Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Georgie Fear on Habit-Based Nutrition for Staying Lean
Episode Date: June 5, 2015In this podcast I interview author and coach George Fear on how to get and stay lean using a habit-based approach as opposed to counting and tracking. GEORGIE'S WEBSITE: http://askgeorgie.com/ ORDER... GEORGIE'S BOOK: http://amzn.to/1cAjWUe ARTICLES RELATED TO THIS VIDEO: Warning: You’re Making Life Harder by Not Using Mini-Habits: http://www.muscleforlife.com/mini-habits/ How I Use Calorie Cycling to Build Muscle and Stay Lean: http://www.muscleforlife.com/calorie-cycling/ The Definitive Guide to Leptin and Weight Loss: http://www.muscleforlife.com/leptin-and-weight-loss/ The Definitive Guide to Effective Meal Planning: http://www.muscleforlife.com/healthy-meal-planning-tips/ The Definitive Guide to Reverse Dieting: http://www.muscleforlife.com/reverse-diet/ The Definitive Guide to Why Low-Carb Dieting Sucks: http://www.muscleforlife.com/low-carb-diet/ Does Alcohol Consumption Affect Weight Loss and Muscle Growth? http://www.muscleforlife.com/does-alcohol-consumption-affect-weight-loss-and-muscle-growth/ Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: https://www.muscleforlife.com/signup/
Transcript
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Okay. Hey, Georgie. Thanks for coming on the show.
Thanks for having me here.
Yeah. Yeah. I'm excited to talk to you because the subject of, of, I guess, I mean, I kind of just call it intuitive eating, I guess.
It's something I get asked about fairly often, because once people start learning about energy
balance, they're learning about macronutrient balance, they start learning how does dieting
actually work, it then kind of dawns on them.
So is this like planning and tracking my numbers?
Is this something I have to do my entire
life? Or like, how do I, what if I don't want to do that for a bit? So I'm excited to kind of dive
into that and some other stuff because I, something that it's kind of on my list of things to write
about, but I haven't really gotten around to it yet. Super. Well, that sounds awesome. That is
exactly what I work with people on. I don't call it, I don't call it intuitive eating because that
tends to have a slightly different connotation.
What do you call it?
I don't even know what to call it. That was just my own.
I just kind of call it
habit-based nutrition.
Most of the people
that come my way don't want to
count calories. There's a certain amount of people
that it really works for and they even enjoy
the process, but I kind of, uh, I like it for, for, for fat loss purposes. It's I, I like
it because you know that you're not screwing it up. Basically, if you just make a meal plan and
stick to that and you know, weigh in and measure your food or whatever, and then you just, there's
just no way that you're going to accidentally overeat, which is obviously the number one reason why people don't lose weight.
Bingo.
Yeah.
When you can remove all of the sources of human error.
Yeah.
You're eliminating all the variables that could mean spinning your wheels.
Yeah.
The downfall is not everybody's as organized or inclined to measure
accurately.
And some people just get downright neurotic when they start counting
calories and it becomes emotionally upsetting. So having an alternative is a nice
thing. Yeah, that's very true. All right. So before we get into all the fun stuff,
let's just quickly, just in case the listeners don't know who you are, you know, so what's your
story? How and what do you kind of specialize in? And you have a book. So if you want to talk about
that. Sure. Well, come on. Who doesn't want to talk about their book?
It's like my baby.
My name is Georgie Feer.
I guess most people on the web know me from AskGeorgie.com.
And I run a nutrition coaching company.
So I, of course, coach my own clients. And then we also have other fabulous coaches who have trained with us and work for us at One by One Nutrition.
Is that spelled out or is it numeral one?
We spell it out.
Cool.
One by one nutrition.
So we have a website and a Facebook group,
but I do,
or a Facebook page,
but I do most of my stuff currently through askgeorgie.com.
My book is called lean habits for lifelong weightoss, which is a bit wordy,
but it's basically for people that have decided that calorie counting may not be for them or is
definitely not for them. And that doesn't mean just giving up on your weight and eating everything
in sight. You know, there's certainly a lot of built-in signals that you can learn from your
body in terms of how much to eat, as well as what type of macronutrient splits are going to give you the most satisfaction per calorie.
So my personal background, I am a registered dietitian,
so I did an undergraduate degree in nutrition,
plus a one-year clinical internship through Cornell University.
And then I went back to school and started working on a PhD and spent five years
doing that. And I studied two main fields. I studied perceived barriers to health behaviors.
So kind of like the psychology of health change. And the other thing I studied was really
nitty gritty lab science. And it was about the mechanisms of appetite regulation in the brain. So how the nutrients that we eat impact neuron firing in the brain that tell us like,
hey, maybe I'm done with that sandwich or, hey, maybe I want to go get another sandwich.
So, yeah.
Can I interrupt you and ask a question?
Please do.
Here's a question that I've asked some pretty smart people,
and I just never really get an answer to it.
So I don't get hungry. It doesn't matter if I eat or don't eat. I could not,
I could fast for 20 hours and I do not feel hunger. I will feel maybe lower on energy. Like if I go a while without food, I'm not really into intermittent fasting as a thing. Sometimes I'll
just kind of tend to do it on the weekends. Cause, um, because of how my diet is set up, I do my weightlifting during the week. So I'm eating
a bit more food during the week, probably in a slight surplus during the week. And then on the
weekends, I'll usually cut my calories back a little bit cause I'm not weightlifting and not
kind of like a little bit of a deficit to make up for that surplus during the week, just to kind of
maintain my, my body fat percentage. Um, but I percentage. But it doesn't matter.
I can go, I'll fast, let's say, 16 hours and break the fast over the weekend.
I just don't get hungry.
I can eat a very small amount of food, a large amount of food.
Do you have any?
Like I said, this is like something that sits in the back of my head.
And when I come across people,
I've never been able to find something in my own research
that really explained it beyond just, I don't know, leptin sensitivity or just good hormones or what? I don't
know. You could, um, I mean, yeah, you probably are very leptin sensitive giving your athletic
background and regular exercise. Um, it may also be that if you're trying to eat at a surplus
during the week that that kind of carries over. It could also be that if you,
but regardless of that, it doesn't matter. Like that's just what I do right now. But sometimes
I change that. It's not always, I could be in a deficit and I just don't get hungry.
Like I could be in a deficit all week, all week long. Like when I'm cutting, it's always a joke
through my friends. They just, they just, you know, like, fuck you with you. Like, cause I'll
be like, I could be in a deficit seven days a week and just not get hungry. It just doesn't matter. Super interesting. Um, yeah, it's tough
to say what it, what exactly it is. Uh, some people are more sensitive to it than others.
Some people also have gotten good at ignoring it. And by that, I mean, you may not be intentionally
ignoring it, but after just getting your body and your mind used to eating what's on your plan.
You can really separate yourself from, uh,
the psychological,
I need food or I want food kind of thing.
No,
I mean,
you can separate yourself because you're not eating by hunger cues.
Yeah,
sure.
So you just get used to not listening to it.
It's kind of like if you have a,
a coworker or someone that's like constantly chatting at you,
just leave them out.
If you're not eating according to hunger cues,
they can tend to fade because you're not paying attention to them.
The people that most often say they're not hungry ever are either obese
and they've been in a chronic positive energy balance,
which is having its own effect on neurotransmitters and leptin,
or the chronic dieters or patients that have
anorexia nervosa.
They have gone so long fighting and ignoring and not responding to their hunger cues that
they don't feel them anymore.
And both of those populations do recover hunger cues when you start working by them.
So I don't think you're missing out on anything because clearly what you're doing is working. Yeah. I mean, my, my, my intake is, I probably
averages out to about 27, 2800 calories a day. And that's around my TDE. I mean, for, for how
lean I am, I'm not mega lean. I mean, I'm maybe about 8%. That's what I maintain. And I've found
that lower body fat levels, I do have to reduce my food intake a little bit.
If I were, let's say, hanging out in like the 12%, 13% range, I would probably be eating maybe upwards of 3,000, 3,100.
But yeah, there's no chronic diet.
It's not like I'm – I'm in a deficit when I want to get leaner and otherwise I just kind of like to stay the same.
Yeah, I'm a big fan of sustainability myself.
I kind of hang out around – I don't know. I'm a big fan of sustainability myself. I, uh, I kind of hang out
around, I don't know, I'm estimating 17% maybe. Um, yeah, which is very lean for, for a woman,
obviously. It's lean for a woman. Um, I don't really have much fluctuation because I just kind
of do the same habits. Yeah. Same 365. And it's, it's nice and easy for me. Yeah, exactly. All
right. So anyway, sorry for the interruption back to your, back to your book, which it's nice and easy for me. Yeah, exactly. All right. So anyway, sorry for the interruption. Back to your book, which it's, you know, whatever, at least our tangent was relevant.
We sent you a copy, didn't we? Did you get a peek at it?
Yeah, I looked through it. I didn't read the whole thing, but I was like looking through
all the main points and I like it's, I'm going to go through it in more detail because like I said,
I want to, it's in a subject I've been meaning to write about because it's just a, I feel like it's a gap in the content that I offer on the website.
So I have it on my list of things to read in depth. It's just that list is long.
I'm impressed you even cracked it.
Yeah, no, no. I, yeah, I do. I, I always, I mean, I'm, I read probably one to two books a week on
average, but I have a list.
And a lot of that also is I'm big on audiobooks because I listen to them when I make food, when I drive.
If I'm not, I spend time every night reading on my Kindle, but otherwise I'm kind of listening to audiobooks.
So that also helps.
Rad. Awesome.
Is yours available as an audiobook?
It is not.
Oh, you should get on that. rad is yours available as an audiobook i didn't it is not i i've considered i've considered looking
at um you know amazon's audiobook creation thing i just haven't acx.com um yeah did you do that yet
oh yeah for sure i sell a shit ton of audiobooks audiobooks are it's a very uh like podcasts it's
a very rapidly growing medium. Yeah.
Yeah.
You should definitely. And I will be picking your brain about that after we finish recording.
Sure.
Sure.
So let's see.
So,
yeah.
So you were telling your story and that's,
so that,
that's your book and,
and you're getting into the,
what the book kind of goes over and then I interrupted you.
It's all good.
Yeah.
So that's me,
science geek,
nutrition pro. I work exclusively
over the internet. So I do all email and phone-based nutrition coaching, which is kind of
fun. It enables me a really big spread. I talk to people in Europe and the States and Canada and
got a couple Australians. So that's a ton of fun. And, yeah, my basic population is people that are done with what they think of as diets.
And they're like, all right, I just want to get some healthy behaviors, habits in place that become my routine that I do for the rest of my life.
And then I can pay more attention to other things.
So the book is basically my coaching system.
You know, I can't coach everybody personally.
And not everybody can afford, you know, having the one-on-one coaching program. So this is like a little coach Georgie
for your bookshelf, as I say. The most important part is the core four habits. And that's the first
section of the book. And these are like the big rocks. And a lot of people in fitness and nutrition
and a lot of other areas too,
we want to get into the details. We all want to be advanced and start with carb cycling and
Yeah, fancy workout routines.
Yeah, fancy supersets and 12 supplements. And meanwhile, people might still be eating when
they aren't hungry. And if your trauma is weight, eating when you're not hungry is just completely maladaptive most of the time.
So the core four habits that we talk about are, first, getting your meal timing down to a more satisfying breakdown.
By that, I mean, if somebody is doing frequent small meals and they consolidate them to get larger meals with some more space between them, there's a number of benefits to that.
One is you get to eat a full plate of food instead of 300-calorie mini meal. distribute them into more substantial meals with more space between them, people report
more satisfaction and they actually get food off of their mind for a number of hours after
the meal.
And I know that you said you personally don't experience hunger, but maybe you've heard
of this before.
That weird thing called hunger.
Yeah.
And I'm sure you've heard your clients say that when you reduce calories pretty low,
they're kind of thinking about food all the time. Yeah. I'm sure you've heard your clients say that when you reduce calories pretty low, they're kind of thinking, all right, let's just start at BMR or something like that. I'd much prefer that somebody exercise.
I mean, obviously there's a point where you just can't – you can overdo it.
But if they can be exercising four to six hours a week,
I much would prefer that because then they just get to eat more food
and we get to start off several hundred calories above BMR,
which gives us some room to move down if necessary
as you know, but yeah, I mean, generally speaking, uh, I think in my experience with when you, um,
most people like that I hear from and I, and I, you know, just email with and stuff,
the first week or two can be a bit of a, like they have, they have that issue. And then as
their body adapts, it seems, it seems to be not so much of a problem.
Awesome.
Yeah, not a big, I don't do huge deficits either.
I mean, when you work in hunger and satiety, your body's pretty good at not wanting you to go into this massive deficit.
Yeah.
But it does let people accumulate, you know, enough of a deficit to, you know, lose a half pound to a
pound a week on average. And, you know, I've got data on thousands of clients at this point, and
we never really know when they will start losing weight as they go through the habits because
we're very consistent with just one habit at a time. Let's do one thing and make sure you do
it enough that you get good at it and it becomes relatively easy and then we're going to stack on a second habit so if somebody's first habit is oh let's
say i'm going to eat four times and i'm not going to graze in between i'm not going to eat the
samples at costco i'm going to try and steer clear of the candy dish at work i'm going to try not to
eat my kids crust from their pb and j sandwich you know that's really, that's a significant habit change for a lot of people who may be
eating, you know.
And that can be a lot of calories too.
A lot of those, you know, I kind of call them hidden calories, quote unquote, because I
don't really realize.
Yeah, they like sneak under your radar.
Yeah.
So that is, for some people, if they're consuming a lot of calories and the grazing between
meals, they'll start losing weight right off the bat.
Other people will clean up their meals. They'll combine their six meals into three larger ones and they're feeling more satisfied, but they're not necessarily eating fewer calories.
So then the second and third habits in the book, you know, I don't use the same habits in the same
order when I have one-on-one clients, but for the sake of the book, you have to commit to an order. So in the book, habit two is to practice feeling hungry.
Because many times, especially people that have been in the diet game and trying to control their
weight for a long time, we can almost start to fear hunger, like it's this disastrous thing
that's going to kill us, when really it's a
perfectly normal physiological response. And it's actually a really good thing to be in touch with
if you want to naturally regulate your calorie intake, because your body will do the math,
and it'll send you that hunger signal for most people when you're getting into, when you're
getting, you know, closer to, you know, using up the fuel from your
last meal and start, your brain starts to pick up on the signals that you're breaking down some
energy stores. So, my recommendation for people that want to lose one half to one pound a week
is simply practice feeling hungry for 30 to 60 minutes before each time you eat. And the 30 to 60 minutes is definitely not random numbers.
If somebody's, well, clearly if someone's eating when they're not hungry at all,
because they're bored or it's lunchtime or somebody brought in donuts,
that's going to be a problem for weight loss.
And if you don't necessarily wait through any hunger,
people tend to end up at a bout of maintenance.
So when I work with people who want to maintain their weight, we usually say, well, just make
sure you're feeling legit stomach-centered hunger, and then it's time to eat. To create that deficit,
that's where we say, you know, get comfortable sitting with hunger, tolerate it for 30 to 60
minutes. It's not a disaster. It may be frightening at first, but if you are really scared of it, take five minutes first.
You know, baby step into it.
That's when it feels comfortable for you.
And I raised my hand.
I had to start with five minutes.
I was not interested in feeling hungry when I first kind of.
My husband actually takes full credit for convincing me of the benefits of our natural hunger system. Because
even with all my research background, I was still not interested in feeling hungry. I wanted to
prevent it. Yeah. And that's also, I like that habit because basically what you're doing is,
because for most people, the dieting experience does come with some hunger. So by extending that out, you are going to eat a bit less food by the end of the day.
Your calorie intake is going to be a bit lower by just waiting out that hunger as opposed to feeling hungry, eating right away.
And then let's say whatever calories you eat, they're going to keep you full for three hours, let's say.
And that hunger is going to hit again.
and that hunger is going to hit again. If you, if it's hunger, weight, eat, uh, you know,
hunger, weight, eat, then by the end of the day, you maybe have shaved off 10% of your calorie intake by doing that. Perfect. Which for somebody eating 2000 calories is approaching half a pound
a week. Yep. Um, Brian, Brian Wansink talks about the mindless margin. Yeah. I read his book,
mindless eating. Yeah, me read his book, Mindless Eating.
Yeah, me too.
And your body will kick and fight if you cut its calories by half.
But if you cut it by 10%, you're not going to feel all that different.
And it's enough to see a steady weight loss.
Yeah, exactly.
So 30 to 60 minutes.
Now, the reason that we don't say, well, just feel hungry for half the day
is because if you start to push your hunger for more than an hour, bad things start to happen.
Often it becomes tougher to eat slowly at the next meal if you've been hungry for way too long.
I think we've all had the experience of eating.
Yeah, once it starts, it just goes downhill.
Yeah, when you get too hungry, it's like, oh, man, the standards come down, the speed goes up, and we're more likely to eat until we have a bellyache.
So that's something that, again, as you can imagine, a lot of people need to practice.
And those first two habits can be life-changing and earth-shattering in a not disastrous sense.
Right.
sense. It shakes up so much of what people are doing. If they're trying to eat mini meals all day long, grazing on 100 calorie yogurt, and then a piece of fruit, and then an hour later,
a half cup of cottage cheese, and then three ounces of chicken. It's really different to
shift to substantial meals and wait to get hungry between them. It also helps kind of free people from what I call hunger purgatory,
which is what happens when you're eating on that little, little, little meals.
You're never all that hungry and you're never all that full.
Yeah, that's true.
In this middle ground.
So it cleans up the signals to get all the way hungry, all the way satisfied.
Yeah, I can definitely see that as just a benefit of fewer meals. Because especially when you're
dieting, especially when you're, let's say, I don't know, 68 weeks into, into a deficit. And that's when, uh, these types of things,
I think start to matter more. Whereas the first few weeks, I mean, it's kind of just,
uh, it's, it's pretty easy if you know what you're doing, but eventually your body is not
liking it so much. And then something like that. How do you help your clients if they run into
that? I don't know, compliance issue.
Um, well, let's see, I'm in a kind of a interesting position where I don't do any
one-on-one coaching because I, I just don't have the time to give it and where I feel like I could
really do, um, do it justice for, and, and I run also into personal, like how much with my time and the things that I'm working
on, like I don't even necessarily feel comfortable charging what I would charge. And so basically I
just kind of, I just help people for free, but I, so I answer a lot of emails and just answer
people's questions. So, you know, I've worked with a lot, a lot of people.
And to be honest, the vast majority of people that I speak with,
they don't really run into any issues.
They kind of just do their thing.
And if they ever run into any little things, they write me and we sort it out.
The only problems, the reason why I was saying on the coaching thing is, so I'm not like Dave, I'm not like inside people's lives every day.
I just kind of, you know, I'll talk to somebody and then I'll hear from them a couple weeks
later and they'll be like, all right, cool.
So this is what's been going on for the last couple of weeks.
Or maybe I won't hear some people.
It's funny.
I'll talk to them once.
And then I hear from them two months later and they just send me pictures.
And now they, you know, they've lost like 15 pounds of fat or something.
Yeah.
So it's just like, oh, cool.
That's like a lot of those people that are up on the website. I have a lot of success stories up on my website. That's a lot
of them. They're just people. A lot of them just come to me. They just go, they read the book.
So you're admitting you sent them one email.
Yeah, exactly. So it can be one email. They read the book, you know, and they're like,
all right, I'm gonna do the program. Here are my questions. And I'm like, all right, cool.
One email. And then they come back to me two months later and they're like, check it out.
I'm like, well, it must be a damn good book in email. Well,
shit. That's cause I talk to my people every day and exactly that's names. Yeah. Yeah. So,
so I'm in a different, I'm in a different position, but, um, I just have a different
setup. However, uh, the, the only like thing that I kind of run into or have, have, it would be the
most common issue that people run into. And because of, you know, I write a lot of content on Muscle for Life
and my books contain a lot of content.
It's usually just like they know the weekends come, let's say.
Every week the weekends come and they just overeat.
And so, you know, they'll run into something like that
and then we'll have to either rework their meal schedule.
So some people,
you know, they, for whatever reason, they thought they had to eat a big breakfast every day. So they
were forcing themselves to eat a big breakfast every day, but they don't really like, they would
prefer to just skip breakfast and eat a big dinner. And they didn't really know, quote unquote,
know they could, that's okay. Because some other, you know, quote unquote, guru said breakfast is
the most important meal, blah, blah, blah. So it's usually just that it's usually stuff of, uh, reworking their meal scheduling. Um, and, and then sometimes it's also
just giving themselves a break, like just reverse dieting for a little bit. Um, go for the next four
weeks and, you know, increase your, your daily calorie intake by a hundred every seven days or
so, or every five days. And, um, that, that can work wonders for people. Obviously
it's like if they've been in a deficit for eight, 10 weeks and they're just not feeling good,
they're just like low energy and their training is not, not that great. And then it's like, okay,
let's just work your calories back up for four weeks and just give your body a break and then
go back at it. That that's also, I found just a simple, uh, you know, a way for, for people to,
um, just get back on track. Yeah. You can't go
hard all the time. We're only human. Yeah, exactly. So, uh, so are there any other, so those
are two habits. Are there any other habits that, cause this was like next on the list to talk
about what are some of these, these positive habits that people can develop? Those were the
first two. And then, uh, number three and four four which round out the kind of four biggies um number three is about eating just enough and that's
stopping when you're satisfied basically um a lot of us have gotten into the habit occasionally or
frequently eating until we're uncomfortable eating until we're stuffed. And that requires a very little explanation.
Every once in a while, I'll eat.
Like come holiday, like come Thanksgiving, I always do.
I'll eat until I just can't move, basically.
Until I'm in so much pain.
I can eat so much food.
I'm like a weird snake human person or something.
I can go probably, I think this last Thanksgiving,
it was like five or six full plates of food until I was like –
Oh, my.
It's absurd.
It doesn't make any sense.
Like I'm just weird.
So I don't get hungry if I don't eat.
I just get low energy and I just know that I need food.
But I don't ever have hunger pangs.
But then I'll go out – I can go out to a restaurant and eat 4,000 calories and
feel like, eh, I guess I ate, I feel 60% full. You know, I'm an alien. I don't know. I'm a robot
or something. Hey, we all have superpowers. That's my superpower. I'm glad you have founders.
It's like, put that on the resume. I have bestselling books and I can eat six plates.
Yeah. My hunger hormones. I have, I have, I've mastered mind over matter with my hunger hormones.
Yeah, the human stomach is remarkably expandable.
Yes, I know that.
And again, that's the type of thing that people practice
if they're not just doing it at holidays,
but doing it every night at dinner.
Yeah.
Then it certainly becomes an issue for their weight. Nobody's
body reflects what they do once a year, unless you're getting a tattoo or something. But in
terms of what you eat, one meal a year is not going to work.
That's why I don't care, exactly. It's like once or twice a year, I'm like, I don't even care. I'm
just going to eat so much food because it's going to taste good and it'll be fun.
I love that Aristotle quote where he says, we are what we repeatedly do.
Excellence is not an act, but a habit.
Yeah.
I'm all about routines as well. So if you've got good habits, eat until you can't move on Thanksgiving and Christmas and it won't matter.
So for the day-to-day, just practicing.
For some people, it's eating literally three bites less.
Really, really small touches here and there.
And, you know, going in a small, non-scary fashion, again, not slashing your intake by 50%, but seeing if you need, you know, six ounces of meat or if five is just as satisfying.
Or if instead of, you know, two-thirds of a cup of oatmeal, maybe half a cup is fine.
So just practicing dialing back portion sizes a bit
so that you're still satisfied.
I don't want people to push away from the table still hungry,
but there's no need to eat a margin of safety after getting satisfied
because there's not a salmon coming.
And is there, I don't know if I've ever seen this in the literature.
Of course, it's just one of those things. I don't know if there's like good science behind it,
but that it takes what I feel like I've even read it. Maybe it was even Brian's book as well. So it
might just be legit. It takes whatever that, that standard 20 minutes for your body to register,
for your brain to register. And for you to start feeling full from, from food that you're eating.
20 minutes is a good ballpark. There's actually different pathways. And I go
into this a bit in the book. It's right in the beginning. It says like, warning, science ahead.
So people who don't want the science can skip it. But there's four main pathways to satiety that
your brain picks up on. The most rapid one is the stretch receptors in the stomach, and the signals get relayed along the vagus nerve directly to the brain.
So there's no metabolite that has to accumulate in the bloodstream or reach a certain concentration.
Your stomach stretches out, zap, signal goes right up to the brain.
And that's where the food volume research comes in, and it's the volume that matters for satiety.
Bingo.
Yeah.
More than the calories.
Yeah.
So in terms of volume,
like Barbara rolls,
research,
volumetrics,
that type of thing,
um,
is quite rapid.
That's why if I drank a liter of seltzer water with all those bubbles in it,
I'd be like,
Whoa,
I need a few minutes before lunch.
Right.
Just doesn't come.
It's not comfortable.
Right.
Um,
your body's not going to be fooled though by a liter of seltzer water. It's going to sort through that
signal and go, wait, wait, there's no calories here. Nice try. Nice try. Nice try. You can't
have diet Coke instead of lunch. You need to actually give me some food. So the other signals
are based on the nutrient content of the meal. So some of the most other powerful signals come from protein,
which triggers the release of various hormones,
and they circulate via the blood up to the brain.
So that, as you would expect, takes some time.
Fat digestion also releases some, I don't want to get too like jargony here, but fat digestion also triggers the release of some compounds such as OEA, which is short for oleoil ethanolamine.
I knew it.
I was going to have to drop a long word in there.
And that reaching the brain also triggers a delay in hunger returning.
So the fat signal is actually the slowest pathway
to register yeah so if you're eating if it's like quick satiety uh then it would be carbohydrate
and protein right right uh carbohydrates don't they do directly fibrous ones well the fibrous
ones are going to trigger more of the volume receptor or the volume pathway.
Carbohydrates aren't – so carbohydrate concentration is sensed by neurons in the brain.
But I think what's more powerful in turning off appetite is the insulin release.
So it's not the carbohydrates themselves but the resulting insulin rise.
Sure.
So that's going to be sensed by the brain as well.
So if somebody's-
Well, I mean, dietary fat won't produce that insulin reaction though.
So I mean, you got to get it from protein or carbs, right?
Oh, okay.
So you're talking about after the stretch pathway?
Yeah, sure.
Yeah, I was just saying like just on that insulin point, because a lot of, you know,
there's low carb dieting is very trendy right now. And I think one of the downsides of it, and you've probably heard
from a million people that have tried it. And I I've heard from at least a thousand people over
the last, I don't even know, six months or so that have come off low carb dieting. Cause they just
don't, it, it, they don't, they're, they're hungrier than usual. Their energy levels are
lower than usual. Um, and there. And there's a bit of research
out there that shows that you can't say it's going to be for everybody, but there's a better
chance of just general satiety on a higher carb intake when you're in a calorie deficit than a
lower carb. Agreed, agreed. A lot of that has to do with the fat percentage of the diet as well.
Because by default, there's only so many nutrients.
So if you drop carbs really low to get enough energy,
most people increase their fat intake.
Do you agree?
Right, yeah.
I mean, it depends on how educated they are, I guess,
because you kind of cap protein at some point.
It's self-limiting.
Yeah, you're not going to be eating two grams of protein
per pound of body weight or something.
There's just no need to.
Yeah, and it will just gross you out.
I mean, when protein –
I've done that before in the past.
I used to think that you have to eat a ton of protein to get anywhere.
It was not enjoyable.
Yeah, 9 p.m. at night, you're holding your nose, putting the canned tuna down like, oh, God.
Or another double scoop protein shake.
Oh, my God, I have to drink this.
Yes. Oh, I laugh because I have to drink this. Yes.
Oh, I laugh because I've done it.
Yeah, I know.
So, yes, protein tending to be self-limiting because it just starts to gross you out after a while.
So that high fat intake actually starts to cause a problem.
If you have too high a fat intake and too high looking at somewhere above 40% of total calories,
it actually weakens the satiety pathway from fat.
Just from oversaturation.
Just from overdoing it.
Yeah.
Furthermore, it impacts your brain so that your brain becomes less sensitive to leptin.
So, you know, this kind of leptin is, as many people know, a hormone that is created by fat cells, among some other tissues.
Right.
And it circulates to the brain and, in general, turns down appetite and turns up energy expenditure.
Right, because it tells the body that it's fed, right?
It tells the body that you have fat stores and energy is on board.
Yes.
So, this is a hormone we definitely want to have its full capacity.
It does lots of good stuff for us.
And if your fat intake is too high, it actually suppresses your brain's sensitivity to leptin.
So for people that are low-carb, high-fat and it's not working for them,
I start bringing down the fat, replacing it with some good fibrous carbohydrates,
nutrient-rich fruits
and vegetables and whole grains and sweet potatoes. And people start doing a whole lot better. And
best of all, they have energy again. Yep. And that's, that's exactly what happens. What I hear
from so many people when they, a lot of times they'll just contact me because I don't, I,
in, uh, in my kind of flagship books, as you say, one for men, one for women, that's, you know,
I go over this.
And so I'll hear from people saying, Hey, I was doing this low carb dieting for a while. I was
really scared to add carbs back in. Cause I thought I'd be fat. I thought I'd get fat,
but I, you know, just did what you said. And not only am I like losing weight again,
but I feel 10 times better. Well, yeah. And I can have toast again. Yeah, exactly. And it's
also a quality of life. I mean, you shouldn't have to sacrifice every food you like for any reason whatsoever.
Yeah, I'm with you.
High on life enjoyment.
And food's huge for that, for me.
For everybody.
There's no question about that.
Yeah.
So we talked about the society pathways and eating just enough.
The fourth habit is a really obvious one, and that's eating mostly whole foods.
Because the whole first three can actually not get you into a calorie deficit if you're living on Ho-Hos and Pepsi.
Right.
Like you can actually eat three or four times a day and eat only after you've been hungry and stop when you're feeling satisfied and gain weight.
If you're eating lots of processed food, cause they just trick the system.
I think we've also very calorie dense. Yeah. You bet. You're just, there's so much in, you know,
depending on the foods, it's so many calories per, you could say cubic inch of food. So you,
you know, you're not, whereas like vegetables, you can fill your stomach up and get that stretch response. And it's not, you know, not very many calories,
lots of nutrients, body feels good. Uh, but donuts, uh, not so much.
Right. Right. So, um, so those are the basic core four habits. And then the rest of the book
is kind of your fine tuning, you know, for somebody that's, um, it's basically
how to get the most mileage from your appetite and satiety cues. So once you're eating mostly
whole foods and I say mostly not all, cause I don't want people to get, we all know people
that have gone too far into that direction and starts to decrease quality of life. Cause they're
feeling like they have to, I don't know, home grow. Or never eat sugar ever again or never have fried anything ever again.
Right, right.
So, you know, moderation, you know, a few processed things, really not a big deal.
But if it's more than 10% of your diet, I usually recommend, you know, trying to nudge
it down.
And by processed, I mean, obviously you mean overly processed because pretty much everything,
a lot of the like grains have been processed to
some degree but you mean more like the pre-packaged crap that you know baked goods and stuff like that
right yeah there's certainly a spectrum of processing um i don't believe in too many
dichotomies of good and bad yeah so some people will start to think well i shouldn't eat anything
that came from the middle aisles of the grocery store exactly well i Well, I get oatmeal from the middle aisles and I get –
Yeah, and oatmeal has been processed.
That's not – they took it from nature.
It didn't come exactly like that.
They had to do something to it.
Yeah, this is not the same as carrot cake mix.
Exactly.
I'm talking different things here.
Canned beans, jarred peanut butter.
Yes, technically these are processed, but we're not looking at really nutrient know, really nutrient, uh, empty foods where I'd
say fat free cheese and stuff. You're like, this isn't food. There's no way Cheetos, um, granola
bars, pop tarts. Like, yeah, if, if that's the stuff that you like for your treats, awesome,
rock on, but it shouldn't be, you know, a significant contributor or the majority of
the food that you eat. Um, I have to say for the people that are in my audience that read my book, I don't know
if anyone actually needs Habit 4 because they're probably already eating mostly whole foods
if they're reading my stuff.
But it's the type of thing that you just have to say.
Yeah, and also I think it's a general, I mean, there's just a general trend and I think it's a general, I mean, there's just a general trend. Uh, and not, it's, it's, I think it's only going to get more and more popular toward, um, eating relatively unprocessed foods and people
being a bit more aware of what they put in their body and wanting to eat more fruits and vegetables
and wanting to eat organic foods, stuff like that. So, um, I think that we're going to see
more and more of that over the next several years. Yeah. So, uh, yeah, from there it talks
about fine tuningtuning,
and that for some people means reducing the fat intake
if they're coming off of a super high-fat diet,
boosting their protein if they're not having enough protein,
tuning down their protein if they're overdoing it,
because some people are just taking in too many calories
because they think they need way more protein than they actually do.
Right.
Looking at the carbohydrates in someone's diet and seeing if
it's proportional to their energy needs or not. Some people need more than others because they're
more active than others. So, kind of sorting that out. We talk about treats, the alcohol,
the chocolate, the stuff that we eat for joy that we don't want to cut out, but we also don't want to separate us from our goals.
So I'm very wide open on the methods to getting your treat intake where it needs to be for your goals.
And I offer a lot of different solutions because as you probably know,
some people will benefit from one style,
such as I'll just have my one meal a week where I eat the more indulgent items.
Or some people go more frequently with a smaller portion such as,
well, I'll just have a square of dark chocolate every night and then never really have this.
That's what I do.
I have a couple hundred calories of chocolate every day because it's delicious.
But then I'll also like for me, my quote unquote cheat meal or whatever would be more
if I'm going out to a restaurant and I'm just going to eat a bunch of food and I'm not really going to pay attention to, uh, you know, I'm not,
I, I'm maybe a little bit conscious of, I'm not going to eat like three orders of macaroni and
cheese, but, uh, you know, I'm going to, I'm going to be eating somewhere in the ballpark of two to
3000 calories. Uh, and restaurant eating out, I think is the only thing that if you're dieting,
you do yourself a favor and prepare your own foods because you do not know what you're eating when you go and eat in restaurants.
Like you make foods taste good by adding cream, butter, oil.
And, you know, that's also how you add a bajillion calories.
Technical term.
Yeah.
So as you know, lots of people have different preferences for the treats.
Yeah. So, you know,
blunting of fat oxidation. Have you ever found that gets in the way or so long as the calories
are right, someone could drink, you know, I mean, obviously there's a point where it becomes a
problem, but could drink whatever that amount is every day. I do think it becomes problematic
to have alcohol every day. It's, I mean, it's not healthy for you. That's clear. I mean,
there's, I know, I know it's kind of trendy right now to say alcohol is healthy. Uh, but I was listening
to a podcast from a guy, super smart guy. He's, um, a lead researcher of, uh, life extension,
which everybody has probably heard of massive company. Um, you know, life extension, right?
I don't actually, sorry. I'm hanging my head and feeling social pressure. Yes, but no,
to be honest, I haven't.
Oh, they're, they're, um, I mean, I think they, they're like a billion dollar
company that produces a ton of, a ton of content and, you know, very, very scientific.
They're mainly are selling products for the medical community, for doctors,
um, a lot of tons of supplements, but they also have a very strong direct customer, uh, aspect,
but they're, I mean, if you just go look at their board, it's like 100 doctors and PhDs.
And so this guy is the lead researcher over there.
He's just a super brain.
And basically he was talking about alcohol.
And he was speaking a lot of these things we're talking about.
I mean, he knows what he's talking about.
So these are kind of like he knows.
Anyway, he's very, very informed.
And he was talking about alcohol and this idea that drinking alcohol regularly is healthy for you. And he was saying that something
he's looked into quite extensively and basically none of the research that is commonly cited as
quote unquote health benefits, in his opinion, it's not convincing at all. And he said, you know, he was saying that alcohol is a poison.
There is no arguing that.
And, you know, yes, you have the theory that, you know, in small amounts, it causes a response in the body that strengthens it.
But basically what he was saying is like, no, in his opinion, it just makes for good headlines.
It gives people what they want to hear, that they can just drink a bunch of alcohol or drink it regularly and it's going to improve their health.
And basically, his take on it was that if your body, it's not going to improve your health, but your body may be able to deal with it just fine.
And if that's the case, good for you.
to deal with it just fine. And if that's the case, good for you. If your body can't deal with it,
well, if it doesn't have, if it's detox pathways and the enzymes involved in that, and it's genetic really, if it's, if you just don't got it, then you really, you're better off not drinking
at all. And kind of interesting take on that and something that makes, that makes more sense to me
than just the standard,
Oh, this one study showed that drinking alcohol X number of times a week is good for you.
Right. Yeah. It's, it's always tough to, again, here comes that dichotomy of good, bad,
you know, good for you, not good for you. And I totally agree that for one person,
a given dose may be inconsequential. And for another person that may be really bad for them.
There's also different settings. You know, usually when they're looking at alcohol and
saying that it has some benefit, it's in the cardiac health kind of zone. Personally, I'm
better read in the brain health area. It's more unequivocal that every drop of alcohol is bad for your brain.
Right. There's not too many people out there saying otherwise. Personally, I leave it up to
my clients for where they want to get their treat calories. Sure. Because at his point,
it wasn't that you shouldn't ever drink alcohol. He was just saying like,
don't think that every time you drink alcohol, you're improving your health. That's all.
Yeah. Do it because it's joyful, not because it's medicinal. Exactly.
Yeah. It's my stance with chocolate though. You know, I actually do believe some of the health benefits of chocolate, but I'm with you on that one. Whatever.
So yeah. So, you know, different people, we work to keep their most enjoyed foods and the most worth it ones in so that this is something that they want to do for the rest of their lives.
And most of us can think about pairing out calories that are ho-hum.
Like, if you think back over the last two weeks and the treats that you ate, maybe one of them was store-bought and stale.
And you were like, after the first bite, I realized it wasn't great, but great but i ate it anyway yeah where you feel like you just wasted calories like you wasted money
that's the worst yeah i hate that feeling wasted calories that's why i hate if i go out to a
restaurant i only do it maybe once a week or so i mean uh it would i'm i work so much i wouldn't
want to do it more frequently because it takes the whole evening really if you're gonna do it but
uh i hate that that you know a shitty if you're going to do it. But I hate that though. You go to a shitty restaurant and you're
like, great, just wasted all the calories. No, you got to wait until next week. So yeah. So lastly,
the only other topics that I think I haven't mentioned are stuff like sleep, stress relief,
and the big one, emotions. Yeah. And let's segue into that. So emotional eating,
obviously a big issue out there.
It gets in the way of a lot of people's attempts to lose weight.
I have come across it a lot in my work.
What do you do?
Yeah, what do you do?
What's going on and what do you do about it?
One of the most common queries that I get from coaches or personal trainers or other
nutrition coaches is how do I help my clients with emotional eating?
It is far and away the most common thing that other coaches write to me about.
And there's no real concise answer, but there's a few tips that I have that are short enough to give on a podcast that may help other coaches and people directly who deal with this trouble.
Right.
And first, maybe just define, like, what is emotional eating?
Like, what are some examples, just in case the listeners aren't even…
Sure.
I'd say emotional eating is the eating that we do for non-hunger reasons.
So if you had a bad day and, you know, you know that some of that sugar,
whatever, some ice cream will make you feel better or…
Exactly.
Exactly that.
You know, the most common things that make people eat emotionally are negative emotions,
such as being frightened, being depressed, being sad, being anxious,
you know, something that they're really not enjoying feeling will often drive people to eat.
Sometimes boredom is a factor.
I mean, people really, really don't like being bored.
sometimes boredom is a factor. I mean, people really, really don't like being bored.
So that isn't per se as much of a strong emotional drive, but it is a non-hunger reason to eat. I call it eat-ertaining. Yeah, yeah. I know people that they know that. They
know if they're bored and they're around food, it's very likely they're just going to start
eating something. Yeah. And we get conditioned to these things so that every time we get bored, we're like, oh, I feel like eating.
We don't even consider doing something else.
So I find the most stubborn ones are where we're looking for food to modify our emotional state.
We're hurting and we want food to make us feel better.
We're upset and we want food to make us feel better.
Or even if it doesn't make us feel better, because many people will just say point blank, it doesn't make us feel better we're upset and we want food to make us feel better or even if it
doesn't make us feel better because many people will just say point blank it doesn't make me feel
any better i don't know why i do it yeah but it becomes like a weird addiction it's like how
people are addicted to technology addicted to facebook addicted to these stupid video phone
video games and stuff there's just the the brain chemistry behind it is kind of interesting. I've read a bit about it actually because I'm building an app, a workout app,
and I wanted to know how are these companies – how do they make these things so goddamn addictive?
You're trying to addict people, Mike.
Yeah, no.
It's more just curiosity because if I'm going to get into apps, I start reading –
I'm just going to educate myself on the whole thing.
And anyways, the science of it is fairly interesting. Like these there's, there's a
science of addiction. And, uh, if, if you're listening and you're one of the people that
has to check Facebook 32 times a day, you, uh, that's engineered.
Yeah. Things that are rewarding. We want to repeat what gets rewarded. And if the reward is a better, you know, emotional
soothing, that's one. Another one is that it just can be numbing. It can give us a feeling of not
being 100% present in our life. And we can kind of check out and go into the freezer, eat ice cream.
And while we're eating the ice cream, we're not thinking about the things that are bothering us. So a lot of the tips that help people, and I've helped
hundreds of people at this point, you know, work through this, is trying to first discover what,
first you want to learn about yourself. Like this is not a defect that you have. If you have found
that it's rewarding to eat to modify
certain emotional states there's nothing wrong with you it's just a habit it's like any other
habit that we can change so if you look into it a little bit more and you're observant you might
notice that okay it's particular times of day that i'm more likely to do it it's also particular
emotional states you know when i'm, I may not emotionally eat.
But when I'm anxious, so excitement with a little bit of fear mixed in, then I emotionally eat.
Everyone's got a little bit different triggers.
Some people, for a certain company, is even a trigger.
Like every time they get together with this friend, they overeat.
Right.
I guess you hear similar things from smokers, right?
And like why it's really hard to quit.
There's triggers, right?
Yeah.
So once you know what your triggers are, then you're equipped to take some more deliberate action.
So for a lot of times, for smoking as a great example, you can avoid some of the triggers so i don't going to the cigar shop or the uh 7-eleven where you always buy your
cigarettes is probably a trigger that you can avoid doing you can like just not go down that
street on your way to work yeah um with emotions you can't avoid all emotion you know i wish that
we could stress proof people's lives or if i could cure depression. You can get a lobotomy. How about that?
Right. We can't rob people of the full spectrum of life experience.
And that includes some pain. It includes some disappointment.
So what we can do is work on healthier coping mechanisms.
So a lot of times it's skills like speaking to another person.
You know, if we've learned to lean on food,
it may be because we've had a bad experience with leaning on another person who betrayed us or,
you know, didn't honor our trust or, you know, looked at us or judged us like we were weak for
being upset about a certain thing. So, many, many times it's, you know, recommitting to,
I can actually lean on people. There's people that are honest and care about me and talking to somebody often helps somebody work through an emotion far
better than hanging out with Ben and Jerry's. And that's just one example. Maybe somebody does
talk to other people, but they can also cultivate, you know, other ways to let go of stress after a
bad day. Exercise is a good way to do that. That's exactly where I was going.
Lots of people use their exercise to decompress, to leave behind the workday.
Yoga is another nice one that a lot of people use.
Taking a walk with their dog.
Yeah.
It's funny.
Those are things like, I mean, I don't really consider myself a stressed person, but, you know, I go home.
That's why I do cardio a few times a week. And so I'll do it, you know, I go home, that's why I, I do, I do cardio a few times a week. Um,
and so I'll do it, you know, I lift weights early in the morning. I like, I just, I like it to just
start my day, but then after work I'll go do, you know, 20 minutes of cardio. I'll walk my dogs,
I'll eat some food and then now I'm good to go again. Nice. Yeah. So it kind of resets you.
Yeah. Get you back to baseline. Yeah. So we've talked about a couple examples and we could, we could make a six hour podcast about all the emotions and
coping mechanisms and healthy strategies to manage emotion. But that's a pretty concise way to think
about emotional eating is learn what's triggering you and why you're doing it without judging
yourself. Yeah. And then look for alternatives that you can do. And if somebody is
struggling to make progress with it on their own, there are so many professionals out there that can
help. You know, not just, you know, dieticians like me, we do have some training in helping
people change behaviors and change thought patterns. There's also professionals in mental
health, you know, counselors and psychologists and therapists that can work with people.
My favorite modality of therapy is cognitive behavioral therapy, which teaches people to
identify and identify the thoughts that are causing them the elevated distress, and then
how to substitute those with more realistic thinking patterns, which enables healthier
behaviors.
thinking patterns, which enables healthier behaviors. So, for example, if my boss at the office said something to me that was critical, my thoughts about that are going to determine if I go,
oh, that wasn't very nice, or if it destroys my day and sends me home and, you know, into a tailspin.
So, the way that we interpret the world has a really profound impact on how upsetting our world seems. And gosh,
one of my favorite things is watching people interpret their world differently and it becomes less upsetting.
And they suddenly realize I don't need food to keep me numb to my life.
My life is handleable.
I'm,
I'm up to this.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And that's also,
I mean,
if you're there, there are a lot of things you can study in that too. A lot of books you can Yeah. And that's also, I mean, if you're, there, there are a lot of things you can
study in that too. A lot of books you can read. And that's, I think one of the easiest ways to
just, uh, change your, just change yourself for the better is, uh, go, go read. Like if you're,
if that's, if a listener is having a problem with that or somebody's having a problem with that,
there's a lot of good stuff out there that can do just that for them. They can learn how to think about it differently, even if they don't
necessarily want to reach out to, you know, a counselor or if they can't afford it or whatever,
you can afford to read, you know, read, go on Amazon and find 10 books that, you know, have a
ton of good reviews and, you know, whatever the classics are that you're supposed to read and to
help deal with whatever issue and you're going to come out better for sure.
Agreed.
There are just so many resources out there to help people.
Yeah, totally.
Okay, cool.
So I want to, usually I kind of just try, we've gone all over the place, which is great.
Let's before, let's take one more point.
Because I try to keep it around an hour or people complain sometimes.
Pick a juicy one. What do you want to chat about, Mike? one more point? Because I try to keep it around an hour or people complain sometimes.
Pick a juicy one. What do you want to chat about, Mike?
Let's wrap up with metabolic adaptation or damage. Should we think of it as adaptation?
Is it damage? And it's kind of a hot topic these days and a lot of opinions on it.
So, and I know this is an area that you specialize in.
Yeah.
So, so what changes when somebody loses a substantial amount of weight?
Earlier in the podcast, we touched upon leptin.
And leptin is one of the main drivers of all of the things that happen after somebody loses weight.
That's how your brain picks up on the fact that you're shedding fat. So when leptin drops and the brain picks up on it, it starts to put some changes in motion to keep you from starving to death. So one of the things it does is it reduces the level of thyroid
hormone that is around in your body. And that has an effect on slightly
decreasing your resting metabolic rate. So just the basic amount of calories that it takes to
beat your heart, grow your hair, blink your eyes, lay in bed all day, that number will reduce.
Now, the actual size of the reduction is where a lot of people get misinformed.
Yeah.
They'll think, oh, I must be burning next to nothing.
You can't get by on next to nothing.
The maximum adjustment that your body can make if you're under eating is about 10% to maximally 15%.
And you've probably, I mean, it's probably worth mentioning even the Minnesota starvation experiment there.
I'm trying to remember the largest metabolic reduction,
like was,
I think it was 40%,
but the average was something around 15%,
right?
I,
I'm not aware of a 40.
Um,
if we look up,
I just might be remembering wrong.
I wrote about it a long time ago.
I remember they're like,
if you took the,
the,
the most metabolic slowdown they saw was,
it was obviously higher than the average
but the average was am i right in that it was somewhere around 15 or something like that yeah
that study was consistent with the average being i want to say 14 but i'll have to look it up but
it was between 10 and 15 and those were people that they were i mean i think their average calorie
intake was 1500 right and they were like hard labor, several hours a day, they were recreating a prison camp experience. It was really extreme. And I think they gave them
50% of their calories. So it was just a huge six month long, which are Yeah, that sounds about
right. Because they were but they were burning a lot of energy, too. I mean, they were just beating
the shit out of their bodies, basically. This was people that didn't want to go to war. So they
did not have all of these subject rights things in place, which is
why you wouldn't see that type of study done again today. But yeah, even in really extreme
circumstances, your resting metabolic rate only comes down 10 to 15%. It does not crash by six,
seven, 800 calories. Now your total energy expenditure can come down by a really big margin.
Yeah. And this is the, I'm glad you're going into this because this is a good distinction
that I've had to make many times.
Yeah. This is where we see a big difference. And that is due to decreased spontaneous physical
activity. So it's not your body's basic metabolism that changes, but the fact that you think twice
before getting up to go to the bathroom and that you may not fidget as much tap your legs or
wiggle along to the music as much as you normally would and all this happens subconsciously stairs
now you're taking the elevator oh yeah you feel tired you know lots of lots of stuff so
people start maybe bailing on their workouts earlier but i think the most um significant
impact is the reduction in daily non-exercise physical activity,
which I've read can be on the order of 300 to 700 calories a day.
Yeah.
I mean, there's research that shows that NEAT can vary by quite a bit more, actually,
by upwards of 2,000 calories a day among some individuals, making it pretty extreme.
Right.
So now we see what happens when we're under eating.
pretty extreme. Right. So, so now we see what happens when we're under eating our basal metabolic rate comes down 10 to 15%, but the big factor is that we're moving less. So that's one thing that
tells people one way to counteract it is to keep moving, keep yourself active. I love the, the
people that are, you know, monitoring their activity with various forms the fitbit thing
and stuff if you find it motivating rock it you know that's what i sound like i i don't really
have any need for it but i do understand if it if it reminds you got to keep moving then cool
yeah yeah so so that's um a really important there the last thing that i find you know
personally extra fascinating is that as you know you have that leptin adjustment and the metabolism
down regulation a really fascinating thing happens that your muscles become up to 20 percent more
mechanically efficient yeah and so in particular doing low intensity exercise like an easy cycle
or jog or walk you're going to burn 20 percent less calories than you did before you lost the weight so lots of lots of down regulation there now so the two key areas that we talked about where
people might be misinformed is thinking that their basal metabolism shut down when it really didn't
it just took a very small decrease and uh second i am completely losing my train of thought what
was i going to say um Oh, there we go.
Well, you just have the reduction in the spontaneous activity.
Yeah, and that it's all started by fat loss.
Yeah.
So what that means is if you're not losing weight,
none of this is happening to you.
So people that think they've crashed their metabolism
and that's why they haven't lost weight
are putting the cart before the horse.
You don't have a slow metabolism. If you haven't
lost significant amount of your body weight, this is not affecting you. So that just means
you need to reduce your calories more. Yep. And I mean, I guess you could qualify it and say that
metabolisms and, you know, as you know, research has shown that metabolisms,
basal metabolic rates can vary by quite a bit.
Some people do naturally have faster, they burn more energy while at rest, you know,
more brown fat, more whatever.
But yeah, I mean, so what would be quote unquote a slow metabolism?
That's just probably not the right terminology for it.
You could say slower than somebody else's maybe, but not so slow that it's like now
a huge problem.
Right. I mean, if somebody suspects that they have, you know, if they really suspect that the
amount of calories they're taking in don't seem to be logically appropriate for the weight that
they're maintaining, go to your doctor. Get your doctor to run a blood test. There are medical
conditions that can interfere with your metabolic rate. You know, I've had several clients over the years that, you know, discovered that they weren't adequate with their
thyroid medication or that they were hypothyroid and didn't even know it. So it can never hurt to
get checked out by your doctor just to make sure that you're healthy and all always.
Right. Yeah, makes sense. So then this idea of metabolic damage then is, you know, what's your thoughts on that?
are starving your body to some degree. You're feeding it less than it wants. So you can,
you know, it sounds like an extreme word, but it's really not. And that's what it is. Mild,
you know, gradual starvation over time.
Well, you know, being in an energy deficit is, you know, I wouldn't think of it as starvation.
I know.
I'm exaggerating.
Yeah, that's the desired thing.
That's what we're going for is an energy deficit.
But as you said, mild and doing it slowly, actually you have less of the metabolic adaptation.
Yeah.
I guess the only downside for that, like in my opinion, it depends on the person.
It depends on what they're trying to do.
A lot of people I work with are – they are wanting to build a physique.
They're not – you know what I mean?
They're not just trying to maybe get into a healthy weight range and just maintain that.
They want to – they're trying to add X pounds of muscle and they're trying to ultimately get to a goal of, okay, this is how I want to look. And to look like that, I'm going to have to put on,
let's say it's a guy put on 40 pounds of muscle because I'm skinny and I need to, you know, be about 10% body fat. That's the look I want. So in under those circumstances, and I've written
about this and I cite some research that was, that was done with weightlifters that showed that
you can be in as high as a 25% calorie deficit and lose, uh, very little muscle,
but you lose a lot more fat than somebody in a five or 10% deficit. If you're doing it right,
if you are, if your calories, uh, well, if you haven't set correctly and you're not in an even
larger deficit, um, but you know, high protein intake, regular weightlifting. So I think it
kind of depends on what your goal is and where are you
trying to go? Because unfortunately, when you're in a calorie deficit, you're not going to build
shit for muscle. So when I'm in a calorie deficit, personally, I want to get it over with as quickly
as possible while still being healthy, essentially. Yeah. Yeah. There is, and the big thing that you
mentioned there that I just want to repeat is the weight training. Yeah. Can't eat your way to a physique.
Yeah.
You have to have the stimulus to build the muscle.
You can definitely eat your way through fat loss.
That all comes down to the kitchen.
But for people that want to build muscle or lose fat and retain their muscle, having that weight training stimulus is really, really valuable.
Totally.
Cool. So this idea of metabolic damage then, I mean,
is you can't damage your metabolism by eating too little because you can't do anything worse
than in that starvation experiment we were talking about. Agreed. Agreed. And people that do have
lowered metabolisms from doing an overly aggressive diet, like people do getting ready for a
competition, as you mentioned
earlier, just coming out of it, giving your body a break, increasing your calories, your body will
adjust and bounce back. You're not permanently damaged in any sense. And I don't even think of
it as damage because your body's doing a good thing to keep you alive. It's kind of a positive benefit. Yeah, it's true.
You know, there's, there's a bit of a bit of research out there, case studies really on
bodybuilders that, but that's also like, cause sometimes that research will be referenced in
terms of quote unquote metabolic damage, because like I've seen, I can think of two that I've seen
that showed that the, the hormonal, the,onal, the negative changes in the hormone profile in
particular, I think it was either six or 12 months later, it was still there. There are two different
papers. I don't remember which was which. One might've been six, one might've been 12.
But what people maybe don't realize is that that's extreme. I mean, a bodybuilding prep means getting
down to 4% body fat. I mean, if you keep going, you're going to die basically.
And, you know, it's 30 weeks of prep. It's a ton of cardio, a ton of just exercise,
just beating your body, beating it, beating it, beating it. And that just, you can't take that
research and then extrapolate that to the person that just says, oh, I just want to lose 20 pounds
of fat and, you know, be a little bit
aggressive with it. Yeah, that's a great point. You know, bodybuilding is certainly an extreme
example. There is abundant research that somebody who has previously been obese that, you know,
embarks on healthy eating and exercise and loses a substantial portion of their excess weight, that their metabolism does stay adjusted.
You know, that 10% does persist even years later.
And it's,
it's a fact that isn't comforting if you are somebody who is a weight reduced
obese person.
But I think it is comforting to know that you're only dealing with about a 10%
added challenge to somebody that never was overweight.
Go,
go lift weights and go build some muscle and you can make that up.
For sure.
And definitely like,
as we said,
10%, we're looking at,
um,
you know,
150 to 200 calories a day.
Yeah.
That's doable for all of us in terms of just walking.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Regular exercise program.
I don't want anybody out there who is,
you know, has had success with successfully losing a lot of weight to think, oh no, I'm doomed. Now
my metabolism is broken. It's just at most reduced by 10 to 15% from your resting rate.
Awesome. That's perfect. All right. So that's great. We covered a lot of cool things.
So much good stuff today. Yeah. That was fun. So where can people go? I know you already said in the beginning,
but just in case they forgot or whatever, where can people find you, find your work,
contact you, get your book, all that stuff?
My home base is askgeorgie.com. And my name is spelled G-E-O-R-G-I-E. It's like George
with an I-E at the end. Luckily, there's not too many people named Georgie Fear in the world.
So Google if you forget everything else.
Yeah, exactly.
My book is Lean Habits for Lifelong Weight Loss.
You can pick it up at Amazon, Borders, Chapters, and local bookstores too.
Cool.
All right.
So definitely go check Georgie as you can.
Here she knows her stuff and it's nice to – it to, to get into the habits and all that, that, that
subject.
Cause like I said, I get asked about it, but I didn't even, until I ran across you, I didn't
really have even a resource like, Oh, just go check this out.
I would just kind of be like, I'm going to write about it soon.
Just one day.
Yeah.
Just hold on.
Awesome.
So that's cool.
It was a real pleasure.
And certainly for the people that do want to count calories, that it really appeals
to them. I think the stuff that you do is, you know,
stands above the rest. So you do a great, you do great work. Yeah. I appreciate that.
Hey, it's Mike again. Hope you liked the podcast. If you did go ahead and subscribe. I put out new
episodes every week or two where I talk about all kinds of things related to health and fitness and
general wellness. Also head over to my website at www.muscleforlife.com,
where you'll find not only past episodes of the podcast,
but you'll also find a bunch of different articles that I've written.
I release a new one almost every day, actually.
I release kind of like four to six new articles a week.
And you can also find my books and everything else that I'm involved in over at muscleforlife.com.
All right. Thanks again. Bye.