Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Everything You Need to Know About Strength Training for Fat Loss
Episode Date: July 11, 2022Most people think cardio is the best type of exercise for losing weight. While it’s true that cardio can help you lose fat and that you should do cardio for its health benefits, strength training is... often unfairly criticized as ineffective when it comes to losing weight. For example, many people say strength training doesn’t burn enough calories to matter, which isn’t exactly true. Others say that while strength training can help you build and maintain muscle, that doesn’t make weight loss easier, which isn’t true. This podcast covers everything you need to know about using strength training effectively for losing fat as quickly as possible. Timestamps: 0:00 - New chocolate peanut butter protein bars are here! Try them risk-free today! Go to buylegion.com/proteinbar and use coupon code MUSCLE to save 20% or get double reward points! 11:56 - Is strength training good for weight loss? 14:14 - What is the best way to maximize fat loss while strength training? 17:05 -What exercises do you recommend? Mentioned on the Show: New chocolate peanut butter protein bars are here! Try them risk-free today! Go to buylegion.com/proteinbar and use coupon code MUSCLE to save 20% or get double reward points!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello there, I am Mike Matthews. This is Muscle For Life. Thank you for joining me today for a
review of some fundamentals. I wanted to talk about strength training and weight loss. And of
course, we're going to be talking about weight loss versus fat loss, but I'm getting ahead of
myself. And the reason I wanted to record this episode is most people think that cardio is the best kind
of exercise to lose weight and lose fat. Those things are different. We're going to talk about
that. But many people think that if you want to lose weight or lose fat effectively, you have to
do cardio or at least some cardio. And while it's true that cardio is great for burning calories and therefore can assist in weight loss and fat loss,
strength training is often unfairly criticized as not good for slimming down, not good for losing weight or losing fat.
Not necessarily bad, but just not very beneficial.
not necessarily bad, but just not very beneficial. Many people say that strength training doesn't burn enough calories to matter, which isn't exactly true. Many people say that while strength
training can help you build and maintain muscle, that's something that cardio can't do. That
doesn't really make weight loss easier, and that's not true. And in this podcast, I am going to share with you
everything you need to know about strength training for weight loss and how to use
strength training effectively for losing fat as quickly as possible. Before we get into it,
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checkout. Okay, so let's start with the question that I often get, which is, is strength training
good for weight loss? Does it really help? Does it really make a difference? Well, let's start
by pointing out the difference between losing weight and losing fat. Because if somebody
feels a little bit too pudgy, they are probably going to say that they want to lose weight. But
what they really mean is they want to lose fat and not muscle. And that's very important. Because
if losing weight is your only objective, if your sole focus is just decreasing the number that you
see on the scale, well, you can just starve
yourself and you can do a ton of cardio and you are going to achieve your goal. You are going to
lose weight and you might lose it very quickly. But the problem, of course, is that you probably
aren't going to like the way that you look or feel when it is all said and done because your body
weight is composed of both fat and muscle.
There are other things, of course, but I'm going to be focusing on just fat and muscle
in this talk here. And that is your body composition as far as this discussion goes,
the composition of that weight in terms of fat and muscle. And although you can starve yourself and you can run yourself
ragged and quickly lose weight, a lot of that weight you are going to lose will come from muscle
and not fat. And as you lose muscle, your body becomes more and more amorphous. You get that
skinny fat look that so many people are frustrated by. And your metabolism also slows down as you lose
muscle and that makes future fat gain more likely. It makes it harder to maintain your ideal body
composition. And it also causes your health to is a mistake. You want to focus on fat loss,
and then you want to maintain or gain as much muscle as possible. And the best way to do all
of that begins with strength training, because strength training actually does burn a considerable
number of calories, maybe not as many calories as
we would wish it burned three to 600 calories per hour for most people generally, but that's enough
to help you maintain enough of a calorie deficit to lose fat at an encouraging rate. Ultimately,
how quickly you can lose fat without losing muscle has a lot to do with how much fat you have to lose to get to a healthy
body composition. For example, if you have, let's say 15 to maybe 30 pounds of fat to lose to get
to the range of 10 to 15% body fat, if you're a man or 20 to maybe 25%, if you are a woman,
then you should be aiming for one to two pounds of fat loss per week. And that would
require something around a 3,500 to 7,000 calorie deficit per week. But if you had a lot more fat to
lose, let's say you had double that amount of fat to lose, you could double that calorie deficit,
at least that range and aim for about double two to four pounds of
fat loss per week without experiencing really any, let's say few, if any of the negative side
effects associated with dieting. And so then coming back to strength training and fat loss,
while strength training, resistance training of any kind, it does burn fewer calories than
cardio does per unit of time. If you matched intensities, that doesn't mean that you should
abandon the barbell for the treadmill. That is a mistake because research shows that doing a mix
of cardio and strength training is actually the most effective way to lose fat. It is more effective
than just doing cardio or just doing strength training. So in an ideal world, you would do,
let's say anywhere from three to five hours of strength training per week and about half of the
amount of time that you spend strength training doing cardio. So a couple of hours of cardio per week, and most of that would be low to moderate
intensity. Maybe if you are very cardiovascularly fit, you could get into the moderate to high
intensity range, but I would not recommend more than an hour or so of true high intensity,
you know, like HIIT, high intensity interval training per week, because while it does burn a lot of calories and that can boost your fat loss, it also puts a lot of strain on your body and requires a
lot more recovery than, well, we can go to the other end of the spectrum, let's say going for a
walk, but even then, let's say a five out of 10 difficulty bike ride. And if you are going to do
high intensity cardio, I would also recommend that
you do not do anything that is high impact because that puts even larger recovery demands on your
body. So then that is the most effective way to lose fat, combining the strength training and the
cardio. And then because you are doing strength training, you are going to benefit in several unique ways that you would not experience if you were only doing the cardio.
So, for example, the strength training is going to increase your muscle mass unless you are a very experienced weightlifter.
But if you are, you probably already know this.
You might not even
be listening to this podcast. Maybe you are, and you are just here to brush up on fundamentals,
which is a smart move. But anyway, in your case, if you are an experienced weightlifter,
you are not going to gain much muscle, if any, when you are cutting. But if you are relatively
new to strength training, then you can gain muscle while you lose fat. And while
cardio can do a lot to burn fat, it does very little, if anything, to increase the size of your
muscles. And the reason I'm not saying it does nothing is there is research that has shown that
in untrained individuals, biking can actually result in some lower body muscle growth in a calorie deficit.
But again, if you are trained, even relatively trained, biking is probably not going to make your leg muscles grow.
Like if you have a decent squat, for example, that's a lot more difficult than biking, especially if you are biking at a moderate intensity.
lot more difficult than biking, especially if you are biking at a moderate intensity.
And so what that means then is if you are only doing cardio, you are probably not going to gain any muscle to speak of. But if you include some strength training, even if it's just
one to three workouts per week, if you are relatively new to all of this, you will gain
muscle. And that is going to help in your weight loss efforts because
muscle is a much more energy hungry tissue than fat. It's more metabolically active. It costs
more energy to maintain. And that's why research shows that we burn about six more calories per day per pound of muscle that we gain versus just about two calories
per day per pound of body fat that we gain. And so then as you are losing fat, you are also gaining
muscle, which is speeding up your metabolism, which makes continued fat loss even easier. It
is a virtuous cycle. And studies also show that muscle helps you maintain good
metabolic health, which then reduces your risk of many types of diseases that can negatively
impact your overall health and well-being, but also your body composition. And finally,
research shows that more muscular people live longer and have a lower risk of a variety of
other lifestyle diseases like heart disease,
osteoporosis, and type 2 diabetes. Total lean mass is associated with all-cause mortality,
meaning that what researchers have found is as people have more and more lean mass,
their chances of dying from anything and everything get lower. Now, just to clarify something regarding increasing your metabolism or boosting your metabolism, specifically, when you gain muscle,
your resting metabolic rate goes up, and that is the number of calories that your body burns at
rest. And that's worth calling out because that's energy that your body is burning that you don't
have to move for. And of course, the more calories
your body burns at rest, the easier it is to maintain a calorie deficit. And then when you're
done dieting, the easier it is to maintain your ideal body composition. And many studies have
shown that strength training is a highly effective way at increasing resting metabolic rate. In fact, it is the most effective way
that is natural and safe. Another interesting benefit of strength training and fat loss is
it actually helps you burn more fat. It makes your body better at burning fat because when we train
our muscles, they release a special type of cell into our blood
called extracellular vesicles. And research shows that when these extracellular vesicles
leave our muscles, they carry with them strands of genetic material called MR1, M-I-R-1 or hyphen
one, which they then deposit in neighboring fat cells. And when mer one is in
muscle tissue, it hinders muscle growth. But when it is in fat cells, it speeds up fat burning. So
what the weightlifting is doing is it's causing a subtle shift in the expression of certain genes
that then accelerate muscle growth. Because remember, these compounds, they're leaving the muscles where they
hinder muscle growth, and then they're going into the fat cells where they can accelerate fat
burning. Okay. So that's enough theory. I think for this episode, let's shift gears and now talk
practical implementation. Let's talk about exercises and programming what's the best way to maximize the fat burning effects
and the health effects everything that we just discussed in your strength training well a few
things you need to focus on compound exercises and those are exercises that target multiple
muscle groups and involve multiple joints like the squat or deadlift and any variation,
of course, of these movements, but just examples, bench press, overhead press, and studies show that
compound exercises produce the greatest increase in metabolic rate, muscle mass, and strength.
And of course, that means that those are the best types of exercises to do for speeding up your fat loss. Now, of course,
you don't only need to do compound exercises. You can do a combination of compound and isolation
exercises. And isolation exercises target one muscle group and usually only involve one joint.
But in your workouts, you want to start with your compound exercises, your hardest exercises,
But in your workouts, you want to start with your compound exercises, your hardest exercises,
get those done, then do your isolation exercises.
And so in a pull workout, for example, you might start with a deadlift, and then you might do a barbell row, and then you might do a biceps curl, for example.
Now, another important factor in using strength training for maximum fat loss is you want
to lift heavy weights because
research shows that lifting weights that are in the range of 75 to 85 percent of your one rep max
so it's going to be in the range of 10 to 4 reps per set with maybe one or two good reps left
pretty close to muscular failure that is going to help you build more muscle and burn more fat than
training with lighter weights than doing, say, 15, 20, 25, 30 plus reps per set. You also need
to make sure that you are progressively overloading your muscles. And that means that you need to be
generating larger and larger amounts of tension in your muscle over time because that is the
primary mechanical driver of
muscle growth. And the most effective way to accomplish that, especially when you are relatively
new to all of this, is adding weight to the bar, is getting stronger, and to the dumbbells and to
the machines as well. And I mean, in the beginning, when you are brand new, you can add weight to
exercises literally every week for at least a
few months before you have to slow down, quote unquote, to maybe adding every other week or
every third week. And even when you are an experienced weightlifter, adding weight to
exercises, getting stronger is still the most effective way to get bigger. It just is much harder. And so with those points in mind, here
are 10 of my favorite strength training exercises for weight loss and for fat loss and muscle gain.
The barbell back squat, the barbell front squat, the Romanian deadlift, the barbell deadlift,
which you can do as a conventional deadlift. You can do it sumo style.
You can also do the trap bar deadlift. You can even do the rack pull if you can't do any of
the variations I just mentioned, maybe because of back pain. The rack pull is a great variation
of the deadlift. Then we have the pull-up. The chin-up is also worth mentioning. The barbell
row and dumbbell row, I'm going to put those together.
The barbell and dumbbell bench press, the barbell and dumbbell incline bench press,
and the barbell overhead press, and then the dumbbell shoulder press, the dumbbell variation
of that.
And so then, if you were to take those exercises and put together some workouts that started with at least
one of those, maybe contained two of those with relatively heavy weights, again, let's say
anything from 10, we can even go up to 12 reps to down to maybe four reps per set. And you're taking
each of those sets close to muscular failure. You don't have to do more than maybe nine or 10,
maximum 12 sets per workout.
Do that a few times per week or get in there and maybe not do the same workout a few times per week.
It depends how you want to break it up, but get in a few strength training workouts per week
and then do a few sessions of cardio per week. If you combine that with proper dieting,
which of course just means a proper calorie deficit, something around 20 to 25%
works for most people. So eating 75 to 80% of the calories that you burn every day, and then eating
enough protein, which is around one gram per pound of body weight for most people. And in the case of
people who are very overweight, something close to maybe 35 to 40% of daily calories. And if you do those things, you are going to lose weight,
you are going to lose fat, you are going to be replacing fat, at least that's how you're going
to experience it. Of course, physiologically, you can't swap fat for muscle, but you're going to see
areas of your body getting leaner. So you're going to be losing fat, and you're going to see muscle
definition coming into those places as well. So it's going to look like you are replacing fat with muscle
and you can do that for as long as you need to diet to reach your target body composition,
which for most guys, they are, I would say most happy in my experience in the range of 10 to 15% body fat and most
gals 20 to 25% body fat.
And if you are not sure what those ranges look like, go over to legionathletics.com,
search for body fat percentage, and you will find an article called how to calculate body
fat percentage.
And in that article, you will learn about different methods,
pros and cons. And you will also find some images that show you what different body fat percentage ranges look like in both men and women. Well, I hope you liked this episode. I hope you
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