Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Cody McBroom on Who Should and Shouldn’t Reverse Diet
Episode Date: November 9, 2022What’s the best way to end a cut once you’ve reached your body fat goal? Should you slowly ramp up calories and reap the purported benefits of a reverse diet, or is that a waste of time or worse, ...potentially negative? Is it better to increase your calorie intake right to maintenance, or will that result in gaining back the fat you lost due to metabolic adaptation? There’s been a bit of controversy in the fitness space in recent years over reverse dieting. In fact, it’s something I’ve changed my mind about over the years as the research panned out. In this interview, I chat with Cody McBroom about the science of reverse dieting and when it makes sense for everyday fitness folks. Because while there’s no denying the usefulness of science and fitness research, real life isn’t a laboratory. Unscientific methods can still prove useful, and sometimes for surprising reasons. So what does the science say about reverse dieting, and how does that compare with the practical utility of slowly increasing calories after a cut? Cody is a repeat-guest on my show, but in case you’re not familiar with him, he’s the CEO and founder of the Tailored Coaching Method, a lifestyle training and nutrition coaching company (that also coaches how to coach), and host of the Tailored Life podcast. In other words, Cody not only has a background in evidence-based fitness, but also years of in-the-trenches experience working with clients and figuring out what works and what doesn’t in the real world. In this interview, Cody and I talk about . . . - What reverse dieting is, the purported benefits, and what science says about it - How a slow increase in calories can affect dietary compliance and self control when ending a cut - How people respond differently to eating more food - Who can benefit from a reverse diet, why, and whether you should do one - Reverse diets versus recovery diets - The negative effects of calorie deficits and how to know if it’s time to reverse diet - And more . . . So, if you want to learn what science says about reverse dieting, how reverse dieting pans out in the real world, whether you should reverse diet, and a lot more, don’t skip this episode! Timestamps (0:00) - Try Triton today! Go to https://buylegion.com/triton and use coupon code MUSCLE to save 20% or get double reward points! (12:15) - What are your thoughts on reverse dieting? (43:02) - How lean do you need to get before you start running into issues? (51:58) - Have you worked with people that can slowly increase their maintenance calories over time and maintain their body composition? Mentioned on the Show: Try Triton today! Go to https://buylegion.com/triton and use coupon code MUSCLE to save 20% or get double reward points! The Tailored Life Podcast: https://tailoredcoachingmethod.com/podcast/ Cody McBroom’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cody.boomboom/ Cody’s website: https://tailoredcoachingmethod.com/
Transcript
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Hey there and welcome to Muscle for Life. I am Mike Matthews. Thank you for joining me today
for an episode on reverse dieting, which is the opposite of dieting for fat loss. So with
dieting for fat loss, you restrict your calories, you create that calorie deficit.
And if you have a fair amount of fat to lose, if it's going to take a fair amount of time,
you are going to have to progressively reduce those calories throughout the duration of your cutting phase.
Almost certainly, you are not going to be able to create that initial calorie deficit and just
leave your calories there for months and months and months, continue to just lose fat in a nice
linear fashion. There are going to be plateaus. And sometimes, especially as you get deeper into
a cut, the only way to break through a plateau
is to eat a bit less food.
With reverse dieting, you are doing the opposite.
You are now at the end of a cutting phase.
You have achieved your body composition goal
or you are just sick of cutting
and you want to now move back to maintenance calories.
How do you do that?
With reverse dieting,
you slowly get back to maintenance calories,
or at least you don't immediately jump back to maintenance calories. Some reverse dieting
protocols are quite slow. You might only increase your daily calories by 50 or 100 calories every
two weeks, for example. That's pretty slow. Sometimes it's a little bit faster. It might be increasing your daily
calories by 100 calories for one week and then another 100 calories, but still can be slow.
That can be a month plus four to six weeks, depending on what you've been doing to get back
to maintenance calories. And the reverse dieting advocates, at least many reverse dieting advocates
The reverse dieting advocates, at least many reverse dieting advocates, claim that doing it their way is far superior to just increasing your calories back up to your new maintenance calculated newly at your new lower body weight after you are done cutting. People who are bullish on reverse dieting will often say
that if you do it their way, you are going to speed up your metabolism more than if you were
to just increase your calories back to maintenance, you are going to gain no body fat on the way back
up to maintenance, whereas jumping right back to maintenance can cause you to gain
body fat because of metabolic adaptations that occurred when you were cutting that you have to
kind of slowly rectify, slowly undo by slowly increasing your calories. And some people even
say that if you reverse diet back to maintenance, you can continue the process of slowly increasing your calories beyond
your calculated maintenance at that body weight and continue to maintain your body composition,
not gain any additional fat by continuing to increase your calories. And so this is a topic
that I have written about and spoken about over the years. I have also changed my position on it over the years.
Many years ago, when I first heard about reverse dieting and looked into some of the research
that was being used to support the theory, I could understand the argument.
I thought that it was possible that slowly increasing your calories from your end of your cut back to maintenance
might be a little bit better
than just going right back to maintenance right away.
I never did get on board with the claims
that you could continue beyond that point,
significantly beyond that point by reverse dieting.
And instead of now having a maintenance caloric intake of let's say 2,500 calories per day, you now can eat 3,000, 3,500,
4,000 calories per day without explicitly moving more. That was a big part of the claim. You don't
have to work out more. You don't have to even go out for more walks. If you do it right, you basically will be living exactly as you normally do. And you will maintain your ideal body composition, but you will just be eating a lot more food. And that sounded great, but I was very skeptical of those claims. However, again, coming back to you finished a cut,
your calories are low. You want to get back to maintenance calories. I thought it's possible
that doing it a little bit slower rather than a little bit faster might be better. And if it were
not better, it is not going to be harmful. So why not?
However, more recently in the last couple of years, more research has come out and more
smart people in the evidence-based fitness space have looked at that research and thought
about that research.
And we have also gotten more anecdotal evidence with reverse dieting because it has become kind of popular, at least in the body composition space over the last few years.
And when I looked at all of that objectively, I changed my mind.
I said, hey, I think I was wrong.
I think it's probably best actually to just recalculate your maintenance calories at the end of your cut.
Don't go back to your maintenance calories at the beginning of the cut because your new
maintenance is going to be lower.
So calculate it newly and just go right back to that when you are done cutting.
If you want to be very quote unquote careful, okay, subtract 100 calories from that calculated
maintenance, go up to that, eat there for a week or two, let your weight stabilize,
see what's happening, and then see if you can go a little bit higher. Although I don't think
that's necessary. I'm just mentioning that because I have gotten a bit of pushback from people over
the years who were very uncomfortable adding 500 calories, 600 calories to their total daily intake in one go. And they did want to do it in maybe two steps.
Okay, so then let's do three to 400. Let's wait a week, you can see how you feel. Maybe two weeks,
you can watch your body weight go up and then stabilize. And then let's finish it. Let's just
get back to maintenance. Let's not drag this out. And so that is basically my current position on reverse dieting.
And so that is just some context for today's interview with Cody McBroom, who has a lot
of experience working one-on-one with all kinds of people and who, as you will hear
in this interview, agrees with what I just said.
However, he also is going to explain some
of the exceptions to the rule because every rule has exceptions and exceptions do not disprove
rules, right? Cody's position, as you will hear, is that most people probably don't need to do any
sort of reverse dieting. However, some people can benefit from it. And he's going to talk about who those
people tend to be and how they benefit from it and why they benefit from it. And of course,
Cody is going to talk about how to do it effectively, how he has done it with many
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Cody, hey, thanks for taking the time to do this.
Yeah, man, I'm excited to get back on finally between our two busy schedules, finally made it happen.
I know, I know. Here we are every few months, the stars align.
And yeah, I was looking forward to this one too, because this is a topic, reverse dieting
is what I wanted to start with.
We'll see if we have enough time to get to some low calorie dieting.
If not, we'll pick it up in another interview.
But reverse dieting is something that I first heard about many years ago.
And at the time, the consensus, so to speak, in the evidence-based fitness space was that
this is an interesting concept. There might be something to it. It might be better to, at the end of a cut, for example,
slowly kind of work your calories back up to your maintenance as opposed to just jumping right back
to maintenance. Or if you're maintaining, there might be some value to slowly trying to increase
those calories over time above what is your normal
maintenance level. And so there was a time when I was intrigued by the potential for better results
really with body composition and just an easier experience cutting and maintaining. And if you can
get your maintenance calories higher, that makes for easier cutting when you do want to cut and so
forth.
And fast forward to today, let's say in the last year or so, I updated an article that I wrote on reverse dieting some years ago to better reflect my new position on it, which was, and I would say
still is, which is why I haven't touched on this topic in some time, that it looks like the scientific evidence didn't quite
pan out in the way that maybe some of the more zealous reverse dieters would have liked.
And it doesn't seem to be as beneficial as many people thought it might be or even it was.
So basically do it if you want to do it or don't if you don't. If you're at the end
of a cut and you just want to jump back to what is your new maintenance as calculated with your
current body composition and physical activity level, you can do that. If you do want to jump
up by one to 200 calories per week or every other week until you're at maintenance, you can do that
as well. If you're at maintenance and you try to slowly increase your calories over time,
if you do not also increase your activity level, even if subconsciously you are probably going to
get fatter, well, let's actually say you are going to get fatter. And that's kind of where I left it.
And so a lot of preamble, but I wanted to just give that context to you for this discussion.
I'd love to hear your thoughts on both the scientific side and also
in the trenches, actually working with people and having done it with many people, because
I haven't done that in some time. There was a time when I was spending hours and hours a day
emailing people. And even though I wasn't officially their coach, they would send me
updates and we would work through things. And I'm going to say,
personally, I don't have the hands-on experience running reverse dieting with many, many people
like you do. So I'm going to stop there. Yeah. I think it's a good topic because,
I mean, first and foremost, there's just not much, if any at all, actual research on reverse
dieting specifically that we can really pull from.
A lot of it is just... Metabolic research, right?
Exactly. I was going to say it's kind of similar to periodization for hypertrophy research. Really,
it's periodization for strength and sport and all these other things. We're trying to pull
hypertrophy suggestions from it. And I had Dr. Bill Campbell, who I know you know really well
as well, on my podcast. And before we aired, he actually asked me if I would be interested in doing a case study next time I diet down because he wanted to do something more structured with a reverse diet, which would be cool because I think there isn't much.
But I think there's a few situations here where it can be applicable to go slow and then a few situations where it's just absolutely pointless and can probably be worse
than if you didn't.
And a few situations that I can think of is getting to know how the client's body is going
to respond.
Because sometimes we don't know.
I think there's some metabolic phenotypes would be the term of these different types
of metabolisms.
I've always called it just there's a highly adaptive metabolism or less adaptive metabolism. And what I mean by this really, and this is where I think people
make the mistake. They assume like we were kind of talking about prior that you can build your
maintenance calories beyond what they were and be leaner without having to have a higher energy
expenditure through activity. And I think that's where people make the big mistake because what
we see often with these transformations,
and this is why a lot of people get confused
is because they see people who go through a reverse diet
and get leaner, but you have to figure out
what also happened when they were increasing those calories.
What I've seen happen to see some kind of recomposition
actually occur during a reverse diet
is typically when we
manipulate carbs up and down throughout the diet. And what I mean by that is protein and fat might
have protein on the higher end, fat on the lower end, and they stay static. The carbs drop through
the diet and then we increase carbs back up, but we don't really play with that. And as they are
bringing their carbs back up, their activity is slowly but surely increasing, right? Their steps
are going up higher. Their
fidgeting is probably going up. Obviously, things like the thermic effect of food, which are
really minor, but all these little things kind of play a role and they start to build up as we
increase the carbohydrates and the calories overall of the diet. And what I've also done
to try and actually nudge this even further is I don't program more steps or anything like that,
but I definitely don't encourage them to not move as much
if that's what they're after,
but actually increasing training volume.
So for example, if somebody is doing a three or four day
a week training split while dieting
and we can increase training volume to four or five
or even six days a week,
going towards like a push-pull leg split
if they're more advanced
while increasing calories and carbohydrates, then yeah, we might be able to see some of this
recomposition happen because we're storing a lot of those carbs as glycogen and helping us
do more volume, perform heavier, progressively overload and build muscle. But there's no magic
here, right? There's no metabolic mystery or magic here. We are increasing volume of training. We're
increasing activity through non-exercise activity thermogenesis. And we're doing so while we're increasing calories, more likely because of the calories specifically. And I think that's usually the biggest reason why people see this.
if we start, let's say for easy math, somebody starts at 2,500 calories and they diet down.
And by the end of the diet, they're at 1,500 calories. So there's huge swing calories by the end of their diet and lost a bunch of weight. When they go to, and this is where people get it
wrong with the reverse diet, they go to bring their calories back up to maintenance,
they immediately go to 2,500. And that's the biggest mistake because as we know,
metabolic adaptation did occur. They also weigh a lot less. They don't realize that their
new maintenance might be several hundred calories lower.
Yeah, I mean, you have less mass on your body.
So just to stand there and survive,
you need less calories and energy coming in.
So again, for easy math,
their new maintenance might actually be 2,000.
So they go right up to 2,500 and they gain a bunch of weight.
So I like to prescribe a way of kind of meeting
in the middle ground and then moving slow.
So I think there is a value in jumping to that midpoint and then trying to build it up to see if they're going
to have some of this hyper responder activity where neat goes up, training volume goes up,
they're pushing it harder, maybe they're sleeping better. And some of those things do allow them to
have a, I guess we could call it a higher capacity for more calories, right? A faster metabolism,
quote unquote. But not everybody's like that.
Some people, you can increase your calories
and they don't move anymore.
They just don't have that adaptive nature.
And that's why I think sometimes
there can be an argument to go slow
or if we are calculating their new maintenance,
one, we use their current weight and their current stats,
not their old stats.
And then when we find out that their new maintenance is 2000,
if the person is in a place
where they're a little worried about it,
there's nothing wrong with going slow to get there
if that makes them feel safe.
Now, as the coach, we have to understand
it's probably going to be no difference.
If I bring over 2,000 or I go 1,600, 1,700, 1,800, 1,900, 2,000,
either way, we're going to get to the same end point
and it's not going to be any different, really.
They're going to put on the same amount of weight, which should just really be glycogen
and water and food volume. But for some people that mentally is better. And I think part of the
process or the art of coaching is understanding that, is understanding the personality of the
person, understanding how to coach that process to ensure that they feel confident and sure of
themselves as they're going
through it. This could take us in a different direction with it. But the psychological aspect
of this is such a huge factor in coaching. And there's a lot of people who, for example,
if I brought them to 2000 right away, if that 500 calorie jump, just for easy math, was the
amount we needed to increase during this reverse diet. If I brought them up right away, their initial thought is, well, I can be more flexible with
my diet. And now they play the if it fits your macros game and they fit in highly palatable
foods and processed junk. And that one is inaccurate from a calorie and macro label
perspective, but then it also might trigger more cravings, more food. Maybe they fit alcohol in
more easily and then they end up having the drunken munchies or whatever it is. And actually for them, even though there's no physical magic
or even data to prove the slow process would work better, if I was to jump calories up by 100 or 200
at a time, they simply would not be able to be that flexible and they would have to use satiating
more whole food-based choices, kind of like
bro foods to do that process.
And that would allow us to cure or fix that biofeedback.
So if they have diet fatigue, we're actually fixing and helping that diet fatigue through
that kind of food.
So by the time they can fit in those flexible foods, they're in a much better place mentally
to control themselves and not go crazy with it.
And I think that's something that a lot of people don't think about is the food selection during a reverse diet. But that can make a big
role because some people do not have the self-control that others do. And if you open
the reins and go, let's just do a recovery diet and bump your calories up right away,
that could open the door for that as well. Yeah. Something I personally do is I just eat more of what I was eating when I was
dieting. Just take something, a meal that I like, and I was eating that much rice in that meal or
oatmeal, whatever it is. And I'll just increase that. I'll increase this. Okay, good. That's the
extra whatever three to 500 calories that I need. And I mean, I tend to eat the same stuff for long
periods of time because I don't really care and it's stuff I like anyway.
However, I've seen that work well with people who just to this point, if they have an extra 500 calories, they've been cutting for a couple of months.
They really would like to start eating some of this stuff they haven't been eating.
And although they're like you've said, there's nothing technically wrong with taking 500 calories and giving it over to that stuff.
It might be a bit much, actually.
500 might be a bit much if it's all junk.
But yes, it can tend to encourage overeating.
And something else I'll add to that is, let's say you have 500 to get to your maintenance, especially at the end of a diet.
With most people, if they're going to make a mistake, it's going to be in the direction of eating too much, not too little. It's going to be in the
direction of it's actually an extra seven, eight, 900 calories. Not I got to 400. I got to 300. I
didn't quite get to 500. And so that also could be a scenario, right? Where easing back into normal
eating could help just avoid a rebound.
And that's the problem.
If we just look at research and we just look at paper
and we don't factor in people's real experiences,
that's where that becomes a difficult part.
And I think something that,
and this is not any shot against 3DMJ
for creating the recovery diet
because I've been a huge fan of their work.
They've been all on my podcast actually and mentors from afar for years and years and years.
But I think when they came out with the recovery diet, which is completely geared towards bodybuilders who get absolutely shredded.
And who wreck their bodies in the process.
Exactly. Exactly. Yeah. And so a lot of people assumed that that meant
after a diet, your hormones are crashed, your body is in an unhealthy place, you're not
supposed to maintain this level of leanness and I have to do a recovery diet and immediately get up.
But then it just puts you right back where you were at the beginning. And I think there's a big
problem with that because coaches who work with gen pop people take those principles and apply it
to them.
And I've seen this happen many times. And those are the exact people who can absolutely do a reverse diet totally fine and go slow. In fact, this is where sometimes I think, and this is where
the whole low calorie thing is probably tied to it. I think that they can actually probably push
it further and be totally fine as well. A lot of people assume that as soon as they have low energy
or like maybe libido is down, they're a little bit
stressed. A little bit of hunger. They're hungry. They're craving something. They're like, oh,
this diet is unhealthy now. I have diet fatigue. My hormones are messed up. It's like, no, that's
just, you're in a deficit. That's just part of it. That's part of the game you have to play.
And so something I like to do as well in these situations, if somebody's in,
let's say we're eight weeks into a diet and they're feeling these symptoms and they're worried and they think like, and I've had this question many times,
do I need to start reverse dieting because I'm feeling this way? The answer is no, typically,
but we can put them into a diet break, for example, and ask those questions again. Do you
have libido? Do you have less stress? Are you craving less? Is your performance better in the
gym? If the answer is yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, nothing's wrong with you. You just were in a diet. So now we can take this diet break. Let's get right back to business
and go into it. Just to prove to them, you don't need to do a recovery diet extremely fast,
or you haven't even got lean enough to warrant that fast of a reverse diet.
Because most of the time, and from what I'm aware of with most research, a lot of those serious negative symptoms
that come from a diet, it's primarily tied to body fat levels more than anything else.
The temporary symptoms are typically from caloric restriction, but anything from caloric restriction
can be reversed really easily when we bring our calories out, whether we do it fast or slow.
Obviously, going slow just prolongs that, which oftentimes is unnecessary. But I think
there's a lot of people that aren't in the, they're not in the evidence-based space simply
because they don't do this for a profession or they're just a gen pop person. They're not a
bodybuilder, a physique athlete, kidney athlete, or anything like that. They make that mistake
quite often because they don't understand that there are hard periods of a diet. It's not going
to be great all the time. And most of those symptoms are purely just from
caloric restriction, which can be easily fixed
in a short period of time, really,
of just bringing your calories back up
and you will feel totally fine again.
Which is where I typically like to, like you said,
kind of keep foods, I know it's a bad word in the industry,
but clean foods.
And so that we can avoid binging, avoid a rebound,
avoid too much highly palatable foods and just try to get the cues from their body and build their body awareness and learn, are you feeling better? Are these symptoms improving from increasing our calories and doing so with foods that are accurate enough for us to know that we are actually increasing our calories properly rather than having some extra food and going to Chipotle to fill those calories. And the guy behind the
counter is giving us one scoop. It's like our one scoop of peanut butter, right?
No, that was like three tablespoons, my friend. Yeah, that's exactly right. So I think a big
problem with it all too, to be honest with you, is the flexible dieting world just got a little
too out of hand. I think that it uh, it turned, it went from,
Hey, like you can actually eat, like everything has a caloric value. We can fit these things in on occasion to like, you're wrong, stupid. And I'm going to shame you if you are eating clean
foods. If you're eating like a bro, like you said, you eat the same thing basically all the time.
I'm the same way. And now that's like a negative almost because flexible dieting went so far
when in reality,
when you eat that way, it's actually much easier to control this whole reverse dieting process.
And I mean, there are multiple reasons why I like it.
Another one, I'm sure it's the same thing.
And also I'll say that for people listening, if you talk to enough fit people, let's say
really fit people who stay that way pretty much year round, who are not
at least obviously on drugs. Sometimes you can't know, but if you feel like, oh, they look pretty
natural and they're always in good shape, 80% of them or more are going to eat like this,
are going to have this more kind of food as a fuel mentality. And that's not to say that food
can't be more than that for people. And that's not to say that you shouldn't be eating foods you like. I'm sure it's the same for you, Cody, but I enjoy every meal that I eat every day, even though it's the same stuff for months on end before I'll make little changes. And then when I do make little changes, they're often little changes. Like I've been eating a salad for lunch for years and years and years. It's just not the exact same salad every six months or so. I just feel like changing it. And so I change it, but it's still, it's still a salad. And I still like to
eat a bunch of vegetables at dinner. And I just, sometimes it's stir fry type stuff. And sometimes
it's other little recipes, but it's still kind of fundamentally the same type of food.
And I also like that there's no cognitive overhead in eating that way. I don't have to think about
what am I going to buy? what am I going to buy? What
am I going to eat? What, how much time do I need to cook this? And I even like making something.
I don't like cooking, but it's just a time. I have too many other things to do and think about
these days. And so just like how I don't think about the clothing that I wear, I don't care.
I don't, I don't think about the food in until I get to the point where I'm eating a meal and I'm not enjoying it at all.
Or I'm just like, that's when I change.
Even with variety, if we look at like, there's actually some really interesting research.
Menno Huntsman came out with a book on self-control and there's a lot of side research on willpower and self-control and stuff.
It's really cool.
But there's quite a bit of interesting research on just boredom and like stimulating your mind, which helps your consistency and your willpower and all those
kind of things. So for example, if I have a meal that has raspberries, and then in two weeks,
I change it to blueberries, virtually the same exact thing, calories, macros wise.
But that mental stimulation of change actually cures some of that boredom, I would suggest.
So there's sometimes where all swap, help clients swap the simplest thing and that alone can actually help them stay consistent.
And we don't have to, like you said, it's not more draining energy and thought process or stress of
how do I track this, how to measure it. It's basically the same thing. 100 grams of strawberries
or blackberries or blueberries or raspberries, it's all the same shit. It's basically just the
same exact amount of calories, carbs, fiber, and nutrients. So little things like that, I think, help a lot with a lot of people.
And to your point, too, I saw some research on this, and I want to say they used mac and
cheese in the study.
And I think they did one on a buffet, too.
But if you apply the concept to this, it'll be helpful.
But essentially, what they found is that the more you increase the frequency of said food,
the less likely you are to overeat in calories.
And they saw it taper down and satiety signals got kind of regulated stuff.
Whereas, and this is why cheat meals are so much worse off than having flexible dieting.
Having a little bit here and there is actually really helpful to avoid those binges because
if you're saving it up and then you have a cheat meal, I mean, you're going in and it's
probably going to lead to overeating.
But I think there's a lot of people who maintain lean physiques year round.
Usually they all eat very similar food groups and they eat the same things every day. Like you said,
I'm the same exact way. And I think this is part of it. If you're not bored and you enjoy the food
and you're able to repeat it over and over again, you're far less likely to overeat.
And I've experienced that, but it was cool to see some research actually just recently.
I don't know if the study was done recently,
but I shared this research from Jackson Piazza,
I think was the guy I originally saw.
Yeah, I'd love to see it.
I haven't come across this.
Yeah, he shared it on his Instagram
and I kind of picked his brain on it.
And essentially, from what I remember,
they basically had two groups.
One group had this mac and cheese five days in a row
versus a group had it once a week for five weeks.
Just within the five periods,
the calories decreased
because their satiety signals decreased.
Like as you ate the food over and over again,
you got less likely to overeat it
even when it was like you can have as much as you want.
Yeah, the novelty wears off.
Okay, it's just mac and cheese again.
Exactly.
Yeah.
And in the group that had it once a week ended up actually just eating more and more.
They never really slowed down.
They just kept eating a lot and overeating.
Now, obviously, we just have to take that with a grain of salt because it's researched on a mac and cheese.
It was only five times.
It rings true, though.
Like if you do tend to eat things a little bit more often, you tend to regulate your intake of them better than if it's every so often.
And like you said, you've been saving it up and now you're so horny for this cheat meal.
Exactly. Yeah. And a big piece of this too, and there's plenty of research to prove this,
I'm sure as well. This is why food prep is so, so helpful. And I don't always mean like you have to
have all these Tupperwares full of food that you carry around in some big cooler like back in the day.
But more than anything, it's just like tonight I'm preparing my meals for tomorrow, like in my head or on my fitness pal or on Google Sheet, however you want to do it.
Or if it's in Tupperware, it's great.
But when you know what you're going to do, it's there.
And even better if it is in a Tupperware because you have this amount, you can eat that amount and stop and then move on and you're less likely.
So using tools like this
apply so much into reverse diet. One of the biggest problems with most people is as soon
as the diet is done and we're going into reverse diet, it's like, okay, now I don't have to eat
those foods. I'm just going to eat whatever I want. And although flexible dieting is 100%
backed by research, it's effective, I'm all for it. I think there's a lot of value in doing exactly
what you said at the beginning. And I've
told so many people this, eat the same foods that you were eating during the diet, just increase
the portions because it's going to keep accuracy way more dialed in. Your satiety is going to be
great. You're going to be able to just listen to your body and see how you're feeling and how these
biofeedback signals are improving based on your caloric intake increasing versus anything else.
And then on top of that, again,
like if we are trying to prove
any type of recomposition happening,
it's really only gonna happen if you increase,
and I would say recomposition as in
you're burning more fat as you increase calories,
which is only going to happen if,
when you increase calories,
you are literally doing more things,
walking more, training more, volume, doing more reps,
you're adding in conditioning, whatever it may be.
And a lot of people aren't in that position.
And I'll interject there just to say that this is something I know that other people
have commented on and I agree with is, let's remember though, if you are going to keep
losing fat, that means you are still in a calorie deficit.
You can't get around that, right?
fat, that means you are still in a calorie deficit. You can't get around that, right?
Because remember, for some time, reverse dieting was, I saw some people selling it almost as like a hack, an energy balance hack, right? And that somehow you're not in a calorie deficit or you're
not, let's just say you are not going to experience any of the downsides of being in a calorie deficit, you're going to burn fat and
build muscle and, and, and. So no, if you are still wanting to lose fat in any capacity that
is going to require a calorie deficit, and if you have been in a calorie deficit for
three months now, four months now, whatever it has taken to get to your goal and you are sick of being in a calorie deficit and you're not feeling so great.
This is where I've seen reverse dieting in that sense that you just mentioned fail, actually, because they're not coming out of a deficit.
They just don't want to come out of the deficit.
You know, they're OK, I'll eat more food, but I'm going to move more.
I still don't feel good.
Okay, I'll eat more food, but I'm going to move more. I still don't feel good.
100%. I think that sometimes you could probably make an argument for it being possible,
but the situation would just have to be so meticulous and it would be so rare because you would have to say, let's say you are in a 400 calorie deficit and then you reverse diet by 200
calories, but this person has a very adaptive metabolism. So that increase of 200
calories actually nudged them to step way more, train way harder, do some more cardio, whatever,
and the net caloric expenditure exceeded the caloric increase. Then you could say, yeah,
you would lose some fat, but it still proves your point of you're still in a deficit. If anything,
you're in just as much, if not more, you just added some calories in it and encourage you to create a bigger energy expenditure through exercise.
And that's not going to fix the diet fatigue at all.
The diet fatigue continues.
It's just going to give you a little more food.
You might psychologically enjoy a bit more food and you might even feel a little bit
better.
That gets into the energy flux argument.
However, you're not going to really feel back to normal
until you are out of that consistent calorie deficit. Now, of course, maintenance is always
either a little bit higher, you're a little bit lower. We never can eat exactly the calories we're
burning, obviously. But to feel normal again, you have to get out of that several hundred daily
calorie deficit consistently operation or mode of operation.
And you got to get something, you got to get into a maintenance mode or a surplus mode.
Yeah. So a good example of this too, and I think this is why I ended up getting a lot of questions
on this topic because I wrote a blog about a client. It's a case study blog. I wrote this
years ago. I mean, if you search Google,
it actually performs really well with SEO.
So if you search Google images,
like reverse diet case study,
reverse diet transformation,
reverse diet before and after,
it's like the first image every time.
It's one of the first articles on that page.
And it's a client of mine named Meredith.
And I took her through a 13-month reverse diet process.
And I documented it on the blog.
It's really good.
And she is one pound heavier in the after picture,
but looks dramatically different, way leaner,
but she has a significantly higher amount of muscle.
The problem with most pieces of content
that we see like this and what people see
is they will see that Google image and they go,
oh, more food equals leaner body.
But like, I didn't do it as an Instagram post.
I did it as a blog.
So you have to read the 5,000 word article that takes you through the 13 months because what
you'll see is that she was following a paleo diet, which was probably low carb, high fat,
moderate protein. And she was filling her whole week with nothing against these people,
but like Orange Theory Fitness and SoulCycle and just circuit training, high intensity.
She came on board with me. We started lifting on an upper-lower split, doing low-intensity cardio a couple days a week and reverse dieting
her carbs up, fats kind of just to a middle ground. And we weren't focused on fat loss.
She really just built muscle over time. And she probably burned a little bit of fat at the
beginning because it was such a new thing for her. But she wasn't obese. So after she probably lost
the first maybe three to five pounds of fat, she really was
just building muscle and it just made her look leaner.
And I think that's where recomposition during a reverse diet can be possible.
And I've seen it happen more so with women than anybody else.
But I've worked with a lot of women who come to me doing circuit classes, high intensity
this, like low carb dieting.
And all we really are trying to accomplish
is finding a maintenance and we're probably pushing a little bit more carbs for them,
which is going to, I've seen it help with a lot of people's stress levels and just training
properly because they have the right fuel source to train hard. And then we strength train and I
get them lifting heavier, progressively overloading. For those listening, doing nothing crazy whatsoever,
doing just like the simple, basic, science-proven shit.
And we just were patient. And these people are typically skinny fat at the beginning,
is what they would call it. And they build muscle. So they look like they recomp. And I would still look at it and think, oh, that's a great recomp. But realistically, if we truly
want to look at it, they're probably not losing a pound of fat. Their body fat percentage might
go down, but it's purely because their muscle tissue
increases and that drops the percentage of total fat compared to muscle, which lowers their body
fat percentage. And I think that's a misconception as well. A lot of times reverse dieting can cause
lean gains, but it's not a recomp. I mean, I guess in one way it is body fat percentage drops,
but in one way it's not because body fat pounds don't drop.
Yeah. Yeah. When a lot of people hearcomp, I mean, they think losing fat,
building muscle at the same time. And so this is a little bit different, even though it seems to
also be a type of re-comp. What else do you call it kind of thing? Yeah, exactly.
There's just a visual kind of trick to it, even though it's not meant to be tricky, of course, Yeah, exactly. even qualify as overweight. Maybe they're skewing toward the overweight end of the normal spectrum,
but they're not even overweight. They just have so little muscle that all you really see is like
jiggly skin and that's about it. And then when they take a year or however long it takes to add
enough muscle to the right places on their body, they're now filling out their frame a lot better.
And now they have some shape and they have some curves because of course, muscle is what gives
us that. That same amount of fat on that more muscular body looks totally different.
Yeah, that's 100%. I would say that's probably the vast majority of the cases. Even for me,
I did a photo shoot for
some marketing stuff we did just not that long ago. And I would say the first month afterwards,
it kind of looked like I recomped, but people, and I, people might've even thought like I
maintained leanness or got a little bit leaner, but I increased my carbohydrates pretty rapidly.
All that happened is I just filled up, I just replenished muscle glycogen and I was still
training hard, you know, and that created this illusion, right? But if you look at the scale, like I was definitely a few
pounds heavier. I didn't gain muscle. I just, it's like muscle memory, if anything, it's just
muscle filling out with more glycogen because I'm increasing my carbs again. And I think that's part
of it as well. People forget, you know, I believe it's every one gram of carb holds three to four
grams of water or something like that. And then there's also food volume. So if you're filling
your diet with produce, vegetables, fruit, things like that,
if you're eating lean meats, if you're consuming sweet potatoes and whole grains and rice and
things like that, not only does that water in your muscles store water, I'm sorry, the carbs in your
muscles store water, but also your gut is going to pull water and food volume is going to be in
your gut as well. So now we have water and extra food in our gut. And typically, another thing people don't remember, and there's nothing
wrong with this, but when we increase calories, we typically naturally increase sodium because
we have more food to put salt on or more food to have sodium in it already or more food to
use condiments on. And that's going to increase sodium. Sodium pulls water as well. So there's
all these factors that kind of play in a role of weight gain during it, some of which can actually make you look better. But it's not any crazy magic or
recomp or anything like that. It's just the fact that you are gaining some water weight.
So I think that there is a lot of things that make people think there's some trickery and
there's unfortunately some people that do try to play that card and have this clickbait style stuff.
It's why I appreciate content creators like us because instead of me doing a before and
after on Instagram and just saying, reverse diet,
recomp, and then just do a bunch of hashtags, it's a long form blog that breaks down the process,
what's actually happening. And for coaches and business owners listening, that actually does
way more for my business long term anyway, because that blog's been up for three years,
and it's still producing a lot of leads and traffic to our website versus an Instagram
post that would be gone.
Nobody would remember anymore
because the newsfeed has evolved since then
and it's not a real, so it's not gonna work.
But point being, I think that there's just a lot
of confusion with reverse dieting,
specifically in the gen pop space.
But I personally don't think
that there's anything wrong with going slow.
I don't think there's anything wrong going fast.
I think typically you're gonna get to the same endpoint.
It's most likely gonna to be a personal preference
for the person. If somebody does get lean enough to where their body fat levels are potentially
causing issues, specifically with women, amenorrhea and things like that, which you got to be pretty
damn lean for, but I've seen it specifically seen it a few times with competitors or CrossFitters
that I've worked with. But typically most GenPod people don't get lean enough to experience seriously negative
symptoms from dieting because their body fat levels don't get low enough.
So you can reverse diet slow.
However, some people just can't adhere to it, especially if they get too flexible during
the reverse diet process.
So I personally still go pretty slow.
I'll take an initial little bump up if they're experiencing too much stress
or cravings or anything like that.
And then I typically like to be gradual
only because I see adherence be a little bit better.
And I think that the GemPop client,
it's not that I'm trying to trick them into it,
but they're a little bit more bought in
and they feel a little bit safer.
And that leads to better results
from an adherence perspective,
not because a slow process
is going to be more metabolically advantageous for some reason. 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 as far as how lean you need to get to really start to run into issues,
can you speak a little bit to that? Because I'm sure some people listening are wondering,
because you mentioned earlier that sometimes toward the end of a diet, you're not feeling
so great. Is this just because you've been restricting your calories for however long
you've been doing it? Or is this just a matter of body fat and you're never really going to feel that great
until you gain some fat?
Yeah.
So I look at this in a few different ways.
Like there's certain telltale signs,
obviously, like I said, amenorrhea.
So when the female lifter athlete loses their period,
that's a pretty good sign
that you're probably dieting pretty aggressively
or pretty low.
Some women can get that happening
without getting too lean. But usually I only see that happen with women who don't have a lot of
muscle tissue because it's harder to see for them. It's harder for them to see that they've gotten
that lean because they don't have a lot of muscle tissue. So they kind of have that skinny fat look.
I'm not big on body fat percentages simply because I think they're pretty inaccurate,
pretty much no matter how you spin it, unless you're a cadaver.
But for the most part,
like what I always tell people,
if you have fully visible abs,
you could probably show concern.
Like that's when you're like,
okay, I'm getting to the point where I'm so lean that I can start considering that as a possibility.
And would you say that is that men and women?
Definitely women.
Men, it is not.
There's a lot more men who can maintain that totally fine. You know, these apply to women too. So I guess both. If progress in gym is pretty bad,
if sleep is really bad, if for lack of better terms, you're just an asshole or a bitch all
the time. So you're very irritable constantly. You just snap in easily or you're getting
frustrated really quick with people you love and normally don't get frustrated with.
That's a good sign. Progress in the gym is low. You're not getting pumps in the gym at all. There's even some evidence to show that if your
fingertips, the tip of your nose, your toes, things like that are really cold quite often,
you might have some thyroid things going on, which usually just means your thyroid's slowing
down a bit, which is a metabolic regulator. So that's a good sign that you might be slowing
things down too much. Those can be signs that you've probably gone a little too far and you might want to reverse diet quicker. But I also look at three
different things within the history of the diet itself that helped me project this as a coach.
So I look at intensity, duration, and frequency as kind of like the dials, kind of like how you
have training volume, intensity, and frequency. Well, I look at it like intensity would be how aggressive did you diet?
You know, if you went into a deficit that is 5% to 10% of your maintenance calories,
it's really just not an aggressive deficit.
I actually encourage people to nudge it way harder at the beginning because like you said,
maintenance isn't a set point.
It's usually like a moving target.
So it is a moving target. Let's say we have 5% wiggle room on both ends and we adjust by 5%.
We're probably not even going to lose weight
and then we're just frustrated.
So now we are in a deficit.
So it's kind of stressful, especially mentally,
but we're not going anywhere.
And there's nothing worse than that.
10% might nudge you a little bit,
but not enough to give you a lot of intrinsic motivation.
And if we look at most research done on fat loss,
whether it's the diet break research,
the intermittent caloric restriction research,
or just general, I mean, the obesity fat loss research is even crazier because those
deficits are even huge, bigger. But I mean, a lot of them are 25, 35. There's even some research
that shows rapid fat loss approaches up to 50 to 65% calorie deficit, which is massive.
So I think people see, oh, Matador study, I can do this intermittent caloric restriction or the ice cap
trial or Bill Campbell's 5-2, where it's five days on, two days off. That's all I got to do.
All those studies had a 25% to 35% deficit on those deficit days, which means that you can't
really warrant a diet break unless you're making an aggressive approach. It's also why these studies
can be an eight-week long study and actually show significant results because they
do make a big deficit, which is hard to adhere to. I think 5% to 10% is more of an adjustment
after the initial diet has already been progressing and you hit a plateau. Now you can bump it 5%.
But point being, I'll look at that first. How aggressive did the person actually go? Because
that's going to dictate a lot of how quickly and how significant the diet fatigue and
the symptoms they're getting are, like how soon they're going to show up and how much they're
hitting them. The other thing is duration. How long has this person been dieting? Maybe they
only did a 15 to 20% deficit. They felt great, but they've been dieting for six months straight.
It's a 24-week deficit. I mean, that's going to linger and that's going to cause greater.
That's going to tell me how quickly I need to get their calories up as well. And then the other one would be frequency. So we have people that will come to
us and they're like, maybe they need a reverse diet, but they've only been dieting for eight
weeks. And it sounds like, oh, this will be a piece of cake. But little do you know that they
took six weeks off and they dieted for 12 weeks before that, and they fell off for a few weeks,
and then they dieted that. They've really been dieting on and off for the last 12 months,
just unsuccessfully, kind of yo-yoing on and off for the last 12 months, just unsuccessfully
kind of yo-yoing back and forth. So looking at the duration, the frequency and intensity does
two things. One, it allows us to program a diet because now we can go into the deficit going,
okay, which dial do we want to crank up for this person, which is totally person dependent.
For me, the intensity is really high. You got to be careful there because you don't obviously want
to sacrifice muscle tissue and stuff, which I do think you have to be pretty aggressive with or just dumb by having
really low protein or not strength training to lose muscle tissue. But I'm the type of person
who would rather just get it done. I don't need diet breaks. I don't need a long duration. I don't
want a long duration. Just turn the intensity up. Let's just do the job and then I'm not going to
diet again for a year. I don't have the interest. Other people might do better with six weeks
of a moderate approach
and then taking like a three-week diet break
and then another six weeks
and then a diet break and another six weeks
and their frequency is high.
And we're just kind of chipping away at it
because they just can't adhere to an aggressive deficit.
And the same thing applies to somebody
who would want a long diet.
So maybe they do diet for 24 weeks,
but it's a very small deficit
and we're just kind of chipping away
at the lowest possible amount of weight loss per week. But all of these things kind of let me know,
first and foremost, one, how to program diet, but also how hard are those symptoms going to hit the
person? And then it's just a matter of asking about those symptoms, usually as the weeks go on.
So you can kind of see them coming because we're asking our clients, how's your stress? How's your
hunger? How's your performance? We're looking for these things. Most of us, we're tracking progress in and out of the gym.
And those symptoms are all just biofeedback signals that are essentially going to tell us
how much diet fatigue has accumulated and how fast you need to reverse diet. Because at the
end of the day, there's no formula for this, but the greater the diet fatigue, then the more severe
those symptoms are for you, probably the faster you should reverse diet to get out of it. And again, I think when you do it faster,
you just got to control the food group. So you're not going to the highly processed foods.
And then I think the last thing really is just the personality type matters quite a bit with
all of this, as far as what kind of diet we approach, but how fast we're going to reverse
diet as well. And the personality type also dictates
the perception of that stress.
So there was even some research,
I can't remember who, I want to say it was Lane.
It might've been on my podcast, but I think it was him.
But he was talking about the negative things
that happen because of stress
is more correlative to our perception of it.
So for example, somebody could be in your exact position
with your
responsibilities as a family man, husband, business owner, marketer, content creator,
all these things. They could chip years away at their life because the stress causes their immune
system to crash. They get sick more often. They can't handle it. They can't recover.
They can't build as much muscle as you because the stress is so great from the work stuff.
Where somebody like you is born for this kind of stuff, you thrive on it. So you can handle it. So it's the same load of stress, but it just doesn't eat at you as much.
And the reason I say that is because I think people's stress capacity is different and their
ability to handle stress is different. So when it comes to the reverse diet, we can go slower with
somebody who just handles stress really well. I see a lot more with guys, to be honest. But
if the stress is like, yeah, I mean, I'm ready for more calories, but it's not the end of the world. Let's just do the
smart thing. Cool. We don't have to overthink this. We can be a little more rigid with our
food groups while we reverse diet up so that we can avoid these highly processed foods.
Where somebody else, we need to implement a structured free meal or something because
they're going to kill themselves if they can't just eat normal because they hate this diet
process, which it should never get to that point. But a little bit of a rant, but I think all these
things kind of play a role in the coaching process. And some of it you can lean on research
and some of it you just have to understand some of the evidence in scientific research and then
just kind of just extrapolate what you can from it to try to make your best judgment call because
real world situations can be different. You mentioned earlier that some
people respond differently to more food. So you take one person, you feed them more food, and they
naturally just start moving around more. They start burning more energy outside of their formal
exercise. So they may not even be particularly aware of it, but they feel more energetic and that just turns into more
movement. And they take the stairs all of a sudden when normally they would take the elevator,
stuff like that. And some people, they just don't respond that way. Have you worked with people who
have found that they can slowly increase their maintenance calories over time to a higher point than they
were at. I mean, it doesn't go on forever while basically maintaining the same body composition
simply because that's just how their body responds. I mean, again, as you mentioned,
there's nothing magical to it, but they just tend to move around more and they have more energy. And so maybe they
even consciously are like, you know what? I feel great. I'm going to go for a walk. I don't normally
go for a walk. I'm going for a walk now every day. And that's an extra a hundred calories.
And you add up enough of those things. And all of a sudden now you actually are eating another
three to 500 calories per day and still maintaining the exact same physique.
I haven't.
Because that is part of the reverse diet pitch.
The appeal. Yeah, yeah. I think there's two situations here. One is not necessarily
anybody I can think of as clients. And if they are, they just don't realize it. They're not
that aware. But even for myself, I notice the mail piles up in my mailbox when I'm
dieting down because I just don't walk to get the mail. When I'm at maintenance or anything,
I enjoy walks. I'm like, oh, this is a chance to listen to music. I'll mow the lawn. I'm glad
that's just my personality type. I like to move. So I've dieted down enough times for... I did
physique competition years ago and then photo shoots and stuff like that, that I've just, I've done it enough times and noticed like, oh yeah,
I get pretty lethargic when I diet down. But to your point, when I diet back up,
I don't go beyond what my normal is. I have my normal, which is active. And then I have
my diet self, which is just lazy. And I think that's usually what it is.
I typically find that you have to program people to move more beyond what
their natural desire is. And so I have seen the result you're talking about, but not naturally.
And the reason I say that is because I've had people go through this process with me to hire
us. We diet them down. We bring them back up and they do get to their normal, but their normal
wasn't really that active. So I'm like, hey, it actually wouldn't be a bad idea for you to increase
your steps because it's healthy for you. And that ends up fueling more calories because normally they're
5,000 steps a day at best. And we're like, hey, let's shoot for 10,000 because that's a good
marker. You're going to be able to eat a little more food and it's healthy for you. And so they
add a couple of walks throughout the day and they easily hit 10,000. But again, that wasn't their
norm. It's actually intentional. So to an extent, you can even argue that's not neat because I'm
physically telling them to go do it. So it's not really... Yeah. So we still count it towards steps, but they know
what they're doing. So I think that... I've had some guys that were skinnier guys that... It's
only happened a few times where I actually had to program less steps, for example, because when we
increase our calories, they just keep moving. And I'm like, dude, we're trying to gain weight. You
need to just chill out more. So we actually programmed them down. It's like, dude, we're trying to gain weight. You need to just chill out more.
So we actually programmed them down. It's like, hey, let's do less steps. Don't go beyond this
point because they do naturally just move. They weren't aware of it. It was like, hey,
I want you to put a pedometer in your pocket because I think this is what's going on.
Sure enough, it was. So I had to really teach them what was happening. But yeah,
I really don't think it happens much outside of the case study situation I explained where we did change their lifestyle to less circuit class, high intensity stuff, less paleo stuff.
Again, this isn't just natural. It's more methodical, but carbohydrates are more thermogenic.
So there's plenty of low carb fans and some people feel great eating low carbs. And at the end of
the day, you can eat low carb and lose weight and there's nothing wrong with it. But most research proves that when you increase carbohydrates, you're more likely to
utilize that for more movement than you are through fats. And you're going to be able to
build more muscle because your training volume and intensity can typically go up.
So I kind of have seen this, not to like anything spectacular levels, but I've seen
some of these recomp-ish results, but we didn't really increase calories
beyond what they were. It's just that they were having too much fat, not enough carb.
And then I'm just flip-flopping those. I'm like, hey, let's lower those fats,
increase those carbs. And because of that, their calories actually stay the same.
And this is another thing that people get confused by. Some people would hear that and go,
oh, so they were able to lose fat at maintenance. That's recomp. And it's like, well, no,
because technically I lowered their fat, increased their carbs, kept calories the same,
but their energy expenditure increased because the macros were more thermogenic.
They naturally moved more. So they burn more calories through movement. So technically,
no, I changed their macros. And probably trained harder in the gym,
even if they're the exact same workouts on paper, they're not exactly
the same when, if you were in there with them on the low carb and then versus the high carb and
just looking at how hard they're working. Yeah. And that, and that creates a deficit.
So again, we, and this is, this is where I think people have such a hard time because more and more
science keeps coming out, coming out, coming out. And it just goes calorie deficit, calorie deficit, calorie deficit.
And it's kind of frustrating because I'm like, it's unfortunate.
But, you know, at this point, I'm going to say that the weight of the evidence is insurmountable.
If you want to quibble, you can go, science doesn't prove anything.
Okay, fine.
But there are some questions that are not worth asking anymore.
fine. But there are some questions that are not worth asking anymore. And what is the physiological mechanism that is responsible for fat loss? That's just not a question worth asking. We don't need to
investigate that further. Yeah. So I think the only way that you can hang your hat on the idea
of reverse dieting creating a recomposition effect is if you were skinny fat
and it helps you build more muscle, therefore technically your body fat percentage drops,
or you do exactly what I just said. We change training and or macros in a favorable way that
creates a bigger energy expenditure through your activity and that causes fat loss. And sometimes
that can happen naturally because your intensity in the gym goes up and maybe you're just, because there are certain things we can't track. Maybe their steps
didn't go up, but maybe they move more with their hands when they talk. Maybe they're fidgeting more.
Maybe they're standing up. Now they're at a standup desk or whatever it may be. There's
things that add up and those can play a role. Carbohydrates are more likely to, I mean,
they are going to store as muscle compared to fat.
Fat's not going to store as muscle, but they're harder to store as body fat compared to fat.
So, and people don't like to hear that, but it's true. And it doesn't mean that carbs can't store
as fat. You need a surplus. But nonetheless, if you're at maintenance, having more carbs might
be advantageous for this idea, but not because it defies the law of thermodynamics. It just kind
of makes you in a more favorable equation of thermodynamics, if that makes sense.
Yeah. I mean, if you're in a consistent calorie surplus, unfortunately,
your body's going to figure out how to get fatter. That is what is going to happen,
regardless of how those macros are broken down. I know there's some research that indicates if
all of the excess calories come from pure protein, that might not be the case. I will say in my personal
experience and just having heard from and worked with so many people over the years, I don't know
of any practical way to put that little factoid into practice. I mean, rarely are you just going
to get pure protein. I mean, if you're eating food, it's usually going to come with some fat, for example.
But even if it were just pure protein, one, I would ask you if that's really enjoyable.
Like, do you really like protein powder that much?
Do you want to have four protein shakes a day instead of two?
Maybe, maybe then you could do that without getting fatter.
But what's the point?
And again, I think there are a couple of studies, I'm sure you've seen them, that suggest what
I just said, that you can create a surplus strictly from protein and not get fatter.
But we know that is probably not going to help you build muscle faster or better than
just a standard high-protein diet. And unless
it's just pure protein, well, it's probably going to come with some additional non-protein calories
that will contribute toward body fatness. And we know that when you get into a consistent
calorie surplus, you mentioned that carbohydrates are not generally stored as fat, but if you eat enough of them and you're in a calorie surplus, they can be converted into body fat. And of course,
then all of with an asterisk, but most of the dietary fat you're eating is also going to be
very efficiently converted into body fat. You're not going to be burning much, if any of it.
Yeah, exactly. And I think that I you know, I've, I have been a fan
of higher protein diets, like going above the recommended amount of 0.8 to one gram.
But I'm talking like 1.1 grams. Yeah. I'll go up to like 1.2.
Exactly. Yeah. I'm usually in the range of one to 1.2. And that's mainly for reasons of somebody is
dieting and their hunger level is going up.
That research to me was cool because it allows us to go, oh, cool. We're actually safe to increase
protein a little bit when their hunger is up. It's going to keep them more satiated and it's
not going to source fat, so it's not going to negatively impact anything. But like you said,
if you're going into a surplus to build muscle, don't do it with protein. It's not going to do
anything except make you sweat. And if you actually read the research by Jose Antonio, I think he's done like two or three
of them now. One of the biggest complaints was that there's no negative health outcomes, but
the participants complained about overheating at night. And so they're just sweating through
their sleep, which is extremely uncomfortable, which is probably not going to help your recovery.
So I wouldn't recommend it. And in order to do it, they had to do what you said. They drank a lot of protein shakes because that's the only way
they could do it. So it's just, it's unpractical, but it's cool research. It lets us know that we
can probably have a little extra and not stress about it, not worry about it. And yeah, some
people like, I have a smoker at my house, so I love smoking meat. And when you spend all day
smoking some meat, I'm going to eat way more protein than I
need to because I just spent all day smoking this expensive meat. So I want to eat it.
I mean, it warrants that sometimes. That's why you get the meat sweats. So
interesting research nonetheless. And I agree with you on the carb and fat piece too. Usually,
I think people actually don't need as much fat as they believe. There was this thing where...
And it's true. Fats are important for your hormones. So people assume, oh, like fats are
important for your hormones. So if I eat more fat, my testosterone increases more and more and more.
And that's just not the case. You're just going to get fatter and fatter, which is actually going
to lower your testosterone. So you probably shouldn't. And even if you control your calories,
you know, I'm sure familiar that this is research. I mean, it's probably at least 10
years old at this point, but there are a number of studies I'm thinking of one or two right off
top of my head that show like, sure, if you go from 15% of daily calories from fat to 30 to 40%,
you will see an increase in your testosterone. But even that is not all that significant. If I remember off the top of my head,
it was like 17 or 18% or so. That was the increase in total testosterone, which is something. It's
significant, but in terms of it's a number that sounds statistically significant. Oh, it's up 16,
17, 18, 19%. But what does that really mean in the context of anything, right? So you're a
dude, you're naturally at five to 700. And you add, let's just be generous and say you add 20%
on top of that. Are you going to gain muscle faster? No. Are you going to have more energy?
Probably not. Are you going to have more sex drive? Probably not. If so, it's going to be minor. It's not going to be anything that is blatantly obvious.
And your workouts, well, those are probably going to be worse because now you cut your
carbs in half to get all those fats in.
I wish these little hacks worked.
I would do it.
Yeah, they just don't.
And that's the thing, too, is even with that like you could increase your testosterone that little bit with fat, but then if you put yourself in a deficit and even if you kept your fats there, it's going to go right back down because the calories are going to play a bigger role in your hormone fluctuations anyway.
case study physique. It was Dr. Brendan Roberts, who's our chief science officer.
And I want to say maybe Peter Fission, I don't know if Alan Eric Helms was on or Trexler.
There was a group of guys that did this and they basically came to the conclusion that I want to say it was like 0.2 grams per pound is like the bare minimum of what you need in fat,
which is really, really low. And that's the bare minimum you need support like hormonal function stuff, which is far lower than I recommend because
the flexibility of your diet would just suck. You're just eating white rice all day.
Especially if you're a woman, you're like, what, how do I survive on,
how do I do 30 grams of fat a day or 25 grams of fat a day?
Literally. Yeah. So there's no reason to, but the point is, is people assume they need way more than they actually do. And I think that's, you know, that's obviously a different topic than reverse dieting. be somewhere in the range of 0.2, lowest, lowest to 0.3 grams per pound of fat per day.
And then when you're at maintenance or lean bulking, probably don't need more than 0.3
to 0.4, somewhere around 30% of your daily calories. You can eat more if you want,
but you don't need to. And I remember a lot of people criticizing me on that saying that's, that's way too little fat
as if that's going to just destroy your body is going to crash everything. And I was like, well,
I don't think so. And here's, here's the, um, the limited, there's more research now that I can
actually point to, but at the time there wasn't that much. And I was saying, here's my understanding
of what I have found. And I also will say after a year or two of hearing from a lot of people, like a lot of people are doing quite well with this. I'm not seeing anybody. I've not heard from one person who said I ate 0.25 grams of fat per pound of body weight per day and I landed the hospital, like some people were implying.
I did hear from some women who found it challenging to go below maybe 0.3 grams per
pound body weight per day and eat stuff they like. There was a point where they were like,
so what am I, do I have to eat, do I have to drink six protein shakes a day and
everything has to be low fat?
Can't I just bring my carbs down so I can enjoy my food? Yes, absolutely.
Yeah. I think, and I agree a hundred percent. And I think there's plenty of research to prove it. I
think that my general recommendations are usually like 0.2 to 0.4 and that's not, you know, it's
just in general dieting, maintenance or lean gain, whatever, just 0.2 to 0.4. And then for women,
like 0.3 to 0.5 for women, because I agree, they usually need more. But I think even if you just
look at anecdotally, every shredded bodybuilder, every physique athlete, every person has impressive
physique, they typically eat lower fat. And then all the people who are arguing against you and
they against me, I'm like, you just don't have an impressive physique. You can't lift heavy weights.
I'm not convinced just by.
Yeah.
And you never, you've never gotten there.
And that, that's not like trying to dunk on them just to, just to make fun of them.
No, there, there actually is a point to what you just said there.
Like success leaves clues.
Yep, exactly.
I could not agree more.
Well, uh, this was, this was this was a fun discussion as always. Is there anything else
that is still in the back of your head that we haven't talked about yet in the context of
reverse dieting, everything we've been discussing that you think we should say before we wrap up?
I don't think so. I mean, I think we covered, it was a really fun discussion. We covered quite a
bit. And I think it's good that we were able to
kind of bounce back and forth between the research and like what happens in the practical setting.
But at the end of the day, I think like we said, there's no magic here. There is ways that could
seem as if some magicry is happening, but it always kind of comes back to energy balance at
the end of the day. And your energy balance changes when you lose weight. So we just have to factor in those things.
It's like magic in the sense of the magician.
It looks like it's supernatural,
but no, it's just a clever mechanism.
Yeah, and I think there's a lot of room.
I'm hoping for more case studies and research to come out like Bill was
talking to me about just with it to just show how it should be done in the practical world.
And I think more coaches need to kind of tune into the psychology behind an individual while
they're coaching them, because I think that plays the biggest role in how this process
is going to work best, ultimately. Yep. Yeah, totally agree. Well, then with that,
why don't we just wrap up? Let's let people know where they can find you and your work and your
coaching services and anything else that you might want to tell them about. Yeah. First and foremost,
thank you for having me on, man. It was a blast, blast again to come on and talk about this topic but um on instagram at cody mcbroom i post there pretty frequently our podcast the tailored life
podcast which mike has been on multiple times uh as well as many guys we just hit episode 800 uh
which was yeah it was pretty cool to we've been doing it for a while so the podcast is growing a
lot over three million downloads so we're having fun there there's a lot of free content there
and the website has guides, blogs, videos,
all kinds of stuff.
That's where our coaching is too.
And that's tailoredcoachingmethod.com.
Awesome.
Well, thanks again for taking the time to do this.
And I look forward to the next one.
We talked a little bit about low calorie dieting,
but maybe we should deep dive into that next time.
Yeah, I would love to.
I think that's a great topic.
Well, I hope you liked this episode. I hope you found it helpful. And if you did,
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