Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Dr. Pak on Minimum Effective Dose Training
Episode Date: November 29, 2023If you spend time in gyms or follow fitness influencers, you've likely encountered the mindset that more is better when it comes to training volume. More sets, more reps, more time in the gym eq...uals faster results. Right? Not necessarily. As with many areas of fitness and nutrition, the truth is more nuanced. Enter the concept of "minimum effective dose" training. Instead of constantly pushing the boundaries of training capacity and trying to maximize your progress, this approach focuses on the least amount of volume needed to drive meaningful progress. To dig into the details of this methodology, I'm joined by Dr. Patroklos “Pak” Androulakis-Korakakis. With a PhD focused on minimum effective training doses for strength gains and years of coaching experience, Dr. Pak has a deep understanding of the science and application of this topic. Throughout our discussion, you'll learn . . . - What minimum effective dose training is and the major benefits it offers - The surprising muscle-building potential of low training volumes - How to determine your personal minimum effective doses based on experience level, genetics, and goals - The importance of training intensity and progression regardless of overall volume - How to add volume gradually over time as you adapt - Why most people underestimate the effort needed to build muscle - How social media promotes unrealistic training expectations - The value of long-term consistency over extreme programs - How traveling or busy schedules are no excuse to skip workouts - And much more . . . If you want to maximize training efficiency and results, this episode provides science-backed insights on the least training needed for meaningful gains so you can save time and general “wear and tear” on your body. Timestamps: (0:00) - Please leave a review of the show wherever you listen to podcasts and make sure to subscribe! (4:54) - What is minimum effective dose training? (6:25) - What are the benefits of minimum effective dose training? (18:16) - How to implement minimum dose training (23:57) - How did you interpret those findings? (26:52) - Is 5 sets per week ideal for experienced weight lifters? (31:48) - Our Biggest Sale of the Year! Save 50% during our Black Friday Sale! https://buylegion.com/ (34:34) - Optimal volume for maximizing muscle and strength progress (39:13) - Tips for safely increasing training volume (47:28) - Common misconceptions about minimalist training approaches (49:09) - Perceived "bad" training genetics and the role of genetics in training efficiency (56:13) - The crucial impact of nutrition in minimalist training regimens (1:06:51) - Discover more about Dr. Pak and his work and how to connect with him Mentioned on the Show: Dr. Pak's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dr__pak/?hl=en Dr. Pak's Website: https://www.drpak.com/ Dr. Pak's YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@Dr__Pak
Transcript
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Hello, hello, I'm Mike Matthews, and this is Muscle for Life.
Thank you for joining me today for a new episode on the topic of minimum effective dose training.
Now, what does that mean?
Well, if we think about the amount of training that can produce progress,
so in the case of strength training, which is what today's episode is going to focus on,
that's gaining strength, that's gaining muscle.
We have a spectrum. So on
one end of the spectrum, we have the maximum amount of training that we can recover from,
and that produces a certain amount of progress or can produce a certain amount of progress.
And then on the other end of the spectrum, we have the minimum amount of training needed to produce progress.
Now, it's not going to be as much progress as the maximum amount of training that we can effectively do and recover from.
But it can produce progress nonetheless.
It is not just a maintenance program.
It is a program that will, over time, help you get a little bit bigger, a little bit stronger.
And this minimum effective dose concept, I think, is under-discussed and underrated generally in the fitness space because a lot of what gets attention on social media, which is how a lot of people get their information, get their fitness
information, is extremes. Extreme amounts of training, extreme intensities, extreme exercises.
And the problem with that is it misleads many people into thinking that to achieve their goals,
which are often pretty modest in the context of social media, that's for sure,
that they need to be far more extreme in their training than they actually need to be. They
come to believe or often come to believe that they need to spend a lot more time in the gym
and they need to do a lot more volume and they need to do a lot more fancy training techniques,
complex programming, et cetera,., etc., then they actually need
to. And that in turn can be very discouraging. It can discourage people from starting because
they don't have the time or the inclination to be that extreme in their training. It can discourage
people who have already started because they feel like they're just going through the motions.
They're not being extreme enough in their training.
They feel guilty about it.
Not sure if it's even worth continuing.
And that can lead people ultimately to quitting.
And so I wanted to get an episode out there on this topic because the reality is very
encouraging.
topic because the reality is very encouraging. Actually, as you will learn in this episode,
it takes a lot less training. It takes a lot less extremity than many people think to keep making meaningful progress, even if you're an experienced weightlifter. And you will learn about that in today's episode. And you will learn
how to create a minimum effective dose program. And in this episode, you are mostly going to be
learning from my guest, Dr. Pack. And that's short for three multi-syllabic Greek names that I've
already forgotten how to pronounce correctly. So I'm not going to botch them. But Dr. Pack is an expert on minimum effective dose training because he has spent a lot of time researching it.
That was the focus of his PhD, and he also has many years of coaching experience.
So that's given him a deep understanding of both the science, the theory, and the practical application of minimum effective dose training.
Pac, it's nice to meet you. Thank you for joining me today.
Mike, likewise. Thank you for having me.
And I appreciate that I see Pac and then I see a middle name that I would butcher and a last name that maybe I could get right.
So I appreciate the brevity of Pac.
I know it's short for...
It's short for my name because actually these are both last surnames.
So my mother wanted me to keep her surname.
So that's my mother's surname and then my dad's surname.
And my actual name is Patroclus.
So it's P-A-K, therefore Pac.
But yeah, even the last names, they're
intimidating, but they're essentially Andrew Lackis. That's the first one. So like the word
Andrew and then Lackis and then Korakakis. But they're a bit of a mouthful.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Easy, easy when you say them. But as an English speaker, some foreign words,
my wife is German and I've learned a bit of German. So some, I ran into this with German words,
they're multi-syllabic. And
when you hear a German speaker say like, oh yeah, I guess that's pretty simple. But if you're trying
to muddle it out yourself, you tend to get it wrong more often than right. But thank you for
joining me today to talk about minimum dose training. And that's kind of a term that you
specifically like to use. So why don't we just start with what you mean by that?
What is minimum dose training?
Yeah, for sure.
So the concept of the minimum dose is a concept, the minimum effective dose rather, is a concept
that exists in plenty of fields, including fields like medicine.
And it essentially revolves around the least amount of work, or in our case, the least amount of training stimulus that you need to impose to your body in order to see a meaningful increase in the outcome that you're interested in.
Either that being strength, hypertrophy, power, and so on and so forth.
So that is the concept of the minimum dose and a concept that I spent quite a bit of my earlier years studying.
And so we're talking about minimum dose to produce progress,
then this is not minimum dose to just maintain what you have,
because those would be two different concepts, right?
Yeah, for sure. So you could look at the minimum dose of maintaining performance,
fitness, whatever, and the minimum dose to see any sort of change, whether that change is meaningful or not.
But I specifically looked at and continue to look to be interested in the minimum effective dose to
see increases in strength and hypertrophy. So somebody like yourself or myself, what's the
least we need to do in order to see progress that we can be happy with? And we can feel like, oh,
this is a meaningful change in my squat strength or my bicep size.
feel like, oh, this is a meaningful change in my squat strength or my bicep size.
And what are some of the benefits of training this way? Aside from, let's say,
you have somebody who they have plenty of time to go to the gym. They like going to the gym.
Why should they maybe consider programming with this kind of MED approach versus what we see on social media, which is a lot of kind of the opposite end
of the spectrum, almost like maximum recoverable capacity, because that makes for cooler videos,
and it's more hardcore, and it just gets more attention. Yeah, so the concept of the minimum
dose is a concept that can be useful to everyone. Now, if you're somebody whose life depends on
gaining as much muscle or as much strength as possible, if you're somebody whose life depends on gaining as much
muscle or as much strength as possible, and you're like a competitive strength or physique athlete,
and you do have the time, it does make sense to try and maximize that time by doing more.
But still having some experience with the concept of the minimum dose, especially if you're not at
the highest level in the world where you're like a professional athlete and you're getting paid to be an athlete, there will come times where life will get in the way.
There will be times where your recovery resources may be limited. And there may also be times where
you're just not feeling like training or spending hours and hours in the gym. And then being able to
revert back to the concept of the minimum effective dose and knowing that you can still get yourself in the gym, do less than you usually would do to maximize performance or muscle growth and still see meaningful gains. I think that's a very, very useful concept to have experience with.
have, you know, deloads that you're going to do now and then, but there could be periods of training,
almost training blocks where you are going from redlining to doing a, maybe a training block of minimum effective dose, even for the purpose of recovery, just, or putting less stress on your
joints for a period of time, just thinking with long-term longevity when you're 20. Yeah. You
kind of just train heavy and hard always. Maybe you
deload when you get sick once every so often. But as I'm 39 now, and I started training when I was
18. So I've lived this and many other people have as well. Whereas you get older, I've still been
able to maintain a high level of fitness and for me, a high level of performance, but it's not
exactly the same. I do have to be a bit more prudent about my programming. And I do have to
think a bit more about the wear and tear that the high intensity training, certain exercises,
high volume puts on my body because I, I feel it more than I did when I was 20.
Yeah, that's a really good point. And I guess we could use the analogy that everybody loves
when talking training, which is a car analogy. So I guess if you have a car that's, you know,
so let's say you have a car that, that, you know, has a hundred plus thousand miles,
the minimum effective training, those would be you running that car at a decent
speed and still getting to your destination, but without necessarily pushing it to its limits and
getting there faster like you would back in the day because it could present certain problems.
I'm not sure if the analogy was the best or if it was needed, but hey.
At least it makes sense. And something else that comes to mind too is, I wonder if
working in some of this style of training, again, even if somebody is willing to push it and they
want to push it, it might even make sense for them to mostly push it. I think that it might
also improve the quality of your training when you are doing less of it and you are focused more on execution of, I mean, even if we get down to
like, what's the ideal of every workout, right? It's perfect reps. Really, that's the ideal,
like perfect reps. Every rep of every set is perfect. And then if we look at just,
we zoom out a little bit, no junk volume, every set provides a high training stimulus.
And again, just thinking back to my own training, if you're
willing to put enough brute force into it, you can make up for some of those mistakes.
Yeah, I agree there that especially for some people and as a coach, I have worked with
individuals who will start doing some of the things that you described as volumes go higher.
So even though they do have
the recovery resources and the willingness to spend more time in the gym, you see that
quality of work sort of deteriorate as they go into their ladder sets in a session. Whereas
if they knew that all they have to do is, let's say, five or 10 sets per muscle group per week
or per lift per week or even less, and they have to give their everything for those sets.
Mentally, I've seen that that helps a lot of people get in more quality work and adhere
as well as have buy-in for a longer period of time versus feeling like they're wasting
their time or, oh, they missed out on a couple of sets and then they missed out on another
session because they felt bad about missing a couple of sets and so on and so forth.
And they missed out on another session because they felt bad about missing a couple of sets and so on and so forth.
Additionally, I also think that the concept of the minimum dose can benefit individuals who may still have time to train from a psychological standpoint. So even if you are somebody who does have the time and the recovery resources, there may come a time where you're not really enjoying training.
There may come a time where you're not really enjoying training and knowing that you can revert back to a minimum dose style of training may be something that will help.
Plus, as a potential baseline where you can build from.
So you could use the minimum effective, the concept of the minimum effective dose to have
as your sort of starting volume.
And because that will still get you meaningful gains, you can start there and start adding
from then onwards
versus what a lot of people do where they start at the maximum because they're like, hey, I want
to maximize muscle growth and strength. Therefore, I'll start at the max. They do that for a few
weeks. They don't feel good because they haven't adapted and because they've started too high.
They feel like they're never going to make progress because they're like, I'm doing what
I'm supposed to be doing. This is the maximum. But they feel tired or they start missing out on sessions.
And then they end up in an almost endless cycle of starting, stopping, starting, stopping.
Or feel guilty by wanting to even reduce training volume or do anything differently.
So I can think of people just over the years who they were determined. So they kept at it, but they just
kept digging the hole deeper because they didn't want to dial anything back because to your point,
they thought, well, this is what you should be doing. If you want to gain muscle and strength
as quickly as possible, this is what you should be doing. Anything less than this is just not,
you're not really trying. You don't really want it. So I think those are good points.
And the other thing you mentioned, the psychological point of if you're not enjoying your training
or if you have some other reason why you don't want to be in the gym as much as maybe you
were, I think that's also something that I just wanted to point out for people listening
because I went from, so for the longest time, I was training five days a week.
Those workouts were probably 70, 80 minutes or so on average.
And for at least the last, there was about a two and a half year, probably almost three
year period where I was pushing pretty hard for my body.
I'd say probably close-ish to about the most that I could do given the other circumstances
in my life, given that I'm like an okay sleeper,
not great sleeper. I have kids, there's other stress, there are things I can only, you know,
beat myself up so much in the gym before the wheels just kind of start to fall off.
And then it's probably about six months ago or so, maybe a little bit less, four months ago,
I switched to three days per week because that period of really pushing for progress,
it was productive and I hit some PRs. I can't really say I see much of a difference in my physique. I gained
a little bit of muscle just tracking my body composition, but we're talking about a few pounds,
maybe two or three pounds over the course of a couple of years. And given my genetics,
it's hard to say that I could have trained much harder and actually recovered from it.
And I was strict with my diet and so forth.
So I'm close to the end of my genetic rope for muscular.
I wasn't meant to be a big and strong guy, really.
I'm kind of like a taller, skinny guy, played ice hockey, good endurance kind of guy, right?
And so I was like, okay, well, that was fun to do that for a while.
But now I really just want to maintain
what I have. I'm happy with how I look. My body generally feels good so long as I don't push it
too hard in the gym. And I like training, but there are many other things that I would like
to be doing with my time. And so if I can spend less time in the gym, like psychologically, that's just more appealing right now than more
time in the gym. And so I went down to three days per week, just kind of a simple push-pull legs,
MED kind of approach. And it's great. And I now like my training on the whole a lot more
because I don't have the voice in my head questioning why I'm still in the gym seven hours a week
when I really don't need to be.
And I don't love being in the gym just for its own sake.
Some workouts are better than others.
I generally enjoy training, but I have other things.
And so that has been a nice shift for me.
And that's new.
I mean, I haven't consistently trained three days per week.
for me. And that's new. I mean, I haven't consistently trained three days per week.
I actually can't remember aside from maybe like I'm on vacation and I'm just going to do a couple workouts or maybe if I really thought about it, I could think of periods where I was very busy and
there were a few weeks here and there where I was just doing a few workouts, but consistently,
intentionally just training three days per week. This might be the first time ever, actually, because when I got into lifting weights, I was 17 and I was 17 or 18. I
had nothing but time. So I'd be in the gym five days a week, two hours a day, sometimes go on
Saturdays, you know what I mean? Good times, man. I think that's where a lot of people fall victims to the somewhat, especially, you know,
individuals who are potentially also dabbling in like self-improvement sort of communities
and just are on social media a lot where you do see this constant idea of like hard work
and you got to grind and wake up at 3 a.m. and this and that and the other, all for hard work.
But similarly with other areas in your life,
the difference between optimization and something,
the difference between optimal and suboptimal is not 60 versus 100%.
It could be 85% versus 100%.
And I think that a lot of people have this idea that unless they're doing the best thing
for muscle growth or strength, whereas in other areas in their life, they don't care,
i.e. finances.
Not everybody is out there trying to maximize their investments and reading hours and hours
of how to trade stocks or whatever.
They're happy with the basic approach and they're happy that they're going to make some
meaningful dividends down the line. I think that a lot of people are just afraid that
they're missing out. And when we actually surveyed national and international level power lifters,
around 32% when asked why they haven't trained with a minimum effective dose approach,
they said that they had not thought of it.
And 29%, obviously, people were able to select multiple reasons,
said that they did not want to experiment and risk potential progress,
while also 20% said that they did not feel comfortable
with doing less than they were currently doing.
So there was a sense of, if what I'm doing now is producing X result,
if I do less, I'm probably going to regress
and I'm probably doing a disservice to my hobby,
my passion, myself, my physical fitness.
When in reality, we see that that's not the case.
And let's get into some details about how this works,
how this looks.
And you can come at it whichever direction you want to but for people
listening if they're thinking okay so what might this look like in my training if i want to continue
gaining muscle and strength okay i'm not going to gain it as quickly as i possibly could but i'm okay
with that how would i go about implementing that and obviously it's going to look different for
beginners and intermediates and advanced and so forth, but I'll let you parse all that out however you want. Sure. So just for the, just a
bit of context for the listeners, I did my PhD on the minimum effective training dose for power
lifters specifically and strengthen power lifters. But as part of that project, I had to look at the
literature as a whole because there's not much direct literature on power lifters. I had to look at the literature as a whole, because there's not much direct literature on power lifters. I had to look at resistance trained individuals separately. So just people
that lift and based on the current literature, uh, for somebody who is a trained individual,
so at least like a year of training. And that would, that would also apply to beginners doing
a single set of six to 12 reps with around 70 to 85% of their one repetition maximum strength.
So being in the 6 to 12 rep range and being very close to failure and doing that set 2 to 3 times per week,
again, with a high intensity of effort, can allow them to make significant strength gains over the course of 8 to 12 weeks.
So we're talking about around two to three sets per exercise.
And that's for just general strength.
Can I ask a quick question on just when you say per exercise,
are you also talking about per muscle group?
So do you mean for one muscle group over the course of a week
or is this exercise, would it be done multiple times?
Yeah, so we specifically,
because this was in the context of powerlifting,
we specifically looked at how much is needed for the squat, bench press, and deadlift.
But as far as per muscle group per week, the guidelines wouldn't differ that much.
You could be looking at instead of three sets per week,
around three to five sets per week would allow you to still make meaningful hypertrophy gains.
five sets per week would allow you to still make meaningful hypertrophy gains. But even as low as one to three sets, either per exercise per week or per muscle group per week, which could be
one set per exercise per week, is enough to give you some growth. But given that adding another set
is not going to take that much time away from you. I mean, it's like maybe an extra minute.
Yeah. If you're in the gym, you might as
well do three sets. Yeah. Might as well do three sets and make, you know, potentially like 20 or
30% more gains. So as far as like highly advanced, you know, strength athletes, because we did look
at powerlifters and we did take powerlifters and put them through training sessions around six sets
per week for the squad, and then six sets
for the bench and for the deadlift were enough to produce meaningful strength increases. And we
defined meaningful by actually asking experienced coaches and athletes, how much strength would you
need to gain over a specific time period for you to regard that as meaningful. But we also did have people that,
so we did a study where we had people do
as little as one repetition per week for some lifts.
So the only, like for the deadlift,
they went in and did their warmups
and then one heavy single, called it a day.
They did three singles per week for the bench press
and two singles per week for the squat.
Those individuals did not have a high probability
of making a ton of gains. So they had a 13% chance of meeting the standards that the coaches and
athletes had set as far as what's meaningful, but they were still able to somewhat increase
their strength with just a few, like less than a handful of repetitions per week. And we're
talking about experienced strength athletes here
and and was that was that what 95 of 1rm or so they were training up to a single at rp 9 to 9.5
okay so so heavy but but still just one rep yeah just one rep and keep in mind that when we added
two sets of three uh backoffs to all those singles so that on paper and in practice is not a lot.
But if you actually calculate the percentage change as far as volume goes, that was 600% more volume.
So you go and you do your single repetition on the bench press, and then you take, they took 80% of whatever they hit and did two triples.
So not a lot of time committed, right?
percent of whatever they hit and did two triples. So not a lot of time committed, right? And they had a 99 percent probability of exceeding what the coaches and athletes regarded as a meaningful
strength. And if we look at the actual numbers on average, we're talking about an increase on their
powerlifting total, meaning their squat, bench and deadlift combined of around 60 to 70 pounds
over the course of six weeks.
Obviously, terms and conditions apply, potential outliers and so on and so forth.
But we also interviewed a bunch of world champion powerlifters and coaches, some of
the best in the world when it comes to the athletes and coaches that have worked with
multiple world record holders, champions, thousands of people, gen pop, military personnel,
and so on and so forth. And even they said that, hey, a handful of sets per week per lift at around
one to five reps, using a heavy weight should be enough for periods up to three months for you to
still make really good gains. We then triangulate that with the hypertrophy data that we have,
somewhere around five sets per muscle group per week seems to be a really, really solid sweet spot for somebody to make solid gains, probably
not maximize, but still make both solid gains in terms of muscle size and strength. And when you
say the, well, how did you interpret those findings? I'm sure you were a little bit surprised
with those findings. And does that tell you something about how a lot of
these people were training before participating in this study? What you were having them do,
I'm assuming, was quite a bit less than what they normally did or know?
Yeah. So they were required to not have done something like that before.
Yeah. And so they were going from, my understanding, they were going from a higher volume, just harder program to a lower volume in a, in some ways, easier program. And
then they, they still made meaningful progress, which would probably mean they, they made a much
or most of the progress that they, that they would have made had they just continued the way they
were training before?
Because they're calibrating their own idea of meaningful progress based on their previous
training experience, right? Yeah, potentially. It may have been that because the training they did
was so for strength specifically, we know that specificity is important. They went from higher
volumes of training to doing something that was very,
very similar to the test that was used to measure their strength, which in their case was the squat,
the bench and their deadlift. So it may be that they got really good at handling heavier weights
and just doing only what they were supposed to do when they got tested. So they got really good
at doing heavy singles and then the backups were still heavy enough. And because volume was so low, fatigue, which we only looked at by
asking them to rate their soreness and overall their soreness was super low throughout the
duration of the study. It may be that such training allows you to maintain a high level
of fitness. In this case, fitness is strength, still get some meaningful practice, some like really good practice in. And at the same time, you are getting really good at
doing whatever you want to get good at doing without having the issue of fatigue building up.
And you're able to express that a bit better. Now, keep in mind that if we assume that, you know,
muscle growth is also important for strength, it is likely that they would have, after a certain point, they would need a bit more volume to keep the hypertrophy sort of gears grinding.
But even so, if we're still toying with the concept of the minimum effective dose, that would just look on paper, that would just be an addition of a few extra sets here and there.
just be an addition of a few extra sets here and there. The nice thing actually that came off the back end of me being involved in the community was that after our studies were out and the concept
was promoted a bit more, a lot of people reached out and said, oh, I've done this in the past and
I've gotten X, Y, Z results. Or a lot of people actually took some of the protocols from the
studies and ran them. And that resulted in a bunch of really cool case studies in quotation marks of people saying, Hey, I ran that made great gains feel great.
That's great. And then, um, so my next question is on this hypertrophy point.
So if we're talking about five sets for, for a muscle group per week, and that's,
that's for an experienced weightlifter or who would you say that, that, that could work for,
work for anyone and everyone
does age come into to play here so i would say if it would work for anyone uh and everyone and i
would also say that again you could go as low as one to three sets per muscle group per week we do
have data showing that single sets are solid at getting you gains. Now, I'm recommending five
because it's right there in the middle
between one and 10.
Absolute mathematical genius over here.
But no, it's slightly above
the absolute minimum effective dose.
And again, the time commitment required is not that great.
But yeah, I would say that for beginners
100 for intermediate and advanced trainees i unless now if you're somebody who's been training
for 25 years and you are a competitive bodybuilder and you've absolutely done everything under the
sun for muscle growth and you're also of a certain age, it may be that there's nothing else you can
do anyways to make meaningful gains, but you will most certainly maintain your muscle mass and still
potentially see some strength gains. For anybody who doesn't fit that category, even if like,
let's take myself, I've been training for 12 years. I should be able to make meaningful
progress with just five sets per muscle group per week.
But that's meaningful.
The definition of meaningfulness changes based on your level, right?
A beginner is not going to be like, oh, I think my bicep looks slightly bigger.
That's meaningful.
A beginner wants to look at themselves in the mirror and see somebody else.
For you and I, if you go, huh, wait a second, I am a bit bigger.
And you measure your biceps and they are indeed slightly bigger.
Although, you know, your loved ones are going to be like, bro, you look the same.
You will be like, no, no, that's meaningful because, you know, I have been lifting for X amount of time.
As far as beginners and gen pop goes, we had a study where we were essentially given access to data for over 14,000 participants over seven years
from a gym chain in the Netherlands where their business model is 20 minutes of resistance
training per week, six exercises, one set per exercise, four to six reps until absolute failure.
Those people were able to make strength gains for a year plus. And after that, those strength
gains started plateauing. They still
had an upward trend, but we're talking about individuals who are in their mid-40s, early 50s.
So the fact that they were still able to slightly increase strength or just maintain it by doing
just 20 minutes of lifting per week, that shows you that if, let's say, you're not somebody who
cares about maximizing strength or
becoming jacked, or even just making meaningful gains as far as muscle mass and strength goes,
even as low as that is still able to do something positive and do much more than if you were to do
nothing. Yeah, that it just highlights the power of strength training. And just and just how little
I've, I've, I guess you can't really say tweeted anymore,
I've X'd, I've posted, I don't know about this a number of times, just trying to encourage people
who are new and maybe they're 40 or 50 or 60 and they're overweight and get them to understand
just how far a little bit can go especially when you combine that with some
sensible dieting you don't have to necessarily count or track calories you don't have to
necessarily weigh and measure food you do have to understand energy balance and you have to know how
to make it work but there are many many ways to do that and you give somebody a year of just good
enough dieting enough to be perfect of course good enough in 20 minutes of resistance training per week. And that's a full transformation. That is a new person. Yeah, I agree. And there was
a paper that was published actually a few days ago that looked at minimalist training and whether
lower dosage or in or lower intensity lifting, whether that is effective at improving just general fitness. And they found that for beginners, for the first three months, even one weekly session
at intensities and by intensities, I mean load on the bar at loads below 50% of their
one RM with around three sets for a few multi-joint exercise.
So just one session a week was enough for them to still improve physical fitness,
strength and so on and so forth
without even lifting hard,
just literally doing some lifting.
Obviously, intensity of effort
and pushing those sets close to failure is important,
obviously after a certain point.
But if you're somebody who hasn't started yet
or is coming after a huge layoff or something,
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and literally doing anything for the first few months will still get you some results.
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before it's too late. Now, what are your thoughts about everything that you've been talking about,
specifically with hypertrophy? And I would say the prevailing position, at least as I understand
it, in the evidence-based space. And the first time I came across this was from Lyle McDonald's work many years ago on how much volume is needed to,
I guess the context is more maximize progress. So it's a different, a little bit different,
but we're just talking about a spectrum here. And the prevailing position is that it's about 10 to
20 hard sets per week for any given
muscle group. And again, for people listening, that would be the argument would be that that's
the range for maximizing progress, where if you go beyond that, it's just diminishing returns.
If you go beyond 20 sets per week, chance of getting hurt just goes up. It's just not
productive. Does that jive you think with the research that you've done and your
understanding of the literature and not that it's it's not directly contrary to what you just said
it just it just makes me wonder that is there maybe not is 20 sets per week ever needed in
your opinion yeah and i would i would push back against the narrative of junk volume that we often see where people hear about, you know, like a very hard cap as far as like an upper threshold when it comes to training volume.
What people need to also understand is that, hey, if you're absolutely trying to maximize muscle growth, staying within 10 to 20 sets and seeing how you're responding, how you're recovering is probably your best educated bet at maximizing and absolutely making the most out of your training.
But a lot of people see that and they understand it as if you don't do 10 to 20 sets, you're barely looking at maintaining you know but as far as the literature goes there are studies that have done more than 20 20 sets and we recently had a study that was published that
the average number of sets in one of the groups was 37 it was mind you that was only for one muscle
group and they still continue to see uh progress as far as hypertrophy went now i would still if
you're somebody who's trying to
absolutely make the most out of your time in the gym, and you want your side delts to be as big as
humanly possible, even if that's something you can only see, staying in the 10 to 20 set sort of range
makes sense, potentially starting lower, and then building up as you are seeing, you know,
as you're recovering, and if you're seeing that you can tolerate more, sure.
And you can go and go in the sort of more crazy
in quotation marks volume range
where it's 20 to 30 sets.
If you're trying to really bring up
a specific muscle group that is lagging.
But again, we're talking about populations here
that pay attention to those things.
I personally don't care.
I'm in somewhere between six to 12 sets per muscle group per week.
And for some muscle groups, as low as like two to four, because I do not care about absolutely
maximizing hypertrophy.
I enjoy going to the gym, lifting hard, deadlifting 600 plus pounds, chasing PRs here and there.
But I'm not fussed about whether my rear delts are directly proportional
to my front delts or whether my lower back could be slightly thicker
for my eyes only.
So yeah, I do think that the 10 to 20 set range is actually based
on the current available evidence.
But keep in mind, again, we may be talking about 80% versus 100%
or 90% versus 100%, not 100% versus 30% as far as potential gains go.
And you've mentioned this a couple times now, I wanted to follow up on it. And that is
working your way up to higher amounts of volume. It's just a common mistake that I see again,
again, probably because of
so much of what's on social media and what gains traction on social media, at least what I've seen
is more extreme type of workouts, especially when big fitness influencers are sometimes sharing
their workouts like, oh, save this workout. And in one workout, you're supposed to do like 25
sets for chest or something like that. You know what I mean? And so, can you help people understand how to go about... Okay. So, they're at wherever. It
doesn't particularly matter. If you want to specify... Okay. If somebody's... Let's say
they're at five sets per week for a muscle group or maybe it's 10 and that is not producing
meaningful progress. Let's just assume
they generally know what they're doing with their diet and their programming is generally sound.
They are just going to need more volume because eventually you do get there where you just have
to work harder. Unfortunately, how should they go about or how should at least they think about
adding volume to their training? Definitely do not go from 10 sets per week for your lower body
to the 35 sets per week that you saw on social media. That's a terrible idea, but
what is a better approach? Yeah, for sure. So assuming that you're actually keeping yourself
in check with your intensity of effort so that you are actually working very close or to momentary failure, because that's another thing. Although we have data and that data is even from our lab in a collaboration with other labs where we did do a systematic review of the literature and did see that in lab conditions, people are good at gauging how close they are to failure.
failure. You know, maybe they were a rep short in their predictions. But as a coach, from my experience and having worked with hundreds of people of all sort of levels and sporting
backgrounds, people often lack the ability to really know how hard they're working.
I run into that sometimes still.
Same. And that's why I try to take all my sets to the point where I'm unable to like
move the bar anymore. Obviously, where I can do so safely, right? But let's say that you've checked yourself and you are indeed training pretty hard and
all sets are near the point where you're unable to do any more reps, even if somebody was
there offering you tens of thousands of dollars.
Now, adding a couple of sets or a single set for each muscle group every other week and monitoring things like your recovery or your
perceived difficulty of each session by looking at session RPE scores. So rating each session
out of seven, seven being absolutely almost impossible session and one being an easy session
or using any sort of tool that you want to quantify the difficulty of your training session,
looking at those numbers, looking at your soreness and looking at how your performance
is changing, whether you're able to add weight to the bar or to the exercise that you're performing
and whether you're feeling good and you're able to actually finish those workouts,
then you could potentially start adding more. So then after a few weeks, you can add a couple
more sets and then take it from there until you've reached the point where you can push your training for a couple of months or even more.
Then you need to take a slight step back and then do that all over again. But at the same time,
I would urge caution with people that follow, you know, fitfluencers or other quote unquote
authority figures when they tell you, oh, I did this and I saw great gains, seeing gains and seeing muscle growth gain specifically, especially for people that are not beginners, takes a long time.
So just because somebody tried something for a couple of months and they feel like they looked a bit better, that doesn't necessarily mean that you should take that as the sort of the definitive proof that they wouldn't have seen better gains
had they done less. Simply losing body fat can create that illusion. Or having less stress in
your life. Yeah, I mean, just even in terms of, okay, so anybody who has gotten fairly lean has
experienced this, where you start out as a guy, let's say somewhere in the teens body fat
percentage and you diet your way down. And by the time you're around maybe 10%, people are
starting to comment like, wow, you've put on some size. Have you been bulking up?
No, it's literally the opposite. I'm 15 pounds lighter or whatever. There's just an optical
illusion that you look bigger when you look leaner.
And then you put on a long sleeve shirt, and then it's people asking,
what happened? Did you stop lifting weights? Also something, it just needs to be said that
just because somebody says that they did a certain workout on social media or that they
train a certain way doesn't
necessarily mean that they do unless you're seeing every set of that workout and you're
seeing enough of that because it's stuff at the fringes that gets the most attention.
People will joke with me that for a long time now that my training is, especially now that I'm there
three days per week, some people are surprised that really as a fitness professional, I'm only doing
maybe eight to 10 hard sets per major muscle group per week. And isn't that boring? Or shouldn't you
be working harder? And I mean, I don't care. But if I were trying to get more attention,
then I wouldn't be honest about my workouts. I might still do what I'm doing. But I would
simply lie. I would make up that, oh, yeah, well, here's today's workout.
And there are people who do that, unfortunately.
Yeah, for sure.
And a lot of it is done for the algorithm.
But additionally, people also discount the fact that it's not impressive for somebody to do 20 sets per muscle group per week for three,
six months, whatever, but rather, at least in my opinion, you, a businessman, family man,
person that is doing other things is still working out with a high intensity of effort
and still hitting volume thresholds that are beyond the minimum effective dose for years and years and years nonstop.
So for me personally, if it's much more impressive for somebody to be in the gym for 20 years
nonstop versus what we often see where people have this sort of spark for the gym for a couple
of years and they kind of fall back for like a few months, they don't work out, get back in,
get back out. And then they end up semi-maintaining what they built back in their 20s for the rest of their lives by doing a few periods in the gym, then taking some months off.
So people should not discount the effectiveness of a plan that doesn't look exciting on paper and doesn't look super fancy or complicated.
on paper and doesn't look super fancy or complicated, that plan, if you're able to be consistent with it and be in and out the gym day in or no day in, week in, week out,
and still add a few kilos to the bar or pounds to the bar over years, even if that plan looks
boring AF, you are going to be doing much better than the person who's trying to do the most every
time. And then they fail and they start again or they get injured and so on and so forth.
time and then they fail and they start again or they get injured and so on and so forth.
I've joked about that, that effective, efficient training is boring on paper. It doesn't mean that all of your workouts are going to be boring, but it is pretty much you have a handful of these
great exercises or a few handfuls of these great exercises and you just do that at least a few handfuls of these great exercises. And you just do that at least a few times a week.
And you push close to failure.
And maybe you train in a variety of rep ranges,
but you're still just doing the same kind of couple handful of exercise.
And you just do that until you die.
And that's the plan.
And that's awesome.
I don't know.
In my head, it's the same as like other other areas
in life where like it's basic and boring on paper but it's not easy to be pushing like again we're
not talking about people that are professional athletes it's not easy at least for most people
to have a family a full-time job traveling other stressors and still be on top of
their nutrition and training for the rest of their lives and maintain like not above average like
way above average level of fitness because we're not talking like your muscularity and your strength
even without knowing you just by by looking at when you, when compared to the average person is just like, it's not even a discussion there and you're able to do so while
doing everything else in your life. And I think that's most of the people that are listening here
that have, you know, other things going on. Yeah, absolutely. That's a, that's been really
the crowd that I've, that I've wanted to reach from, from the beginning is the everyday person. Fitness is
not their life. It's important to them. It's something that they want to be able to do for
the rest of their life, but it does have to fit in and it has to take... It's not number one on
the list of priorities and obligations. And so how do you help somebody get really fit with just a few hours per week?
And I wanted to also ask if there are any kind of common misunderstandings or misconceptions
about this minimum effective approach that you haven't already addressed that you think we
should address? Yeah. So a lot of people somewhat discount the word effective and
they assume it's like a maintenance thing, where in reality, again, we're looking at what's the
least you need to do in order to make meaningful increases in strength. A misconception, I guess,
would be that it's only for beginners when in reality we have data in powerlifters, i.e. people that were squatting and deadlifting over 440 pounds and benching,
I don't know, near 315 or somewhere close to that. As far as misconceptions also go is that you
potentially couldn't do that for the rest of your life. Sure, if you're trying to maximize gains,
yeah, probably not the best way to go about it, but I would argue for a lot of listeners here,
even if you stayed at like five heart sets per muscle group per week, and you did that for the
rest of your life, potentially switching things up when your workouts get a bit monotonous.
I don't see why you cannot do that and still make solid gains and reap the health benefits
of resistance training that based on the literature we see like 60 minutes of resistance training is where the maximum risk reduction for all-cause mortality
occurs so you're ticking a lot of boxes with that so it's not a maintenance thing it's not
just for beginners and it's not like a tool or like it is a tool but it's not like a method just
for like a few weeks when you're busy or you don't have time to train.
Sure, it can be used like that as well, but it's not just that.
And what about genetics?
I know that that has to be a part of the discussion where people are saying, well, yeah, if you're genetically gifted or if you tend to gain muscle and strength easily, maybe you only need to do five sets for a muscle group per week.
But speaking as somebody, I don't have good muscle building genetics, which is a real thing. I mean,
for people listening, yes, genetics is a factor. Everyone can gain muscle and strength, period.
But some people are going to gain it faster and they're going to be able to gain more. And that
is a reality. How does that kind of map with what you've explained?
How does that kind of map with what you've explained?
Yeah.
So if we look at the literature, it's not that the literature was on genetically gifted individuals.
It was on a bunch of individuals.
Some may have been.
Some may have been non-responders.
Some may have been high responders.
So that addresses that.
But I would argue that a lot of people that think like you may have bad genetics and it
may be that for you to grow your calves or your biceps, you do need to do more than five sets per
week. But still, the minimum effective dose guidelines will be able, assuming that you're
also doing what you're supposed to do on the nutrition side of things, because that's really
something that people often forget. And I doubt that a lot of people that do say they have
bad genetics have consistently tried to train with a very high intensity of effort and make
sure that they're supporting that nutritionally by periods of conservative weight gain,
but for long periods of time. So I do feel like a lot of people get discouraged
that in the first few years of their training, they're not turning heads on the beach,
but it's, it's, it's likely that they also have, um, sort of a wrong idea of what an average body
will look like after you're lifting for a bunch of time. Cause we do live in a highlight reel,
and I see 700 pound deadlifts now. And i don't get impressed because i'm used to on
the social on my social media feed just by following the people that i follow it's just
normal to see that every day and like it does get in your head if it's somebody i know i'll be like
well wow nice nice for them but i don't look at a bodybuilding physique and feel any sort of um
like there's no wow effect anymore it's literally like oh
some bodybuilder yeah yeah it has to be absolutely fast to be it seems like the combination of
freaky size and young age seems to that catches people's eye these days yeah sam sulik i just i
it's funny you said i didn't even know who that was three or four days
ago and um somebody asked me like oh what do you think about this guy who's that and then went and
found him that's exactly what i was thinking i was like oh i see so the dude i don't know how
old he is he looks like he's 20 or 21 20 20 something okay yeah he looks early 20s and absolutely massive for his age and unfortunately
the trend is that you just need to you need more and more extreme physiques or extreme
feats of strength to get a lot of attention on social media and that's what social media is rewarding
indirectly i mean it's almost like kind of the collective unconscious is maybe more responsible
for it than algorithms per se but that just seems to be where things are at yeah and it's like
in our echo chambers and you see people that are like you cannot say that they're not muscular.
They're like, if you measure their body,
they are muscular.
They may not be mass monsters or insanely shredded,
but like you'll have people say things like,
do you even lift?
Or, oh, this guy looks skinny.
But if you then go out in the real world
or if you think of muscularity
in terms of where it puts you as far as the percentiles go,
or if you go to a mall or just in your town and just actually focus and be like,
okay, let me see how many fit people, not muscular, like big bodybuilding looking guys,
how many fit individuals, including both men and women, can I spot?
You'll see that even just going to the gym a few times per week and having some muscle on you
and being relatively at a healthy body composition
already places you above the average by quite a bit.
And for the majority of people,
if they saw you without a t-shirt,
they'd say, oh, you look like you take care of yourself
and that you're physically able to do things.
It's a good point.
In the real world, you can be in the 99th percentile, but on social media, yeah, you're skinny, you're weak, do you even lift? The best shape I've ever gotten in getting really lean for photo shoots, I haven't competed. I never cared to compete, but I've gotten to ab veins lean for photo shoots. That's about as lean as I've gotten. So seven ish percent or whatever.
And that's, that's the best ish that my body can look realistically, given my genetics
and not that I care, but the, the general consensus was he looks good for a natural
weightlifter.
So it wasn't, it was, does he even lift?
You know, they said, all right, all right, fine.
He looks good for, for a natty.
I wasn't even taking it there. i was taking it to the opposite side so i bet you've gone to like social events where you were the guy here comes here comes okay here comes the mass monster like
every time i go to like the christmas party of my partner's company these are people that don't
lift or are not fitness oriented so it's like like, whoa, Eddie Hall just walked in. Yeah. Yeah. You're, you're an actual superhero. Like you
just stepped out of the big screen. Same, same. Yeah. Same, same for you. Like you walk up there
with a t-shirt and maybe not like a winter jacket on and just, just looking at the shape of your
arms, people will be like, wow, like this is, and you see that with um how they admire um certain characters in movies like bane and batman i'm just going on a
completely weird tangent here but like if you look at tom hardy's physique in uh portraying bane
well it wasn't anything insane he had big traps well that was you know he was just like a guy that
looked like he worked out and i think he was maybe shrugging a lot also to get the traps out a little bit.
Yes, you thought darkness was your ally.
But yeah, but people still perceived it as, whoa, here comes Bane, the huge guy.
I think of who's Chris Hemsworth as Thor.
I remember I was in the theater, maybe for the first one, and he takes his shirt off.
And I mean, he looked good.
But that physique is achievable for most people.
Most guys, if they're willing to work long enough, regardless of what he may or may not
have used to prepare for the movie.
But that's still an achievable physique.
And I think 80% of the women in the
theater all like side at the same time when his shirt came off. Yeah. Yeah, exactly.
And then one final thing you mentioned nutrition and that, that is a great point, particularly,
I mean, it, it just starts with calories. I mean, I know, I know, you know, this,
but for many people listening, if you're not consistently in a slight calorie surplus, no reason to go above 10% of your daily energy expenditure.
Probably closer to 5% is a better idea if you can make that work.
That means you're going to have to diet on a lean bulk with the same mentality, at least,
that you would diet on a cut, not go way overboard or not pay attention and accidentally
under eat, which I've heard from many people over the years who are surprised when they lean bulk
for the first time that after the first couple of weeks, it's not fun anymore. You're always full.
And after a couple of months, you're force feeding yourself unless you have a large appetite.
But if you have a normal appetite
or even a lower than normal appetite, it just as the desire for food and the hunger and cravings
that can occur when you're cutting or annoying, you kind of have the opposite that is annoying,
where you just don't want to eat anymore when you're lean bulking. And so that point of being
willing to do that and not just do it for a couple of weeks, not just do it for a month, like no, try to do it for start relatively lean and try to do it for six months consistently in a surplus training with an effective amount of volume training with that intensity is there are just many, many people who don't want to do that or have not done
that. But then who, like you said, will think that, and in some cases, they actually think
that it's their genetics that is the problem, or they think it's their training that is the
problem. They think that they need more volume or they need to do a more extreme program when no, they, they just need to
eat more food. I mean, I, I, I've, I've experienced that simply because I kind of like being lean and
at least I know it, but I I've accepted that at this point, if I wanted to gain any significant
amount of muscle, which is, is not going to be that much, but if I wanted to try to gain,
let's say somehow gain another 10 pounds of muscle, work really hard over a course of a couple of years, I'd have to
generally be at a higher body fat level. And I don't care enough. I kind of just like the way
that I look where I'm at. And I like how I feel. And that works for me.
Ying and yang over here. I'm the opposite but uh the opposite as in i'm comfortable at
higher body fat percentages well you're also though performance focused i mean it sounds
like you like to be strong you like to you like to yeah naturally i was never like i am between
20 and 24 percent body fat based on like dexa bot pod BotBot and BIA at 5'10 and at around 235 pounds.
But I make sure to measure my waist circumference daily and make sure that that's in check.
So that is half of my height in centimeters in centimeters and circumference.
Make sure my visceral fat is low.
So that's measured by DEXA.
Make sure my visceral fat is low.
So that's measured by DEXA.
Obviously, I ensure that my steps, so I've been averaging 12,000 steps for like the past seven, eight years and lift, but I just enjoy eating food.
I'm naturally inclined to be at sort of these body fat percentages.
And at the same time, I like how I look with clothes and hey.
But all that, which was unrelated to what you mentioned,
is that as far as gaining muscle goes,
it's cool to look at 12-week transformations and stuff.
And sure, you can do great,
especially from a weight loss perspective.
In 12 weeks, you could look like a different person.
But as far as actual muscle growth goes,
if you're not a beginner,
you need, in order for you to actually see like solid gains,
that needs time commitment, a conservative surplus. You know, although we have data showing
that even maintenance calories can allow you to build muscle, if you want to make sure,
and especially if you feel like you may not be an extreme responder to lifting.
Or let me just interject. And this is something that I do it intentionally,
but I've heard from many people over the years who didn't realize they thought that they were
eating maintenance calories. That's how they thought of it, right? But of course, they're
not eating exactly the amount of calories that they're burning every day. Some days they're over,
some days they're under. And because they were averse to gaining body fat, they wanted to keep their abs
if it's a guy or if it's a woman. Of course, then maintenance when you want to stay lean
means erring on the side of under eating rather than overeating. That's just how it goes.
If you look at on a weekly basis,
there are probably going to be more deficit days, slight deficit days than surplus days.
And just the kind of average lifestyle, you'd have weekdays are probably on average deficit
days. And then they kind of just make up for that deficit on the weekend. They go out to restaurants
and they loosen up a little bit and that allows them to maintain their body fat levels. And so they think of that as maintenance.
But well, that's five days a week in a slight deficit. And those are your training days. And
then you have two days a week of a moderate surplus, let's call it. Those two days can't
make up for the detriment of the five days. That's a good point because a lot of people
will go, yeah, yeah, I've been bulking and nothing happened. And then you're asking, how much weight did you
really gain? Were you actually measuring? Was it that you saw the scale go up because you ate more
carbs and your weight sort of bumped up the first few weeks and then you just maintained it?
How has training been? Are you training intensely? But it's important to make sure that
nutrition is in check. Obviously, eating plenty of whole foods and stuff for your health and
getting enough fiber in and avoiding eating too many ultra processed foods.
Eat plants as well. Just as we know, plants are not trying to kill you. You need to eat vegetables.
Yes, they're good.
There you go. But yeah, anyways, it's important
to make sure before you call it a day and say, yep, I'm doomed. I have bad genetics. It's unlikely
that if you do, you know, if you train hard and you're eating and you give yourself enough time
with a mindset also that supports that, if you go into it thinking, ah, what's the point? It's
likely you're going to have acid. So, you know, make sure you're doing all these things.
And I'm sure you're going to respond just fine.
And one final thing I'll say that has worked for me,
it requires a bit more work on the meal planning side.
So some people wouldn't want to bother with it.
However, it's flipping the, so we have the mistake of a slight deficit five days a week,
and then a slight, a moderate surplus two days a week. Now,
that's fine. If you just want to maintain your body comp, that's totally fine. But if you're
trying to make progress, and you're an experienced weightlifter, that's just not going to work.
However, I have had success with the opposite. So intentionally being in a slight surplus five
days a week, and then a moderate, not extreme, but just moderate deficit
on the weekends is what I would do. And that allowed me to make progress as measured in
strength gains. And also I was taking body measurements. So I was clearly progressing.
And I did over the course of probably four or five or six months, I did gain a little bit of
body fat, but it was less than I would have gained
if I would have just maintained a steady surplus. And it's not necessary to do that. I just thought
it would be interesting. Like, I was curious how, how well could I keep my abs and actually make
some progress in the gym over the course of four to six months? Yeah, that sounds, that sounds like
a solid strategy as well.
But it doesn't work well for a lot of people who... I mean, even just social events and lifestyle on the weekends, for example. If you're going to eat... For me, there's maybe 22, 2300 calories.
I also wasn't lifting on the weekends. So I was less active on the weekends. Maybe it was a little
bit more than that. But anyway, I understand it's not a very workable, it's not very practical.
But if people listening want to try it,
there's a good chance that it'll also work for them.
Well, those are all the questions
that I had.
Is there anything else
before we wrap up
that's kind of bouncing around in your head
that I should have asked about
or you want to say before we wrap up?
Not really.
I think we've covered everything.
I guess the one main takeaway is that, hey, if you're doing a ton at the moment, know that you could also do less and still see progress. So don't be afraid when life gets in the way or you're not feeling like lifting. Instead of saying, you know what, I can't do my X amount of sets per week, 20 sets, 15 sets, 10 sets,
might as well not do anything. If you've listened to this, you know that you could do much less and still make some progress, if not quite a bit of progress. Yep. And this is great for people who
have to travel a lot. I've heard from many people over the years for work, and it can be impossible
to even follow a consistent routine because you just don't know exactly which
days you're going to be able to get in the gym. You don't know what the gym is going to be like.
And so this is a great approach for just taking what you have when you can get it and doing the
exercises that you have available. Even if it's just an under-equipped hotel gym, and you can get at least a few sets in a few times per week for the major muscle groups, and you could maintain your physique indefinitely just doing that.
I've traveled, I've flown over 20 times the past, like three, four months, over six countries.
And I haven't stopped training at all, even hitting as high as like six training sessions per week.
Some of those sessions, 20 minutes long, get in, chin-ups, push-ups, a few lateral raises,
get out.
Other sessions longer, but I'm constantly just telling myself, hey, just get something
in.
Even if it's a hotel gym and I end up doing three exercises with light weights till the point of failure, that still
counts. And it adds up over time. Yeah, that's a great tip. I do that. Even when traveling on
vacation, I don't make it a priority, but on average, I'll do one or two workouts per week
and just in the hotel gym. And usually I'll just do an upper body workout and a
lower body workout. I come back and I'm able to pick up right where I left off. All right. Well,
thanks again, Pac, for taking the time. Let's just wrap up with where people can find you if
they want to know more about your work and if there's anything in particular that you want people to know about? So I am on Instagram at drpack, D-R double underscore P-A-K.
I have a YouTube channel, which is also called dr.pack, D-R dot P-A-K.
And my personal website, drpack.com.
So yeah, that's it.
Everything is there.
Links to my research, links to videos and so on and so forth.
And yeah, thanks so much for having me on. Yeah, it was a great discussion. I enjoyed it.
Awesome. I appreciate you. 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.
And if you didn't like something
about this episode
or about the show in general,
or if you have ideas or suggestions
or just feedback to share,
shoot me an email,
mike at muscleforlife.com,
muscleforlife.com, and let me know what I could do better or just what your thoughts are about
maybe what you'd like to see me do in the future. I read everything myself. I'm always looking for
new ideas and constructive feedback. So thanks again for listening to this episode, and I hope
to hear from you soon.