Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Bill Campbell on the Science of Training Volume

Episode Date: November 2, 2022

In this podcast, I chat with scientist and friend Dr. Bill Campbell about training volume. There’s a recent trend in the fitness space that more volume is always better. Is that always true, though?... And if you do want to increase your volume, what’s the best way to do it? You’re going to learn all that and more in this interview. In case you’re not familiar with Dr. Campbell, he’s a professor of Exercise Science and the Director of the Performance & Physique Enhancement Laboratory at the University of South Florida, who’s also published more than 150 scientific papers. He also recently started a research review in which he examines scientific papers and breaks them down into simple, actionable takeaways. In other words, Dr. Campbell has long been behind the scenes, conducting research on practical, fitness-related matters and helping people apply the latest findings to get us more jacked. In this interview, Bill and I talk about . . . - The right way to count volume (sets, tonnage, etc.) - The practical limits of increasing volume (and how to increase volume the right way) - The utility of “test days” and training to failure every so often - The drawbacks of training to failure (especially for athletes) - Why rest times between sets matter - How to count indirect volume for muscle groups - And more . . . So, if you want to learn what the latest science says about training volume and if you should adjust your workout programming, don’t miss this episode! Timestamps (0:00) - Legion VIP One-on-One Coaching: https://www.muscleforlife.show/vip (5:29) - Can you tell us about your research review? (9:11) - Where can people find that? (9:36) - Does more volume help you build more muscle? (15:07) - What are some of the drawbacks of the tonnage method? (18:24) - What are your thoughts on the studies that conclude that more and more volume is better? (28:04) - In this study, were there instances where the individualized leg grew more than the non individualized leg? (30:03) - What are your thoughts on increasing volume relative to where you’re at? Is there a ceiling to potential muscle growth that volume can stimulate? (36:29) - At what point is it not practical to increase volume per week? (41:44) - Why do you suggest training to around 3 reps left as opposed to training to failure? (48:59) - What are your thoughts on shorter rest times in between sets to save time? (51:49) - Why do we need to rest for 3 minutes in between hard sets? (54:18)  - What is a good method to increasing volume and why would a person want to? (58:13) - Can you elaborate on decreasing and increasing volume? (1:00:47) - How should people choose between a direct or indirect volume training program? (1:08:03) - Is there anything you would like to mention? (1:10:58) - Where can we find you and your work? Mentioned on the Show: Legion VIP One-on-One Coaching: https://www.muscleforlife.show/vip Bill Campbell’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/billcampbellphd/ Bill’s website: https://www.billcampbellphd.com/

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello and welcome to Muscle for Life. I am Mike Matthews. Thank you for joining me today for an episode on training volume because recently there is a trend in the fitness space, particularly in the evidence-based fitness space, and that is toward more volume, not less, in the idea that more volume is always better if you want to gain muscle and strength as quickly as possible. Of course, you can only do so much volume. Most people will acknowledge that. But if you want to get big and strong as quickly as possible, should you try to do as much volume as you possibly can, as you can possibly recover from. Is that true?
Starting point is 00:00:47 Is it a little bit true? Is it completely true? Is it always true? Is it sometimes a little bit true, sometimes completely true? Well, you are going to hear answers to those questions and more in today's episode, which is an interview with my buddy, Dr. Bill Campbell, who is a professor of exercise science and the director of the Performance and Physique Enhancement Laboratory at the University of South Florida. Bill has published more than 150 scientific papers and has recently started
Starting point is 00:01:19 a research review, which you can find over at BillCampbell, C-A-M-P-B-E-L-L-P-H-D.com, in which Bill examines scientific papers on body composition in particular. That is the focus of his research review, how to improve body composition. And it is heavily focused on practicality, not just understanding things that might be interesting or understanding theory, but application. How do you put this scientific information into use to lose fat and build muscle and stay healthy? And again, you can check that out over at BillCampbellPhD.com. And so in this interview, Bill and I talk about counting volume because there are different ways to count volume.
Starting point is 00:02:13 Should it be total sets? Should it be total tonnage? Should it be hard sets and so forth? We talk about the practical limits of increasing volume and how to increase volume the right way because sometimes, as you will learn in this episode, it does make sense to do more volume than you are currently doing. But let's say you need to do 50% more volume than you are currently doing to achieve your goals. Should you just make that jump one week to the next? Or should you increase volume incrementally?
Starting point is 00:02:47 jump one week to the next or should you increase volume incrementally? Bill talks about some of the drawbacks of training to failure, especially for athletes, why rest times matter between sets, and more. But first, how would you like to know a little secret that will help you get into the best shape of your life. Here it is. The business model for my VIP coaching service sucks. Boom, mic drop. And what in the fiddly frack am I talking about? Well, while most coaching businesses try to keep their clients around for as long as possible, I take a different approach. You see, my team and I, we don't just help you build your best body ever. I mean, we do that. We figure out your calories and macros, and we create custom diet and training plans based on your goals and your circumstances. And we make adjustments depending on how your body responds. And we help you ingrain the right eating and
Starting point is 00:03:46 exercise habits so you can develop a healthy and a sustainable relationship with food and training and more. But then there's the kicker. Because once you are thrilled with your results, we ask you to fire us. Seriously. You've heard the phrase, give a man a fish and you feed him for a day, teach him to fish and you feed him for a lifetime. Well, that summarizes how my one-on-one coaching service works. And that's why it doesn't make nearly as much coin as it could, but I'm okay with that because my mission is not to just help you gain muscle and lose fat. It's to give you the tools and to give you the know-how that you need to forge ahead in your fitness without me. So dig this. When you sign up for my coaching, we don't just take you
Starting point is 00:04:37 by the hand and walk you through the entire process of building a body you can be proud of, we also teach you the all-important whys behind the hows, the key principles, and the key techniques you need to understand to become your own coach. And the best part? It only takes 90 days. So instead of going it alone this year, why not try something different? Head over to muscleforlife.show slash VIP. That is muscleforlife.show slash VIP and schedule your free consultation call now. And let's see if my one-on-one coaching service is right for you. Hey, Bill. Hey, good afternoon.
Starting point is 00:05:23 Yeah. Thanks for coming back on my podcast. Thank you for inviting me again. Yeah, Bill. Hey, good afternoon. Yeah, thanks for coming back on my podcast. Thank you for inviting me again. thought on how effective volume is for hypertrophy, how much volume you should be doing, how much volume you could be doing and what that might mean for additional muscle growth. And this is something that you recently covered in your research review, which if you want to quickly tell people about, and then let's just get into it. Yeah, yeah. Well, thank you for the opportunity. So I recently launched in July a body by science research review. For anybody who's not familiar with what a research review is, what I'm offering is I summarize two studies every month that are solely focused on building muscle and losing body
Starting point is 00:06:21 fat. In addition to me summarizing these research studies, I bring in two experts. They could be physique coaches, dieticians, physicians, other researchers, people like yourself, Mike, that help me apply the research. So I always like to tell people, you can read all the research you want. If you don't have a plan for applying it into your life, or if you're a fitness professional into the lives of your clients, it's not very helpful. And sometimes there's a disconnect there, right? Between even what is scientifically optimal
Starting point is 00:06:54 and what is practical, what people can or will actually do, right? Yes, yep, yeah. And you have to meet people where they're at and that's part of this art. So as I bring in the experts, I think that's my favorite part. And again, it's called Body by Science. And if you're into fat loss and building muscle or keeping your muscle when you're dieting, I think this is a great resource to keep you current and to stimulate ideas in your own
Starting point is 00:07:23 training or in your business if you're a fitness professional. And I would say also, if you want to improve your scientific literacy, it's a great resource for that too because you are producing it for laymen. You are not speaking exclusively to your peers. You're not speaking exclusively to people with PhDs who understand the intricacies
Starting point is 00:07:46 of scientific research. And so, for example, I like that you don't use a lot of jargon. You explain in simple terms what is done in these studies and what this might mean and researchers, how they interpreted this and how you interpret this and so forth. So that's something that even I myself like with research reviews like this, because I guess I'm probably more scientifically literate than the average person, but I'm not at your level. So there are certain things like if we get too into the weeds with statistical methodologies, for example, I get a bit lost and then I have to stop and maybe I'm going to have to spend now an hour digging through statistical math to understand one paragraph that, again,
Starting point is 00:08:35 somebody like you would read and be like, yeah, sure, that makes sense. So it's also worth mentioning. Yeah. Yeah. Thank you. And if an average person can't read this and understand what the research was, way that you know exactly what research was done and what the results were. And then again, the experts helping us to apply it. That's kind of the essence of it. That's great. And where can people find that? We're talking about it, so we might as well just tell them if they want to already go check it out. Yeah, so my website is where you can get it. It's BillCampbellPhD.com. And I give away the inaugural issue for free. So if it's something you just want to test drive, just go to my website, BillCampbellPhD.com, and you can download the inaugural issue for free. Great. All right. So let's talk about volume. And
Starting point is 00:09:40 we can start this discussion wherever you want to start it. I'll just throw something out there that has been circulating for, it's been at least a year now, maybe a little bit longer. And that is the idea that the more volume you do, the more muscle you will build, period. build period. And almost in, it looks to be forever. Uh, it's kind of like if you're currently doing 15 hard sets for your biceps every week, 30 hard sets is going to be much better. Maybe not double the muscle growth, but it's going to be much better. And if you could somehow get to 50 hard sets, that's going to be better still. So I'm just going to give that to you. And you can, if you want to table that and come back to it, that's fine. But that's just something that in particular, a lot of people have asked me about. Yeah. So I'll try to tackle that now. And I have a dichotomy of my thoughts on volume. There's huge problems with all of the research that's done on volume, almost all of it. And I
Starting point is 00:10:44 actually talk about that. And I think it's issue number two of the research that's done on volume, almost all of the research. And I actually talk about that in, I think it's issue number two of the Body by Science Research Review. So I do want to mention that. Let me start with this. The reason I think that increasing volume over time, and you want to be careful because there are some big implications when you increase volume over time, you can get out of hand quickly. But the reason that my opinion is that it does build muscle is because all of the research, and there's a process, this universe of research is about 30 studies, 28, 32, but it's around 30 studies where the sole purpose of the study by the researchers was designed to look at increasing volume and assessing muscle hypertrophy. So there's the universe of studies. All of those studies reported one of two things, either an increase in muscle hypertrophy or no gain. So there's never a harm in terms of muscle hypertrophy. Now, again, we can talk about overtraining, sports performance, and we're
Starting point is 00:11:42 not looking at those outcomes, at least not now. The other reason that my default position is, or what I'm basing my opinion on, is that these are multiple labs, different researchers using multiple methods, sometimes ultrasound, sometimes MRI, sometimes DEXA. So again, my interpretation of literature, if you increase volume, you should expect no harm and potentially gains in muscle. Now, again, I caveated this with there's a lot of problems with the current research that that's based on. And what are you going to do? You're going to keep increasing volume. Good luck next year or two years down the line because you've just set yourself up for an unattainable baseline of volume that that logic where it ends, so to speak.
Starting point is 00:12:34 Yeah, it ends in injury. That's where it will end eventually. I mean, and even if it's not an acute injury, it's going to be a repetitive stress injury or multiple, right? I know this is something you'll probably get to, but it depends how you want to define volume. But it doesn't matter if you're talking about increasing reps, poundage, hard sets, however you want to define it. We know that this is maybe an example of theoretical versus practical. You can only go so far until your recovery falls behind and eventually you get hurt. Yeah. Or lose your motivation to train before you get hurt. If
Starting point is 00:13:12 you're just going to trudge through it. So this is one of my favorite topics about how you define volume. I love science and I love simplicity. So in my opinion, the simplest way to track your volume, and I might add, it's also scientifically validated, is it's this concept, I call it set volumes. Are you familiar with set volume? Yeah, I think we're talking about this. I give Greg Knuckles credit. I like hard sets is kind of how he talks about it. Yes, yeah, same. Yes. So any set, not counting warmup sets, but any set that you do that's near failure. So where you could only do one, maybe two. And according to the research that has validated this within three repetitions of failure to where you could do another rep, you would simply count that set towards that muscle group. So if I did five sets of bench press and I took every one of them to where I thought
Starting point is 00:14:08 I could do one more rep, that's five sets set volume for my chest. And I love that because one, it's simple. And again, I love simplicity and I've done some work on this. It's validated. Like it's validated in the literature. There's a lot more problems that get introduced when you start looking at tonnage. When you multiply reps times sets times weight, that introduces a lot more things. So let's just mention one of the big problems with this research on all of the resistance training volume for muscle hypertrophy
Starting point is 00:14:42 is a lack of a standardization of effort or intensity. So if each set is not taken to the same standard, which would be failure or near failure, one study can't be interpreted the same way. So the best studies are those that increased volume and that controlled for intensity, or I like to call it effort. And before we continue on that line, would you mind just commenting on some of the drawbacks
Starting point is 00:15:12 of the tonnage method? And then maybe if you want to also quickly comment on total reps, because this is also something that a lot of people wonder, how should I be counting my volume? Yeah, so a major problem that I have with tonnage, which is basically this is where you're going to track your volume by how much weight you've lifted. So if you do 10 reps at 100 pounds for 10 sets, what is that? That's 10,000 pounds on any given exercise. If you're going to use tonnage, total weight to base all of your decisions, whether you're going to increase volume, decrease volume,
Starting point is 00:15:49 here's where this really falls apart. Squats and leg press. So let's assume for a moment that squats with 200 pounds will tax my body, have the same stimulus on my body as 400 pounds. Let's just double it for 10 reps on the leg press. So let me reset. Let me reset that. I did 10 reps of a back squat with 200 pounds that has introduced a stimulus on my body that's equal to the stimulus that 400 pounds for 10 reps that the leg press did. So my body perceives both of them as the same stimulus for growth. Because of course you would be able to do a lot more on the leg press is the point.
Starting point is 00:16:32 Yes, so the leg press is double the tonnage. And what happens that in a given week or two where you've done more leg press workouts than squat. So there's just a simple example where tonnage falls apart. And that's just one example. You've got chest flies versus bench press. You've got all of these. Again, it just introduces so many problems. And again, I just I love set volume. It also I mean, you mentioned you mentioned this, that this point of effort is very important.
Starting point is 00:17:05 The tonnage doesn't reflect how much effort went into each of those sets. So you could rack up more tonnage doing a bunch of low effort sets. You could just sit in the gym for three hours doing a bunch of real sub max, just low effort stuff. And if you were thinking that that's how you track volume and I just increased my volume, I should gain more muscle. No, you won't. If you went from training with a lot of effort,
Starting point is 00:17:32 lower amount of tonnage to that for a period of time, you might not lose muscle, but you're probably gonna get weaker. Like you're not gonna get stronger and fitter during that, almost like a, it's not a detraining phase, but it'd be like a very low effort maintenance phase, I guess you could say. Yeah. And thank you for mentioning that. That's even more of a baseline issue with tonnage. Exactly that. If you're not controlling for effort, like you said, I'll just do 10-pound dumbbells for three hours because I can do it.
Starting point is 00:18:05 I've got a lot of tonnage. I'm growing. Nope. Yep. Yep. And total reps have the same types of problems, right? Yes. Yep.
Starting point is 00:18:15 Yep. Same thing. Yep. Okay, cool. So I just wanted to quickly kind of divert on that because I think it's i think it's uh it's good and it's relevant to the discussion but coming back to you were talking about how all right the best research on volume it controls for effort and so i'm assuming where you want to go from there is all right when you look at that research then in particular what's the message? What's kind of the signal in that research as opposed to the 30-ish studies that many people will look at in the aggregate and again, conclude,
Starting point is 00:18:54 and this, you've seen this conclude that more volume is better and you just can keep doing more and more forever. As long as you can, as long as you know, you don't get hurt. If you can get up to 50 hard sets per week for your biceps, then do that if you want really big biceps. Yeah, and I'll also add in control for effort and frequency, ideally. So the same number of days per week that you're stimulating a muscle group, ideally that's controlled for as well. controlled for as well. Even volume per session, ideally, right? Because we know that doing 20 sets for one muscle group in one session is not going to be as effective
Starting point is 00:19:30 as doing two 10-set sessions or three 6-7 sets. Yes. So now we've just reduced the approximately 30 studies that didn't control for intensity. And now we have like eight of them or six, whatever. We have the best study.
Starting point is 00:19:49 Let me get into the next major problem with this. And it's a big problem. The problem with that research, and this is everywhere, and I'm guilty of, I've published several resistance training studies, and I violated this, and I won't do it anymore. So I'm not saying every other researcher is just a poor methodologist. I'm also guilty of what I'm about to say or historically have been. Right.
Starting point is 00:20:16 And just because it was an oversight, I'm assuming. I mean, it's just now you know more. Yes. Yeah. So these studies that were designed to investigate volume. So I'm going to explain the problem and then I'll give an example to bring it home. The researchers did not assess the current training volume of the subjects of what they were doing before they entered the study. So let's look at a practical example. Let's say researchers have a high volume group
Starting point is 00:20:46 and a low volume group. They're going to compare 10 sets per week versus 20 sets per week. 20 sets being the high volume, 10 sets being the low volume group. And they're going to randomize their subjects to these two groups, which is exactly what you should do. That's a great way to conduct a study. But what if a subject, let's just say this is biceps, what if one of the subjects was doing 30 sets per week on their own and they were randomly assigned to the high volume group? So the researchers are taking that data and attributing their outcomes to a high volume of training.
Starting point is 00:21:26 But what were they actually studying in that subject? What is it, a 33% decrease in volume? The same could be true, what if somebody was in the low volume group, they were assigned to the low volume group, but prior to the study, they were doing five sets per week for bicep. So they have increased their training volume by 100%. But yet the way the study was designed by not accounting for their previous training volume, researchers are saying this is what you can expect with low volume. That's not even close to what that subject was actually doing. They were increasing your volume.
Starting point is 00:22:07 So I say all of this to say there's a lot of holes in the volume research. One of the largest things we already mentioned was not controlling for intensity. The other, and this is almost all of them, is not appreciating the current training volume of the subjects going into the study. And then, so if you have to look at this existing literature with that additional lens now added, where does that leave us? Well, that's where I still, as I interpret the literature, on average, again, everything in research is based on averages. On average, you're going to have some people that were likely incorrectly randomly assigned to one group and the other, but on average, you're going to have some people that were likely incorrectly randomly assigned to one group and the other, but on average, increases in volume associated with
Starting point is 00:22:51 or have caused, because everything else was controlled in the best studies, an increase in muscle hypertrophy. Now, let me talk about the best study that I found on wolf. And this is the one that I have in the body by science research review. This one study, the research did handle this. They addressed this. What they did was they had two groups of subjects. They had a non-individualized group and an individualized group. I think they actually did this within subjects model, which means they had one leg train one way, one leg train the other. So it was actually the same they had one leg train one way, one leg train the other. So it was actually the same subject, one leg doing one thing, one leg doing the other.
Starting point is 00:23:30 So just so people understand, one leg would be the individualized and one leg would be the non-individualized. Yes, yes. So what they did for the non-individualized group or leg, they said, we're going to give you an, uh, kind of an arbitrary amount of set volume to do. We're going to give you 22 sets per week. And this was a combination of leg press and leg extension. And they measured the muscle thickness. I think it was with ultrasound. Maybe it was MRI. I can't recall. They looked at the actual muscle growth in the quadriceps. And the way that they came up with 22 sets per week was it was a random assignment based on 10 other resistance training studies. And that was the average resistance training volume that those 10 other studies were.
Starting point is 00:24:19 So one group didn't matter what they were doing. They said, you're doing 22 sets. Whether you're doing less than that, more than that, we don't care. The other group or the other leg, they said, whatever you're currently doing, we're going to increase that by 20%. So there was an individualized component to that group or that leg. And at the end of the study, I think it was a six or eight week study, both legs experienced a significant increase in muscle growth. But the individualized group, who across the board increased their resistance training volume by 20%, had a significantly greater muscle hypertrophic response than just the arbitrary. Now, one other statement
Starting point is 00:25:08 here, that does not mean that 20% is a magical number. They didn't test 10, they didn't test 30. And I would say 20% increases in your volume is pretty extreme. That can get out of hand very quickly. Yeah, because it compounds if you're going to be aggressive with it, right? Yeah, if you do 20% each month, within six months, you're going to be in the gym eight hours. It is a compounded programming approach and it cannot be maintained.
Starting point is 00:25:38 So yes, I think the principle is for coaches, for fitness professionals, for people that are serious about their training, base your programming decisions on what you're currently doing. There's the principle. And now further research should seek to fine tune this. But I think 20% is way too high, unless you're going to do that on an annual basis. But that's kind of wonky.
Starting point is 00:26:01 Yeah. A couple follow-up questions. So one is, in this study, I'm curious, were there instances where somebody, they were not doing 20-ish hard sets per week? Maybe they were doing 10 or 12-ish, let's say, right? And they, in one leg, they're essentially doubling their weekly volume or maybe just even increasing, let's just say 50% plus. Were there instances where that leg grew less than the leg that was individualized, which had a smaller increase in volume? If you don't remember exactly, that's fine.
Starting point is 00:26:40 I'm just curious because if that is the case, that's kind of interesting, right? Yeah. So let me tell you what I do remember and then I'll say what I think happened. So what I remember is in the non-individualized leg, exactly what you would think. Some of those legs were decreasing their volume by 50%. One of them was like 150% increase. So it was all over the board. And there were some that were right. Like that was their average. So they were just, you know, staying the same.
Starting point is 00:27:10 Just doing their normal workouts. Yeah. Yes. And then I remember the graph and I love it when studies do this, when they tell you what happens on a per subject basis. And they did that in this study. And yeah, I believe there were some people in the non-individualized group that had an outstanding, maybe decreased volume. I don't remember the individual details, but there were some that had a great response to this arbitrary 22 cents per week. And then again, the way the research is reported, it's on average, it was not as good as the individualized approach. Yep. And just to comment on that point for something that I think is good for people to keep in mind when trying to understand research or interpret research is this point of averages,
Starting point is 00:27:57 that if you have, on average, something doing better for the participants, worse, no change. If you look into individual responses, what you often find is a bell curve, not always, but a normal kind of distribution where on average, most of the people are kind of in the middle, and maybe that middle is a little bit better, a little bit worse, or about the same. but then you will often find a minority of people who did much better, minority of people who did much worse. And so if somebody were just reading the abstract of a study, they might read, oh, well, on average, this doesn't seem to make much of a difference. But there are scenarios where because of individual circumstances, if they were in that study, they might've been one of the really good high responders.
Starting point is 00:28:47 They were just in the minority and that isn't necessarily reflected in an abstract. Yeah, that's absolutely right. Just to further that example, we recently did a diet break study in resistance trained females. And this isn't published yet, but one of the things we were
Starting point is 00:29:05 able to do was monitor their weight gain or loss during the week of the diet break. So they took scales home and every day we had them weigh in. And there was like a third of the subjects, I think it was like 40% that gained weight when they increased their calories for seven days back to maintenance. There was like 20, 25% that actually lost weight. And then there was like, you know, this middle group, 15% that really didn't gain or lose weight. So there's a perfect example. If I'm coaching somebody and my client's educated
Starting point is 00:29:38 and they say, hey, the research says this, as a researcher, I would say, yeah, that's true on average. And we shouldn't be surprised if that happens. But do appreciate, there are some people that responded better than this. You may respond worse. So we can't have 100% faith in what the research reports, because you are not an average. You are an individual data point. Yep, yep. Very important point. Coming back to volume. So a key takeaway is increasing volume relative to where you're at
Starting point is 00:30:11 is going to be superior on average than just picking an arbitrary number that's really high. And that also practically is gonna work better because if you're going, I mean, take lower body. If you're doing 10 sets per week, let's say you're relatively new, you start with 10 sets per week, hard sets per week for your lower body. You're going to do quite well with that.
Starting point is 00:30:29 We know that. Eventually, that's not going to be enough volume to continue gaining muscle and strength. And so you're at that point. It's going to be smarter to go, all right, I'm going to bump that up to 11 or 12 sets and see where that gets me. That might be enough to eke out another couple months of muscle growth. It might be a month, it might be two, it might be three. And then at that point, maybe you look at adding a little bit more. That approach is going to be superior to just going,
Starting point is 00:30:58 all right, I'm ready. I'm ready to be hardcore. I'm going to go from 10 to 20 hard sets simply because I mean, thinking the amount of soreness, you're not going to want to do those workouts for, uh, for very long. Right. And, you know, I, I'd love to hear your comments on, on that, if you agree with that approach. And then after that, I would love to hear your thoughts on the ceiling. You do think, cause this is, this is something, again, that there's a debate on, is there essentially no ceiling to the potential muscle growth that volume can stimulate? Are we only limited by our ability to recover and just sit in the gym for hours? The first part of that, going from 10 to 20 sets, I think that would be insane. First of all, you're doubling the amount of time at a minimum because there's a fatigue aspect in that as well. Again, I said earlier, I think 20% at a given time is too much, in my opinion.
Starting point is 00:32:03 I guess I know we have this. I'd say it's a consensus. I think most people would say less than 10 sets per muscle group is low volume. 10 to 20 is considered moderate volume, and then 20 or greater would be considered high volume. And again, this would be on a per body part basis. And per week, right? Just so people understand. Yeah. Sets per muscle group per week. Yeah. I'll talk when we can. If we have time, I'll get into what I'm currently doing it for my own volume and tracking it.
Starting point is 00:32:36 Man, 20 sets per week. Again, I'm also assuming a non-enhanced, somebody who's not taking anabolic steroids. I think there's a different class of lifter who I'm not basing my opinions on, which would be the enhanced athlete here. And in terms of, is there a ceiling? Yeah, I believe so. I think I always go back to protein. As I interpret the research on protein intake, the more and more protein you ingest, intake, the more and more protein you ingest, you still, in my opinion, you get a benefit. The more you eat, you keep getting benefits. But the more you eat, the less and less and less of a benefit you get. So it's like this, what's the name of the curve? It just- Asymptote, asymptote, however you pronounce that, I can spell it. But yeah, it's approaching zero, but it never reaches zero. Yeah. Yes, it's exactly right. So that's my
Starting point is 00:33:32 opinion on protein. And again, I'm just going to say the same thing with volume. There may be a benefit in a perfect world with continually, but that's when we're getting into, like we're admitting here, recovery. Is it impacting your sleep? What about just your lifestyle, your time? Here's what I think is the problem with going to high volumes. I think by default, and I will say this would be natural,
Starting point is 00:34:00 the intensity with which you are conducting those sets is probably not going to be what it would otherwise be if you did less and that's something the research as far as i know hasn't really addressed so you can keep increasing your volume and i'm going to assume that your intensity doesn't change so that i can you know compare apples to apples but if you're going to tell me that I've got to do eight sets of leg press versus three, I might tell, I might try to convince myself that all eight sets are within a few repetitions of failure. They're probably not. And, you know, I, in, in my training wouldn't, I mean, I do four sets per exercise right now. and that's kind of my
Starting point is 00:34:45 standard, but take leg press or a squat, any compound exercise. That first set, I actually want to be around three, two or three good reps left because I just know that by set four, that's going to be a one. And if I start with a one though, by set four, I'm probably going to have to take weight off the bar or off of the machine, which, you know, it actually, it occurred to me that that could make for an interesting discussion. What's better, push to one on that first set and basically keep every set at one ish good rep left, but you got to take weight off the bar or the first set is three, maybe two or three good reps left. And then set four is maybe one good rep left, but you did not have to take weight off
Starting point is 00:35:39 of the bar. However, regardless to your point, doing it the latter way, like where set one is all out, almost to failure, and then doing that every single set, that's a lot more taxing. I mean, coming back to recovery and soreness. I mean, I run into that still where in my training blocks, I start with sets of 10 and I progressively over the course of four months move into heavier weights. So by the end, I'm doing like sets of fours and twos when I start. So, you know, I just did it last week. Tens. I squatted on Thursday, did lower body on Thursday. I'm still sore. I couldn't deadlift today. I was like, my legs are too sore. And that's, that was only 12 hard sets in that workout but those are pretty hard sets yeah and
Starting point is 00:36:26 that factors into it just again i think it always goes back to recovery and and then so what are your thoughts then practically speaking at what point is it just not practical anymore to further increase volume like hard sets per for a major muscle group in a week? In my opinion, and this is my opinion, this is not based on evidence, your first priority should be on effort. So if you can only do one set with an effort that's near failure, or then two and then three, that would be, I think effort or intensity is the primary driver of muscle hypertrophy. I'm assuming we're focused on muscle hypertrophy. Once that's taken care of and you can maintain a high effort, then the next priority would be, okay, can I, over time, increase volume? And that can be
Starting point is 00:37:20 stepwise over a period of time and then dropping back down and going stepwise again. Again, because it can get out of hand with the compounded effect if you're just going to constantly be increasing volume. So those are my thoughts. And intensity's got to be the focus. I'm going to lift hard. And when somebody says they're going to stop three reps shy of failure, that's still not an easy set. Technically, it wouldn't matter. The load wouldn't matter if you're always going to three reps shy of failure. That is a hard workout. There's nothing easy about that. Yeah, that's a good point. And I refer to this, I don't think it's an official technical term. It's just something that I talk about intensity, discipline,
Starting point is 00:38:00 and trying not to deceive ourselves about how many good reps we actually have left. And I catch myself, I've been paying attention to this more closely for at least a year now and been tracking my reps in reserve, my perception of it in my training spreadsheet. And so I'm able to see over time how my loads trend reps and my perception of effort. And I'll catch myself sometimes on certain exercises ending a set. You know, I just just yesterday I was doing an incline press. It was a machine kind of incline press. I wanted to try it out.
Starting point is 00:38:39 And it was my third set and I had done like eight or nine reps. And I marked that down as like a two reps in reserve. And then I had a thought that I was like, I don't think so. I think I could have done a few more than that. And so I then this is my next set. This is my fourth set. So I'm a little bit even more fatigued now than that third set. And because it's a machine, I mean, not that pushing to absolute failure on a,
Starting point is 00:39:06 on incline bench press is a big deal if you have a spotter, but it's a machine. So I'm like, all right, I'm just going to, I'm going to go for it and see what failure really looks like here. And I did 13. So, so, you know, I, I, I try to, I feel like it's easier for me to perceive it properly on free weight exercise on a, on a squat. I feel like I'm pretty good. Um, you know, that when that final rep is a grinder and that bar has really slowed down, you know, I, I think I've maintained a pretty good perception there deadlifting as well. I don't push it to that point. I don't like to deadlift until I'm like shaking, trying to get the bar up. I don't think it's necessary, but just in a very important point that, that you brought up is, um, how hard are you training
Starting point is 00:39:50 really? And if you don't ever really push it, you can lose your perception, right? Of what is failure because, you know, often we can do a little bit more than, than we think. Yeah. And I like the idea of, I call them test days. So every month, every six weeks, take your, I mean, again, not on deadlift, I would say not on squats, but especially on single joint exercises, take it to salute failure where you cannot physically do another repetition. And then you have a standard or you have something objective to say, okay, for the next six weeks, I know that on my first set, I should be able to do 12.
Starting point is 00:40:33 So anything less than nine is I'm not pushing it. So I call them test days. And I actually like that. It's kind of like a self-calibration if you're going to use this to near failure type of approach in your lifting, which I think you should. Yep. Yep. I do that as well. So, you know, I do some AMRAPs on my big exercises every four months and I don't push to absolute failure on the squat. I don't think that's necessary. I am comfortable going to like a zero to one good reps left though. Like that
Starting point is 00:41:01 final rep is, is really hard. I almost don't get it. You know, I'm comfortable going to that point. I'm comfortable on the deadlift going to one or two good reps left. So that last rep was hard. The bar really started to slow down. I probably could grind out one max two more, but I don't do it because I just don't think it's necessary. I don't am wrap everything, but I will do the same thing where I'm, I'm happy to push it really right up to the edge. And maybe, maybe even more often than four months on the isolation stuff, just for that point of not that it, it necessarily stimulates more muscle growth, but, um, it does, it does just help maintain that intensity discipline.
Starting point is 00:41:43 And, um, you know, that's just a segue to something I wanted to follow up with you on, which is a comment that you made about training many people have heard that you have to push to failure or right up to failure, maybe one good rep left or even zero, like that was it. You didn't fail, but if you tried to get another one, you would fail. Many people think that you really need to train at that level of intensity always in all or most of your sets to gain muscle. You know, bodybuilders for a long time have been saying that it's those last couple reps before you fail. Like that's where all the muscle growth is, you know? Yes. And that's, that's kind of how, where I grew up. I don't, I don't know if you remember Mike Menser and, uh, yeah, the heavy duty systems. Yeah, sure. And Dorian Yates kind of had like a hybrid approach to that.
Starting point is 00:42:47 So that was my introduction to bodybuilding. But the evidence would suggest that training to failure is no better than leaving up to three repetitions in the tank. Now, there's not 30 studies that have shown this, but of the research that exists, training to failure is not harmful for muscle hypertrophy, but it does not give you a benefit. And I would add, though, if you're an athlete, there is a harm in training to failure because it decreases acute power production and a chronic power production. If you're an athlete and your sport requires that you generate power, you do not want to
Starting point is 00:43:25 train to failure because there's multiple studies, three off the top of my head, where that has been shown that you want to avoid failure training. And if you think about it, it kind of makes sense. When you're training to failure, think of the speed of the bar or the dumbbell on that last set. Is that an explosive? No, it's slow. It's very slow.
Starting point is 00:43:49 So you can see the argument that you're training your neuromuscular system to grind. Yes, yes, which is not what you want if you're a powerful athlete. Now, again, for hypertrophy, no harm, but you also have to look at what is your recovery ability going to be and and there is some cellular data on just atp resynthesis that it takes a a much longer period of time to recover from a set to failure and that could have implications on sets two three and four and the rest of your workout and and especially if you're doing that on big exercises. I see people in the gym, maybe not so much on a squat or a deadlift, but on a leg press, for example, and another lower body,
Starting point is 00:44:37 lunging until they can't even walk anymore. And hey, I've done it as well. It just places some major recovery demands on your body that you could then wonder, is that really the most effective way to go about this? Because I'm not, I'm not gaining, let's say it's, let's just even be very generous and say it might be a little bit better. And I understand your position and I agree with you, but let's even just say, oh, well, in this case, it's a little bit better for hypertrophy to train that hard, but how much more stress is it putting on your body? It's just the math doesn't work out. Yeah. And I will also admit all of the research that I'm relying on that informs my opinion is once again in a non-enhanced gym go. So if you're on steroids, I'm willing to admit that it's possible that training to absolute failure, that may be different for that athlete because I don't have evidence to rely on. That I just say, I don't know. It's possible. It's also possible that it's the same as a
Starting point is 00:45:44 non-enhanced athlete. Yeah. Yeah. That's a fair point. I mean, anecdotally speaking, I don't know. It's possible. It's also possible that it's the same as a non-enhanced athlete. Yeah. Yeah, that's a fair point. I mean, anecdotally speaking, I can think of one big enhanced bodybuilder who works out when I work out in the gym I go to. And just over the years, a lot of these really big guys, they do tend to train that way, it seems like, right? Where it's a lot of high rep sets, a lot of sets and a
Starting point is 00:46:05 lot of training to failure. It's rare to see a big jacked bodybuilder, not a strength guy, but a bodybuilder doing sets of five on the squat, you know, to, to failure. Right. And one other thing I wanted to mention, cause I think it's, it's very practical, just my, my own training right now. So what I'm doing is I'm on at least a four week, maybe even a little bit longer. I'm trying to standardize my volume. And the reason for this is, I know we're not going to talk about this today, but you're helping me design a weight loss case study that I'm going to go on. So I'm in the process of just making sure that kind of like earlier, I want to make sure that everything I'm doing, my diet and my training and my cardio is all standardized so that when I start this weight loss study on myself, that there's nothing that's been
Starting point is 00:46:56 changed other than the diet. So there's the pretext for this. And also thank you for continuing to help me design this. Um, so what I'm doing is I'm doing 10 sets per body part per week for my major body parts. And I'll just say what they are. So it's chest, back, shoulders, quads, hams, biceps, triceps, glutes. That's eight. That's eight. So I don't, I don't do calves and I don't do abs. That's eight. That's eight. So I don't do calves and I don't do abs.
Starting point is 00:47:28 I'm really keen on calves. And the practical part of this is that takes me about four hours per week. So I divide that over four workouts. So if anybody's curious, if you're going to do 10 sets per week, which most people would say that's on the threshold of low to moderate volume. It takes me, again, across four workouts. It's about four hours per week. And my warmup, that also includes my warmup, which is about 10 minutes per session. So about 15 minutes per session to get 10 sets. So personally, I can't imagine doing 20 sets because now I'm in the gym eight hours per week. And again, that's with my lifestyle, my father, job, all the other things.
Starting point is 00:48:12 So I always am curious for the people that are able to do more. I think they're usually young. Correct. And they usually don't have kids and are not teaching at a university and so forth. Hey there, if you are hearing this, you are still listening, which is awesome. Thank you. And if you are enjoying this podcast or if you just like my podcast in general
Starting point is 00:48:37 and you are getting at least something out of it, would you mind sharing it with a friend or a loved one or a not so loved one even who might want to learn something new. Word of mouth helps really bigly in growing the show. So if you think of someone who might like this episode or another one, please do tell them about it. And another question I wanted to get your thoughts on just related to volume is, so some people, what they do just to this point is they shorten rest times. So instead of resting two to three minutes in between sets, at least a bigger exercises,
Starting point is 00:49:16 and I actually personally, I don't ever rest less than two minutes unless I'm doing a kind of modified super set, like an antagonist paired where I'll, you know, do a set of biceps, rest a minute, do a set of calves or whatever, right? Because they don't interfere with each other. But what are your thoughts on that approach? Because again, some people are thinking about, okay, I don't want to spend two hours in the gym. I have maybe 60, 70 minutes. I want to do more volume. All right. Instead of I'll just rest a minute, minute and a half in between sets. And yeah, if I have to take weight off the bar or maybe I have to pyramid down my reps, I start with 10 and then I only get six and then I only get three or
Starting point is 00:49:54 whatever. A lot of people do that. I appreciate saving time trying to be efficient. I personally don't like the short rest periods. So something that I'll just, I mean, I worked out right before we got on here. So I did incline bench press and I did lat pulldown. And what I do is I finished my set of lat pulldown and I'll set a timer for five minutes. So within five minutes, I need to go back to the lat pulldown. But during that five minute rest period, I'm also doing a set of incline bench press. So I guess to go back to the lat pulldown. But during that five minute rest period, I'm also doing a set of incline bench pulls. So I guess we're going to call that super set. So lat pulldown, incline bench, lat pulldown, incline bench, lat pulldown, incline bench, lat pulldown. I actually
Starting point is 00:50:37 did four sets of lat pulldown, three sets of incline. Then my workout took me to step up. So I put a barbell across my back. I stepped up with one leg, my left leg and my right leg. And so I took two minutes in between there. And then I went and did a set of shrug. So now I'm doing lower body and shrug. So this is just a different spin on what you're suggesting. Some people will choose to lower the rest periods. I'm just supersetting so that my muscle group is having plenty of time to recover, but yet I'm maximizing my time because I'm able to work another muscle group that wasn't fatigued while the other one is recovering. efficient. So yeah, so typically it's either, you know, depending on the movements, if it's squats or deadlift, then the time or six minutes while I'll go do something else because I need more time to recover. But five minutes, four minutes where I'm doing two exercises in that in every five minutes. Yeah, yeah, it's a great time efficient way to get a little bit more training done in a little bit less time without compromising any of the exercises.
Starting point is 00:51:49 But can you speak briefly to this? Well, it's just a question that somebody really might ask is like, OK, so if I if I take a set relatively close to failure, it's a it's a hard set. And that has a certain amount of training stimulus to it. That's where I should be, somewhere between one and three good reps left. And why do I need to rest two to three minutes? Let's just say it's going to be a more standard, straightforward, do a set of incline bench press, rest two to three minutes, maybe two and a half minutes, whatever, do the next set. Why not just rest one minute so long as I keep pushing close to failure? Yeah, I'm going to have to take weight off the bar, but why does that matter? I think this goes back to the mechanisms of muscle hypertrophy. So there's two that I think have the largest impact. Mechanical tension, which is the amount of stress you're putting
Starting point is 00:52:51 on the muscle fibers. And then there's metabolic stress. So with that approach, if you're going to do an exercise and then only take a minute, you are sacrificing mechanical tension because you're not going to be able to do the same weight for the same amount of reps in that second and third set. So you are knowingly sacrificing some mechanical tension and that aspect of muscle hypertrophy. But what you're gaining with that approach is metabolic stress. So a oxygen deprivation to the tissue, an increase in lactate production, which also is associated with growth hormone increase. So there's that aspect. So I would be hard pressed to say, I don't know if there's a strong argument against that. Other than
Starting point is 00:53:38 theoretically, I think mechanical tension probably plays a larger role in muscle hypertrophy than metabolic stress. So I'm going to choose to put more of my efforts on keeping my weight higher for each set, rather than getting this lactic acid buildup, which would naturally happen with very short period. But that's just my opinion. Yeah. And that's my understanding as well. That's my answer is prioritizing mechanical tension is what we want to do. I would look at that as kind of like stepping over a dollar to pick up a dime. So why don't we, let's just take the dollar. Last question for you, which is something I'm sure some people listening are curious about is you've
Starting point is 00:54:26 spoken a little bit about this, but, but maybe if you could just lay it out just succinctly and clearly so people can understand, how would you go about increasing volume? So somebody is, um, wherever they're at right now. And okay. They understand that 20% every week or maybe even every month, it gets out of control. What is a more reasonable method of increasing volume? And maybe you want to just first explain why somebody might want to increase volume based on where they're at. Yeah, so that question there would be my first question is, why would they want to? And again, they may say, because I want to get bigger muscles. So I would want to make sure if I'm putting myself in the role of coach or programmer, does the person want to increase volume? And if they say yes,
Starting point is 00:55:16 and they have the time and they're going to be able to execute, because I think the worst thing is, yeah, let's increase your frequency, your volume, and then you're not going to be able to finish your workouts. Well, now that's a negative. I'd rather you do less and actually complete things. But if the answer is yes, I want to increase it, I would do something around the lines of like 10%, maybe even less. And again, the numbers get dicey because if you're currently doing 12 sets per week, I might say, hey, let's do 14 sets for that muscle group this week, and then only 13 sets next week. So it would be somewhere around 10%. And that's where my scientist nature would come out. I would want some assessment. Now, I'm fortunate I have an
Starting point is 00:55:58 ultrasound where I can measure this. So maybe after eight or 12 weeks, hey, is this working? Is your intensity still the same? That's what I would do. I would say, why do you want to do this? Do you want to do this? Do you have a desire to do this? Then I'm going to be inclined to work to say, yes, well, let's do this. You have the desire, you have the energy, you obviously feel recovered enough to have an increase in volume. And I'm going to do a minor increase in volume, minor meaning around 10%. increase in volume, minor meaning around 10%. And again, that's based on a body part perspective. It's just important that you shared that because in my experience talking with people,
Starting point is 00:56:38 they're often surprised. Because I'll say about the same thing, add one or two hard sets for a muscle group, do that for a month, two, three months, something like that. One month is actually probably more like two or three months, see where you're at. And people are often surprised because that sounds so little. It sounds like they're skeptical that that will actually make a difference. Like, really? I just need to do an extra set or two of biceps curls every week, and that's going to be enough to get the needle moving again. And yes, I mean, if we're just talking about volume, there are many other things, of course, that are going to influence results, but just looking at volume, yes, that can be enough. And it's also something you can recover from and still enjoy your workouts and so forth. Yeah. And if this hypothetical
Starting point is 00:57:22 person would challenge that, okay, so let's do what you want. Let's go up five sets. All right, well, do you think if we decreased your volume that you would lose muscle? They would probably say yes. So if you say yes, then let's assume you're correct, and I'm not going to make that assumption, but let's assume that if we decreased your volume, you would lose muscle, and you want to increase five. Where does that leave you for the rest of your life? Or get smaller. Either you're now doing 15 hard sets a week forever, or you are getting smaller.
Starting point is 00:57:56 Or 20 or 25, again, depending on how soon they want to keep increasing it. It's one of those, what do you call it, the snowball that rolls down the hill. increasing it. It's one of those, what do you call it, the snowball that rolls down the hill. It's exponentially impossible to maintain a given level of an increase in volume. Yeah, it becomes geometrically troubling, right? And you had mentioned increasing volume for a period and then decreasing. Could you just comment on that? Because that's something that I just thought was interesting. Yeah, so because I'm a nerd on this stuff, I would often just write out, you know, as I was doing this research, what would this look like? So as an example, if somebody starts at 10 sets per week, January 1st, maybe over the course of that year,
Starting point is 00:58:39 from January 1st to December 31st, we're going from 10 to 18 sets, which is a big difference over that year. Now we go into year two, we start back to 12 and now we go to 20. And now we're into year three, we start at 14 and go to 22. So there's a life cycle plan for this in that case. Again, I'm not just looking at this month. I'm forcing the client to have an appreciation. What would my volume look like in five years? And is it maintainable? So that's what I mean by you increase, then you drop back down, but you're not dropping to the same floor where you were when you start. Over your training life, you do have an increase in training volume. It's just step one. And what would you say to a question of, well, why decrease at all?
Starting point is 00:59:35 Okay, I don't mind spending time in the gym, whatever. I've checked whatever boxes that need to be checked. Why not go from, okay, we work from 10 up to 18. And then why not just keep going? And why go down before we go back up? So if a client were to present me with that argument, I would probably say, okay, I don't have evidence to suggest that if you have the time and you have the recovery ability and you can foresee yourself still progressing, yeah, let's do it. Let's, let's try it your way and let's, let's, let's get some numbers. But at some point I would challenge them. You're going to come back at some point. You're going to come. Is that, is that driven mostly by recovery or, or other factors?
Starting point is 01:00:23 I would just say time, just the time alone. You might have to work overtime or you might want to write a book or whatever. That's a great question. I would not force somebody. I'm just trying to think of what do I think is realistic for somebody to maintain that appreciates an increase in volume, does increase hypertrophy,
Starting point is 01:00:43 but keeping it on a path that's sustainable. Last question for you. And that is regarding direct versus indirect volume. I think it's probably worth commenting on just given the context of the conversation, people trying to figure out, okay, how, how do I want to program my volume? Could you just explain that? And then I'm curious how you account for that in your training. Yeah, that's, I love it. Again, I love these little caveats. So that's a problem, not a problem. That's an issue that everybody's going to have to handle. So an example would be a, think of you're working your back by doing a machine row. So I'm pulling the machine back and working my back, but I'm also working my biceps. And we know from published research that lat pulldowns will significantly increase biceps hypertrophy.
Starting point is 01:01:33 Machine rows will significantly increase biceps muscle hypertrophy. Same thing with bench press. Bench press is also primarily stimulating my chest, but you get a triceps activation as well. So the question is, I'll just explain how I handle this. And I've done this two different ways. For years, I've done it one way. And then recently in preparation for this case study that I'm doing, I've adopted a different way. So I used to say if a muscle group is a primary mover in a lift, I count it as a set. So what that means is on a bench press, that counts as a set for my chest and my triceps. If I'm doing a back row, that counts as a set for my back and my biceps.
Starting point is 01:02:19 I think that's fine. That's great because of the research that says you are clearly getting a benefit in these secondary movers of the movement. What I've done recently is I just take it in half. So if I do four sets of bench press, I'm going to count it as two sets for my triceps, four sets for my chest. Yeah, that's what I do. Okay. And then just to take it one step further, because I do a lot of things that are three sets, I round. So if I do three sets of bench press, three for my chest, I don't like doing 1.5 for triceps.
Starting point is 01:02:52 I just round up and it's two for my triceps. But please know you are getting a growth stimulus on these, I call them secondary movers of these compound lifts. Yep. Yeah, that's exactly what I do. If we look at what's the limiting factor in terms of pushing close to failure in a bench press, it's more your chest than your triceps. So it's probably not as effective of a training stimulus as a triceps exercise that you're taking right up to the point of failure, but it's not nothing
Starting point is 01:03:24 either. So, you know, there's kind of a compromise there. If you're going to use set volume as your approach, I think ignoring that is not the best approach. You're going to run into problems. There's going to be a time issue because then you're going to be looking at, okay, what do I need to do for each of my deltoids for my biceps for my triceps you mentioned quads and hamstrings let's say if you're squatting and you only counted that as quads volume because it's primarily a quads exercise but your hamstrings are working if you're squatting correctly they're not uh just along for the ride you're going to be spending a lot more time in the gym and as you've, you'll probably run into an issue where your volume
Starting point is 01:04:05 now is inappropriately high on some of these other muscle groups because you're not counting what should be, it could be five, six, seven, eight hard sets. It really should be counted already toward that muscle group, but you're starting at zero thinking that, okay, I need to do 15 direct sets for my biceps every week because I don't count any of my pulling. Yeah. And that's usually where you see the numbers get kind of crazy with biceps, triceps, potentially glutes as well.
Starting point is 01:04:35 True. Yeah. That's, I guess, kind of trendy. See, I see it all the time in my gym. It's mostly women, but doing a lot of glutes three to five times a week. And I mean, I swear sometimes it's like half of my workout, you know, my workouts are like 60, 70 minutes. I'll see some of these girls, like they're just doing glutes for probably 30 to 40 minutes. And I'm like, didn't I just, wasn't she just doing that two days ago? Like, yeah. And
Starting point is 01:05:02 that's where you see, I mean, if you do the math they're they're over i wouldn't be surprised over 40 sets per week on on because you know if you're doing deadlifts that's if you're doing squats if you're doing lunges if you're doing that like all of those non you know not direct glued exercises are still anything with hip extension yeah yeah exactly and and to a point you made earlier though what i will often also see is many of those sets don't look all that difficult. They're not pushing to, certainly not to failure. And depending on the exercise, if I look at even a hip thrust, how quickly are they finishing the last reps of each set? I mean, I can't say I have like a visual montage I can go to, but I just have, I made a mental note just paying attention that a lot of these sets are very sub-maximal.
Starting point is 01:05:54 And so chances are they could do a lot fewer, they could do many fewer sets, but work harder in them and get potentially even better results in half the time. Yeah. What's the slang? Is that junk volume? Is that what we call that? Yeah. Yeah, exactly. Unless I guess the counter argument is if you just like being in the gym hours every day and that's like social time and you're 20 years old and you have nothing better to do, then sure, I guess.
Starting point is 01:06:24 Yeah. I don't love training. I don't love it. You know, it's funny you say that that could be an interesting, uh, another discussion is this something that people ask me about motivation and they assume that I just love working out. No, I, I really like having finished a workout. Some workouts I enjoy. Many workouts are not all that enjoyable, but I do it anyway. I mean, yeah. And that's where I'm at with squats. Like I hate squats, but I feel like if I give in and I stopped doing squats, well, then I'm going to give in on maybe, you know, posting something on Instagram. You know what I mean? Like, I just, I don't want, I don't want to let that creep in. Yeah. Yeah. You don't want to start becoming a quitter.
Starting point is 01:07:09 That's why I still train my calves. Cause if I, if I stop, they win. I've given, I've surrendered. I've put in the little calf white flag up. My calves are actually big, just, I guess, just from birth. So yeah. Oh, well then you don't even need to see my calves are not. And, uh, I mean, they've, they've grown and there may be, I haven't measured them recently, but they're, they're not what they should be by, by bodybuilding standards. Certainly not. And so I do enough there. They're slowly growing, but if I really cared, I would double because I'm doing direct sets in the range of eight to 12 hard sets per week and then there's some squatting and deadlifting so there's a bit of indirect there as well but if i really
Starting point is 01:07:50 cared i would be doing 20 direct hard so i would just be blitzing them i'm only doing it again just so they don't win but that's everything i actually had for this discussion. Is there anything that we haven't mentioned that I haven't asked about that before we wrap up, you think should be said that is still just kind of bouncing around in your head? No, the only thing that since you asked, I would just encourage people. And again, I know I'm a data person, but track your volume and just see where you're at if you're not currently doing it, because then you have a context. If you're ever going to increase it or if you're going to decrease it, is it doing your harm?
Starting point is 01:08:31 So I'm just big on the little workout log. What are you doing? Again, to me, it's just fun. It makes it more fun. I mean, that's something I think that both of us share that sentiment that people ask me in the gym sometimes. So I have my little Google spreadsheet and I have years of training in this spreadsheet because I just make a new tab for my next four months and build it all out. And people ask me sometimes, like, why do you bother with that? Because it makes it a little bit more fun because I don't inherently love just, you know,
Starting point is 01:09:06 banging weights. I have to find other ways to make it a bit more interesting. And this is one of them because at least this way, to your point, I can pay attention to things. I can see in actual numbers how things change for better or for worse. Hopefully I'm making at least a little bit of progress, at least on key exercises. That alone is motivating. It's motivating. So in four months of training, I gained about 10 to 15 pounds on my front squat and probably about five to 10 pounds on my dead lift. I was happy with that. That's cool. To not know that just makes it a little bit less interesting. Yes. And I mean, as you get older, that's I still have in my head. I want to have my my PR deadlift like 405.
Starting point is 01:09:53 But I've never I've always had back pain that derails me like every two or three years. It just sets me back. So but anyway, yeah, I know my numbers and I'm committed to getting 405 one day. Hopefully soon. Nice. Yeah, I thought at one point I was getting close to, you know, I wanted to do the five plates, the 495, just because it looks cool, right? And I'm back to close to that. I did in my last AMRAP, I did 375 for seven with one or two more still in the tank.
Starting point is 01:10:28 So that's close. Yeah, you would surpass it. Well, if I remember, it was like around 480s, something like that. And at least the calculator that I looked at. Oh, okay. Yep. Okay. So it is close.
Starting point is 01:10:39 Yeah. As you know, with these calculators, though, is once you get above five or six reps, it gets less accurate. So I actually might be able to do it on a good day, but I haven't tried yet. So, but, uh, but anyways, this was, this was a great discussion. Um, and again, thanks for taking the time to do it. Why don't we wrap up quickly and let people know where they can find you and find your work. And, um And just in case they missed it in the beginning, let's tell them again about the new research review that you launched. Sure. Yeah. So go to my website, BillCampbellPhD.com.
Starting point is 01:11:15 Download the inaugural issue. It's free. It'll give you a taste for what the body by science is about. And again, I'll just say, if you want to be current, or if you want to learn, be on top of the best research, and some of the research I look at is historical as well. But if you really want to, I'd say, be the best professional or be the best programmer or be on top of the best nutrition research as it pertains to fat loss and building muscle,
Starting point is 01:11:42 I think it's a great resource for you. And it's an easy read. You do not have to be a science savant to read it. In terms of following my work, I'm just active on Instagram. That is Bill Campbell, PhD. And I just, I do a lot of education on that. I love true false questions.
Starting point is 01:12:02 Well, yeah, a lot of great information on your Instagram account. That's it for this one. Thanks again for doing it. And I look forward to the next one. Thank you. Well, I hope you liked this episode. I hope you found it helpful.
Starting point is 01:12:13 And if you did subscribe to the show because it makes sure that you don't miss new episodes. And it also helps me because it increases the rankings of the show a little bit, which of course then makes it a little bit more easily found by other people who may like it just as much as you. 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.

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