Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Adam Bornstein on Practical Strategies for Sustainable Dieting
Episode Date: June 28, 2023Understanding the psychology of dieting is crucial for long-term weight loss and improved health. In this episode, I interview fitness expert, New York Times bestselling author, and nutrition adviso...r for LeBron James and Arnold Schwarzenegger, Adam Bornstein, about diet psychology and sustainable weight loss, which is the subject of his new book, You Can't Screw This Up. With over two decades in the industry, Adam has witnessed countless struggles people face when trying to improve their health, despite an abundance of resources and information at their disposal. In this interview, he breaks down these challenges and offers practical strategies to navigate them successfully. In our conversation, Adam and I discuss . . . - The personal connection and motivation behind his new book - The psychological barriers to effective dieting and how to overcome them - The truth about meal planning and its role in achieving sustainable health goals - The concept of "minimum effective dose" in training and why more is not always better - Practical strategies for creating meal boundaries and incorporating takeout food effectively in your diet - And more . . . So, if you're ready to understand dieting better and set yourself up for sustainable weight loss, tune in to this episode with Adam Bornstein! Timestamps: (0:00) - Please leave a review of the show wherever you listen to podcasts and make sure to subscribe! (4:19) - What is the personal connection to "You Can't Screw This Up"? (7:57) - Is dieting the 20% that gives you the 80% in results? (29:22) - What is your take on meal planning? (27:41) - BOGO 50% Off during my July 4th sale! https://buylegion.com/ (35:31) - What are some tools that can help make meal boundaries? (43:34) - How can you make takeout food work in a diet? (53:31) - Where can people find you and your work? Mentioned on the Show: Buy one supplement get one 50% off during my big July 4th sale! Plus, get a free $20 gift card on orders over $99. Go to buylegion.com to save now! Use coupon code MUSCLE to get double reward points! Adam Bornstein's Book You Can't Screw This Up: https://www.amazon.com/You-Cant-Screw-This-Up/dp/0063230577/?tag=mflweb-20 Adam's Instagram: www.instagram.com/bornfitness Adam's Website: www.bornfitness.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, friend. I am Mike Matthews. This is Muscle for Life. Thank you for joining me today
for a new episode, an interview with a fitness expert, a New York Times bestselling author,
a nutrition advisor for LeBron James and Arnold Schwarzenegger, Adam Bornstein,
about diet psychology and sustainable weight loss, which means losing weight in a sustainable
manner and keeping it off for the long term,
which is the real goal, of course. And the reason Adam is coming on my show to talk about these
things is he has a new book called You Can't Screw This Up, which is all about the psychology
of diet, the psychology of food, the psychology of eating, how to use these things to diet, to eat sustainably, and achieve your
fitness goals and your health goals. So if you want to learn some practical and evidence-based
strategies for overcoming some of the bigger and thornier psychological barriers that prevent
people from developing healthy and effective relationship with food, then I think you're going to like this
episode because Adam is going to give you those practical strategies. He's going to talk about
meal planning. His take is a bit different than many people in the evidence-based fitness space.
He talks about the concept of minimum effective dose in training and why more training is not
always better. He also is going to share
some practical strategies for creating meal boundaries, he calls it, and incorporating
takeout food and other delicious things in your diet and more.
Hello, Adam. Good afternoon. Hey, Mike. How are you doing today?
I'm all right. I'm all right. As I said offline, I think I'm getting a little bit sick, but I feel good enough to do this.
So here I am.
And maybe I'll get lucky.
And I'm in that limbo, like I'm in purgatory, you know, where am I going to wake up tomorrow
feeling good or bad?
But here I am.
You never know.
You're in that stage where you're like, you know, I could beat this thing or it's going
to beat me.
It's a toss up right now.
So hopefully when you wake up tomorrow, you're on the right side of things.
Exactly.
Exactly.
You know, it occurred to me that it's funny that for as long as I've been in the fitness
racket, we haven't crossed paths because you've done a lot in the way of writing books and
writing for magazines.
And you have a project going with
Arnold right now, right? A podcast project. So you've been doing a lot of things in the space
for a long time. And it's probably, I'm guessing both of us, we kind of just like live like hermits
when our cave doing our things. And at least that's how I live. Yeah, no, I'm always surprised
when I don't cross paths with certain people who have just been around and doing things for a while.
So it's funny and it's awesome when I do get to meet people who you just have a mutual
respect for.
And it's like, you know what?
Somehow, some way we haven't met and yet here we are now.
So I'm glad we get a chance to sit down, chat about things.
But I don't know how we haven't met yet.
And that is one of those things that maybe it is that
hermit life. Honestly, probably my fault. I'm just not a good quote unquote networker because I'm
always just kind of working on the next thing. And it's probably not a, probably a mistake in
some ways. I think it's more of a, I expect by happen chance, but yes, I think people are like,
well, what are your days like? And I'm like, well, there's a lot of, it's like sitting here
at my desk and, uh, being with my kids and then sitting here at my desk and being with my kids and then sitting here at my
desk and being with my kids and just repeat. Yep. Yep. I get that question sometimes too,
where for some reason, some people think that I must live some kind of glamorous life.
It's not a bad life, but it doesn't quite qualify. If we're looking at the dictionary
definition of glamorous, it's not that glamorous. It's a lot of what you just said. A lot of it's enjoyable, but I wouldn't have a very interesting
vlog. It would be like one or two episodes that you just repeat over and over. And that's about
it. Right. And this is my life. Yeah, exactly. But anyway, we are here to talk about your new
book. You can't screw this up, which I like the title. Actually, I wrote a little
some time ago. It started as like a little essay and then I kind of repurposed it into,
I think, on the podcast and on social media with this theme of you can't screw this up.
And so when I saw it, I was like, oh, that's clever. I like that. And you mentioned that this
was a very personal book. My notes are right that you said this is the most personal thing that you've written.
Why is that?
There are many reasons.
I think the biggest one is that I've, as you mentioned, been doing this for a while, right?
20 plus years now in the industry.
And at some point you start looking at the end result for many people, right?
Like, did they figure this out?
Do they take control of their health?
result for many people, right? Like, did they figure this out? Do they take control of their health? And most people don't completely feel in control, even the ones that are doing the things
on a day-to-day basis. And it's not for a lack of effort, right? They've tried diets, they try
exercise, they try different plans. And while we could argue all day whether money and resources
are spent on the right things trying to make people healthier.
And I would argue they're not.
I don't think there's a debate whether money and resources are put towards making people healthier.
Some people think that, oh, we're not making efforts to make people healthier.
No, it's wellness is a trillion dollar industry.
There's no lack of money at this.
And yet, why are so many people
not healthy? And at some point, like when you do this for so long and you don't necessarily look
at the people you work with directly, but you look at the greater population, you see stats like
75 percent of people in the United States alone are overweight or obese. You can't help but sit
there and be like, if something isn't working for three quarters of the people, something is seriously wrong. And, you know, it's like the Michael Jordan meme,
right? And I took that personally, right? Like I had to go on this exploration of why is it when
people have access to so much information? Why is it when there's so much technology and things that
seemingly should make this easier? So many people not just struggle with their health,
but struggle to really achieve the goals that they want,
even if they're on the right path,
they still have trouble getting there.
And it wasn't an easy question to answer.
And it kind of took a lot of personal exploration as well.
It took a lot of personal struggle.
I found myself at one point struggling with my own health
because of how much travel I was doing. And I seemingly should be armed with enough information to know how to make this work
for me. And then I started making mistakes that I should have seen. And I think my own personal
struggle, plus the desire to figure it out this for people made this just like the book was a
nine year journey. I'd love to be like, I whip this up. Like I originally had this idea nine
years ago and it took me forever to write it, to
figure it out and do it in a way that I truly felt they could help people.
So it was definitely a passion project and one that I'm proud of because I think the
things that you put the most time and effort into are the ones that inevitably feel personal
because of the personal investment itself.
And you're talking about a multifaceted problem that is that kind of an
intersection of various psychological, physiological, emotional, socioeconomic
factors on and on. And, you know, this is, I share the underlying mission with you to try to do
something about it, at least pick some elements that I can understand and
help people with. And in this book, what are those facets that you decided to focus on?
Because as much as we would love to write the one book that rules them all, it's such a complex
problem. At least this has been something that I wouldn't say that I've quote unquote struggled with, I've just had to accept and do my best to, to do what I can in the areas that I'm most qualified in and that I most resonate with
personally and that my work most resonates with others in. And so in this book, like,
for example, you talk about a lot about diet and looking at dieting in a new way. And I'm just curious,
is that the facet that you think is part of that 20% that can give 80% or why did you choose that?
Yeah, I think what I really focus on the most is how on the mental side of things. I believe that
the psychological barriers are much bigger than the
physiological barriers. And a lot of times the reason we don't see the success that we want
is because we actually play this game that we're not designed to win because we're taught to
identify failure inaccurately. In other words, we start plans and we are led to believe that when we cannot do certain behaviors,
we've made a mistake and we need to adjust for that. But that's not reality. Our body is much
more resilient than so many plans make it seem. So we give ourselves this small margin of error
and we give ourselves these huge terms and consequences if we fall into that small margin
of error and it becomes this perpetuating cycle.
So, you know, in the book, I do identify that, you know, like you said, it's multifaceted and
some of those facets can't even control. Some are genetic and epigenetic, right? Some are
environmental and we don't all necessarily control like where we grew up or the impact we had.
And I think the two things that people can do more than anything, in addition to the diet and exercise, is one, looking at the situation differently, looking at the structures
of diets and health plans differently, where we are taught to catastrophize behaviors that
then lead us down this dark path, as opposed to taught to be more resilient, taught to
have more grit, and then learn to coexist with the environment, right?
Our food environment is, in general, not designed to make us the learn to coexist with the environment. Right. Our food environment is
in general not designed to make us the healthiest people in the world. But most books and plans
insist on fighting against this food environment or waiting till it changes. And like there are
tens of billions, arguably hundreds of billions of dollars put into that food environment. And
like that's going to be a slow change if it happens ever at all. And that's not being pessimistic. That's being realistic. So you can fight against that or you can learn to coexist
with it. And I see very few people teaching how to coexist with an environment where there's
ultra processed foods, where there's takeout, where there's dessert on demand. I mean, you just
grab your phone and you don't even have to get off the couch. And I don't think we have to be at
odds with that. And the research shows that you don't have to be at odds.
The research actually suggests that people that who take the less restrictive plans and
have what they call the planned hedonic deviations, aka the cheap meals, the people who are able
to enjoy takeout, remove the psychological burden, remove the anxiety and stress, less
likely to make mistakes more often and more likely to stick to a plan because they do not
overreact when they make a mistake that they understand is perfectly normal, right? Instead
of punishing yourself when you have takeout, if you know just how often you can have that or you
know what you can eat there without it being a problem, it shifts the paradigm where you're not
constantly like you're stressed and you're tired and you know that cooking meals is great, but
tonight's just not a night. It shouldn't result in the fact that if you order takeout or you decide
to have a dessert that you think that you fundamentally screwed up. And then because
you think you screwed up, that you fundamentally must compensate for something. And the real screw
up is like that lesson, that approach of constantly thinking that every action needs an equal and
opposite reaction, which isn't true,
right? If someone only worked out once every two weeks, right, they would not be healthy,
they would not see the results. And yet when people like eat a certain way, one or two or
three times per week, I'm not talking about every single meal, we overemphasize the damage that it
does. So I think teaching people to understand about the psychological load that
most of these diets put on you is really important because our performance, our ability to follow
something is led by the psychology, not by the physiology, right? And this is, I explain in the
book, this idea of the Yerkes-Dodson curve. Yerkes-Dodson curve is this beautiful inverted
U curve around the X axis is the amount of anxiety or stress that you're in, and the Y axis is your
performance. And on one end, you see the performance performance is very very low when there's no stress when
there's no anxiety some of that you mean no one's challenging you no one's asking you to become
better right just is what it is like you're on the couch and no one's saying like you got to rise up
and do something for yourself on the other end though performance is just as low when you're in
these situations where there's super high stress there there's lots of rules, there's lots of parameters, there's no leeway, there's no freedom. And every
single decision is overemphasized in a way that like, if you feel you can't do it, that you've
blown the whole thing, right? And this is the people who like will go on a diet and the moment
they like can't follow it to T, they kind of feel like they screwed up. And then like they quit,
right, they quit completely. So the goal isn't necessarily to do nothing and not challenge
yourself, but equally the goal is not to be in such a stressful and anxious situation where you
can't achieve that peak performance. So knowing that for mental side, knowing that you can coexist
with the food environment and don't have to constantly be at odds with it, I think are just
competitive advantages if you're willing to accept that those realities can be yours,
right?
That the path to health doesn't have to be paved in extremes.
I feel like, just because you think of the title, you can't screw this up, right?
And now I'm guessing that the follow-up to that is, well, you can screw it up if you just quit altogether. And if you allow yourself to
catastrophize and maybe approach your fitness in a way that would be appropriate, if you were
an IFBB bodybuilder about to step on stage or one week out from Olympia, you're in the running for
the top three. And okay, if you go and binge for a couple of days straight, maybe you should
be a little bit upset because you worked so hard. But chances are, most people listening are not in
any situation like that. So does it really matter if, as you said, you eat a bit too much, you eat
off plan, which I want to talk about meal plans in a minute, but or if you eat a little bit too much takeout, that is not quote unquote screwing it up
if I'm hearing you right.
It is, yeah.
I mean, the screw up is the compensation
because when we compensate, right,
we put more tension, we add more stress,
we add more anxiety.
If you eat takeout, if you eat dessert
and you just return, regress to the mean,
go back to normal, healthy behaviors,
your body's going to be fine.
What happens is when we teeter between one extreme to another, we're eventually going to
break either mentally or physically, right? If we're constantly like doing one extreme, like
not eating well, and then trying to compensate by like burning ourselves to the ground,
the fast and three a day exercise and everything you burn out and you crash. So like one of two
things happen when people think they screw up. The first is they think they made a mistake. And then they're like,
I blew it all. I'm going to take the rest of the week off. And that one week becomes a month or
two months or the rest of the year, right? The other is I need to compensate. I need to punish
myself. And they learn this very maladaptive behavior, right? All I care about is helping
people build habits and routines because that's what's sustainable.
So then they think that like every single thing that they do
needs to be punished, right?
Because they screwed up
and they burn themselves out to the ground
or they end up creating a plan
that is nothing what the plan look like, right?
It becomes unsustainable because every little inaction
has this like massive reaction.
So you can't screw this up is based on two principles.
One, you want to actually make plans simple in the beginning so that you can have a level of
mastery. And, you know, when people are learning, it's important to not start at the end. And I
think we get these goals of what we want to achieve. And we see the people that we want
to emulate and be like, and we try to start where they are.
And I say that's the equivalent of, you know, never doing math and then starting with calculus or geometry before you've done addition or subtraction.
Or when you're trying to learn a sport or you're trying to learn to swim, no one throws
you in the deep end before you've put a toe in the shallow end and learn how to tread
water.
But a lot of diet plans and fitness plans, because they know where they want to take
you, forget about where you need to begin. I know if I were to ask you, I know if anyone asked me,
the plans that I started with that gave me a chance to be healthier, look nothing like the
plans I do today. And yet we are oftentimes giving people these overly complicated, overly complex,
where they don't have the ability to be so successful that the more challenging ones become
easier. It's a principle
I discuss in the book of, you know, we have to leave our comfort zone, but we don't need to
abandon it, right? We need to expand it. And expanding your comfort zone means having one
foot in things that you know and understand, because from a stable base, from a stable
foundation, you can more effectively learn new behaviors while adding new behaviors.
Don't throw everything you do out the window and think that suddenly overnight you're going to be able to take on 10 new behaviors that you've never even
tried before. When you are able to bit by bit master certain healthy habits, the ones that
seem more complicated become easier. The example I give in the book is if someone walks into the
gym the first time, you have really two options, right? You can have them do a bunch of bodyweight exercises.
You can assess them.
And from that alone, they're going to be pretty smoked, right?
If you take someone who's completely untrained and they do enough volume of bodyweight, they're
going to be sore for several days.
So you can do that.
And that is enough of a challenge.
That's it.
And that is enough of a challenge.
But because relative to where they are, that is really, really hard.
Now, if you took that same person and you loaded 300 pounds on a bar and asked them to barbell squat,
that's going to crush them. But the difference between the body weight and the barbell squat
is the person who did the barbell squat is never coming back. It leaves damage, right? It's like
you end up, it's aversive conditioning. You start to program like, I can't do this. I can't succeed.
And so many diet plans and so many fitness plans actually program people to fail in the long term
by crushing them so hard initially. They can't succeed. So to your point, I say the goal isn't having 100 percent weeks. We glorify this idea of perfection where we clean eat and everything is just like locked and loaded and perfect. The goal is no zero percent weeks. The goal is none of these weeks where like where you have a bad day that you don't turn that into a bad week. Right. It's kind of like a pitcher's mentality where like, if you gave up a home run, man, like don't let the
last batter screw up the next batter, right? You got to forget it. Short memory. If you had a bad
meal, if you had a bad day, like if this is sports and your week is four quarters, right? One meal
is just like a period of a quarter, right? Imagine if every team that was down at halftime just threw in the towel and never played the second half. So many of us do this with our
diet or fitness. Like we don't have a good first half of the week and we're just like,
that's great. No, get back on, win the rest of the week. And that's still a win because
I could ask you like if you every single day, probably even it's great right now because
you're sick. If you feel like you can just conquer the day. And the reality is no,
most people who are super fit, the only difference,
they don't wake up feeling more motivated than you.
They don't wake up always feeling they can crush.
They wake up knowing that they got to show up
and do something.
And when they have their off days,
they just got to get back on track
because that happens someday.
If you wake up tomorrow, you're not feeling well.
You can't go to the gym.
You can't train.
It's not, oh no, I'm unhealthy.
It's all right, let's get better
and then just get back on track.
And you don't need to make up for the time lost.
You just need to get back to being consistent.
And you can't screw up is all about this, right?
It's getting out of that mindset.
It's changing the approach and building a progression.
So that makes it easier for people to succeed so they can continually take on harder challenges
that because they have become stronger will become easier, right?
The person who goes from the bodyweight squats to like the goblet squat to the barbell squat,
suddenly everything becomes easier because you just took a logical progression that gave you
a better chance of success rather than like throwing someone, you know, to these hungry
sharks on day one where the likelihood of success was so low. And for people listening who obviously
the 300 pound squat is exaggerated for effect.
But if you go on Instagram and you go or on TikTok or whatever, and you go and look at
some of the workouts that some of these super fit people share, especially super fit and
probably on an extra dose of the hashtag dedication, their workouts are the equivalent of the 300 pound squat for the day one
guy. If somebody is new to all of this, and maybe that workout does not include 300 pound squats,
but you know what it does include? Oh, it includes 30 sets for one or two major, major muscle groups
and hundreds and hundreds of reps. And all of those sets taken close to failure. That is
just as ridiculous as like asking a new person to train like that would be just as ridiculous
as asking a new person to go squat 315 for their first set of squats ever. Yet, unfortunately,
many people who are relatively new to this are doing stuff like that because those types of
workouts often are what get attention on social
media. That's what people want to see. And the messaging is often, it's crafted more for marketing
than it is for anything else. And here's my proprietary method. And so just wanted to
spotlight that point for people listening, because I will sometimes get asked for really,
actually, it's been from the beginning, my training personally has always seemed a bit
minimalist to people who are used to seeing some of these other workouts, where for me,
a high volume workout is probably 15 to 16 hard sets for the entire workout. And that wouldn't
be for one muscle group. That also probably be a two or three muscle group workout. A high volume week for me would be 15 to 20 hard sets
for an individual muscle group. And so what does that look like? Well, my workouts are
three or four exercises, three or four sets per exercise, 60 minutes or so. And if I get talking
to people, maybe it's my, maybe it turns into 90, but it
didn't have to be 90. And so I still get people who they're just surprised they're relatively new
and I'm asking them to do even a bit less than that. I don't think it's even necessary for
somebody new to do 15 to 16 hard sets per workout. And so people will reach out to me and they're,
they're skeptical that it's going to work. Like really I can do three or four max five workouts per week. And I can, I can do 10 hard
sets, 12 hard sets in the whole workout. And that's it. Like that's actually going to work.
Yes. Yes. It's going to work. And doubling it is actually not going to be more effective. It's
going to make it probably less effective because to your point, chances are, it's just going to be more effective. It's going to make it probably less effective because to your point, chances are it's just going to be too much. Compliance is going to suffer and
you're probably not going to be able to stick to the plan. And it's probably going to be junk reps
too, right? I have the very same thing where the minimum effective dose is actually much lower. I
think that the big theme of this book is the journey to really good health or being in really good shape or eating
really nutritious foods is not what people are told. It's not because like, right, it is sensationalized
for effect because that's what gets likes. That's what gets attention. I call it out in the book
that as far as complicated and sophisticated as our brains are, They have some very, very fundamental faults. And one of the biggest one is that our brains react to novel or new information as if it is more effective.
So the area of our brain that then releases dopamine, that then drives our behavior,
will react to something that is just like, oh my goodness, I can't believe they're doing 100 sets
with more certainty that that will be effective than the person who's like, yeah, I'm doing 10 sets of like three exercises and that's it.
And you've heard of all of these exercises, too. They're not like Rube Goldberg contraptions.
And this goes to send you a diet, right? These like the diets that are going to just focus on
eating one food or remove one food like, oh, that has to be it. Our brains make us think that those
are more likely to be effective. But the funny thing about science is science is dependent on validity and reliability.
And that means things that are repeatedly tested over and over to give you a more likely outcome
to the point that it's almost like boring or simplified. So the things that are most likely
to be effective are the things that we are most likely to ignore. And the things that are less
likely to be effective or not be effective at all are the things that we are most likely to ignore. And the things that are less likely to be effective or not be effective at all are the things that we are more likely to pay
attention to. And this doesn't just apply to the beginner. This applies to the person who has been
training for a while and trying to get to the next level of their fitness, build a little more muscle,
lose another five or 10 pounds of fat, nothing dramatic, right? It's like you said, it's not
IFBB stage where when you get to those highest levels, right, the sacrifice becomes much more significant because what you are trying to achieve, it's such rarefied
air.
But for the person who wants to be lean or healthy or fit or muscular or strong, the
minimum effective dose is so much less.
And we're oftentimes applying plans for a goal that we don't even want to achieve.
And by doing that, we tell ourselves we can't be healthy
because we think that's the only way, right? And it becomes this self-fulfilling prophecy where
you become empathetic because you remember the times that you failed or you remember the time
that you went on the extreme 39-day detox and you lost all this weight. And then you go off and
start eating food like a normal human and then you gain all the weight back. And instead of being, wow, I gained a lot of weight in that period after the detox,
more than I would have normally gained at any time.
You think, oh, the detox worked.
Look how much weight I've lost, right?
It's a very manipulative situation where we look at the success and don't realize that
right was the bright, shiny object.
But it was deception.
It's sucking us in because it gives
you just enough success to believe it works as opposed to realize like that was the problem
because the aftermath, the rebound was so much more extreme, so much more worse than you ever
would have been. Like there's research that I show in the book that people who will go on these
extreme diets over the course of a year or a course two years end up gaining more weight than
people who don't diet at all. And the reason is simple. When they go on the plan,
they lose more weight. But when they go off the plan, they gain more weight. So the net amount
of weight gain is more significant than the net amount of weight gain of someone who does nothing.
The average person only gains one to three pounds per year. It's rarely more than that. The problem
is that happens yearly from the time you're about 20 to 40. So you wake up at one weight in 20 and
you wake up at 40 and you might be 20 to 60 pounds heavier. And you're like, what the hell? And then
you want to lose it in four weeks and you do something extreme. And then you end up gaining
back more weight and you just think your metabolism is broken or that you're too old or you can't do
it. And that's the vicious cycle. I call it like the dieting cycle of hell, where we put people in
this spin cycle and from one diet to the next. You think that the diet is different,
but it's actually the same exact manipulation. You blame one thing. You follow an extreme. That
extreme isn't sustainable. You break down, you get off of it. You gain back more weight than you
would have. You then feel bad because you gain that weight back and you eat even worse. Get
yourself in a bigger hole, feel more desperate, decide to try a new diet, and repeat the same thing again.
And this is the repetitive cycle that I want to stop more than anything. It's not about telling
you there's a specific way to eat. I have the ways that I like to eat, but I'm pretty diet agnostic
because the researcher is pretty certain that a lot of different diets work, right? I don't care
if you're vegan or you're carnivore or whatever type of dietary tribe you apply to. I like looking
at what these different methods of eating have in common,
because what we know is the people who can follow the diets for the longest period of time,
regardless of diet, see the most success, right?
And they've tested it.
There was like the diet Super Bowl.
They looked at zone versus low fat versus low carb, right?
There's five different diets.
And all of them had the exact same result,
just dependent on how long
someone was able to stay on a diet. So how do you give people the tools to pick the right diet for
them? Stick to that plan, not catastrophize and not fall into that dieting circle of hell. We're
constantly doing plans that leave them worse off than they would have been if they never would
have followed it in the first place. If you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere and if you want to help me do more
of it please do check out my sports nutrition company legion because while you don't need
supplements to build muscle to lose fat to get healthy the right ones can help and that's why
over 400 000 discerning folk now have chosen legion over 400 000 customers i think that's
pretty cool and people also like
us because we use natural ingredients, nothing artificial, nothing chemical. We use clinically
effective ingredients and doses, actual science-backed ingredients with science that you
can verify yourself. And we have a no-hassle money-back guarantee. And if all that is not
enough for you to head over to buylegion.com, B-U-I-Legion.com and check out our wares, we also are holding our big July 4th sale.
And how that works is BOGO 50% site-wide. So buy one, get one 50% off site-wide. Everything that
we have plus a free $20 gift card, a store gift card on orders over $99. And so that means you can save
upward of 30 to 35% when you factor in the BOGO 50 plus the $20 rebate, so to speak, the gift card
that you can use toward anything else in our store. And so if you like saving money on all
natural science-based sports supplements like protein powders, pre-workout
and post-workout supplements,
fat burners, multivitamins,
joint support, fish oil,
and many more.
Skedaddle on over to buylegion.com now
and save big before we run out of stock
of at least a thing or two,
which tends to happen with our site-wide sales.
And that's a good segue to a question
I wanted to ask you,
which is your take on,
quote unquote, for people doing meal planning in the book, because it's different than what
many people listening think when they hear meal plan, which is more the lifestyle bodybuilders
meal plan. Maybe you could say it's like at that tier where you're being very specific about the
things that you're eating, and you've probably spent a period of time weighing and measuring
those things.
You understand what portions look like, blah, blah, blah, which I fully endorse for certain
under certain circumstances.
It certainly can work, but I like that you're sharing maybe what I would call an undercut
to that level of rigor or involvement, at least, because it
takes a fair amount of work to make that work. Yeah. So there are a couple of things here,
right? And I'm all about like what is sustainable and what is doable. And some people will thrive
in those environments where they weigh and measure. And I do think just like you, for some people
who feel like they have no control whatsoever, it can be helpful just for a couple of days,
like two to three. Yeah. I've said that many times. Just do it for a period because I'm sure you've heard from these people.
I hear from for years and years of people, they're actually a little bit surprised.
It does help them kind of recalibrate their even their idea of what a proper portion of
food is.
They just had no idea.
What does a portion of what does 100 calories of peanut butter actually look like? Like, oh, shit.
And they're not alone. Like literally the opening line of the book is like, you are not alone,
because I think we don't have these conversations because a lot of us just end up feeling bad.
Right. We've all had the friend who did like the exact same diet or workout as us and they got
better results. And we're like, oh, what is wrong with me? Right. And I think like having these
conversations are so important. Research has shown that the average person underestimates how much they eat by 60
percent and they overestimate how many calories they burn during exercise by 40 percent. That is
a terrible combination. Right. You're not doing it on purpose. You just don't know. So for some
people, they need to do that. And I give kind of rules of thumb without meeting a scale to be able
to better recognize portions of food because it's hard. Like no, no one's taught this, right? You shouldn't be ashamed of like not
knowing how much a portion of food is because when does anyone learn this? My issue with meal plans
is that it leads to the screw up mindset, right? So if like you end up getting in a routine and
building a meal plan, that's not the problem. My problem is the dependency that I typically see
where someone is given a meal plan and this is it.
This is the end all be all.
And if I stray from this, it's suddenly like,
oh no, A, I failed, right?
So it gets into that catastrophizing
or B, the moment they're at a restaurant,
the moment they're on vacation,
the moment they have to do something,
we're like, they ran out of food
they didn't expect to have.
And it's like, oh no, if this isn't on my meal plan, we panic, right?
Or we think that we can't do it.
And I think the most important thing any of us can do is empower people to be more in
control so that in any environment they feel that they can thrive.
They shouldn't feel that they are dependent on such a strictly regimented plan that there
is no leeway.
I would much rather teach people to understand how to look at foods.
And I give a meal plan in the book. And I admit, I tell people I hate meal plans because I don't
like the dependency. But I know that people like examples. So I say, do not use this as a template.
Use this as an example. And let me show you how you could sub out almost infinite foods. Because
the key thing here is to pick the foods that you enjoy and plug them in here. Because a big part
of effectively eating is satisfaction. People need to learn to eat in a way where they're satisfied
and satisfaction takes on two forms. Satisfaction is A, the enjoyable part of picking foods that
you love, some that are healthy and some that might not be healthy, right? Dessert or takeout.
And satisfaction is also, again, a psychological aspect because hunger is more psychological than
physiological. We have a satiety center in our
stomach that when we eat, we'll send a signal up to our brain to tell us that we are full.
Now, a funny thing happens when we lose weight, right? The hormones change in our body in a way
that like actually make us hungrier because we want to return to the weight that we were previously
at. So a big part of creating sustainable weight loss is learning how to eat in a way that your
brain gets satisfied, giving you the foods that are more likely to make you feel full so that as your body recalibrates,
because it will, it's called metabolic adaptation, your body will eventually recalibrate so you're
not hungry all the time. But at first, when you lose weight, and if you lose a lot of weight,
your body makes you more hungry. So you need to learn to eat in a way where you feel more
satisfied so your brain isn't working against your body because your body wants to adjust.
It just takes some time. So by not
being dependent on meal plans and having more agency and having more freedom, I've found that
people are less likely to go off the rails, freak out, think they screw up because they know that
this one plan isn't the end all be all. So I'm all for people creating meal plans as part of the
routine. I'm against them having that dependency because I think that's where so much of the spiraling can occur that
happens to us, right? Like when we are in absence of the thing that we think is our roadmap,
but the roadmap is actually like within us all. It's a different shift in terms of knowing that
like you can control what you eat and you don't just have to eat a certain way or you don't just
have to eat exactly what Mike eats or what Adam eats because that's a misnomer we eat the
things that we eat because they work for us and if either of us had to follow the plan of someone
else it probably wouldn't work you know arnold schwarzenegger wrote the forward of my book and
i think the favorite part of the forward is towards the end where he says you know i wanted
to be the world's greatest bodybuilder and still eat cherry pie and kaiser schnarn which is his
favorite you know austrian dessert that his mom would make. And a lot of people find that like
counterintuitive, but like Arnold loved food and still does. And, you know, there was then
compensation that he had to make in terms of how he trained and the other things that he would eat.
But he's like, we all strive in some way, shape or form for a healthy balance. And balance for him
was cherry pie and kaiserschnarrn. Balance for me might be like eating something else. Balance for you might be that.
But the idea that we have to follow a plan for tea that doesn't allow for some of that
personalization is where we go wrong.
Because I think the future of everything in health is learning not only how to do what
is good for your body, but how to do what's good for your body and then personalize it
so you can do it in a way where you do not want to quit.
And that is the goal for everyone.
It's not being perfect. It's getting that way where you do not want to quit. And that is the goal for everyone. It's not being perfect.
It's getting that way where you know the small iterations, the small variations that make
that work for you.
And that's enough.
And to that end, you share in the book several tools for dieting.
Like I have a list here.
So one is creating meal boundaries.
Another one is prioritizing protein and fiber, adding a plus one.
You don't have to go through all of them, but there are, are there a few of these tools that you want to share with people listening? Maybe the few that
you think might be very useful. I put this into, into use right away and it can make a big
difference. Yeah. The easiest one that's the hardest for people to do is the one that was
going to follow. I think it's to number four, which is take 20 minutes. And I mentioned this
because we just talked about how hunger is a connection between your stomach and your brain. And it's not a speed highway, right? Like
the average person takes eight minutes to eat a meal. And then what happens is they're still
hungry and they eat more. And then like an hour later, they're like, oh, I overate. I'm so full.
And a lot of this is you don't give your body enough time to send that signal to your brain
saying I'm full. I ran a test group of 500 people when I wrote this book
to put them through the program.
It's one of the things you learn from writing books.
Like you better have people test this stuff
to make sure they can do it and you get their feedback
and that it makes sense.
The hardest thing for people to do was to take 20 minutes.
And it's not just taking the 20 minutes,
it's slowing down and paying attention
because most of us don't pay attention when we eat.
We're working on our computer, we're scrolling on our phones
and this plays a role as well.
There's been studies that looked at what happens when people
pay attention to the food on their plate, as opposed to it being blinded, where they just
can't see what they're eating. And the people who can't see what they're eating, even though the
food was the same on both plates, end up eating more than the people who are paying attention,
because your eyes are also helping your brain figure out, this is enough food. So by slowing
down your meal, by paying more attention to what you're eating,
you end up eating significantly less. I love the, you know, the type of behavioral changes
that are like so small and not so hard, but they kind of have like an exponential improvement.
Because the other thing that happens when we're not being mindful of what we're eating
ends up increasing cravings because we actually don't enjoy the food. We talk about the aspect
of like satisfaction. So like slowing down is so simple and it sounds ridiculous, but it is incredibly effective.
And it's also really, really difficult for most people to do because it's so different than how
many people eat. And then the meal boundary one, I think is interesting for people because I think
it gets conflated or confused with intermittent fasting. I'm not against intermittent fasting.
I used to do it for many, many years. I think many of the benefits are overstated.
But my favorite thing about it is a great tool to create parameters on what I would
call open kitchen, closed kitchen.
So the boundaries are less about how much time you have to feast or fast.
I think that's overstated.
The boundaries are more that a lot of us do mindlessly eat because we have so much food
abundance.
And it doesn't matter if it's like six o'clock in the morning or 11 o'clock at night.
If the food is there, we're probably going to eat it because a lot of times we eat out
of boredom or out of habit.
And I referenced one study where it's one of those days that you have to look at like
twice because it doesn't make any sense.
But what they did was they didn't give people any dietary guidelines and they had them go
ahead and move their breakfast up an hour and a half and move their dinner up an hour and a half. There was no fasting program or anything, just created a
start time of eating in an end time. And the people not only lost significant amount of weight,
they kept it off because that became the open kitchen, closed kitchen. And I tell people,
do the same type of thing. You can choose where the boundaries are. I suggest moving your first
meal up two to three hours if possible and move the last
meal two to three hours before you go to bed because eating too close to bed can disrupt
sleep.
Disrupted sleep then can make you eat more and it becomes the domino effect of, oh man,
like you didn't realize it, but having that meal actually had an impact on what you're
going to eat the day after the day after the day after.
So by just creating these boundaries, you know, if it's after that time and every once in a while you eat it, don't worry about it. You didn't screw it up, right? That's the day after. So by just creating these boundaries, you know, if it's after that time,
and every once in a while you eat it, don't worry about getting screwed up, right? That's that's the
whole idea, like the aberration, the things that happen infrequently, we don't need to act like
they're happening all the time, we don't need to make a big deal out of it. But by creating these
boundaries, it naturally pushes us towards better behaviors, naturally will improve sleep time,
wake time naturally will help us eat less because
we just know that like, oh, this isn't the time that I eat, just as they've seen in research that
when people create a start time and a stop time to their workday, their happiness and their stress
and their burnout goes down. And the job didn't change. The people they work with didn't change.
All that changes. They actually put a boundary. I'm like, I'm not answering email at 1030 at night because then I'm on all the time.
And if we think we're on all the time with our eating, it's, you know, it becomes problematic and it becomes too easy to overeat when there's no need to eat.
overstressed without meal boundaries, even when they're trying to be meticulous with planning or tracking their calories because of this point, especially if they're trying to track on the go,
because now they're constantly looking at, okay, how many calories do they have left?
And they're trying to think, what are they going to want to eat when? But what if at 1030,
they actually want to have that snack? So maybe they shouldn't eat that now, or they do eat it
now. And then it comes and then they only have 50 calories left, but 50 calories isn't really enough for anything. So I think that is a great tip for people,
whether they are brand new and just focusing on really what we're talking about is developing a
healthy relationship with food, or if they're more experienced and are wanting to accomplish
something that does require, let's say, a more rigorous approach to eating.
And I think you would agree that if a guy or a gal wants to go from lean to very lean and they
want to stay there for whatever reason, I think most of those people would probably be happier
if they just had a bit more body fat. But if they want to do it, maybe it's for a photo shoot or
whatever, then you can get there with just a rules based approach.
But there is a point where you probably are going to have to at least do some audits of whatuggle your calories and macros every day over the course of many, many hours that change every day.
stress adds up to become problematic, right? Like the more people are stressing about this,
the more this is going to affect all of their behaviors. And it's easy to think that these are just tips and habits and tricks for beginners. But I think that these tools are actually the
ones that give you the most leverage when you try to achieve the highest level of fitness.
You know, I've had
the privilege of working with big name actors and athletes and celebs, people who many considered
some of the fittest people in the world. And what I found is that the foundation of their plans
are these tools and they know how to manipulate them and adjust them in a way so they can continue
making progress because the most effective tools are the ones that
have multiple uses no matter what the goal is and i think like the idea of eating well or exercising
more often is these are habits that require mastery and mastery is about like building these
tools that you could sharpen when you do anything whatsoever and i think people misunderstand
oftentimes the goal of you know we'll give fat loss as an example. The goal of fat loss is to be at a place where you can eat as much as possible and still lose
weight. And then when things stall out, make slight adjustments to keep it going down. Most
people artificially started a place where they want to lose so fast that once the weight loss
stalls, they don't have any room to make any adjustments, right?
Because they've already cut everything out as opposed to taking the opposite approach.
How do I learn to eat in a way where I'm still feeling pretty satisfied and I'm achieving
my goals?
And then when it finally stalls out, I have plenty of room to continue to make adjustments.
And that's a great place to be because most people, again, under or I think they underestimate
what it is that they need to do in order to start seeing changes and you want to have plenty gas in
the tank plenty of leeway to keep on making tweaks people making adjustments so you can keep on seeing
results great point and one more question i have for you and then i want to be mindful of your time
it'll be coming up on an hour but you've mentioned making takeout work, making highly processed food work.
We do live in this food environment that contains a lot of these foods. For some people, simply not
eating them is an option. Fine. If someone listening, if you're one of those people,
I mean, I'm one of those people. I don't really care to eat those types of foods,
maybe a little bit here and there, but I'm not most people. And I recognize that that's not an option for most people. And you do give some great advice
in the book on how do you make these foods work? How do you go out and eat in restaurants that you
like to eat in? That doesn't mean you like to go eat a Caesar salad with low-fat Caesar dressing and grilled chicken breast.
Like, you want to eat food that you like.
It needs to be part of a sustainable lifestyle.
Yeah, I think some of the favorite parts people have of the book are where I teach people
to eat takeout at the top most 50 popular restaurants and things like that.
I do call out that I don't believe in removing any individual food because I know that life
happens.
And when you tell people that, even if we know we shouldn't catastrophize, we do.
The goal is to cook more. The goal is to eat more food, you know, foods that are more nutritious.
And the goal is to know that if you when you eat those foods that aren't, it's OK,
as long as it's not very often. But I point out that the food that you probably want to
be most wary of are the ultra processed foods. And it's important to know the difference between the ultra-processed and any other processing, right?
Many very healthy foods are processed.
Beans are processed.
Olive oil is processed.
So all processed foods get lumped together.
Like if a food has been chopped up, that's actually processing, like by definition.
Right.
There are so many foods that are processed or canned,
Right. There are so many foods that are processed or canned, and it is very, very dangerous and very misleading for us to vilify all of those foods. What we need to be aware of are these foods that have unnatural amounts sensational. The type of foods that should fill us up don't. And I think it's less problematic. The ones that you would
normally expect ultra processed foods can be things like baked goods, right? Like cookies
and brownies and cakes. Most people know that's not good for you. If you have that once or twice
a week, it's okay. It's not a problem. The more dangerous things are when you have breads or pasta
sauces that, you know, have
10, 20 grams of sugar and you've got the extra salt.
And like what this does is when you add it to pasta, which could be a normal meal, it
can make you insatiable.
We found that when people are eating these ultra processed foods compared to less processed
foods, they just eat more.
And it's crazy when when they people there's this one amazing study by Kevin Hall, NIH
researcher, takes two groups of people.
The macros are equal on these things, but one are going to be less processed foods and
one's going to be ultra processed.
They're eating like Chef Boyardee.
Again, macros are equal.
And all they say is just like eat till you're full.
So technically, if you're eating the same macros, right, protein, carbs, fats, you would
imagine they're going to eat the same amount.
But the people in the ultra processed food ate on average 500 calories more and gained about a pound more per week. And then the crazy
part is because you had two different groups when they switch positions, when the people eating the
ultra process went to the less processed and the people eating less processed went to the ultra
processed. Now those people who are eating less processed food lost weight and started eating less
and the people who switched to the ultra processed started eating more just like the prior group.
And you see while they haven't figured it all, something is going on
here that's making you eat more. So if the majority of your diet ends up being these ultra-processed
foods and you're wondering, why am I always so hungry? Why am I struggling? It's probably the
ultra-processed food. And it doesn't mean you can't eat these foods. It means swapping them
out for better alternatives. I'm not going to rail against bread. Just like don't have a bread
that's loaded with salt, sugar, and fat, because that's
not what should be in bread, right?
Same thing with a pasta sauce.
If you're going out to eat at a restaurant, be mindful of things where they're probably
adding extra oil, extra sugar, extra salt, and you can make adjustments.
My favorite adjustment at takeout is just telling them, and you're so specific because
you can do it on the apps now, just tell them I want a quarter of the oil. A quarter. So I did this as an experiment
as a fun thing. And the dishes will show up. They won't even look the same, right? Because so many
of these dishes are just like caked in so much oil and the oil isn't necessarily the problem.
The problem is that oil is so calorically dense that you are taking in so many more calories that
are necessary and it doesn't even make the dishes taste better. So are they actually going to only use one quarter of
the all? Probably not, but they're going to one quarter is so specific that you use significantly
less. The dish looks different. The dish tastes better if you're asking me. And it's not going
to necessarily like throw your diet for a loop unnecessarily. And there are a lot of these like
small adjustments where takeout is now designed in a way
that makes it super easy for you to just request
whatever you want with no guilt or shame or whatever it is.
And like you said, I'm not telling everyone
to eat salads with low fat dressing.
No, because then you're still gonna crave these foods.
The whole idea of allowing yourself to eat these
as part of the plan is that the research shows
when you don't
completely restrict the things that you desire, you end up craving it less. And the opposite then
is true. There's a study that reference in the book for the journal obesity. They told people
for one day and one day only don't eat these foods. And what happens naturally, people ate
133% more calories. All they had to do was just one day,
you had one job and you couldn't do it.
That's just how we're wired.
So if we plan in some room for this,
it doesn't even mean you need to eat those foods.
It just means that when you do,
if you have the quota,
you know that it's not a big deal.
You know, the rest of your meals should be okay.
And it is a practical and sustainable way
that when life happens,
you're stressed, you're busy, or like you just want to go out with friends.
There's no reason to think that that can't coexist within a very, very healthy lifestyle, being super fit and achieving your goals.
And what people tend to find over time, too, when you create this leeway, a lot of times you realize that the things that you thought once served, you no longer do.
Right. There was a time where I used to eat dessert more often and I allowed myself to eat dessert and now I crave it less. There's a time where I needed to
eat takeout more often because I was traveling so much and I came back and it became a habit.
And then once I got back on track with things, not from this extreme behavior, but with one that had
flexibility, I felt like, oh, I don't feel as good. I don't desire this. I don't want it. So it's
funny what happens when you give yourself room and freedom to do things. It's
very easy for you to assess what makes you feel best as opposed to when you're told you can't do
things. And then it pushes you to something that fundamentally might not be great for you because
your brain is just being told like, I want what I can't have. Don't create that construct where
your brain works against you. Create a construct where your brain will work with you. And that's when you won't screw up. Great message. And something else that works
well for me, and I know it's worked well for others is when deciding, so you're going to
take out, you're going to go to a restaurant, eat whatever you want to eat, make sure that you can
eat enough of it to be satisfied. And I, in my experience, it's been a person, just an individual
thing, like take ice
cream, just something that maybe everybody can relate to. Yeah, ice cream is delicious. But for
me, eating 100 calories, 200 calories of ice cream is not satisfying at all. I need to eat at least
half of the pint, if not the whole pint to really feel satisfied. Whereas if I eat 200 calories of dark chocolate, that's very
satisfying to me. And the same thing would apply to non-dessert foods as well that you can, I wanted
to ask you about the pizza rule and what that is. Because for me, for example, pizza, yeah, I like
pizza, but I have to be, let's just say in the the mood to eat at least a thousand calories of pizza
or I'm just not going to be satisfied.
I'd rather just eat something else.
Yeah, pizza is one of those ultra processed foods is to live it and delicious.
I'm Chicago and I love pizza.
To me, the pizza rule is if you're going to have it, it's usually like a one time a week
thing.
And if you do it, you just got to limit the number of slices to like two or three.
And that's why I don't often eat pizza. Cause I'm like, you know,
two slices of pizza. I'm just not very, I'm not getting the, the psychological satisfaction. I'd rather take the 500 and 600 calories and put it into something else. It's more satisfying.
Yeah. And I think the overall point that I make for people is find the foods that you enjoy most
and make sure those are a part of the plan. Everything else that you find enjoyable, but it's not like you crave it or you love it.
It's just something that you typically eat.
Those are the things that you're going to sacrifice because then you are not operating
from a position of scarcity.
Most plans tell you, here's all the things that you love, remove it.
No, I say take an assessment.
I talk about the idea of inversion.
Inversion means like starting at the end and asking yourself, we're six months from now and you have failed at
your goal. Why? And a lot of times you're gonna be like, well, yeah, I loved eating chocolate and I
thought I could have no chocolate. So I just ended up eating chocolate every single night. Right? So
I'm like, okay, let's not remove chocolate. But like, and what's one other food that you love?
Let's not remove that. And then everything else we're going to try and limit or not eat very often because
while you are good, find them enjoyable because they're enjoyable foods. They're not something
that like you feel is needed in the diet. So by giving people some of the things that they enjoy
most and then removing the other, that is the idea of expanding the comfort zone, right? There's some
of the familiar, so it's not like everything is off limits and there's some restrictions so that
you're not just like eating with no boundaries whatsoever. And this combination tends to be very, very effective. And it also makes you more aware
of the things you truly enjoy eating. So you can like build a plan around those rather than feeling
forced into certain foods that, you know, you would never follow or enjoy in the first place.
Totally agree. And lots of great information for people listening. If you liked
this discussion, I think you're going to like the book. So you should definitely pick up a copy. You
can't screw this up. Thank you again, Adam, for taking the time. And why don't we wrap up with
where people can find you, find your work. If there's anything else that you want them to know
about, like the podcast project you're working on or anything else. Yeah. So you can find me on
social media at at born fitness, the book you can get at any, you
know, anywhere they're selling books, or you can just go to can't screw this up.com.
It's a funny URL because you can't screw this up.
And yeah, I also, you know, every day I put out an email and newsletter with Arnold
Schwarzenegger was part of Arnold's pump club.
So it's just our way to help people be a little bit healthier and happier. It's all free. And it's just the daily email is a couple, three, four
blurbs about what's going on in the world of health and how to make sense of it all. So if you don't
want to buy a book or spend the $20, which I think 20 years of knowledge packed in for $20 is a pretty
good value. You can always just get information for free at Arnold's Pump Club at the podcast
or from me on social. Just to comment quickly on that point on books, one of the great things about many books,
especially books that are born of many years of in the trenches experience that are written by
true subject matter experts is the only, as a rule, the only reason, like the reason you wrote this book is not to make money.
You're probably going to make some money, but if you figure the amount of work that goes into
creating a good book, the economics don't quite make sense. People like us write books because
we want to help. That's actually why we're doing it. And that's why I still even write books. Do I
quote unquote need to keep writing books?
No, I like to do it as an activity and I like to help others.
And it's I like the medium and that's why I continue to do it.
So, you know, whereas if I were selling a thousand dollar diet course, maybe there would be some economic motives that are more prominent. But in the case of books, it just occurs to me,
you know, as I like to read and I read widely that it's amazing the amount that you can learn
from people who otherwise you might never be able to, you could never even get 10 minutes of their
time yet. You could just spend $20 and just get a download of the last 20 years of their life.
And they're sharing everything that they can to try to help you succeed.
I just, I love that.
Yeah, definitely a passion progress, passion project and a legacy piece
because yeah, you put it out there so that it lasts and it helps people.
Yep.
Well, anyways, thanks again for taking the time to do this.
It was a great discussion.
Thanks so much, Mike.
I appreciate it.
Well, I hope you liked, Mike. I appreciate it. makes it a little bit more easily found by other people who may like it just as much as you.
And if you didn't like something about this episode or about the show in general, or if you have ideas or suggestions or just feedback to share, shoot me an email, mike at muscleforlife.com,
muscleforlife.com, and let me know what I could do better or just what your thoughts are about maybe what you'd like to see me do in the future.
I read everything myself.
I'm always looking for new ideas and constructive feedback.
So thanks again for listening to this episode
and I hope to hear from you soon.