronger.
You're, you're automatically, by the way, when you get stronger, even if you did
the same amount of sets, your volume went up.
So if all your lifts went up 10 pounds, that means your volume of training naturally went up.
What made that happen? The extra calories.
Well, and also we primarily use lifting weights to build muscle or send a
signal to build muscle.
When it's most loudest and most likely going to, isn't a calorie surface and a
deficit, that's not going to happen.
I used to tell my,
my clients that we're competing that, listen, the hard work,
the body that's going to get up on stage and we're going to
present that body that everybody is trying to cut towards is
already built.
If we're in the cut, it's already done.
That part's done.
The muscle is there.
At this point, we want to preserve as much as that muscle
we can while we just chisel away at just the body fat.
And there's a real art to that.
Part of that art is knowing how to just stretch the body
enough to where it carves away a body fat,
but it hangs on the muscle.
One of the best ways of doing that
is by doing it through diet and not through exercise.
Doing it through exercise, which is a stress,
and pushing the body really hard.
That's more precise.
When you're not feeding it properly,
is you're sending a super loud signal for it to pare down.
Right.
So people are like, OK, well, high reps, low reps, which one's better for bulking and cutting?
Both high reps and low reps build muscle and they'll build the most muscle when
they're the most novel for you.
So that, that's true. Whether you're bulking or cutting both bulking,
when a game muscle cutting, when I at least keep muscle,
you want to send a novel signal. So when you switch into a bulk or cut,
it's a good idea to switch up your programming to send a novel signal. So when you switch into a bulk or cut, it's a good idea to switch up your programming
to send a novel signal.
But the big thing to consider is when I'm cutting,
I can't handle as much volume.
So do not try to ramp up the volume at the attempt
to try and burn more calories.
That is how everybody screws themselves up
with their workouts when it comes to cutting in particular.
No, one of my favorite strategies,
whenever I'm transitioning from a cut to a bulk
or vice versa is to switch programming to just for the novel stimulus.
But when I'm in a cut, the way I'm approaching the workout is like I've been training already for a while, I already came out of a bulk, I'm now in the cut, I've already built up all that muscle.
It's like go in there, do the work, touch the weights.
It's like, it's the stuff that I've been doing consistently as far as how much weight I'm with. I'm not trying to hit PRs. I'm not trying to stretch the extra set. I'm not trying to go to failure.
I'm not doing any of that stuff like that. You go in there and you consistently touch those weights while feeding
the body properly, you're going to hang onto that muscle. You will for the most part. When you start
flirting with pushing it and really stretching yourself or really cutting hard or really starting to ramp up activity like cardio is when you
sacrifice.
By the way, here's why,
here's the main theory is the why that happens when you push the body with lots
of stress, exercise is stress, calorie deficit is a stress,
and you overcome your body's ability to recover and adapt to that stress.
What it does is it's, it's, it's like, it's a, you know,
like commercial where there's like it's a you know, that
commercial where there's like a button you push and it gives you
the answer. Your body has this button that is that what it's
the button that it pushes when it's under too much stress, which
says get rid of muscle store body save energy, right? Because
muscle is calorically active in the sense that it burns a lot of
calories, it's expensive tissue nutrient wise, body fats not body fats also a great insurance policy. If it burns a lot of calories, it's expensive tissue nutrient-wise, body fat's not.
Body fat's also a great insurance policy.
If I have a lot of body fat on me and we're starving
or I'm under a lot of stress and I can't get food,
I'll survive.
So if you push the body too hard in the cut,
you're already in a deficit,
now you're pushing it with training,
what you're essentially telling your body is,
get rid of muscle hole on the body fat,
which makes it very, very difficult
to continue to get leaner.
That's what causes most of the plateaus in that type of process.
All right.
So let's talk about mental hurdles.
Here's where I think the discussion gets interesting because the mental hurdles,
even when you do everything right, are really hard for bulking and cutting,
especially because the people that tend to bulk tend to be insecure about being too
small or too skinny.
This was me and the people who tend to want to cut tend to be insecure about
being too, too fat or whatever.
And so, uh, that poses challenges.
The reverse also poses challenges.
If you've always tried to bulk and now you're going to cut and you lose a little
bit of size, it freaks you out and vice versa.
If you've lost a lot of weight, you're going on a bulk to speed up your metabolism.
If you're a little bigger, uh-oh, reverse gears.
So let's talk a little bit about.
So I don't, I can't speak for the other competitors out there, but I definitely
looked like the stereotypical bodybuilder with the big old oversized hoodie over
his head and headphones on and like just baggy
everything. And I used to train this way. Now, I know why I was drawn to that.
It wasn't like a fashion statement. Like the psychological game was so big and
so impactful that I didn't, I wanted to fool myself. I wanted to cover myself up
and not allow like how much my pumps or
what I look like today or if I knew too there was days when I would be carrying
a little bit of inflammation and so then it would look, I literally look when
you start and the leaner you get the more this is like this where you like,
oh my God, I feel I'm doing everything right. But yet I look fatter today.
Like I had those, I had all those challenges. And so I, I'm such a
numbers person and I believe that I did the work.
I did the work and figuring out my maintenance.
I've done the due diligence of like tracking my stuff.
It's like, I know I'm hitting my protein.
I know I'm doing it like I got to trust the process and part of trusting
the process and getting over this mental hurdle.
Knowing that you were going to mess with yourself if you looked in the mirror.
And so I would cover myself up.
I would stay covered up purely for the mental game of knowing that I would get in my own
head and start to measure that the scale is the same way.
It's like, it's like another way of, I think the scale and the mirror sometimes can lie
to us and that can really get in your head and then make you course correct.
And so I would cover up like that.
Yeah.
So, uh, with bulking, if you're the hard gainer, okay, the, the mental games with bulking that can happen or hurdles is, wow, if the scale
is going up, I must be doing good. That was me. Like if the
scale is going up to the point, here's how bad it was. And
this is just a little self awareness. But as a kid, I would
always weigh myself at the end of the day after my last meal,
because I knew I was heaviest at that time, I had to see that
number go up. And if a particular dinner made my, you know,
made me hold more water,
it made me gain a little bit of weight on the scale.
Well, guess which dinner I would have most nights, right?
The most inflammatory meal I could eat.
So for that person, bulking can be a challenge
because anything going up on the scale is a good thing.
Even though it may all be body fat,
this is what would happen to me.
Now, for somebody who is afraid of gaining body fat,
somebody who let's say you've lost a lot of weight, now you're doing a reverse diet, or let's say you're a female,
this is more common for women.
And you're like, okay, I know I'm supposed to go into calorie surplus to build,
let's say the butt I want or to build the curves I want or speed up my metabolism.
Now any pound that goes up on the scale is like nails on a chalkboard.
It's like terrible.
Uh-oh, I went too high in a surplus, back out type of deal.
So the scale can really, I would say is your enemy unless you combine it with
other metrics and your objective about the metrics, scale, body fat test, once every
two weeks, otherwise don't touch them at all.
And then after, like Adam said, if you get two consecutive measurements that are
going in the wrong direction, then you start to make some adjustments.
Now with cutting, if you're this, the, if you were always a skinny guy and
you're all constantly on a bulk and now you're like, you know what,
I think I want to get really lean.
It's terrifying to feel yourself getting smaller.
Uh-oh, I'm getting smaller.
I'm weaker.
This isn't good or whatever.
And then you'll reverse out into the person who, you know, is always, uh,
you know, was always dealt with being small or dealt with, uh, being fat or
whatever, any pound that goes down, I should say, is now a plus,
even though they're losing muscle.
The irony of this is that even though these are two
completely different individuals and are insecure
about two completely different things,
it's exactly the same thing.
It's exactly the same thing that's going through their head.
And that's why too, I don't like,
the other part of this is recognizing that this is
a really long process and slow process
and accepting that it's just not like part of why this is so challenging.
And there's such a mental hurdle here is that we're marketed to and we're,
we're constantly see these 30 day challenges and these before and afters.
And there's always this example of somebody who did something crazy,
radical in three months
or six months. And so we have this perception that, man, if I'm dialed,
I'm doing all these things, I should see all this.
And then when we don't, we assume it's wrong or we're not doing something right.
And then we, and we course correct. And when we course correct,
we many times over correct and we just shoot ourselves in the foot.
And so part of that, and this is why the very beginning of this
conversation, I started off with how important the maintenance thing is,
how important of really figuring out what do I, you know,
if I stayed consistent with these calories and I did my daily habits,
this is my routine, I go to work, I do this. It's like, that's pretty damn,
that's like 90% of my life outside of random vacations and different stuff.
Like that's what I do. And you know what it takes to kind of just maintain your body. That's so
important because from there, you can make these little adjustments and you just, it's just, it's
a hurry up in weight. Here's your objective measurements that you can use. And I do not
suggest you do these daily because it will mess with your head. I think literally once every two
weeks is a good, a good place to look,
but it's weight, body fat percentage,
circumference measurements, these are all good.
If you do all three of them better,
because you can compare all of them.
And then lastly,
here's my favorite metric to pay attention to,
which is performance in the gym.
If you're stronger, whether you're bulking or cutting,
first off, if you're bulking, you better be getting stronger.
If you're getting stronger while you're cutting,
you are crushing it. You're doing amazing. If you maintain your strength while stronger while you're cutting, you are crushing it. You're doing amazing.
If you maintain your strength while you're in a cut,
you're crushing it.
You're doing very good.
So those four things are what should drive,
which direction you go,
not the subjective feeling of,
I feel fluffy or I feel small or I feel big
or I'm gaining too much or what's going on.
That will 100% point you in the wrong direction.
I mean, that was one of my favorite things
about going through that process was, again,
up into this point in my life,
even though I had already been a trainer for over 10 years,
I had never tracked this diligently
and I never really got to like see firsthand
how much our body can fluctuate
because of sodium and water and inflammation and how
much of a mind fuck that is even for a trainer who thinks he knows what he's doing.
It's like that was, and so that was really enlightening for me to go like, wow, how many
of my clients go through this where they eat a food.
They don't even know, they don't even know, they don't even know that they have an inflammatory
response to a food.
It's a food they eat all the time.
So they think that it's okay, but they've never even tracked diligently enough to know that.
Wow.
Every time they eat that food, they get slightly inflamed, their body holds on to an extra few glasses of water, which looks like another 2% body fat on your, on your body.
Out of nowhere, what it had nothing to do with actually body fat going on there and it's temporary and it'll go away in the next 48 to 72 hours
But you don't know that and so you see that and you wake up after a day of what you thought was perfect
I did my walk and worked out. I was perfect on my diet
I anything perfect and then you wake up and you look worse than what you did you got you got to know yourself like for me
If I felt bigger then I was moving in the right direction
And so objective measurements would have really helped me quite a bit.
For someone else feeling smaller, might just be like, yeah, I'm going in the right direction,
even though they're losing muscle and getting weaker. So those objective measurements every
couple of weeks are really important because read those, deny your feelings, look at those numbers
and go, okay, here's what's actually happening. All right, last, let's talk about when to stop
Look at those numbers and go, okay, here's what's actually happening. All right, last, let's talk about when to stop the bulk or the cut.
Now, for me, I think that with a bulk in particular,
I think once you stop gaining muscle,
once the body fat percentage starts to climb on its own,
like muscle's not going up, body fat's going up,
that's a pretty easy sign.
But here's another good sign to stop the bulk.
You just, you can't eat that many calories anymore.
This is one that people run into.
It's like, oh man, I'm eating 3 that many calories anymore. This is one that, um, that people run into.
It's like, Oh man, I'm eating 3,500 calories. This is like a total chore.
I'm, I'm force feeding myself.
Like if you start to get to this mental state with your bulk, it's probably a
good idea to reverse out of it because you're not, you're not training
anything good, uh, by doing that.
Now with the cut, when do you stop a cut?
Well, if your performance really starts to decline in the gym, if you notice low libido,
if you notice lots of fatigue,
if you feel ravenous, not just like normal hunger,
but like all you're doing is obsessing about food.
And if you've never really done a hard cut,
especially competitors, bodybuilders in particular,
we'll tell you about this,
they'll have dreams of apples and strawberries
and stuff like that. You start to obsess about food. That'll have dreams of apples and strawberries and stuff like that.
You start to obsess about food.
That's probably a good idea to come out of the car.
That's so you know you're getting lean.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
When you originally put this, I was like,
I don't know how I'm gonna communicate this
because I find that there's a bit
of an individual variance here, right?
Like, and mostly what that variance looks like is
how long we've been cutting or bulking
and or where we at body fat percentage.
For example, if I'm in a cut for somebody and I'm cutting somebody who has, uh, you
know, they're 35 plus percent body fat.
They have a lot of body fat to lose.
Taking a four to stay in a deficit and a cut for a longer period of time because
they have so much body fat like that.
That person I might allow to stretch out longer, three, four, five, six
weeks in a row of doing a cut without interrupting that.
If I have a client who is getting ready for stage and they're 8% body fat,
and we've been cutting for a week or two weeks, I'll probably have a
refeed day in there or a maintenance to surplus week and then go back to the
cut. So it depends on where somebody's body fat percentage is and how long they've
been doing it on when I would probably interrupt that.
Yeah.
I think what you said, you gave with like the way you feel is a good general
yeah, idea.
Yeah.
Cause like, I mean, you could have someone at 35% body fat and a cut,
but their metabolism is just so slow and they've been cutting and now they're showing
signs of nutrient deficiencies and fatigue and I can't sleep.
Well, in that case, I'm going to pull you out of this, even
though your body fat percentage is high.
So, so another way to look at that would be like again, going
back to the original rule of the two tests in a row.
So that would be a course adjustment, right?
So let's say this person is like you're saying 35% overweight
and they do a body fat test
and we don't really move the needle much.
Again, we're not gonna course correct, stay the course.
We do another one and they again don't know too.
Okay, we probably need to reverse out of this.
So that's how I would probably gauge that.
It's like, again, going back to the test of,
I'm gonna, two bad tests, too bad tests means
we're not moving in the direction that I'm supposed to move. If we're in a cut, we're
supposed to be. I'm glad he said that because a bulk can be used as an effective way to
break through a plateau in a cut. And a cut can be used as an effective way to break through
a plateau in a bulk. In other words, what Adam just talked about was somebody who was
eating low calories. And so this is not somebody who's eating a lot of calories and isn't losing weight. They're eating already low calories. We're already down to 15
or calories, 16 or calories, and they're not losing body fat two weeks in a row. The reason
why he would reverse them is because now let's go into a metabolism boosting two or three week
period or maybe even just a one week period to get that metabolism kicked up so we could start the
fat loss process over. Same thing with being in a bulk for a long times, you know,
the whole feeling of I can't eat anymore. Oh my gosh, I'm so stuffed.
One of the remedies to that oftentimes is to go in a small deficit.
Yeah. Small deficit for a week.
And then your appetite comes right back and you probably lost no muscle.
In fact, oftentimes that you really well,
and then you go back in the bulk and then everything responds again.
And again, I like using that kind of like, you know,
I know it's generic to say like two tests in a row, but like, that's a cool,
I think that's a good,
it's a good way to do it is like, give yourself that time that you're not just
having a bad week or you just had some things that were inflamed you or like,
you've got enough time of consistently back to back test that didn't move in the
positive direction for you. Okay. Now let's make a course direct adjustment.
And in the case of where you're at calorie wise
and how long we'd probably dictate that.
Like you said, like if you got somebody
who's got a long ways to go body fat wise,
but they're already down to 1700 calories,
what about that?
I don't have a lot more room to keep cutting that person.
We might be due for a reverse diet.
Go the other direction for a little bit before we cut down.
And that really is dependent on where they're at.
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