Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - How Bigger Leaner Stronger Helped Brian Beat PTSD and Get Jacked
Episode Date: August 26, 2020In this episode, I interview Brian, who used Bigger Leaner Stronger to bulk up from an atrophied 150 pounds to a jacked 220 pounds. Like many guys, Brian learned everything he knew about fitness from ...magazines. He was following bro splits and celebrity workouts, taking every supplement under the sun, and hardly paid attention to his diet. And thanks to the majestic power of newbie gains, he still made progress despite all this. But then everything changed. Brain was the victim of a crime that landed him in a 6-day coma. When he woke up, his body had atrophied to an unrecognizable 155 pounds. The good news is Brian didn’t give up, and he got back in the gym, determined to heal his body. He experienced newbie gains for a second time thanks to muscle memory, but progress began to stagnate. Along the way, a friend introduced him to Bigger Leaner Stronger, and that’s when things really started to change. Brian learned about progressive overload, how much protein he should be eating, how to track his workouts, and more. And now Brian is lean and jacked at 225 pounds, and in the best shape of his life. In this interview, Brian and I talk about his story and the important lessons he’s learned along the way, including what he was doing with his diet and training before finding BLS, how not eating enough held back his progress, how tracking his workouts lead to rapid progress in the gym, how alcohol became a crutch as he dealt with PTSD from the attack, and more. So if you’re looking for a jolt of inspiration and like motivational stories, I highly recommend you listen to this episode. 8:29 - Where were you at before Bigger Learner Stronger and what drove you to find it? 19:02 - What were the major diet and exercise changes after you woke up from your coma? 34:03 - How has alcohol played into your meal plan? 41:09 - Where do you want to go from here? 46:14 - Where can people find you and your work? Mentioned on the show: Books by Mike Matthews: https://legionathletics.com/products/books/ Legion VIP One-on-One Coaching: https://legionathletics.com/coaching/ Brian’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brianashleymiller/ Brian’s Website (The Shredded Sommelier): https://www.theshreddedsommelier.com/ --- 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.legionathletics.com/signup/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, and welcome to Muscle for Life. I'm Mike Matthews, your host. Thank you for taking some
time out of your day to be with me here. And in this episode, I interview Brian, who used my
Bigger Leaner Stronger book and program to bulk up from an atrophied 150 pounds to a jacked 220 pounds. And if that sounds a bit extreme to you,
I understand because it is a bit extreme and his story is a bit extreme, which also makes it
that more inspiring because Brian was in a coma. That's how he ended up at 150, 155 pounds. But before that, he was into fitness.
Like me, he learned everything he knew about it from magazines and he was doing different
bodybuilding workouts, different bro splits, mostly the stuff that you find in most bodybuilding
magazines and celebrity workouts.
And he was taking all the supplements and didn't really know what to do with his diet. So didn't
pay too much attention to it. He didn't know about energy balance or macronutrient balance.
Of course, thanks to the power of newbie gains, he still did fairly well for the first bit. The first year or so is smooth sailing. Even if you do most things wrong or
poorly, if you do just a couple of things decently well in the beginning, you are going to see
progress. But of course, everything changes as you transition from your novice or newbie phase
to your intermediate phase. Now, in the case of Brian, not only did his newbie gains come to an end, well, his entire life got flipped upside down. He was the victim of a crime.
It put him into a six-day coma and he went into the hospital at about 200 pounds and woke up at
like 155 pounds. I mean, he felt that his body was almost unrecognizable. The good news is once the shock wore off, Brian didn't let that discourage him from starting back up.
He did not give up.
He did get back into the gym and he was determined to heal his body.
And of course, he got another round of newbie gains of sorts, right?
Thanks to muscle memory.
But progress began to stagnate.
And along the way, a friend of his introduced him to my Bigger Leaner Stronger book. And that's when
everything started to change. He learned about progressive overload. He learned for the first
time how much protein he should actually be eating and how to set up his calories and how to track
his workouts properly, which becomes very important as you move beyond your
novice phase and all the other cool stuff that's in the book. And now Brian is at a lean 225 pounds.
He's a tall dude. He's a big dude. He is in the best shape of his life now, thanks to the
information that I teach in my book. And in this interview, Brian and I talk about his story
and some of the big lessons he has learned along the way, including how he has used fitness to
help him deal with the PTSD, the fallout from the attack. So if you could use a jolt of inspiration
today, or if you just like motivational stories, if you like hearing stories of other people doing well,
and if you like picking up little tips and tricks that might help you do better in your journey,
then this episode is for you. Also, if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere,
definitely check out my VIP one-on-one coaching service because my team and I have helped people of all ages and all circumstances
lose fat, build muscle, and get into the best shape of their life faster than they ever thought
possible. And we can do the same for you. We make getting fitter, leaner, and stronger paint by
numbers simple by carefully managing every aspect of your training and your diet for you. Basically, we take out all
of the guesswork. So all you have to do is follow the plan and watch your body change day after day,
week after week, and month after month. What's more, we've found that people are often missing
just one or two crucial pieces of the puzzle. And I'd bet a shiny shekel it's the same with you. You're
probably doing a lot of things right, but dollars to donuts, there's something you're not doing
correctly or at all that's giving you the most grief. Maybe it's your calories or your macros.
Maybe it's your exercise selection. Maybe it's your food choices. Maybe you're not progressively
overloading your muscles or maybe it's something else.
And whatever it is, here's what's important. Once you identify those one or two things you're
missing, once you figure it out, that's when everything finally clicks. That's when you start
making serious progress. And that's exactly what we do for our clients. To learn more, head over to www.buylegion.com. That's B-U-Y-L-E-G-I-O-N.com
slash VIP and schedule your free consultation call, which by the way, is not a high pressure
sales call. It's really just a discovery call where we get to know you better and see if you're
a good fit for the service. And if you're not for any reason, we will be able to share resources
that'll point you in the right direction.
So again, if you appreciate my work and if you want to see more of it, and if you also want to
finally stop spinning your wheels and make more progress in the next few months than you did in
the last few years, check out my VIP coaching service at www.buylegion.com slash VIP. Hey, Brian, welcome to my podcast, man.
Glad that we could make this happen. Sorry about the last time we tried for people listening.
When we went to record this previously, my internet just was mysteriously not working.
I couldn't connect to my wifi. So I was like, well, I guess we're going to have to postpone this.
Yeah, no, glad to be here. It's a terrible time not to have your internet working.
Yeah. Yeah. Well, ironically it was working. It's just, I couldn't get, I record
on a Mac book, so I have a windows computer upstairs, but it's not good acoustics and my
kids run around and make noise. And so the wired internet was working. I just couldn't get my
computer to connect. So whatever it was, who knows now it's fine. Computers, you know, it's one of
the things you just like try over and over and you just restart them like five times and then eventually they work again. Yeah. It took me
years to stop calling it before I just tried to restart it. That's the secret. Have you restarted
it? You restarted again. Did you hit some more buttons? Did you just try literally anything
random? Oh man. Yeah. I had to see that it wasn't me on the technical difficulties. Yeah. My fault.
Yeah. Yeah. No, that was me anyway. So we're here to talk about you and your story,
where you were at in your fitness and your health and your lifestyle before you found me
and my work in Bigger, Leaner, Stronger in particular, and how things have changed since
then. Any also kind of, I tried to give as good of a one size fits all,
all inclusive program as I could in Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, but inevitably, and I get
emails every day from people asking good questions that, because I can never address every little
nuance of people's circumstances. So I also like to get into those details of
where did you have to make changes from what I've
discussed in the book or which things worked well for you, which things did not work well for you.
For example, it's common on the dietary side of things where I think it's very reasonable to tell
people to start with a balanced diet of higher protein, moderate higher carb, moderate lower fat. But some people don't
like that. They're fine on the protein. They understand that that's kind of non-negotiable.
It's just smart to eat that higher protein diet. But the carbs and fats are negotiable. And some
people find that they just prefer a lower carb, higher fat diet, or they do better on a lower
carb, higher fat diet. Or some people prefer intermittent fasting, which I don't recommend in Bigger Leaner Stronger. I don't say it's bad. I just have found in working with
many people that most people seem to not like it over just eating five meals a day or doing the
normal, you know, three square meals with a couple snacks seems to work best for most people,
but that's not always the case. And so I always like to hear those details too, because there are the equivalents on the training side as well. So I think where we should start is
I'm curious to hear where you were at before you found Bigeliner Stronger and what drove you to
even find it. And then how did things go from there? So starting off, I was really, really
skinny. I was a very small person. I graduated high school
at like six foot two and 155, 160 pounds. That's exactly where I started.
Right. And I think that's a big part of what kind of kept me moving towards you because there was a
lot in common. I started working out, trying to get bigger, superhero fetish, wanting to be
Superman, normal guy stuff. And I was doing the typical bro
split five day a week, chest day, back day, arm day, leg day, shoulder day, and getting most of
my information from men's fitness, men's health, normal modalities, and not really even giving any
thought to whether or not supplements work. I mean, I took, you know, fat burners, I took weight
gainers, I'd taken protein with no rhyme or reason, never really even thought about my diet. And I had a decent physique. I was in pretty good shape.
And then when I was 22, where my story is kind of unique, I was a victim of a crime
where I was thrown off a bridge and I was in a coma for six days and I was about 205 pounds. I've done okay. You know, I'm doing my typical
bro split stuff because I had youth on my side, I think mostly really not paying attention to what
I was eating, drinking all the time. And then the accident, if you want to call it, happened. And
I went from about 205 pounds. I basically overnight in my mind, I woke up from a coma
six days later and I weighed 155 pounds. So kind of looked down and had a feeding tube in my mind, I woke up from a coma six days later, and I weighed 155 pounds.
So I kind of looked down and had a feeding tube in my mouth, had IVs all over my arms.
I mean, it was kind of the stuff of nightmares.
So I ripped the feeding tube out, ripped the IVs out, alarms went off, orderlies ran in,
and went from a reasonably strong guy at 205 pounds to basically my muscle had all atrophied off my body and these
orderlies are holding me down i don't know what's happening so it's like one of those nightmares
where nothing you do to defend yourself actually works obviously i was able to calm down and i was
sedated and the situation was explained to me but kind of went through the uh the whole newbie gains
twice because i went through all kinds of physical
therapy.
There were years and years of recovery,
learning how to walk again,
working with a physical therapist,
going from facility to facility.
I ended up having to live with my parents for a while because I couldn't live
on my own.
Trying to retrain myself was sort of comical.
Like I would try to jump rope and do things like that.
But fast forward about 10 years later,
I'm getting... This is like 2011, 2001. It had to be 2012. Getting into my 30s and doing the
typical bro split stuff just wasn't working as well. I was starting to put on a little weight
and I was still going to the gym all the time. Like in my mind, I should have looked
like a magazine cover because I believed in all that stuff at the time. And a friend of mine
actually recommended Bigger, Leaner, Stronger. He's kind of my friend who researches this stuff
all the time. And I was griping to him about not seeing results. And I've actually bought
Bigger, Leaner, Stronger and paperback and twice on Audible How did you do two different audible accounts?
Well, I canceled my audible account. Okay. Okay. And then when I came back, I didn't,
they didn't save your library. If you cancel, I may have used a different email. Okay. I got it.
And then didn't really pitch a fit and it was never super expensive anyway. And I bought
beyond bigger, leaner, stronger as well. But the biggest thing that I got from,
and I still remember which gym I was working out at.
And you may actually remember,
you and I DM'd a couple of times.
I was working in the wine industry.
I had DM'd you a couple of times asking questions about,
okay, I'm finally ready to accept
that I need to focus on diet.
And you recommended the macros you just said,
moderate to high carbs, moderate to low fat.
And first time in my life,
I started really concentrating on protein. I never had tracked my workouts either. I was one of those that I'd been curling
the same 35-pound dumbbell since high school, doing my sets of 10. And it just had never occurred to
me. I just hadn't thought about it. So the biggest thing that really started to make a difference for
me with Bigger, Leaner, Stronger was the concept of progressive overload. And then I started programming better and using periodization and switch to a
push,
pull legs split six days a week.
You couldn't deny that after a couple of months,
I started to see changes.
I'd always had difficulty in my pecs and I started really seeing a
difference.
You know,
I I'd been the victim of different certifications that told you to do
your bench press down to 90 degrees and not doing full range of motion. And same thing with squats,
going to parallel rather than trying to use it as a stretch. And I actually dropped the weight.
I was lifting a lot and started doing more full range of motion and just started to see results
within a few months. Yep. I remember going through the same process, which was humbling.
I've told this little anecdote a couple of times, but I remember when I first
learned how to squat properly. So I was like quarter squatting 405, right?
This is when I first learned as maybe was from Ripito and starting strength. It was
many years ago, but I first learned why parallel squatting is better than quarter
squatting or slightly below parallel normal squatting.
And I was like, oh, okay.
Sure.
That makes sense.
But had never done it properly before.
So I didn't realize how much more difficult it is, even though it may only, if you look
at it objectively, you're like, I don't know, what is that?
Like a foot difference or something.
It can't be that much harder.
And maybe it was a little bit more because I really do think it was more like a quarter squat. Maybe I got to halfway with 405, maybe. So 405 is on the bar
and sit down to proper depth and immediately realize I fucked up. There's no way this is
coming back up. Holy shit. And had to bail. Fortunately,
I didn't get hurt or anything. I bailed out of it successfully. And I wasn't, I didn't even have any
training bars in place or I wasn't in a cage. I was just on a, I guess you'd call them a squat
rack, but you know, just two vertical, like a squat stand, I guess you could call it.
Oh yeah. With no safety bars.
Yeah. And I had never even bailed on a squat before. So I bailed it
throwing the weight forward instead of backwards. So again, I'm probably lucky I didn't get hurt,
but I didn't. And I had to learn my lesson. And then I went from there, 405 quarter squatting,
which I thought at the time, like, oh, that's a lot of weight. That looks cool. To 185 proper
squatting for sets of maybe eight to 10 or something like that. And it felt like
starting over from scratch. Yeah. But I mean, you know, luckily I came across some statements
that really spoke to me. Things like your muscles get bigger, your joints don't,
and the body doesn't know how many numbers are on the bar to try to like get my ego out of it.
And I had some friends that did get hurt and my form was so bad. I think I'm pretty lucky that I never got hurt, but yeah, I actually had to go from three 15. I never went to four or
five, but I had to go from three 15, probably, you know, third squats, maybe quarter squats too.
I actually dropped to one 35 for years and just sat at the bottom using it as a stretch to open
my hips up and really started to notice how much more my glutes were participating
in the lift. Yeah. Yeah. I think from going back down to, to one 85, what did it take? It took a
couple of years to get just into the low threes for sets of four sets of four or five. It took a
lot of work. Yeah. I mean, I weigh 225 pounds. I don't know if I could get a set of four on 315 with proper depth.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, before the virus came around, I was getting back up to that.
My best was 365 for sets of three.
I remember that.
And that's when I was, so I was doing Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, this first edition
that's out right now, or the first edition that's out right now.
I'm about to wrap up a new
second edition, which I'm excited about. It's rewritten from scratch, really. It's a brand
new book. And again, it touches on a lot of the same principles that are in the book currently,
but explains them better. The information is better organized. The program is periodized a
bit differently. I like the new programming more, but anyway, so that time I was
doing the programming that's in the book right now and I was lean bulking. So I was a little bit
younger, which is, it's not a major factor, but it is a factor. There is a difference. I'm 35 now
versus maybe 27 or 28. Maybe I was 29. I don't remember exactly when I was doing that, but I'd
gotten up to 365 for sets of three, which isn't bad considering that I was only squatting once a week. And I was doing that intentionally. I really didn't want to get to
training lower body because I was squatting and deadlifting separately. So I was training lower
body twice a week and I didn't want to train it more than that because, and I still stand by this,
that yes, I want to have good legs and I like having size and definition, but I actually don't particularly like the look that
a bodybuilder would say, oh, if you want to have bodybuilding proportions, you need to gain three
inches or two inches on your thighs. Because then forget about wearing jeans, for example,
or it just looks ridiculous. Then you were one of those dudes who's wearing like
jean leggings. And I would take it in my calves, but that'll
never happen. But so I didn't want to, if I were to increase my squat frequency to several
sessions a week, the purpose of that, the only reason why that would make me gain more strength
would be bumping up my volume, which of course would mean that my legs are going to get bigger.
And anyway, so that's why I've always kept my squatting at once a week. And I was getting close to that. I have to check my training spreadsheet in terms of 1RMs, getting back up to low threes for just a 1RM right now. I've really started to work on a lot more mobility days
and stuff. I squat twice a week, but I still use 185. I mean, it's more for like 12 to 15 reps
right now. That's what I'm doing this month. I don't know that I would try. I've used the one
rep max calculators that you have to figure out what mine would be. So let's go back to you come
out of a coma and you get back in the gym and when you found bigger than you're stronger
how did things change like how did that experience change what did you start noticing
versus previously now of course you had muscle memory on your side when you had lost the muscle
from the injury and so you were already predisposed to getting bigger and stronger faster but and this
is i guess in the gym and in the kitchen.
So with your training and your diet,
what were the major changes that you made?
You had mentioned more protein,
more emphasis on progressive overload.
And what did you notice as a result of that
versus how you were doing things previously?
Well, the biggest thing diet-wise for me is,
you know, everybody, you know,
the media was demonizing fat, then they were demonizing carbs and, you know, everybody's reading the
headline and not doing the research. I was eating low fat and low carbs. So I was not eating nearly
enough. So with the recovering from the injury thing and trying to put back on size, once I'd
gotten out of the whole, basically physical therapy stage, I realized I wasn't eating
nearly enough. I was eating 15, 16, 1700 calories as a six foot two, 200 plus pound person. I wasn't
eating. And so then would you then dramatically overeat every so often? Because I mean, obviously
if you were eating 15, 1600 calories a day for a very long time, you'd eventually just die.
But along the way, you'd get really shredded and then you would die.
Well, I'm sure that there were also days, because there was definitely days when I was
eating fast food, junk food, really calorie dense foods. So it was either super low calorie day or
super high calorie day with no sort of thoughts. Yeah. And that's common. I've seen that many times with just working with people and emailing
with a lot of people and keeping track of their progress. I've seen a lot of people,
guys and gals start there where they would, and this has actually even been shown in research,
that a fair amount of the weight gain that occurs in most people as they get older occurs specifically
on the weekends.
So it's common for people to eat quote unquote well throughout the week.
And maybe that doesn't mean a large calorie deficit, but maybe it does mean a slight calorie
deficit because they're trying to focus on vegetables and salads and relatively energy
light calorie light foods. And then the weekends come
and it's the cheat days and then it's all out. So they might eat over the course of a Friday
evening by Friday evening, Saturday, Sunday, you add it all up. They might have eaten 15,000
calories, 12 to 15,000 calories over the weekend. And you kind of rinse and repeat that where then
it's like under eating throughout the week and then spiking calories on the occasional weeknight and often
spiking them on the weekends. And so, yeah, I've, I've come across that that's a common mistake
that people make. And it's an understandable one. If you don't know anything about dieting,
or if you don't have any clear goal in mind and you're just trying to not get super fat,
basically, I understand it, but it really
can get in the way of fitness in particular, because now, as you understand, when you're
spending five days a week in a calorie deficit and then dramatically overeating, you're not doing
your body composition any favors. You're just not. No, no. And it took me a little, as I read it,
as I learned the things from it, it took me a little while to accept, like, you've got to start tracking your workouts.
You've got to start tracking your calories.
And I started using MyFitnessPal.
And I was pretty inconsistent until I realized, like, I was having days where I wasn't even getting 100 grams of protein.
I started to accept that using the tracking system, even if I wasn't going to do it forever, just got you in those habits of focusing my meals around protein. And a lot of the foods that are super protein dense,
like grilled chicken or boiled shrimp, were my favorite foods anyway. So it wasn't that big of a
sacrifice because I already kind of preferred those. And then I started to realize that when
I was tracking my workouts, there was a lot of workouts where, let's say I was working in the six to eight rep range.
Last time I got seven reps on a weight and I wasn't feeling a hundred percent, but I probably
would have quit at six reps this day, except for I had realized I'd gotten seven last time. So my
ego wouldn't let me stop until I beat the last workout. Yeah. That's a big aha moment as well
on the training side of things. I remember it myself, right? I used to do the same thing like you were saying. I would go in, I wouldn't track my workouts, and I would
just have kind of a general outline of this is what I was going to do. Often the number of sets
was a bit random as well. Like I was at least going to do this amount of sets, but who knows,
maybe I'll do more or I don't know, maybe I'll do less of this exercise and more of that exercise, but not tracking things, just kind of picking weights based on feel and thinking that,
oh, so, cause I remember, you know, you hear a lot of things you hear that, oh, the body doesn't
know weight. It only knows tension. So you just want to maximize time under tension. The amount
of weight that you use doesn't matter. It's just getting a pump. It's just getting a burn. It's
just a really feeling your muscles work. And so I remember that where I just grab weights and do things and think that
like, oh, I'm getting a pump and it's productive. But by tracking what you're doing in the gym and
understanding that you do need to see your one rep maxes going up over time, that is really the
key as a natural weightlifter and
particularly on your key compound exercises. But you do want to be seeing that on all of your
exercises. You naturally will. Like if you're getting stronger on your squat, deadlift,
bench press, overhead press over time, you probably also are getting stronger on your
curls and your side raises, you know? Yeah. And that was one of the other aha moments that I had was I had been the victim of so many celebrity workouts. If you do this
cool movement, you're going to have a six pack. If you do this, you're going to look like Thor,
whatever it was. And so I developed a lot of bad habits with using things like more complicated
things, machines and things like that. And by going back to the barbell and the dumbbells and
really focusing on getting stronger on those key lifts, as well as getting my mindset off of this
is how much I weigh and more on I'm staying the same weight, but my strength is going up,
which means I'm dialed in was really, really effective for me. Like, you know, I'm still
weighing into 220 every morning, but my lifts are going up every single workout or every other workout or whatever it is. Just it really, the
planning just, and not to mention I'm OCD. So it was very satisfying for me to track and control
everything. It just had never occurred to me before I read bigger, stronger.
Yeah, no, I totally understand. And that point of watching your strength is important because
in the beginning, depending
on your circumstances, you can watch your weight and see it change pretty dramatically
one way or the other.
So if you are starting out with a lot of fat to lose, and if you start lifting, obviously
the muscle you gain is going to offset that to some degree.
So maybe the first month or two is going to be a little bit strange as if you don't know
what to expect.
But once you get
settled into that, because you do have that initial spike of weight gain, which is mostly
just water and glycogen right in the beginning. But once you get settled in, then you see a steady
decline in body weight and that's nice and encouraging. And on the other hand, if you start
skinnier, you will see a spike and then a steady increase in weight, which is
nice. But once you have your newbie gains behind you, things slow down pretty dramatically. Yeah,
weighing yourself every day is not a bad idea. You can still weigh yourself every day and take
an average every seven or 10 days, but you shouldn't expect to see that big of a change
in the day-to-day or even necessarily in the week-to-week,
maybe slightly in the week-to-week, more so in the month-to-month. If you want to keep that
average going up, you need to do exactly what you're saying is you really make sure that your
strength is going up. And that remains true as you get deeper into your intermediate phase.
And even when you're in your advanced phase, when you have very little muscle and strength left to gain, really, relatively speaking, it's just the differences are even smaller now. So speaking in a scientific sense, you need a bigger sample size to detect them, right? You need more time to even detect those small increases.
I'd say toward the end of your novice phase is right where you're talking about, where you still see your strength going up. Your weight is not jumping up a pound a week like it was in the
beginning or a half a pound a week like it was a few weeks in or a few months in, but it's still,
if you're lean bulking, for example, you still should see an increase. If you're trying to just
maintain, if you're eating maintenance, then it should be exactly what you're saying, where you
should still be able to make progress, but you're not going to see much of a change in your body
weight. You're really not. You're going to see a very slight increase over time, very slight,
because it is hard to gain muscle effectively when you're just trying to maintain, mostly because
maintenance, it's not like you're hitting your exact maintenance calories every day. Really,
what it means is you're in a slight deficit some days, a slight surplus other days, and it's not ideal from a muscle building perspective.
So just some commentary that you might find helpful or anybody listening might find
helpful if they're in a similar situation. Yeah. And that was one of the things when I
first dove into Bigger, Leaner, Stronger that I found myself just kind of thinking like,
I can't progressively overload forever. I'll be bench pressing a million. That's true. And that's when I started
to start going into periodization and changing my rep ranges and worrying about progressing.
I do it every month because it's just easy. Now it's May, so I'm going to switch to the
one to three rep range or whatever it is. Yep. It sounds like you're doing something
similar to what I'm
putting together. I mean, it's already done. So what I have put together for Beyond Bigger,
Stronger 2.0, which is a linear periodization and you are working in, you're actually changing
your rep ranges on your compound lifts week to week. So each mesocycle is four weeks. It's
comprised of three micro cycles. So three
weeks of hard training and then a deload and how the mesocycles and how the macro cycle,
which is a four month. So four mesocycles makes up the macro cycle. You start the macro cycle
with lighter weights and higher reps. So on your compounds, you're doing sets of 10 with about 75, I believe it is.
I'd have to pull up the spreadsheet to look. And then the next week though, you're doing sets of
eight with a little bit more weight. You're adding 5% and then six and then deload. And then the next
mesocycle, you're starting with eight now, eight, six, four, deload, and then six, four, two,
six, four, deload, and then six, four, two, deload, and then four, two, AMRAP to test your strength,
deload, update your training weights, restart. So it sounds like you're doing something similar where now you just have to be more patient. You have to work harder for less and you have to
wait longer to see smaller increases in strength. Yeah. And I think I've convinced myself to look at my tracker
and make sure that I'm not going backwards at the very least maintain what you had last time.
Yep. Especially if you've been cutting, even if it's unintentionally, if you look back and you're
like, you know, there were a lot of days where I was in a deficit, even though, you know, maybe it
was just, you were busy and you didn't
think of it. And because what many people, they don't realize if they haven't done a proper lean
bulk is it is, I would say just as obnoxious as cutting in a different way, right? So for your
first few weeks on a cut, most people, it's not a big deal. Your workouts are good. And, you know,
maybe you feel like you would like to eat a little bit more food, but it's not a big deal. In fact, many people tell me that they experience more energy in the
beginning of a cut. They actually experience like a little boost in their workouts. But then when
you get into probably the fourth or fifth week is when you start to feel it a little bit and you
start to deal with a little bit of hunger and just the desire to eat more food. Well, on the flip
side with lean bulking, it's the same
thing for most people. First couple of weeks, you're like, hey, this is cool. I get to eat more
food. And then it gets obnoxious because you are force feeding yourself and your body responds
differently than it does when it's in a calorie deficit, but it doesn't want to be overfed either.
Like it just wants to maintain homeostasis. It doesn't want to be underfed and it doesn't really want to be overfed consistently. And so then you get into a palate fatigue where regardless,
even if you try to introduce variety, you just don't feel like eating. And so if you're just
kind of intuitively eating and maintaining, what can happen is you will, some people tend toward,
I think this is just based on their natural appetite.
Some people tend to naturally be in a slight calorie deficit more often than not, whereas
others tend to be naturally in a slight calorie surplus. And so something else to keep in mind
when you're just eating by feel and you're looking back on a training cycle and let's say you didn't
really gain any strength. And let's say your training is set up somewhat similar to what I'm talking about, where you do have a proper all out
seeing how strong you are, where again, how I'm programming and beyond bigger than you're stronger
is, is AMRAPs with, I believe I have to look, I don't remember exactly because I've gone back and
forth and tried it a couple of different ways, 90 or 95% on the bar. I believe it's 90, but I'd have to check what was the final determination. And so that's a tough set. Let's
say even is just 90 for, and if you can get five or six reps or whatever, that's a tough set going
more or less to technical failure or at least one rep shy, not to absolute failure, but to the point
where your form is starting to get a little bit ugly and then you're done. And so if you though
are keeping track of
your one RM and it didn't change in a training cycle, that's the first thing to look at is where
were your calories at, regardless of macros, where were your calories at? And if you think that you
were in a slight deficit, just as many days as maybe a slight surplus, or if you were doing
something similar to what we were talking about earlier, maybe where it's like, I was probably in a deficit like four or five days a week,
so I could eat a bit more on the weekends. Then yeah, actually maintaining your strength over an
extended period of time, if you're an intermediate or advanced weightlifter, given those circumstances
is good actually. Yeah, a hundred percent. When I first started with bigger, leaner, stronger,
you're like, I said, I'm, I can get get a little obsessive. I needed to go up every workout. I had to remind myself like, look, you're not going to
go up forever. And when you don't go up, it might be time to look at your programming, maybe make
some adjustments, maybe change your calories, et cetera, et cetera. But it was very eye-opening
to just, like I said, just start tracking and start progressively
overloading.
And there was definitely some hard lessons learned and some, like you said earlier, some
taking the ego out of it and accepting that I was not always going to be the strongest
guy in the gym and that I was competing with myself and not anybody else.
Totally.
If you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, definitely check out my VIP
one-on-one coaching service because my team and I have helped people of all ages and circumstances
lose fat, build muscle, and get into the best shape of their life faster than they ever thought
possible. And we can do the same for you. What about alcohol? How has that played
into your, I guess it'd be just into your meal plan. How have you made this work? Because this
is something I get asked about fairly often. Yeah. And I actually listened to your podcast.
Actually, that was pretty eyeopening for me because I listened to your podcast on it because
I was in the wine business for 20 years. And when I came out of the coma,
obviously felt very victimized and had to really focus on getting better. And there was a lot of
years of that. And I didn't realize I never focused on the psychological recovery. I was
so into the gym and I was so focused on physical recovery. I didn't realize that I was suffering
from PTSD and that I was self-medicating with alcohol. What I had done
because I was working in the wine business, so it kind of enabled me to drink more than normal
people because that was my business on top of the fact that I was dealing with PTSD undiagnosed at
the time. What I was doing was basically making sure I got to my protein goal and kept my fat
super low any night I was going to drink. So I was basically living each
day around focusing on my diet and fitness, but from the perspective of allowing alcohol to come
in at night. And PTSD is something that a lot of people deal with. And it's not commonly known that
most cases come from car wrecks. So it never occurred to me. I wasn't in battle. So PTSD had
never occurred to me as a possibility. But once I figured that out and started getting treatment for it,
it became a lot easier to not have that drink every day and to start getting sober sleep,
which is also super effective. Yeah, alcohol was a big self-medication piece for me for a long time.
My therapist that I have a very close relationship with, obviously, he always says
that these rules that you developed from this training system are the reason that you never
went off the deep end because you had to hit your protein goal and you couldn't sacrifice that
with the consumption of anything else and things like that. He brings it up all the time.
So that was, it's super interesting. And I still drink wine.
I am a drinker.
I still enjoy wine.
I have a big passion for wine.
I'm not in that business anymore because I realized that I didn't need to be in a business
where having a drink on a Tuesday afternoon was appropriate.
That wasn't going to be conducive to health, but I do still really enjoy wine.
And like I said, if it's going to be a drinking day,
I try to keep my fat grams lower than normal. And I try to hit my protein very early. And the
reason I try to get it to hit it early is so that it's in my system and not in my stomach with the
alcohol where the body switches over to dealing with the alcohol instead of the protein.
Yep. Yeah. That's smart. And for anybody wondering why the low fat intake,
Yep. Yeah, that's smart. And for anybody wondering why the low fat intake, it's because with alcohol, it is even more preferentially stored as body fat.
And that's one of the reasons why alcohol is conducive to fat gain really is because what kind of foods do people generally like to eat when they're drinking?
It's not celery.
Well, and I'll tell you, Mike, I was in the wine business, which is a very passion driven
business.
Like I've said, I'm a certified sommelier.
And one of the first things they teach you is think of wine as sauce for the food.
The wine is there to accentuate the taste of the food.
So I still remember where I was when you DM me and told me that I was at Anytime Fitness
in San Antonio, Texas.
And you responded to my message and told me that.
And I remember thinking, oh man. Yeah. Yeah. And so really what it comes down to is where you're at now. It sounds like
you have a good balance where you still get to enjoy wine. You're not drinking as much as you
were previously, which maybe was an issue in terms of bottom line. Like how many grams of alcohol are
you consuming every week, but now where you can enjoy it, you can adjust your macros on the days and
make sure that your calories, obviously you pay attention to that as well. And on the days where
you want to enjoy some wine, and then there's the physical component of that, which is why you're
doing what you're doing. But then there's also, I'm sure you get to enjoy it. Then there's the
psychological component too, where you're not then concerned about gaining fat from drinking alcohol. Even if
anybody hearing that would think that, oh, it's kind of silly to be concerned about that. Okay,
fine. That's an opinion. But for those of us who are into our fitness, that is a common concern.
It is a common conflict. That's why I recorded that podcast on it. And I had written about
alcohol intake previously, but not too much.
It was more in the context of testosterone. So I thought it'd make sense to do something a bit
more in depth and you can strike a balance, which is music to many people's ears. It's kind of like,
it's part of the whole flexible dieting mindset. You can include alcohol in there if you want to.
As my physique got better and better, especially having been in a business, I found people approaching me constantly going, dude, because there's so
many people out there that are like, I love to drink and that doesn't work with fitness.
So I'm going to choose alcohol. And so I found that people were really, really intrigued,
like, hey man, how are you built athletically, even though I drink wine with you all the time?
And people were really intrigued by the fact that there is a way to do it.
There is now, obviously, I'm not going to get on stage and win Mr. Olympia.
40 years old, I've given up on that dream anyway.
And I don't think the Houston Texans are going to reach out to me anytime soon.
But it is okay to have that balance and to, you know, the whole, uh, you can have a few glasses of wine with dinner
and you can do those kinds of things and still be healthy. And it was music to my ears when my
doctor tested my enzymes and said, I wouldn't even guess that you drink based on your liver enzymes.
That's great. And that's just a testament to, again, if you do the most important things,
mostly right, most of the time you can be be in great health, great fitness, and have a
sustainable lifestyle, something that actually does work for you. And even in my experience,
working with and just going back and forth with many people who do like alcohol, just as you do,
one for one, we've always been able to find that balance. I know there are people out
there who have maybe addiction issues and that I couldn't say that that would be the case for
everybody, but I'm just speaking from personal experience. I've always been able to, it's not
just me, but I've always been able to work with somebody and find a balance where they get the
satisfaction that they want and from how they're eating and from the frequency of drinking and what kind of drinks
they're able to have and what they're doing in the gym. And then it all comes together.
And then you have the additional evidence, like in your case, where you're getting blood work done
and your doctor's even signing off on it saying, please just continue what you're doing. This is
great. Yeah. And then that was after having blood tests where the doctor was like, dude,
like, this is not good. You need to get control of this. So like I said, it was just music to my
ears. So where do you want to go from here? What are your future goals?
Well, you know, I've, I've had a lot of interest. Like I said, I've still got a ton of peers and
friends and people that are in that industry. I mean, because that's where I was
for 20 years before that I was in restaurants. So same kind of kind of thing. So I'm trying to
develop a website to kind of reach out to people who want to do that kind of thing. People who want
to be in shape, they want to be healthy, but they want to have a passion for wine. They want to
enjoy a cocktail every now and then things like that. And I want to kind of bring my jury to more people. Maybe they've got that all or nothing attitude. Like,
well, because I drink wine, like I said earlier, because I drink wine, what's the point of even
trying? Try to help people kind of defeat that attitude. Like you can still be very, very healthy
and have a balanced lifestyle. You don't have to be obsessive to be healthy. And I think there's
a lot of people out there that think, well, you, either you're on the cover of men's health or you don't work out.
Yeah. Kind of all or nothing mentality, right?
A hundred percent. And I think so many people, I've been really fighting the urge to say a hundred
percent because a friend of mine who does alcohol podcasts told me she noticed that I say it a lot.
But yeah, I think a lot of people just have that all or nothing mentality. And like I said,
because I had that mentality and I just had those aha moments with Barely
Stronger, they just sent me on this path to getting healthier mentally and getting healthier
physically and having, you know, if I don't look like the cover of Men's Health, I'm never
going to be completely satisfied, but that's not realistic either because I don't have
any photoshopping equipment.
But yeah, and I would say, let's see, men's health, maybe not so much, but you get into
the fitness magazines and certainly like the muscle magazines. And then you're also looking
at a lot of drugs too. So let's not forget that. Even if you have the genetics and even if you
put in the work at the gym, adding the drugs changes everything.
Well, and you know, ironically, I was so concerned with losing my hair, which is a big
part of the drugs a lot of times that my vanity kept me from ever doing them. The lack of barber
in this whole quarantine thing has finally motivated me to shave my head and give up on
the old receding hairline. So the fear of balding prevented me from ever doing it and
went bald anyway. You win some, you lose some with uh with genetics i have good hair but i have no
calves so you know um my calves are humongous because i walk on my toes yeah well i think
i don't think it would matter in my case maybe maybe that's what i tell myself anyway i've tried
i've tried i'll give myself credit for trying my buddy josh that brought bigger later stronger to
me that i mentioned earlier i mean he works them day and just doesn't have them. It's a frustration point for him. And
I never work calves and my calves are almost 19 inches. Most times
you're a bastard. You're one of those guys. I had people walk up to me at the gym and be like,
Hey man, what do you do for calves? And I see that you're one of those guys. I had a friend
who I just haven't seen in a while. When I was
living in Florida, we didn't work out together, but he read Bigger, Leaner, Stronger. He was
a bit overweight and then he got into it and he lost a lot of body fat and he got pretty jacked
actually. It was the same thing. He had been overweight for a long time. And so his calves
were huge, but he also just had good calf genetics because they weren't just big, but they were like cut. He had the split down the middle.
He had straight bodybuilders calves. Yeah. And he never once done a calf exercise. And so he
already started with big calves and then he did a bunch of heavy squatting and deadlifting,
which of course works your calves quite a bit actually. And so his calves just got even bigger
and more developed. And he said, he would tell me the same thing all the time. Guys would come
up to him in the gym and how do you get those calves? Please tell me. He just sees the blank
stare when he's like, dude, I don't, I have never done a calf raise in my life. I even remember
talking to Josh and being like, dude, should I just tell people like I run a bunch of hills or
just tell them something like I jumped. Yeah. Just tell, just tell. Yeah.
Tell them something that's going to benefit them anyway. So maybe. Yeah. You need to go like
30 hard sets a week. You need to be doing seated raises, leg press raises, standing raises,
and you got to periodize your calf training and you just got to, you know, you got to grid it out.
You got to grind it out like everything else. That would, that'd be more encouraging. Like, oh, okay, great. I'll do it.
If it motivates them to take better care of themselves and start working out more than
I've done them a solid, you know? Yeah. Yeah, exactly. Not now we get into the
philosophical argument though is lying ever ethical, but yeah, no, I had the same experience
with a buddy of mine. That's fine. I don't remember. Do you say you have the website and
the podcast up or you are starting them or? No, no, I'm putting it together. I've got some ideas
and I'm working with some people to get it going and trying to use Squarespace to get my website
going and lock down the web address and all that. So. Oh, okay. Well, if you already, I mean,
if you have anything you want to share in terms of where people can find you, because this probably won't come out. We run pretty ahead on interviews. So I'm guessing this will come out
in a month or so, but people will start listening to it, you know, and then people will be listening
to a year from now. So if you have anything to share where people can find you and your work
or where they, what should they search for? My Instagram is just at Brian Ashley Miller.
So it's Brian with an I, Ashley with an EY.
And then the website will be the shredded sommelier.com. Okay, cool. I like the alliteration and the nod. I'll take it because I have for people wondering, I have a book called the
shredded chef. A hundred percent. Yeah. I'm well aware. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Great. Mike,
this has been awesome, man. I've really enjoyed it. Yeah, man. Thanks again for taking the time
and keep up the good work and definitely keep me
posted on how things go with your training and also your website and your podcast.
Yeah. Yep. I'll keep you posted. Appreciate it, man.
Yeah. Yeah.
All right. Well, that's it for today's episode. I hope you found it interesting and helpful.
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