Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Alan Aragon on Artificial Sweeteners, Refeeds, Protein Timing, and More!
Episode Date: June 8, 2020This was a fun episode for me, because my guest is a fitness “godfather” of sorts who has greatly influenced my own work and career, as well as probably the most-requested guest from listeners. I�...��m talking about the inimitable Alan Aragon, who has been at the forefront of the evidence-based fitness movement for over a decade now and has helped countless fitness enthusiasts, professional athletes, and top coaches. So, it’s a treat to finally get him on the show! If you’re not familiar with Alan, he’s a nutrition researcher and educator and creator of the first-of-its-kind research review in 2008, called AARR (Alan Aragon’s Research Review). He also has a true talent for translating science into practical application, making it work for normal people with real lives and not just subjects in a lab. In this episode, I pepper Alan with a smattering of questions that I often receive from my readers, ranging from artificial sweeteners’ effects on weight loss and the gut microbiome, to the benefits of cyclical dieting and refeeds, to protein timing and “hyperfeeding.” So, if any of those topics interest you, or you just want to hear from one of the fitness industry’s finest educators, tune in! 11:28 - Can artificial sweeteners affect weight loss? 14:47 - What is scaccharine’s effect on the gut microbiota? 22:38 - Will artificial sweeteners affect somebody that is already healthy and exercising? 49:07 - What are your thoughts on cyclical dieting? 49:07 - What are your thoughts on carbohydrate and fat intake? 53:08 - What are your thoughts on protein timing? 1:05:23- What is your general recommendation for servings of protein a day? 1:09:42 - Where can people find you and your work? --- Mentioned on The Show: Alan Aragon’s Research Review: alanaragon.com Alan Aragon’s Instagram: www.instagram.com/thealanaragon Shop Legion Supplements Here: legionathletics.com/shop/ --- Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: www.legionathletics.com/signup/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey friends, welcome to Muscle for Life.
I'm Mike Matthews.
Thank you for checking out this episode, which was a fun one for me because my guest is a
fitness godfather of sorts who has greatly influenced my own work and career and is probably
the most requested guest from my listeners, somebody who I have been trying
to get on the podcast for some time. And here we are, and I'm talking about Alan Aragon, the one
and only, the guy who has been at the forefront of the evidence-based fitness movement for over
a decade now and who has helped countless fitness enthusiasts, professional
athletes, and top coaches get into the best shape of their lives. And so it's a treat to get Alan on
the show. And in case you're not familiar with him and why I'm singing his praises, Alan is a
nutrition researcher and educator, as well as the creator of the first of its kind research
review, which he launched in 2008. And it's called AARR, Alan Aragon's Research Review.
And this was the first of its kind. There are a number of these research reviews out there now,
and some very good ones like Mass, for example, which is the creation of Greg Knuckles, Eric
Helms, Mike Sordos, and Eric Trexler, as well as others. But
Allen's was the first, and he really has a talent for translating science into practical application,
making this stuff work for us normal people with real lives, as opposed to just subjects in a lab.
And you'll really get a sense of that in this episode
where I pepper Alan with a smattering of questions
that I am receiving from readers and followers,
ranging from artificial sweeteners effects
on weight loss and the gut microbiome
to the benefits of cyclical dieting and refeeds
to protein timing and hyperfeeding and more.
So if any of those things sound interesting to you, or if you just want to hear from one of the
fitness industry's finest educators, this episode's for you. Also, if you like what I am doing here
on the podcast and elsewhere, definitely check out my sports nutrition company, Legion, which thanks
to the support of many people like you is the leading brand of all natural sports supplements
in the world. And we're on top because every ingredient and dose in every product is backed
by peer-reviewed scientific research. Every formulation is 100% transparent. There are
no proprietary blends, for example. And everything is naturally sweetened and flavored. So that means
no artificial sweeteners, no artificial food dyes, which may not be as dangerous as some people would
have you believe, but there is good evidence to suggest that having many servings of artificial
sweeteners in particular every day
for long periods of time may not be the best for your health. So while you don't need pills,
powders, and potions to get into great shape, and frankly, most of them are virtually useless,
there are natural ingredients that can help you lose fat, build muscle, and get healthy faster,
and you will find the best of them
in Legion's products. To check out everything we have to offer, including protein powders and
protein bars, pre-workout, post-workout supplements, fat burners, multivitamins,
joint support, and more, head over to www.buylegion.com, B-U-Y legion.com. And just to show how much I appreciate my podcast peeps,
use the coupon code MFL at checkout, and you will save 20% on your entire first order.
So again, if you appreciate my work, and if you want to see more of it, and if you also want
all natural evidence-based supplements that work, please do consider
supporting Legion so I can keep doing what I love, like producing more podcasts like this.
Alan Aragon is on my podcast. This is a cool moment for me. You're one of the first people
who turned me on to evidence-based fitness. your research review. I found it very early on.
And if you search your subscriber base, you won't find me because it was actually under the name of
someone who works with me, but it's still there. It's still active. It's a company, like a company
membership, you know what I mean? But no, so I found your work early on and really liked your
approach to interpreting research and explaining the
research in a way that I can understand. Because in the beginning, there's a learning curve to
getting into this stuff. And even if it's just the terminology alone and spending time in, I guess,
not the dictionary per se, but glossaries online and just learning how this space works. And your research review
has really helped me a lot right in the beginning. And then up until now, I've been able to get a lot
of answers myself. And I would say in some ways I've tried to pattern my own work on yours. So
I'm excited to pick your brain on some non Rona related stuff. I've been doing enough Rona content.
Let's just, let's do some
good old wholesome health and fitness stuff. Awesome, man. Well, thank you so much for
inviting me on. Really happy that my work has benefited you and good to know, man,
that you were there since some of the early days. So really appreciate it, Mike.
Yeah, absolutely. So I have just, it's kind of just a collection of questions that I get asked fairly often,
things that you have written about and have covered in probably, I don't know, the last
year or so, maybe even six, whatever, six, eight months of your research review.
And these are things that I've touched on here and there, maybe written a little bit
about or spoken a little bit about, but not had a
definitive answer of, Hey, currently here's what the weight of the evidence says about this.
And that would include also you have the scientific evidence, but then also given your
experience, having worked with so many people and you continue to work with people, high level
athletes, that has a lot of value as well, because there is something to be said for the anecdotal side of it and having firsthand
experience dealing with people, even if it's just what works best in the real world, because
sometimes, and I've spoken and written about this and really want people to understand that
sometimes what's scientifically optimal is not optimal for an individual. Like the best
potential training program, for example, as far as the science of muscle building goes,
is not the best for Joe. If Joe doesn't like it, for example, he just doesn't enjoy it
and he has to struggle to comply. And so I think there's you, and that's what I've liked also about
your work since the beginning is you're coming at this, not just in an ivory tower looking at research, but you also are
in the trenches. You're at the coalface working with people. And so you know how to translate
the research to practical advice that works for people who, in my case, a lot of people in my
orbit are people who have jobs and
they have families and they have lives to live and they care about their fitness, but it's not
the only thing, you know? There's a lot of real world practical application missing from the
research community, from the ivory tower lab coat community. And thankfully i got my start in fitness training and i've
maintained that and so and i'm seeing a lot of finally the guys who've been in the trenches
get their formal training their degrees and then finally their jobs as researchers
finally begin to put out studies that reflect what is going on in the trenches and
being able to answer some of these questions that we've had for many generations. And so it is an
exciting time for research. We've got a little bit derailed as of the past couple months,
got slightly derailed, but it is an exciting time in research as far as fitness and sports
nutrition, even some of the clinical nutrition side as well.
I agree.
I agree.
Even on the training side, starting to see better programs used in studies, for example,
which is nice because again, it's more reflective of something that you as an actual practitioner
would recommend to a client.
something that you as an actual practitioner would recommend to a client. And as far as the pause goes, I'm via my supplement company, my sports nutrition company, Legion funding a study
on creatine and DHT to give an answer. I'm doing with Tinsley, Grant Tinsley.
Oh yes. Grant. Yep.
Yep. And so it's going to be, yeah, yeah. Great guy and you know, good lab and something that
it doesn't have anything to
do with my supplement company. It's really just a way to give back something to the Evans-based
community that I've benefited a lot from. And so that's on pause temporarily.
Are you allowed to divulge much about that project? Because I'm pretty interested. I get a lot of questions about creatine's effect on DHT
and the connection to hair loss. And that is a truly gray area in the literature. So that's
really exciting to know that you may kind of fill that gap. So we'll see.
Yeah. I mean, we're just in the beginning stages, so there's not much to share on it
yet. And I actually haven't spoken. I would, I'd figure
is that we get it going and I was going to get Grant on the podcast to just let him break it
down. And so I'm actually not sure what he would or wouldn't want me to say. I didn't even ask
because I was just going to wait a bit, but it's a well-designed study and we're spending the money
that needs to be spent. I believe it's about $30,000 that I'm spending to get it done. It's either going to tend toward replication of the rugby study that caused the controversy or it's going to provide a good refutation of it. We'll see how it goes, but I think it'll put a lot of men at ease one way or another, right? So if we see it more toward replication,
then guys could be like, okay, then I didn't, I guess any guy who's worried about that male
pattern baldness, who's been staying away from creatine can be like, whew, I actually might've
made a good decision there. And if it is more of a refutation, then they can take their creatine
monohydrate without worrying. So I think it's a win-win either way.
can take their creatine monohydrate without worrying.
So I think it's a win-win either way.
Sure.
And on the other hand, you have the observation that, damn, all my most jacked friends are bald.
You'll kind of know that there may be something to that with the creatine use.
So yeah, you're right.
Yeah.
Or is it something else?
Right.
And especially all the jacked guys on Instagram, all the 40 plus jacked guys are bald.
Why is that?
Yeah, yeah.
Creatine.
Yeah. Yeah.
Really cool. I'm excited about the proceedings of that study. So keep me in the loop, man,
if you could.
Absolutely. All right. So let's switch gears here. And the first question that I want to give to you is something that I get asked fairly often. It's about artificial sweeteners. And this
is an ongoing controversy. I think there are a couple of points I'd like to get your take on. So let's
start with artificial sweeteners and weight loss. Because usually when people are asking me,
they're concerned that if they have, usually it's too much. I don't often hear from someone who's
worried about necessarily like a couple of sticks of gum per day, but it's if they have a couple diet Cokes maybe, or if they're using supplements
that are officially sweetened, is that going to get in the way of weight loss, whether it's in
a direct or even indirect way by maybe stimulating hunger or cravings for sweet things, for example?
That's a good question. And the answer to that has not really been very clear until recently. The general
answer to that is that artificial sweeteners, whether it be products that are artificially
sweetened or artificially sweetened beverages, diet sodas and such, generally speaking, they are not a threat to weight gain or fat gain.
You either see neutral to positive effects on weight loss with these products, which
is not too surprising since they're negligible in terms of their calories.
But then, of course, it's a legit question to ask, okay, do these things kind of prime
you for having a sweet tooth and make you crave the consumption of more sweets?
And that's a valid question.
And that's been investigated enough to the degree that we can say pretty confidently that, okay, well, that concern is not a threat.
Now, looking at artificial sweeteners as a singular entity, it's a mistake. And that's because a recent study that just came out within
the last year-ish, it compared the effects of four different conditions. And I believe my memory is
serving me right. Sucralose, aspartame, saccharin, and I'm forgetting the fourth one. The fourth one could have been the control condition being
either water or sucrose. Okay. Sucrose is just table sugar, just regular table sugar,
tasty sugar, calorie containing table sugar. So the comparison was done and they actually
found saccharin to encourage weight gain while the other artificial sweeteners being sucralose
and aspartame, those being the two most commonly used ones, those guys did not result in weight
gain, whereas the saccharin did. It either resulted in slight weight gain or prevention
of weight loss, whereas the other ones resulted in weight loss. So either way, there was some sort of unfavorable effect with saccharin. This was a human study.
It was well-controlled. I believe it was a crossover type study where all of the subjects
got a chance to undergo each of the treatments that they were comparing. So a, in quotes,
within subject design eliminates a lot of the
shortcomings of study designs that are just parallel arm. And then you can kind of think,
okay, well there's, you know, what have we crossed over, but then it's not possible.
But yeah, this one was a crossover design and highly controlled. And it hinted to the possibility
that artificial sweeteners are not created equal, especially when you're looking
in particular at saccharin. And these results corroborated a previous study that looked at
saccharin's effect on the gut microbiota. Which is one of the other things I wanted
to ask you about. So it's a natural segue into it then.
Yes. Yes. So they used saccharin out of all the
artificial sweeteners they could have chosen, which has limited external validity or the
non-jargony way of saying that it has limited real world relevance to be testing saccharin
because who the heck freaking uses saccharin, right?
Yeah. I was going to ask you, where would you even, I don't have any artificial sweeteners,
not because I'm afraid of them, but it's just not in, it's just not in my diet. You know,
I don't care about diet sodas and I'll maybe have some gum if it's around in the office or
something. But yeah, so that was gonna be my question is of course the ones that if I look
at some energy drinks, for example, I think it's usually sucralose, aspartame or ace K seem to be the
most common. Yeah. Those would be the common ones. Saccharin is present in, well, it used to be
most ubiquitous in a soft drink called tab TAB. And that was big in the late seventies, early eighties or something like that.
But yeah, Tab soda was the thing way back in the day. And it is still used in a product called
Sweet and Low. Oh, Sweet and Low. Okay. These are the little pink packets at your local greasy
spoon. Yeah. I was going to say, that's like a diner thing, right?
Yes, yes.
It's your local IHOP, Denny's, et cetera.
Those little pink packets is where you'll find.
Is it cheaper than Splenda?
Is that why?
Not necessarily.
It could be that there's just such a huge stockpile of it and there was a bit of a cancer scare
regarding saccharin back in the 80s or 90s or somewhat of a cancer scare. And it
got some bad, bad PR. And so people started backing off from saccharin. So my guess is that
they still just have a huge commercial stockpile of it and they still need to unload it. And
there's enough people out there who have an affinity toward that little pink packet.
So, I mean, that's the power of branding, right?
Oh yeah. Yeah, for sure. Sweet and low, baby.
You know, a funny little aside is, did you come across that company Brandless?
No, I haven't heard of it.
So it was a big direct consumer disruptive, one of these types of businesses, and they raised a
lot of money. I don't remember the number, but it was a lot. This was a big deal. I mean, brandless.com, you can imagine even what that
costs, right? It's a seven figure domain, I'm sure. And then the whole thing and the whole
concept of the brand was brandless, right? And you paid less, but there's no brand.
And so they're trying to take the counter position to branding and it was a complete failure. And
people, if you want to read about it, you can go read about it online. It was been reported about and the story's been broken down,
but it's just attesting it to the power of brand. It's one of those things you look back at,
you know, I'm sure the people that look back at retro spectively and they're like,
yeah, that was a pretty dumb idea actually. Cause there's such an overwhelming amount of
evidence that shows how much brand actually matters in
people's perception and how loyal people get to brands. Even if it's subconscious,
it's one of those things where it's almost like trying to create a product that just goes against
the dominant trend. We're trying to create a new trend that flies in the face of what's established.
Good luck. Maybe if you have $500 billion to
spend in advertising or something, you know, for over the next 20 years, you can try to shift
the predominant paradigm, I guess you could say in consumers' minds. But anyway, it just makes
me think of that, that that very well could be why saccharin is still a thing because they become
attached to the brand and they want their sweet and low. They don't want Splenda. Sure. They might even prefer the taste of it or the consistency or
whatever it might be. And really who knows about Suez et al a few years ago when they tested
saccharin at pretty high doses in rats and humans and saw that it caused some degree of disruption in the gut microbiota that led to impairments in
glucose control. So that was the issue with saccharin was its effect on the gut, which led to
a decreased capability to properly metabolize glucose. And so this effect was seen,
this was a short study, it was like a seven day study,
but they saw it in rats and they saw it in humans. And now with this other study that I just
mentioned, comparing sucralose, aspartame and saccharin and one other that I'm not remembering
at the moment, once again, it was saccharin that was kind of the bad guy of the lineup.
And I guess we can say pretty confidently that we can't look
at artificial sweeteners as a homogeneous or single entity. We have to kind of talk about
artificial sweeteners individually. And it appears that saccharin is not a good idea. And maybe
saccharin is the one that fulfills all the concerns of folks who are anti-artificial sweetener. Whereas the other ones,
we have not seen particularly bad stuff with things like stevia, sucralose, and aspartame.
Right. And stevia or stevia, however you pronounce it, that would be different though,
right? Because that's natural. I mean, it's obtained from a plant.
A part of me wants to say stevia, but I just can't. You know, it's like I'm wired to say stevia.
Like some people are wired to say tomato.
I have no idea why.
But yeah, yeah.
Stevia is in quotes more natural.
I mean, obviously it's processed to some degree, but it's not a chemical that's created in a lab.
Sure.
Sure.
Yeah.
I just checked Google.
Google says stevia.
So I'll stick to stevia.
You can stick to stevia though.
Nobody can use it.
It's okay.
Got it. says stevia so i'll stick to steva you can stick to stevia though nobody can it's okay got it because i was like am i have i been saying this wrong all along one of those moments you know okay you might change my behavior now from this point on but yeah no that makes sense and i have
heard and again this is a topic i haven't researched much on simply because it's something that's been on my list. It's not of much personal interest to me because I don't care. I don't consume them at all. And so I've looked into it lightly. Now I was having a conversation with Curtis Frank from examine, right? So he works former examine. Yeah, exactly. So the guy who did a lot of the original work, a lot of the highly technical stuff.
Yeah.
Brilliant guy.
Yeah.
He works with me in Legion.
He's been the guy who's been doing Legion's formulation since the beginning.
Holy crap.
So Legion is essentially, I give him all the credit.
Whenever people compliment me or say, oh, your formulations are so well put together.
I'm like, no, no, no, it's not me.
Here's Curtis.
And then also I have
to give credit to the other guys who work with him on the scientific advisory board. So that
includes James Krieger. It includes Menno Henselman, Spencer Adolsky, Eric Helms,
Danny Lennon, Brad Dieter. All those guys know so much more about supplementation than I do.
But I was talking with Curtis about artificial sweeteners just recently, because I was curious about what's your current take on it. And it was a short, just little blurb of a longer conversation.
So he didn't get even to that specific detail. So it might've been the saccharin that was the
issue. He had just said that his personal take on it is there's some evidence in vitro that,
again, he didn't specify that some artificial sweeteners can harm gut health. And for context,
this was a few months ago and had this conversation. So maybe something has changed since
then. What we don't know is in vivo. So if we just look at the in vitro research, it would indicate,
yeah, you have enough of these chemicals. It's probably not good for your gut.
But what if you do that now with a healthy person who actually eats well and they exercise and
they have good sleep hygiene, that effect may be irrelevant.
What's your thought on that?
The effects of saccharin that Suez, S-U-E-Z and colleagues saw wasn't humans.
It was obviously in vivo.
wasn't humans. It was obviously in vivo. It did occur pretty quickly over a seven-day period, but it still has limitations. Yeah. He actually probably was referring,
because in all the conversations that I've had with him about artificial sweeteners,
I don't know if saccharin really was part of it, probably because it's just so rare. Usually,
I've asked him, if I'm asking
him about artificial sweeteners, it's been about sucralose, ACE-K, and aspartame, the ones that
you would use in a supplement, for example, or people do drink in their energy drinks or whatever.
Yeah. I've kept a pretty good eye on those other sweeteners as well. And there's no
tangible health concerns about those things.
And that is Curtis's position. It's just like, that's where he's about those things. And that is Curtis's position.
It's just like, that's where he's at on it.
And this is something that, again, I want to put words in his mouth, but that's been
my understanding of his take on it.
Yeah.
And saccharin is what I would call almost commercially extinct because the market kind
of raged against it.
And now it's relegated to those little pink packets and I hop.
So, and once they run out, that might be it. So any saccharin fans out there that
it's days are numbered. You might want to get your own stash.
Collect it. Right. Yeah. Yeah.
If you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, definitely check out my sports nutrition company, Legion,
which thanks to the support of many people like you is the leading brand of all natural sports
supplements in the world. Let's move on to the next topic, which is cyclical dieting or
refeeding diet breaks. Those are not synonymous, but they all are about the same type of approach to dieting
where your calories are changing and your macros are changing on a set schedule. What are your
thoughts about that? Is there good evidence that doing that is good for, let's say when you're
cutting, is that going to help you lose fat faster, retain muscle? And what about when you're
lean bulking? Is it going to help or could it help you gain more muscle or less fat?
So really good questions.
Cyclical dieting or nonlinear dieting, as I've called it, it mainly benefits those who
are like basically two conditions.
Okay.
So it mainly benefits people who are in hypocaloric conditions.
So dieting conditions where you're eating less than you're burning for the purpose of
weight loss or fat loss.
And within those hypocaloric conditions, the time that nonlinear dieting can benefit most
is when you're pretty severely restricting carbohydrate.
So those are the two conditions, dieting and low
carbohydrate intake. And certainly those two combined. Other conditions such as, we'll take
the other end of the spectrum, hypercaloric conditions where you're consuming more calories
than you're burning and you're consuming a large amount of total daily carbohydrate,
then cyclical intakes, typically of either
total calories or carbohydrate or both, has a lot less usefulness.
So if we look at the example, the former example of somebody, let's imagine somebody is allotted
100 grams of carbohydrate or less per day.
Let's say they're going full keto per day, like 50 grams of carbs or less per day. Let's say they're going full keto per day,
like 50 grams of carbs or less per day. Over the long term, if this person is on a
rigorous training program, something intensive, something progressive, then they will benefit
from periodically, in quotes, carving up. And that would be because of a couple of reasons. First of all,
there is a psychological benefit to knowing that there are breaks throughout the course
of your diet. And if there are breaks throughout the course of seven days,
hey, you can make it. Anybody can diet for two to three days at a time, two to three to four days at a time. I mean, that's anybody can do that. But if you're going to put like a three month period in front of someone and say, okay, you're basically going to be killing yourself for three months straight, ready, set, go. you can reach a degree of diet fatigue or psychological fatigue of keeping carbohydrate
low and close to non-existent and just maintaining that. It can be done, but most people break
at somewhere between the four to six week point where they're just, God, I'm sick of this,
where subconsciously they'll start increasing the intake or even
consciously they'll binge and then they won't tell you as their trainer or their coach.
So cyclical dieting with periodic increases in carbohydrate intake under low carb conditions
and under hypocaloric conditions is an effective way to make sure that there's adherence.
So it's mainly a psychological benefit.
There's not enough evidence for us to say, yes, when you carb up, it elevates these metabolic
rate regulatory hormones that encourage or push the fat loss process forward.
There's not enough evidence for us to say that, but there's enough evidence for us to at least hypothesize that the main benefit
of cyclical dieting is behavioral, is adherence-based. Yeah, that makes sense. When I
first came across refeeds, and this was years ago, and the argument that was being made at the time,
and there was some research to suggest that may be the case, is that by carving up even just one day per week, you could raise
leptin levels enough to, if nothing else, make you feel better for a few days. But then as more
research came out, that doesn't seem to be the case necessarily, right? And there is something
to be said though, for diet breaks, even in that regard. So let's say we're saying, and you can
correct me if I'm wrong, but so what
if we're talking about a five to seven day period where you're bringing your calories back up to
somewhere around maintenance, maybe you go a little bit beneath your predicted maintenance,
because if you've lost a bit of weight, maybe you're burning a little bit less than certain
formulas would, would suggest, but you know, more or less bringing it back up to maintenance. And you're doing that mostly with carbs and you're doing it for several
days, probably a minimum of three days, maximum of maybe seven days. What are your thoughts on
that? And let's say, well, I'd be curious your thoughts in a low carb and then low-ish carb,
but normal like 40, 40, 20, or maybe 40, 30, 30, just a more balanced kind of standard bodybuilding cutting diet? It's a gray area. I'll start off with saying that because when you bring calories back up to
pre-dieting levels, and certainly when you bring carbs up to pre-dieting levels,
thyroid is going to go up. Leptin is going to go up. Resting metabolic rate will go up, but the fact of the matter is that the
increase in calories is always going to offset these increases in a hormone-mediated energy
expenditure. Oh, yeah, yeah. No, that, okay. I didn't even know that that's being claimed.
I'm not saying that it's going to, that somehow you're going to be able to continue losing fat while
eating at maintenance. I just mean that you're just going to feel better and you're going to
feel like your batteries are kind of recharged to go back into a deficit and be able to sustain it
ultimately and be able to comply better. And I'll talk about with people where let's say they have
a lot of weight to lose and I know that it's going to take this guy or this gal six months, let's say, to get to where they want to be. My recommendation
is not to just, yeah, let's just go six months straight. No, let's break this up. Maybe let's
go a couple of months and then let's take a break. There's the psychological component,
but then as my understanding is there's a bit of a physiological component too.
If we do take a long enough break that doesn't't not so long where they're kind of off the rails now, but just long enough to allow some of these positive adaptations to occur so
they can go back into the deficit and not feel too run down after many months, you know?
Yeah, definitely. Totally agreed with you on that. And interesting in practice,
when you're helping somebody diet down, I've found that one week's
worth of a diet break that I would define as a lifting off of the diet and gas pedal, where you
don't just cast caution to the wind. You don't just YOLO it and binge for a week, but you lift
off some of the, or actually most of the restrictions that you're normally putting
yourself through during a diet and you're eating close or at maintenance at pre-dieting
levels for a week.
This in and of itself, just not dieting for a week has a very beneficial effect psychologically
because you know it's within the plan.
You know you're going to gain one or two pounds. You know it's no big deal because most of it is going to be actually lean body mass. And at most, you might gain a pound of fat. Big deal. just regulating the, like you say, where in practice, like what I've done personally is I
would add, usually just, I would take a meal of my meal plan and I would just beef it up. You know,
I'd add, sometimes it would be eating more of the stuff that I'm already eating, which I like
anyway, or it would just be adding like, okay, let's say an afternoon snack when I'm cutting
would be a protein shake, just simple. Take some of my way,
mix it with water, drink it down. I might now have a protein shake plus an English muffin with some
nut butter or something. It's just tasty, right? Just adding a couple hundred calories,
three to 500 depending, and just do that every day and keep it real simple. And so if somebody
does that, then they shouldn't expect any fat gain. Sure, your weight's going to go up a little bit for the reasons you gave, but for anybody listening, just know that you have to overeat by at least probably 3,500-ish calories to even gain that pound of fat. So that's a big swing of calorie intake when you're in a deficit and then you go into that much of a surplus. Sure, you might enjoy it, but you certainly are going to know it. That doesn't just happen accidentally. Yeah.
Yeah.
And as long as it's within the plan, as long as a person on the diet knows, okay, we've got a diet break coming up somewhere between the fourth to the eighth week of this diet.
And we can auto-regulate that depending on how you're progressing and how you're feeling.
And I've found that to be very effective for people
who are in contest prep or for people who are prepping for a photo shoot. If we've got 16 weeks,
there's going to be one to two diet breaks in there, depending on how they're feeling.
And during that diet break, it's a chance for them to get a mental break from dieting, but also kind of for them
to feel the rush again of a spike in, or at least a return to high level training performance.
And so in essence, you can sort of flux upward for a period of time training wise, and you would get
lesser doses of that during weekly carb ups or biweekly carb ups. So there's also a training
performance element there for refeeds and in quotes or non-linear dieting or carb ups. There's
also a performance element that you can take advantage of for certain people for whom that's
their goal. So it's not necessarily just a psychological or adherence benefit, but you can actually time these carb
ups to fuel training bouts that are of a particularly high volume or high effort.
Yeah, that makes sense. I would probably prefer it during a higher volume training block because
that's always more taxing than, you know, even if it's a heavier weight, if it's a lower volume, I find those
workouts less grueling than, you know, the sets of 10 rep squats, for example.
Right. And yeah, it's something that in practice, you can say immediately that for dieters,
if you were to make a choice, let's take like an example of if you were to hold a contest with a
million dollar prize at the end of the contest, and the goal was to improve body composition as much as possible.
So you get points for muscle gain and retention, as well as points for fat loss.
You undoubtedly, you would do some sort of cyclical scheme because you're getting the
best of both worlds there.
Anybody can just not eat for a year, just not
eat. Take multivitamin, get doctor's supervision, make sure you're hydrated. Some people might
actually die through that, but in theory, and it's been- They're either going to die or they're
going to get rich. Get rich or die trying. Right. There's an optimal way to improve body
composition and there's just various ways to get there.
And so I've found in practice, cyclical dieting to be the way because it improves adherence,
it can bolster performance in certain circumstances.
And when you take diet breaks, people kind of overestimate the damage that can be done
with a proper diet break when, in fact, like you mentioned, you really have to try in order to just really sabotage the progress that you've made over a number of weeks.
There was a study, it's by Ott, OTT, and colleagues.
This was a 2018 study where they fed the subjects a thousand calories a day above and beyond their
maintenance requirements. Okay. So just imagine what you're eating right now to maintain and then
stacking on top of it, a thousand calories. And these thousand calories were not bodybuilding
type calories. They weren't ideal macro calories. They were high fat dairy
calories. They're whipping cream calories. Okay. So totally unideal thousand calorie surplus for
seven days resulted in one pound of fat gain and one pound of lean mass gain. Okay. So two pound
gain in a week of pounding the whipping cream, a thousand calories above and
beyond maintenance requirements. So- And were they also working out or were these just sitting?
No. So just sitting there. Sitting around. So people who are afraid of a seven day diet break,
they're unaware of research like this. Whereas if you and I were to put a client
on a seven day diet break, it would be much more ideal. And as you mentioned, you can even avoid significant fat gain or avoid seems like without gaining any fat or very little fat, at least not nothing like what
you'd think if you just looked at the pure calories of it. And then you have a similar
effect with carbohydrates and that's been shown in studies as well, right? That you have to really go
to town on carbs if you're keeping your fat relatively low before de novo lipogenesis even becomes a thing,
like before you really start contributing to fat gain. That's particularly true if you're
working out, right? Right. On the carb front, I'll touch upon the carb thing and then the protein
thing. And if I forget about the protein thing, then please remind me because I find it really
interesting. So after you've depleted your glycogen levels. So that would be done by just running a low carb or
a ketogenic or near ketogenic diet plus training for a few days. And then you can actually deplete
glycogen in the quads with an exercise bout lasting roughly 90 minutes if it's intense
enough. And then you can really kind of wring out the last bits of glycogen in
the quads if you train for two hours. And is that in a low carb condition or just a higher carb?
That's after you just take somebody at baseline, you know, with normal glycogen levels,
you can deplete glycogen in large muscle groups with a continuous 90 to 120 minutes of work.
Yep. Yeah. That was my, I actually had mentioned that in a, I'm working on updating an existing book
for that I have for intermediate and advanced and talking a bit about glycogen, but just
want to make sure like that I was on the same page there.
Yep.
Yeah.
You can just take anyone.
They don't have to necessarily have been on a low carb diet.
Yeah.
Which a 90 minute workout.
I mean, if you're an intermediate lifter, maybe that's a bit excessive if you're new,
but for an intermediate 60 to 90 minutes is probably what you need to get enough volume in. I mean, that's what I train five days a week normally. And it's not a crazy high volume.
I'm probably doing 15 to 16, maybe let's say 15 to 18 hard sets per major muscle group per week.
And that's what it takes. I mean, it takes 60 to 90 minutes.
Yep. So let's imagine you deplete glycogen under those conditions. It would take,
this was a study done in 1988-ish or so.
I'm forgetting the name of the author, but it could be Roeberg's potentially, but it
took right around 500 grams of carbohydrate a day for about four days before they started
seeing significant levels of de novo lipogenesis or the generation of, or the synthesis of fatty
acids. If you can imagine, you know, 500 grams of carbs a day is a lot of freaking carbs.
And if you're glycogen depleted, then you can actually nail a hell of a lot of carbs and it'll
take a few days for you to even begin to start putting on fat. That's the carbohydrate side of things
if you're glycogen depleted.
And then on the protein side of things,
which you mentioned,
Antonio and colleagues within the pretty recent years,
he's done a slew of protein overfeeding studies.
So this is Joey Antonio at Nova University.
He fed subjects 800 calories above maintenance requirements, and those 800 calories
were in the form of protein. Very interestingly, this surplus protein calorie hit that was ran for
eight weeks, I believe, it seemingly disappeared. It's just such an interesting thing because it obviously didn't disappear, but there was some sort of ramp up in
energy expenditure that neutralized those 800 calories in from protein. Now, the super interesting
thing about this study was that the subjects were trained, they were resistance trained,
and they were already consuming relatively high amount of protein.
So what happened was their baseline protein intake was already optimized.
So they didn't gain a significant amount of lean body mass or muscle tissue.
And they also didn't gain a significant amount of fat tissue. So their body composition was just literally just
static at the end of eight weeks of overfeeding protein to the tune of 800 calories. And so
the big head scratcher is how the heck did that happen? And so the speculation behind how that
happened was maybe at least three or four reasons. Okay. Reason number one, protein is the most
satiating macronutrient. So as these individuals slam down the protein to the tune of like four
grams per kilo a day, like 4.4 grams per kilo a day. So roughly like two grams of protein per
pound of body weight a day. I've done that back before I knew what I was doing. I thought that
was, I read in a magazine somewhere. That's what you had to do. That's what the bodybuild a day. I've done that back before I knew what I was doing. I thought that was, I read in a magazine somewhere. That's what you had. That's what the bodybuilders did.
And I can attest that's not fun. That's not fun when you're drinking several 60 gram,
like protein shakes with 60 grams of protein, you know, triple scoop protein shakes several a day.
Well, that's what the subject said. It's not fun what comes out of your ass either.
Yeah. The energy out part, right? That's a certain type of energy out, but yeah, I've spoken.
Maybe that's where it goes. Yeah. No. And you're actually ahead of me on that. I spoke to Joey
about this study, Joey Antonio, the principal investigator of this study. And he said that
there was a lot of complaining amongst the participants about the protein intake. They definitely didn't enjoy
trying to eat two plus grams of protein per pound of body weight. It was difficult.
And so it's possible that their satiety levels were driven up to the point where they
subconsciously decreased the amount of other macronutrient intake. So other than the protein
stuff could have subconsciously went down. They kept a log, I'm assuming of what they were eating.
Yeah. They kept a log, but- But that's not foolproof, of course.
True. True. And here's the interesting thing with protein and with the amount of protein that they were taking in, it's entirely possible that they unintentionally over-reported their protein intake in order to avoid the shame of not following the instructions of the assignment.
And that is a real thing amongst subjects.
And with different food types, refined carbohydrate foods tend to get underreported. So,
whereas it's the opposite with this protein assignment, you know, it's totally possible
that they overreported their protein intake in order to please the research staff. So that's
a possibility. So you've got satiety, increased satiety driving down the consumption of the other macronutrients.
You've got over-reporting in order to avoid the shame of disappointing the research staff.
You've got increased excretion in that department, energy out.
And there could also be some odd things with decreased de novo lipogenesis, but that sort of thing
wasn't directly measured.
So, oh, and then a fourth factor.
Interestingly, the subjects, and this isn't on the record, but this is something that
Joey Antonio told me in personal communication was that the subjects actually reported sleep
sweats.
So sweating while sleeping.
Interesting. The phenomenon, like if you've ever eaten at Brazilian barbecue and you took down
like two pounds of meat, then you know, the phenomenon called meat sweats. Yep. And I know
in Europe, bro. So I would bet money that, you know, all about. I've been there. I've been there
when you say it, it was the last time I can
remember that immediately, like the flashbulb memory is a Brazilian. I just ate meat until I,
my stomach, I was in pain. I was like, I got to stop now. That's it. I got to stop.
Totally dude. Oh God. Yeah. Good times, man. Hey, everybody should experience that.
But there is an interesting phenomenon. When you over-consume
protein, your body can ramp up thermogenesis in that way. And there could also that the other
potential reason why that extra protein disappeared in quotes is a potential increase in non-exercise
activity thermogenesis or NEAT that can either be conscious, but it's mostly subconscious.
So an increase in subconscious movement and energy expenditure somehow as a result of increasing
that protein. So I thought that was interesting, man. And I think that in practice, it corroborated
what I've tried with clients. So while the normal paradigm is carbohydrate refeeds, I used to do what I called
protein hyper feeds. There was just some really cool results that I've seen in clients who twice
a week, instead of doing this massive carb binge, you basically do a massive protein binge where you
double and triple your protein intake two days out of the week. And we actually saw recomp happen in more than one client. And so recomp being an increase in
muscle tissue or lean body mass and decrease in fat mass. And I couldn't explain it, but I was
not going to argue with it because I was liking the results I was seeing in clients.
And this was during a cut, I'm assuming?
It was during like a gain tainting maintenance type of thing.
Okay. Which I mean, really what that comes down to then, right? Is some days you're in a slight
deficit. Some days it's a slight surplus because you never, your actual maintenance calories are
always a moving target, right? Yes.
That's a fun little kind of end wonders, personal experiment. Anybody listening, if they want to try it and they don't mind eating an amount of protein that is slightly
disturbing. Well, this is the way you do it. Like if you normally consume a gram of protein per pound
of body weight or slightly less than that, because it's even a pain in the butt for some people to
consume that much protein. You know, let's say you consume like a gram of protein per pound of lean
mass even, you know, so it's slightly less than a gram per pound of total body weight on two days
a week, just double that and see what happens. And you'll probably experience what I just described
in Joey Antonio's work. You'll probably experience a spike in
satiety that day where you're just not motivated to eat the rest of what's in your diet. You'll
experience meat sweats to a degree. Hopefully you won't experience running to the toilet,
but there's some interesting applications to that for dieters because some dieters would actually
prefer to pound a lot of protein a couple days a week than they would
just slamming the bagels in the pasta. And when you do the protein pounding thing, or what I would
call the protein hyperfeeds, you'll have a lot greater resistance to gaining fat as a result of
those. So it is super interesting. And it's good to know that many, many years later, I was able to see that tactic in a way indirectly supported by research.
What are your thoughts on carbohydrate and fat intake on those days? So let's say somebody
listening to like, yeah, I'm going to do that. Say they're lean bulking or kind of, you know,
gain tainting or really just doing a standard and just trying to, they're not going intentionally
into a surplus at all, but it's interesting. This is almost like the other side of the refeed coin, right? Where when you're cutting,
the standard refeed protocol is, hey, just raise your carbs for a day or two,
which we already talked about. So this is the other side of that coin.
So if somebody is going to do it, what would you recommend in terms of carbs and fat? Because I
know people are going to be thinking, they're going to be like, I love ribeye steak. Should
I just eat like four ribeye steaks?
There's kind of a careful way to tiptoe with that.
And then there's a little bit more relaxed way.
So the careful way to tiptoe around it is, there might be even three tiers to doing this.
So the super anal retentive way would be to consume a lot of lean protein that day.
And that's the majority of what you consume.
And so what you may be fat intake beneath 70 or 80 grams for the day or even lower. Fat intake would be at least no added stuff or just minimal carbs would be kept down to a minimum
as well. And then you can just basically go off on your protein. And then maybe the next tier down from that in terms of relaxedness
and do ability would be to eat the protein first, whether it's at, yeah, at each meal,
get the protein in first. And if you have room for the rest of the stuff, then do it.
And that way it can be a little bit more auto-regulated according to how satiated and
motivated you are to eat the rest of your
stuff after you've pounded the protein. And you can do that, like do the protein first. And then
by the end of the day, if you're still hungry, then you can get in some of the other stuff.
And then there's the third tier of relaxedness, which would be just add the protein on top of
your existing diet, but make sure you prioritize eating it and see what happens.
And practically speaking, it's probably in the middle where a lot of people fall,
the second option, right? Where they're like, cool, I'm going to try to eat my normal diet.
But then when they get into it and they eat their protein first, the rest of the food is
not nearly as appetizing. Exactly, dude. Exactly.
And I think it probably should be said though, right? In terms of fat intake,
don't go for the fattiest. Like you probably do want to generally stick to leaner,
lower fat. It doesn't have to be 0% Fie yogurt all day, but probably want to stick to leaner
protein, I'm assuming. I would agree with that. And that's what I would.
Like it might be a little bit counterproductive if you end your day in a significant calorie
surplus due to protein, but you also had like 200 grams of fat or something.
significant calorie surplus due to protein, but you also had like 200 grams of fat or something.
Yeah. Like a crap load of fat. Right. Right. Just from the standpoint of making sure the results happen the way that you really want them to happen, especially if it's a paying client and
a lot is on the line, I would stick to the lean stuff. And in fact, that's what they did in
Antonio et al. It was 800 calories of lean protein sources. I'm
talking protein powder and lean meats. They didn't do the 800 calories of just really fatty protein
stuff. Sausage or something. Right. Exactly. So yes, I'm with you on that one.
And do you remember approximately what the carbohydrate and fat intake looked like in
that study? Just for anybody wondering, you had the overfeeding on the protein, but otherwise was their diet
kind of your standard? It was very standard, dude. It was moderate carb, moderate-ish fat
type of thing. Yep. Yeah. Their baseline protein intake was about 1.8-ish grams per kilogram,
close to two grams per kilo. So close to a gram per pound. That was
their protein intake. Their carbon fat intake was pretty standard. I don't remember the exacts on it,
but I do remember thinking, okay, this is standard moderate carbs.
Yeah. Same. I remember when I saw it, that was, that's the idea that stuck in my head was like,
yeah, that's actually a pretty standard diet. That's interesting. Awesome. That's great.
And the next question I want to ask you is regarding protein intake.
So we'll just go right into that.
Now, what are your thoughts on protein timing?
So spreading your protein intake throughout the day and probably worth talking about that in the context of cutting and lean bulking.
Any general recommendations there?
Any benefits or drawbacks to eating? And I get asked
this often from people who are doing intermittent fasting. I'll get asked, I'm getting asked more
about one meal a day. So I'm going to produce some content on that. That's something that it's been
around for a while, but I don't know if it's having resurgence or something, but it's, I'm
getting asked it more and more consistently, but that's usually the context. But then there also
are people who just, maybe they're not doing an intermittent fasting diet, but that's usually the context. But then there also are people who
just, maybe they're not doing an intermittent fasting diet, but they wonder, for example,
maybe they don't particularly like eating breakfast type proteins, right? And so they
would prefer if it were up to them having a carbohydrate and maybe more fat rich breakfast,
and then maybe just getting their protein in a lunch and a dinner. What are your thoughts on
all of that? It can be broken down pretty simply.
Big picture is if your goal is to lose fat, your chances are you're going to be hypocaloric,
right?
You're going to be, you're going to be dieting.
Sure.
There are some folks who are trying to recomp, they're trying to do it all, right?
They're trying to gain muscle and lose fat at the same time. But let's just look at the separate goals of either fat loss or muscle
gain. Okay. So the fat loss goal is going to by and large involve hypocaloric conditions. The
main goal of gaining muscle is going to involve a caloric surplus or hypercaloric conditions
sustained. So for hypocaloric conditions and the main goal of fat loss, meal frequency or protein distribution,
number of protein feedings in the day doesn't have much impact, Mike.
And that makes sense, right?
Because you're not going to gain, unless you're new, you're not going to be gaining any muscle
to speak of anyway, right?
Yes.
Yes.
There are differences with different populations.
If you're more advanced and closer to your potential, you are not going to gain much
anyway, right? year potential, you are not going to gain much anyway. Right. For the goal of retaining muscle
during a cut meal frequency basically doesn't matter, bro. You can go one to two meals or you
can go three to six meals. Well, you know what? Interesting. So one, let me, let me back up.
Okay. Cause I haven't read much on the one meal a day approach in some time. And
what I had taken away years ago, when I looked into some of the research on it was like, yeah,
you guess you could do it, but it's probably not optimal. Like it's not something I'd recommend
unless for some reason, someone is like, that's the only way I can, I can live.
Backpedal a little bit there. There's no research specifically comparing, let's say one to two meals
a day versus three to six meals a day in resistance training subjects who weren't total noobs straight
off the couch, you know, but I would hypothesize that, and this is based on, interestingly,
on Tinsley's recent studies on the time-restricted feeding and its effects on resistance trainees. And so
his time-restricted feeding model is similar to the Martin Burkhardt Lean Gains 16-8 thing. So
within an eight-hour feeding window, he just restricts the food intake. And that was compared
with, I believe, like a 12-hour feeding window. There was no disadvantage to maintaining lean mass in the time-restricted
feeding versus the conventional distribution. And how many servings of protein in the time
restriction? Was it two or three? Oh boy. I believe it was three squanched together versus
three spread out. But functionally, it's the same principle of either higher meal frequency, a more greater spread out versus a greater concentration.
So in principle, it's the same thing as comparing, let's say, four or five meals with two or three meals.
So that gives rise to the possibility.
And it actually strengthens the idea that, you know, in resistance trainees whose goal is to lose body fat, meal frequency or protein feeding distribution might not have a significant
impact on retention of muscle tissue during hypochloric conditions.
So if somebody wants to eat two meals a day, well, then they better get their total protein
in by the end of
the day. Let's say they've got a 200 gram target for protein intake for the day, and they want to
eat 100 grams. And as what my kids would call, they're an absolute mad lad. They want to have
100 grams of protein at each meal, two meals a day. I would question whether somebody who has 50 grams of protein
at four meals spread out through the course of the day, I can honestly say I don't know
in trained subjects on a proper resistance training program. I'm not sure whether the
more ideal 50-50-50-50 at four spread out points in the day would have an advantage
over the two 100 gram Mad Lad protein meals in dieting conditions with the goal of retaining
muscle. I'm not sure. The Mad Lad diet. Maybe you have a brand here. You better go register that domain. The Mad Lad Diet.
Now here's where things get a little freaky.
Let's imagine that the goal is not specifically fat loss and retaining muscle.
Let's flip the goal to gaining muscle as quickly as possible.
I would actually put my bets on the 50 gram dose at four points in the day, outperforming
the a hundred gram dose at two points in the day for just the rate of muscle hypertrophy over time.
And do you want to quickly explain why that is? Why would you put your money on,
let's say that's red instead of black? Yes, yes, yes. It's because, well, Tinsley's work
had quite a little bit of influence on the other side of it, about the retention side.
As far as the growth side, I can't point to any specific research actually looking at muscle
hypertrophy over time in those conditions, resistance training, trained subjects. However,
time in those conditions, resistance training, trained subjects. However, there is short-term research comparing muscle protein synthesis. This was done by a researcher named Aretha.
This is beginning to be a few years ago. He compared a total dose of 80 grams. So,
okay, there's limitations to research. There's always going to be limitations. And it was just protein. It wasn't mixed meals, but he compared two 40 gram doses with four 20 gram doses with eight 10 gram doses.
And the four 20 gram doses caused a greater net amount of muscle protein synthesis than the two big doses, the 240 gram doses or the 810 gram
doses. So that kind of gave us a hint to how we can distribute protein through the day to maximize
muscle protein synthesis. So now, obviously, there's the question of, okay, then why would the body be better at retaining muscle in unideal
protein distributions? Why would it not matter in hypochloric conditions, but why would it matter
in hyperchloric conditions? The answers to that are just purely speculative, but I would guess
that muscle gains, gaining muscle being a more energetically expensive process.
I think you just have to be a bit more careful about how you allocate things because it's
a different game.
Gaining muscle is a different game than retaining muscle under dieting conditions.
And you have to pull a little bit more strings in order to push muscle gain.
It's a harder fought battle, especially in training.
Yeah. Especially when you're in, you're an intermediate or beyond weightlifter, right? I
mean, again, I'm wrapping up the second edition of a book I have for me, it's an advanced and
one of the key takeaways of the whole training section. And when I'm explaining the theory
behind the program is you got to work a lot harder for a lot less. Like that's what it comes down to.
And so that mentality, you also need to apply with your diet as well, where you just can't afford to
be as YOLO with your diet as when you were new, where maybe you didn't pay too much attention to
your calorie intake and your protein intake and how often maybe one day it was two meals of protein.
The next day it was four and you're, maybe next day it was four, and maybe you were in
a deficit a little bit and then a surplus. You can get away with that in the beginning,
but once those newbie gains are gone, it becomes a lot harder to continue to convince your body's
muscle building machinery to keep doing what you want. No doubt about it. No doubt about it, man.
And anybody who has worked with clients, the range of newbies fresh off the
couch, all the way to professional athletes, you can see that difference. You have to pull a lot
more strings with the pros and the elites, whereas shoot with the newbies, you throw anything at the
wall and most of it will stick. But yeah, on the topic of protein distribution and frequency and
body composition, I actually did an Instagram post
where I sum all of that up. And if anybody wants to go to it, it's a post I did on December 27th
of 2019. I listed all that stuff there. And I think you would be appreciative of the work that
went into this Instagram post, which is just horribly violating the
rules of Instagram, where I use like just tiny font and you just have to, you have to
depend.
Can you pinch zoom on Instagram?
I don't even know if you can, but it sounds like you need to.
You can.
Okay.
So then that's what it requires.
You would massively need to for this post, but I crammed everything on there for, for
anyone interested on, on my take on protein feeding frequency through the day,
because for that question, the population and the goal is always neglected. You always have to
discuss, okay, what population, advanced guys or newbies? And for what goal are we talking muscle
gain or are we talking muscle retention? There's different protocols for those populations and goals.
Makes sense.
And just to summarize, then if I heard you correctly, so if you are new and really regardless
of whether you are focusing on fat gain, which really is going to be recomp if you're new,
if you're doing anything even remotely right in the gym, right?
But if that's your focus, then you can eat again,
maybe not one serving of protein, but who wants to do that? If you, let's say you needed to eat
a hundred, even if it's just 150 grams in one meal, that's not enjoyable. So yeah,
there's practical limitations. That's why the pro bodybuilders, you see them eating
six to eight times a day because these guys are fricking 230 to 280 pounds. And they're trying to get down
six, 7,000 calories in the off season. There's no way in hell they're going to eat their protein
over two to three meals a day and not want to kill themselves. We all remember the footage of
Ronnie Coleman eating his Tupperware full of chicken breasts, just microwave in the car
with the barbecue sauce. What is it?
Road to redemption or cost of redemption?
Yes, cost of redemption.
And the unbelievable, yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
Yep, yep.
And so if you're new, anywhere from probably what you say on two to whatever you want,
whatever, if it's just twice a day, if that works for you, then that's totally fine.
Right, right. Whether you're trying to lose fat or maybe you're just a skinny guy or gal's just starting out and
you actually are not interested in losing any fat. You just want to focus on muscle gain. Again,
in the beginning, it's not particularly important, probably whether it's two meals a day with
protein or four or five. And if you're not new, let's say if you have probably a good solid,
I don't know, year or so of proper training under your belt, your newbie gains are certainly
exhausted by then.
Yeah. Then you got to start pulling some strings.
Yeah. Then it was worth me paying attention. So if you're cutting, you could do two,
if you'd like to do that, just do two servings of protein per day. And you can
be fairly sure that you're not going to run into any muscle retention issues.
And if you're lean bulking though, then that's where it makes sense to,
what's your general
recommendation with your client? Is it three to five or is it like four to five servings of
protein per day? Kind of a gray area there, Mike. In a recent paper I did with Brad Schoenfeld,
we advocated for four servings of protein dosed at somewhere between 0.4 to 0.6 grams per kilo
of body weight. Okay. Which is for most guys, at least that's
going to be whatever, 40 to 50 grams, 40 ish grams, right? Yeah, exactly. Yeah. Yeah. And
we advocated for that, that dose for advanced folks. However, there's not enough research out
there for us to be super confident and say that if you wanted to ratchet that down to three and
you don't want to bother with that, like four protein feedings in the day, you'll, you'll get the same results that we just
don't have enough data to, to know. So that's why we kind of played it safe and said, Hey, you know,
we know there's limits to muscle protein synthesis per dose of protein. So if you wanted to pull out
all the hypothetical stops towards muscle growth and you would do four servings and up as a more
advanced training.
And the idea there, right, is to use the analogy again, to keep your body's muscle building machinery working as much throughout the day as possible.
Yes. Just maximize these micro anabolic events, right? That would hopefully over time,
over the longer term, accumulate into greater gains in muscle
mass. And that would be the same theory behind having a serving of protein before you go to bed,
right? It would be the same thing, whether how big of a difference it makes. I know it's unclear,
but theoretically it'd be better if your body's muscle building machinery could work while you
sleep, as opposed to maybe you stop eating protein at six. And by the time you're in bed, you're not going to lose muscle, but your body doesn't have the raw
materials to continue repairing and rebuilding tissue. So it's going to have to wait until the
next serving of protein, right? Yeah, that's exactly right. And then we have to kind of
take a step back and say, okay, for what population does this matter? You know,
somebody who has casual goals,
maybe not. Somebody who's pushing the envelope, well then, yeah, that this is something that you
would want to look into. Yeah, it's, there are a lot of those little things where if you isolated
them individually, right, you'd be like, oh, it's not, the effect size is small. Yeah, that's fine.
But when you're a natural weightlifter and maybe you're not even a competitive athlete, you're not a bodybuilder or physique guy, you're just someone who is training hard and you're playing the game of trying to get the most out of your genetics, then you are% or 3% difference, hey, well, that's a 10% or 15% difference now.
And if you play that out over the course of a couple of years, let's say your final couple
of years of progress until it becomes so negligible, you've entered the realm of
permanent maintenance, it can make a slight difference and help you get there a little
bit faster. And if you don't mind it, then you might as well do these
things. And I think that's, for example, where supplementation can come into play. I mean,
something like creatine, for example, I think it just probably makes sense for anybody into lifting
to take it, but that would be another good example of something that gives you a little edge that in
and of itself is not some huge thing, but Hey, if you do that plus three or four other things,
you might be making a bit more
progress that's actually an appreciable amount so yep agreed awesome man well this was super
informative uh you did not we covered like half the things that we were going to we actually got
we got through all but one which we can save for the next just to tease it it was regarding fat
intake i left it for last because i i get the least about it, but fat intake during cutting, but we can save that and for the next conversation and
come up with some more questions. Be happy to tackle them, man.
Yeah, man. We'd love to have you back on. Let's just wrap up with where people can find you and
your work and your research review, which I highly recommend your review. That was the first research review
that I ever actually came across. And I've been a longtime reader and fan of it. And I also very
much like what Eric Helms and Greg Knuckles are doing in the research review front. So both of
your guys' reviews are kind of like my go-tos. James Krieger does good work there as well. So
give a shout out to those guys. But yeah, let's wrap up with where people can find you and your work. And if you have anything
new and interesting on the horizon that you want people to know about, you can let them know about
that too, if you want. Cool. Thanks, man. You can find me at alanaragon.com. And my research review
is something I've been doing since 2008. It's a monthly synthesis of everything going on
research-wise in the fitness world, sports nutrition world, and training as well.
My research review started the trend of people who have been following my work from
over a decade back. It's great to see some of the most brilliant minds, most of them my students, emulating the research.
The OG mentor.
Sure. Yeah. And doing a great job. So I feel great about having pioneered that within the industry.
My research review is my baby. I'm super proud of it. I'm super happy to hear, Mike, that you are enjoying it and benefiting from it.
of it. I'm super happy to hear Mike, that you are enjoying it and benefiting from it. So you can find it just by going to alanaragon.com and the research review cost basically pennies. My whole
intention is to make it affordable to everyone from professionals all the way to starving students.
That's my approach, man. Awesome. And to find you on Instagram.
Awesome. And to find you on Instagram.
Yeah. Yeah. Instagram. My Instagram handle is the Alan Aragon. So I didn't do that out of ego.
There's somebody who's- I was going to say, maybe add the real, the real.
Thankfully, I didn't have to go that far, but yeah, the Alan Aragon on Instagram.
And you get your blue check mark and then you've made it, man.
Yes. Yeah. I can retire now. Got the blue check mark and then you've made it, man. Ah, yes. Yeah. I've, I can retire now. Got the blue check mark. Cash it in. All right, man. Well, uh, this was great again. Thank you
for taking the time and I look forward to the next one. Thanks right back, Mike.
All right. Well, that's it for this episode. I hope you enjoyed it and found it interesting
and helpful. And if you did, and you don't mind doing me a favor, please do leave a quick review on
iTunes or wherever you're listening to me from in whichever app you're listening to me in,
because that not only convinces people that they should check out the show, it also increases
search visibility. And thus it helps more people find their way to me and learn how to get fitter, leaner, stronger,
healthier, and happier as well.
And of course, if you want to be notified
when the next episode goes live,
then simply subscribe to the podcast
and you won't miss out on any new stuff.
And if you didn't like something about the show,
please do shoot me an email at mike at muscleforlife.com, just
muscle, F-O-R, life.com, and share your thoughts on how I can do this better. I read everything
myself and I'm always looking for constructive feedback, even if it is criticism. I'm open to it.
And of course, you can email me if you have positive feedback as well, or if you have questions
really relating to anything
that you think I could help you with, definitely send me an email. That is the best way to get a
hold of me, mikeatmusclefullife.com. And that's it. Thanks again for listening to this episode,
and I hope to hear from you soon. Thank you.