Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - How Bigger Leaner Stronger Helped Tom Beat Sciatica, Lose 45 Pounds, and Transform His Physique
Episode Date: September 23, 2019In this episode, I interview Tom, who found me on Youtube and used my teachings to completely change his body and life. When he first started working out, he didn’t know what he was doing with his t...raining or diet and after a spurt of newbie gains, fell into a rut. He was also dealing with debilitating sciatica that sometimes had him crawling to the bathroom in the middle of the night and asking his girlfriend to help him put on underwear. Everything changed when Tom discovered the world of evidence-based fitness, however, and started implementing my advice. In the span of 1.5 years, he bulked up from 160 pounds to 205 and then cut back down to a much leaner, more muscular 160 pounds. And even better, his back pain was more or less gone. He couldn’t believe it. In fact, Tom was so astounded that he decided to pay it forward by starting to share his journey and learnings on the popular website Twitch. Now, his channel is now the most popular fitness-related hangout on the website, and every day, Tom uses it to stream workouts, answer people's questions, and share his favorite tips that have helped him build his best body ever. In this interview, Tom and I chat about his story and the many important lessons he's learned along the way, including exactly how he beat his back pain, how he optimizes meal prepping for maximum enjoyment, efficiency, and economy, and more. 9:23 - Where was your physique when you started the program? 19:29 - How many calories do you eat per day at the end of a bulk? 20:43 - How does alcohol affect muscle gain and fat loss? 25:02 - What kind of back issues did you have? 42:04 - What led you to be on Twitch? 48:26 - Do you have any tips on meal planning? 1:10:49 - Where can people find you and your work? Mentioned on The Show: Tom's Twitch Channel: https://www.twitch.tv/tominationtime 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
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Hey, Mike here. And if you like what I'm doing on the podcast and elsewhere, and if you want to help me help more people get into the best shape of their lives, please do consider picking up one of my bestselling health and fitness books, including Bigger, Leaner, Stronger for Men, Thinner, Leaner, Stronger for Women, my flexible dieting cookbook, The Shredded Chef, and my 100% practical and hands-on blueprint
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www.legionathletics.com slash Audible. That's L-E-G-I-O-N athletics slash A-U-D-I-B-L-E,
and sign up for your account. Hello, Mike Matthews here and welcome to another episode of Muscle for Life.
This episode is a success story episode.
This time around, I interview Tom who found me on YouTube some time ago and then used
the knowledge that he learned to completely change his physique and life. You see, when Tom first
started in the gym, he didn't know what he was doing, diet, and he stayed that way for a long
time. He had been spinning his wheels for years before finding his way to me. And he was also
dealing with really bad back pain, debilitating sciatica that sometimes had him
crawling to the bathroom in the middle of the night to go pee and asking his girlfriend to
help him put on underwear in the morning. Everything changed though when he discovered
the world of evidence-based fitness and started implementing my advice. In the span
of about one and a half years, Tom bulked up from 160 pounds, skinny fat, as he would say,
to about 205 pounds and then cut back down to 160 pounds. But this time around, he was far
leaner and far more muscular. He had dramatically improved his body composition.
And even better, his back pain was more or less gone.
And he was so astounded by the change in his body, in both his body composition and in the functioning of his body,
and in the functioning of his body, particularly his back,
that Tom decided to pay it forward by sharing his journey and his learnings on the popular website Twitch.
And now his channel is the most popular fitness-related hangout on the website.
And every day, Tom streams his workouts, he answers people's questions,
he shares his favorite tips that have
helped him build his best body ever. And in this interview, he and I chat about his story and we
cover the big important lessons that he has learned along the way, including how deadlifting
and stretching helped him dramatically improve his back pain, again, to where it really doesn't
bother him much at all anymore. How to optimize meal prepping, not only for food variety, but also
time efficiency and huge financial savings. He has a good system for this and more.
So let's get to the interview. Tom, welcome to the podcast, my friend.
Mike, thank you for having me.
Huge fan.
Really glad to be here.
Tom has a popular Twitch channel.
So he had me on his Twitch channel to talk about all kinds of things.
And so now I'm repaying the favor.
Dude, it's kind of funny how people spend so much time trying to meet some social media
influencer, for lack of a better term.
And they go to like, you know, these conventions, go try to meet the person, but you know what,
just make your own platform, invite them on as a guest, and then you can talk to them.
But you got to build a platform though. That's not so easy.
I just read one of those books and follow 10 easy steps.
What? Book, read? Come on, what are you talking about?
So yeah, social media influencer.
I would consider that a slur.
What are you?
You're like a social media influencer, right?
Like that's like them's fighting words.
I'm an influencer.
How dare you, sir?
Call me an influencer.
It's almost derogatory.
You know, like bro, would you call someone bro? Now it's, to me. It's almost derogatory. You know, like, bro,
would you call someone bro? Now it's, to me, it's almost derogatory to say,
oh, what are your lifts, bro? Like, whoa. Okay, let's calm down.
Well, what's the new internet thing is to call everyone my dude. Whenever somebody says that,
I just want to tell them, you realize that doesn't make you cool, right? You realize you just sound
like an internet idiot, right? When you say like, oh yeah, no problem, my dude.
You know, being in the Twitch space
is kind of a blessing and a curse.
I'm on the forefront of seeing
what the newest internet slang is
because people will immediately,
whatever's hot, start throwing it in the Twitch chat.
And I see it, I gotta kind of feel this out like,
okay, do I feel like an old geezer at 34 years old?
Like I'm trying to sound cool.
Is this actually cool?
Is this really stupid?
Is this going to die out in five days?
Like what?
What are some of the buzzwords right now?
Oh, there's a new one.
Like no meme.
Instead of saying like, no joke, not going to lie, you know, because that's also kind
of new in the last, I don't know, 10 years.
Now I heard a new one.
No meme.
Hey, no meme, Mike.
Your stuff is fucking hilarious, right?
That's a new way of saying no joke. I don't know. I don't know if it's really caught on or if it
will. I still feel kind of gross saying it, so I haven't figured out if I like that or not.
What's another one?
I'm trying to think because there's certain memes that I know are going to die in a week.
Some things go viral in the Twitch world that last like a week. Well, it's probably beyond Twitch, right? I mean, it's just the gaming,
I would assume, right? A lot of this comes from the world of the gaming world.
No, Twitch has its own life in terms of like, it's a streaming platform for gaming,
but also the Twitch chat is so unique in the way it moves. So for example, Twitch at E3,
they were covering E3 as a games conference
and there are certain announcements for certain games.
It's so weird to explain,
but it's like you're sitting in a stadium
watching a football game
and then everyone's kind of cheering or booing
at the same time
because the chat is just littered with emotes,
nonstop emotes and emojis.
And so if people are like booing,
like, is this sleepy?
This is boring. You'll see all the chat suddenly start moving towards sleepy emotes or you know stuff
like that or or like you know jaw-dropping emotes like oh man this is so crazy so it's just such a
weird and unique culture which is why it kind of just has its life of its own sometimes and
in some of the memes and jokes in there, I can't tell if it's
isolated to Twitch or if this is like a new internet thing. And well, hey, you're a social
media influencer too, Mike. You should- Oh, dare you.
Sorry, that was derogatory. I dare you.
That was derogatory. This interview's over. Ben Shapiro style. You see that interview? And
it was with some political pundit in the UK who was asking him mildly pointed questions about a book of his.
And he just got super butthurt that anybody would challenge him.
And got to the level of ad hominem, was basically saying, nobody even knows who you are.
And then he just ended, this interview is over.
Okay, Ben.
I didn't see that one.
If you want to laugh at Ben Shapiro, just check it out. I've seen other ones.
I'll have to take a look at that one later.
It's funny, seeing those mic drop interviews where they just
drop the mic and leave. It was always
just so fun to watch from the popcorn
eating perspective. Like, oh man, this
is going to be so juicy. I wonder what's
going to happen next. Yeah, and then your
brain just shrinks. It just shrivels
just a little bit every time
until you're addicted to that
stuff. And then you're a broken idiot at that point. You can't focus on anything anymore.
For marketing, you got to use Ascend for that. It's somehow going to counteract internet culture
memes. It is a multivitamin for your brain. It means that you can consume more mindless content
without destroying your mind as quickly by Ascent. So we're here to talk about
your personal transformation. And this one is going to be cool because there's a lot of meat
to it. So why don't we just start with a quick snapshot, kind of like a before and after where
you were at before you found me and my stuff, and then where you're at now. And I guess we can kind of just
start with the broad strokes, right? Of the stuff that people want to know about, where was your
physique at? And we can get into it when we kind of rewind to like, all right, let's go through
the details now, but you were having back issues and versus those things now, you know?
Yeah. So I'm 34 years old, six feet tall. And before I got serious about
training and dieting and really knew what I was doing and found the evidence-based crowds,
such as yourself, I was late, mid late twenties, actually more like late twenties, six feet tall,
about 160 pounds, kind of, I would say skinny fat, but definitely more on the skinny side
with just not a lot going on. Yeah. You looked like me in my like second year of lifting. I had a little
bit more chest maybe because my chest was always just a high responding body part, but very similar.
I'm six, two ish, six, one to two. I don't know. Somewhere in there. And when I started lifting,
I was like one 55, although my weight is always strangely low. My best guess is that it's because I have small bones.
So I have small wrists, small ankles. So a lot of people, they've always guessed me to be a bit
heavier than I was. But when I started lifting, I was 155, maybe 160. And then after my first year,
I had gained maybe eight to 10 pounds of weight, not necessarily muscle and looked very similar to
your 160 pounds. Yeah. Prior to that, I was kind of going on and off to the gym.
I'll get into more detail later,
but kind of getting nowhere, spinning my wheels,
going through different types of periods
of really bad back injuries,
just different kinds of back problems
and kind of just spinning my wheels
and the doldrums at the gym.
So found the evidence-based crowd, yourself included.
Your sarcoplasmic hypertrophy video
is the first video I found of you. I was
like, who is this guy? And I started liking a lot of your stuff. Oh, that's a very old video,
sarcoplasmic hypertrophy. And then I had a personal trainer at the time too, where he was
telling me, okay, you got to focus on calories, energy balance. It just kind of blew my mind.
Like, really? I was kind of skeptical. Like, I don't know about this guy. And then all these different evidence-based folks were corroborating
all of this. Like, you know what? Let's do it. First bulk cut cycle had really good results.
And then I've done a couple of bulk cut cycles since then. Progress is really slow right now,
but it's still moving forward in terms of like strength gains. right now, I'm still doing some more bulking and cutting cycles.
Probably going to end that in, I would say, two-ish years from now.
I'm going to try to go to maintenance mode.
Because my ideal physique is somewhere between Bruce Lee and underwear model,
not fitness model.
Because fitness models are like 5 percent body fat like sometimes enhanced
a lot of times enhanced so uh just to get to a place of decent physique and then maintain because
you know as we know to achieve hypertrophy you have to put in a lot more time and volume than
it does it takes to maintain and i'm getting older recovery isn't as good i'm i'm i'm a busy
person so i do want to kind of reduce the
amount of time. I mean, you also look good now. I mean, just where, so you weigh, I mean, I have,
you're making me blush. I have, I have a picture here of you. It may not be you right now if you're
bulking, but this is a picture of you quite lean, probably somewhere around, you know,
8%. When you start getting veins up the side of your core,
you know, you're getting fairly low. So maybe even 7% or so, and you're 160 there,
but you have a completely different physique. You have, you know, a lot more muscle because you've
in your before, you know, maybe somewhere, yeah, 13, 14, 15, something like that to cutting that
in half and replacing that weight with muscle looks dramatically different.
And like you've said, a couple more years of what you're doing and you're doing things correctly.
So let's say you're four years in, you are going to have achieved more or less,
let's just say most of what is genetically available to you in the way of muscle and strength gain. Anything you do from that point forward is not going to matter nearly as much
as everything you did up to that point, period. And that's just reality, right? And I would say,
it's in my books and it's just something I mentioned because I think it's a good
perspective to have and it gives good expectations. And I think if you look at it the right way,
good perspective to have and it gives good expectations. And I think if you look at it the right way, it's motivating where you start from nothing, do this right for five years and
that's it. That's what you've got. And you're going to be happy with it. Trust me. Like any,
any guy can get muscular. If people could see you, you, again, you have a very similar
physique to me, kind of a, you know, we're probably mesomorphs, but we have some ectomorphic
qualities. I mean, you probably also, can you wrap, can you wrap your fingers around your
wrist and touch them together? Yes. With, uh, well, actually I don't know how to describe the
gap, but yes, I can create a gap there. Yeah. Same. So, so we, we're not meant to be big people.
We're just not like, you know, one of the, one of the simplest ways to predict
total potential for muscularity is to look at the
size of your bones because the more bone density, bone, sorry, not density, but mass, the more
bone mass you have in your body, the bigger you can get.
And there's quite a bit of science behind this.
If anybody listening wants to check it out, I recorded a podcast on it.
I also wrote an article on it.
If you search naturally in my podcast feed, you'll find it.
If you go to legionathletics.com, search for naturally, you'll find the article that podcast was based on where
that's the written form of it, where all the research is. You can go check it out.
But the bottom line is guys like us are just not meant to be like, we would never be good
strength athletes, period. It doesn't matter how many drugs we take because everyone else is taking them too, but we'd be going up
against people who just have better genetics for strength and size. So looking at where you're at
now, it looks like your plan makes sense is my point. A couple more years of hard work,
and not only will you be obviously happy with how you look, but you can also be happy with knowing
that no matter how hard you work going forward,
the progress is going to be negligible. Not zero, but negligible. I'm talking about,
I'll speak for myself. I may be, according to different models, could gain on the low end,
another three to five pounds of muscle. On the high end, eight to 10. I don't believe that.
I think that that is skewed by my low body weight, my abnormally low body weight, which is, I think, just due to smaller bones and less bone mass. And those
models don't necessarily take that into account. And so let's just say, cut it down the middle and
say, I do have another five pounds of muscle that I could gain. I do think that's possible,
but it'd probably take three years. I probably could, if I did everything right,
and that means spending nine months or so of each of those years in a calorie surplus,
no fewer than six months. If I did fewer than six months, it's just because I did it wrong.
So let's just say six to nine months in a calorie surplus. Ideally it'd be nine and working
tremendously hard in the gym. And by that, just to put specific numbers to it, let's say 15 to 20
hard sets per major muscle group per week. Now you can't do that full body or I'd be in the gym,
you know, I'd have to be doing two a days. So I would have to, I'd have to rotate in mesocycles.
I have to be like, okay, I'm going to hammer the shit out of my lower body in this mesocycle,
this training block for people that aren't familiar with that term, just a block of training. And then in the next training block, I still would
be hitting my lower body with a fair amount of volume. Maybe it's 12, 13 sets or so hard sets
per week. And then I'd have to flip that in the next because I wouldn't be willing to sit in the
gym three hours a day, basically. So I could do that for like a pound and a half of actual muscle
gain that I actually don't even care about.
You'll get to that point yourself where you're just going to have to make that decision. I understand being in the same position where I'm 35, it takes me a little bit longer to recover
from tough workouts than it did when I was in my mid to late 20s. I have two kids. My sleep is now
better, but it's been off and on. It kind of depends on what's going
on, I guess, in general. I don't know. I don't have a great answer for it. So yes, I want to
work hard in the gym, but am I ready to do all that and accept the consequences? The risk of
injury goes up too because the weights get heavier and you have to keep on moving them up. You can't
just stick with the same weights and just do a
bunch of reps or sets and get there. You also need to continue to progressively overload.
And so the risk of injury goes up as those weights get heavier. And because failing with 400 pounds
on your back is quite different than failing with 200 pounds on your back. And so there are also
potential just other consequences that that come with it so
i'm completely hijacking the interview but i thought i'd share that it might be it might
be helpful to you and just people listening to just be thinking with the bigger picture in the
in the longer term yeah i'll just say like gratitude and having realistic expectations
i think is huge for just life happiness in general. But in terms of fitness, as an ectomorph, it's kind of like a blessing and a curse.
I find it very easy to cut.
I actually enjoy cutting more than bulking at the two opposite extremes.
Near the end of a cut, it gets kind of miserable.
At the end of a bulk, it gets kind of miserable.
But cutting has always been easier and more enjoyable for me because when people get stressed,
all we hear about is stress eating. And yeah, that definitely impacts a lot of people, but some people are stressed starvers. I'm a stress starver where when I'm stressed and
under pressure, I just skip meals naturally. I eat less. I just want to get stuff done.
And so if I'm trying to bull, God, that is hard. That's probably more in line with just the body's
fight or flight response, right? I mean, it is.
I mean, that's why, for example, stimulants can blunt appetite because, I mean, it's a similar response in the body.
Technically, the fight or flight response, it does blunt appetite.
And it's like, yeah, trying to kick you into action, not go eat some food and pass out.
Yeah.
Sometimes I wish I had that response though
when I'm bulking because I just, man, I get so sick of it. Yeah. No, I understand. How many
calories per day are you eating on average when you're at the end of a bulk? End of a bulk,
probably 3,300, 3,500. Oh, that's not enough to complain.
Well, I mean, I cut out cardio so that way I don't
have to eat as much because if I kept doing cardio towards the end of a bulk, I just, I have to bring
it up to like 4,000 and you know, I still try to eat healthy. So like a healthier whole food
calories, it tends to be harder to eat than just junk. Sometimes I will supplement with alcohol, alcohol calories.
Sometimes I supplement with In-N-Out.
Yeah. Supplement with juice or soda to get the calories up. But yeah, for the most part,
I try to follow the 80-20 rule, keep things mostly healthy, meal prep, mostly healthy foods,
and then some junk here and there delicious
junk, like alcohol. I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't relate. I don't drink. So I, all I can do
is sit there and be silent. Yeah. I mean, you know, real talk though, drinking is probably not
healthy. I just try to convince myself some study here or there. No, it's not. It'll kill me less
quickly than I hope. Actually, I'm not too interested.
I haven't done a personal deep dive into the research because it's not something that interests me.
I've never been into alcohol and don't see myself getting into it.
So I haven't even considered it.
And I haven't written much about it.
I've only written about it in terms of how it can affect fat loss and muscle gain because those are questions that I would get.
So it made sense to do some research and writing on that.
But I did some time ago listen to an interview with a guy. So he was an MD, PhD, and he headed up a large team of scientists and researchers. I think he worked with Life
Extension actually, which I'm not too familiar with their business side of things, but on the
research side of things, they definitely have a large team of very credentialed people that produce a lot of their content, which tends to be from what I've
seen a bit over the top in terms of marketing claims, which is kind of, I guess, par for the
course as far as selling supplements goes, but also fairly informative and fairly evidence-based
is just sometimes when the evidence isn't as
cut and dried, maybe as it's being presented. And so my guess is their process is they have
a large team of researchers and those are not the people who are writing the articles.
So the people who are writing the articles are thinking more, they're taking the research done
by the team and thinking more as marketers and how do we like sexify this a bit more.
But anyway, so I was listening to an interview with a guy who heads up that entire the weight of the evidence shows that alcohol is simply not
good for you, period, in any amount. It's a poison. However, some people's bodies are better
at processing it than others. So in some people, you'll find that they can have a certain amount
of alcohol units per week, whatever it is, and you don't really see any negative effects,
at least in the short term. Maybe if they do it for 40 years, that's something else. But in terms of immediate biomarkers, things you can look at, it looks like
it's totally fine, whereas other people could have the same amount of alcohol and have it affect
them very negatively. So that was his take on it, and that just sticks in my brain.
And there also, I have seen, again, I haven't done enough research to like
stand by it, but I have seen a number of studies that have come out in the last year or two that
indicate the same thing basically. And they were research reviews. Yeah. One was a review. One
might've been a meta-analysis. I don't remember exactly. Cause I wasn't, I was just reading
through like an update on, uh, on research that, that was coming was coming out, so I didn't get into the details, but that's my two cents on alcohol.
Yeah, the way I see it, the age-old wisdom holds true.
If you don't feel good doing it, like caffeine, right?
You don't feel good on too much caffeine, you're probably not well-optimized to deal with it.
Yeah, I mean, that applies to food, too.
That's an easy way for people to know, oh, should you eat insert food here? Well, let's start with, okay, if it's full of trans fat,
no, you shouldn't eat it. That's the one where I would say no. And that means it's like a microwaved
chicken pot pie or something. We all know you're not supposed to be eating that crap.
But beyond that, how do you feel? If you feel fine, let's say gluten, right? A lot of people
worried about gluten. Do you feel fine when you eat gluten or do you get bloated or do you get gassy or do
you start to feel sluggish or that could apply even to carbs.
Some people, their bodies just don't process carbs as well as others.
And if they get over a certain amount in an individual meal, they do feel sleepy.
They just don't feel good.
They feel they get a bit bloated.
They get a bit gassy.
Sometimes it's certain types of carbs, right? FODMAPs, if anybody's heard of that F O D M A P, there's an article on Legion about it. And so for some people, it's certain types of carbs and stuff that otherwise is healthy. Like certain people don't do well with beans. Beans is a FODMAP for example. And it's not that beans are bad, but that's a good test for food as well. Yeah. If you feel totally fine,
like I can eat a lot of carbs and feel good. I get like that pump. Sometimes I'll even get
like sweat from it. Right. Cause my body just processes carbs well. So that's a sign that,
Hey, there's no reason for me to worry too much about my carb intake. But if that were different,
I wouldn't worry about it, but I would calibrate my diet accordingly. Right.
Yeah. And that's actually a good segue into my back issues because,
believe it or not, gluten is a trigger for one of my back issues. I guess I should just give a
quick overview of the different back issues I've had. So I'm 34 now. When I was about 18-ish,
that's when my back issues started. And you can go to my website. I have an article,
TominationTime.com slash Leaky Gut. And I detail this in a lot of detail, but I'll just give it
kind of a quick overview here. The first major back issue I had was the typical lower lumbar
pain that most people have, like the L4, L5, S1 discs, where just kind of dull, achy pain.
A lot of that was bad genetics and also bad posture, bad movement, bad exercises. I wasn't
really working out back then. But basically, when I sat down, I would slouch. Rounded lower back,
I would slouch a lot like that. And that was basically slowly bulging the discs,
causing typical low back pain. The next one that started... I mean, I've had a couple other minor
ones that aren't that important. But the next major crippling one started in my early twenties. And for about 10 years, I had it on and off where I basically
couldn't walk sometimes. It was very similar to sciatica. It was basically like that crushing
nerve pain in your butt cheek where it just hurts so bad that to like even, you know,
try to put any weight on it, it would be be so painful. It'd be like blackout pain.
And in my early 20s, I would be crawling to the bathroom in the middle of the night.
If I had to go pee, I would have serious conversations with myself. Do I really want
to risk peeing myself or deal with the 20-minute pain of getting up and crawling really slowly to
the bathroom? My girlfriend, now wife, had to help me put my underwear on sometimes. I'd be walking around college campus so young and looking fine,
looking like I have no issues. But people would be like, oh, Tom, what's wrong with your leg?
What's wrong with your... Why are you limping? Why are you using a cane? And it was just the
same conversations over and over. And I honestly didn't want to keep having these conversations.
And it got so bad that I would try to hide it. Like later on at work, if I was limping down the hall because I was having a bad episode,
I didn't want to be stopped by coworkers to have the same conversation again of like,
you're so young, what's wrong with your leg? Oh, it's not my leg, it's my back. And then,
you know, you should go see a chiropractor, you should go see a doctor. I've seen them.
I've seen like over probably 30 different practitioners to try to deal with it of all
kinds, right? Like doctors, chiropractic, massage, physical therapy, you name it. I pretty much tried
everything. To summarize what the problem was, it was basically, I have ankylosing spondylitis,
AS, that is autoimmune disease. It's not technically an autoimmune disease. It's
close enough for the purpose of this conversation. It's autoimmune disease,
where basically my immune system attacks my spine. That caused permanent SI joint degeneration. That's basically where the
spine and the pelvis kind of come together, for those who don't know. And that does impact my
squats a little bit. Anything wide stance, I can't do. Sumo deadlift is risky. Wide stance
squats is very risky, even to today. I just don't do them and I'm safer that way. Lunges,
single leg stuff, unilateral leg exercises are risky movements. I always don't do them and I'm safer that way. Lunges, single leg stuff, unilateral leg
exercises are risky movements. I always have to go bilateral or just both legs together at the same
time. So AS, irritating or destroying my SI joint or damaging, I should say. It's not destroyed,
but it's damaging that combined with poor posture and other problems triggering piriformis syndrome,
which was basically tugging on that static nerve.
All of that caused me hell for 10 years
where I could barely walk.
I was thinking, am I going to be in a wheelchair
10 years later?
And all the while, whenever I did have a reprieve
from the pain and things started to get better,
I would try to go work out and exercise
because I was just so desperate to stop these cycles
of going back in to episodes
of pain where I could barely walk. Thank God today, I am pretty much completely better to
the point where I haven't had an episode in, I want to say three years. I've had a couple of
mild flare-ups where I was like, oh, okay, I'm getting a warning sign. I got to take it easy.
Like, okay, that last squat I did, last sets, I was probably a little bit too wide of a stance.
Let's just take it easy the next couple of days and it's gone.
But nothing like before.
Like I haven't had to use my cane in years and it feels wonderful and stronger and healthier than ever.
That's great.
And it probably sounded counterintuitive to many people where you went from that to where you're at now and that doing a bunch of squatting and deadlifting in particular
helped. I used to think like when I had lower back issues, someone told me, oh, hey, bro,
you should try deadlifting. And all I heard was bad back, don't deadlift. And that's what I thought
was just like, this guy's an idiot. But the truth is one of the major things that helped me with a
generic low back pain was deadlifting. Obviously, once the pain subsided and I was back to a good baseline, then with proper form, it really taught me hip hinge movements where you basically know how to properly stick your butt out to hinge at the hips, maintain a neutral curve in your spine as you pick things up.
maintain a neutral curve in your spine as you pick things up. That was a game changer. That was one of the reasons why I had chronic low back pain all the time. I did not have my neutral curve
in my lumbar. I had a flat back. And as a result, I always had that dull ache. After properly
deadlifting, that helped get that to go away completely. And it's funny because back in the
day, I could squat maybe 60 pounds and it would set off my back where I couldn't
walk for weeks. 60 pounds, couldn't walk for weeks. And last PR, not particularly impressive,
but from how far I've come, I'm very proud of it. 295 for five on squatting. So that is just a world
of difference from where I was before. The bar plus 10 pounds each side crippled for weeks.
I'm so close to just three plates for five. That's kind of like my life goal.
315 for five reps. I'll be happy with that. And then I'm retiring. I'm done.
The most I've ever squatted was, again, nothing particularly impressive, maybe 365 for a few.
So that meant I could get, I think I was working with 335 for four or five and then
could get 365 for a couple. I might've gotten as much as 375 for, I don't remember, or sorry,
345 for four. So I don't remember exactly, but you feel cool at the three plates.
You're so close to that four plate dinner, Mike.
I know. Although that was at the end of a lean bulk. I was sick of it.
I was sick of eating. I actually wasn't too fat. I was probably 13 or 14%. I could have kept going,
but I just was sick of eating. I mean, I was eating 4,000 calories a day, every day, and I
wasn't training on the weekend. So at least I was able to get a little bit of reprieve and drop to,
you know, just my maintenance, but still a fair amount of calories.
just my maintenance, but still a fair amount of calories. And also my right knee was just getting more aggravated. And that became a thing where I never injured it. It just would
be kind of aggravated and annoyed. And it was probably due to inflexibility, which I've now
corrected. I do like a series of yoga stretches every day, basically. And then also an imbalance
in my hips where I had good external rotation on my right side, good internal rotation on my right
side and shit external rotation and the opposite on my left side. So I had shit internal rotation
on my left and very good external rotation. And who knows how that happened? And maybe because
I used to sit, I remember when I was younger and I'd be on the computer, there was a period when
I was, I think I was 13 and maybe I was 14. For a year, I played a bunch of a video game called
Asheron's Call. It was the first big MMORPG, right? It was very popular. So I played a bunch of that game and I would sit
in a chair with my left leg externally rotated. So fully, you know, as if kind of half of a
butterfly, right? If people listening, just so they can see where my knee is splayed out to the
side and my calf is touching my hamstring. And then I would have my right leg kind of up on the
chair and I would just prop myself on it.
And if I was on the computer, I don't know, that just became like a default position that I would
sit in for a lot of the time that I was on the computer. And that lasted for like a year,
but I don't know, maybe that was enough to give me this kind of almost hypermobile left side.
And I definitely affected my diaphragm. It took some time before I would just
get random kind of diaphragm pains because this right side of my body was always scrunched up.
So at the time, I felt like I was getting warning signs with my knee. My neck was getting tight from
benching. So I got up to 295 on flat for a couple, two or three, 265 or 275 on incline for two or three. I finally called it off
on the lean bulk. I kind of hurt myself, but it wasn't a bad injury. Deadlifting, maybe it was
430 something. Got to the top, felt good, and then felt my hip almost like shift. And I was like,
oh, that's bad. I don't know. That's not what's supposed to happen. And then had back pains. And again, it was that SI joint. There was an instability on my left side.
And so my point with all of that is what has really helped that. And my knee pain has not
returned since. I haven't had any back issues, which again, it wasn't my back that got affected
by that deadlifting injury. It was my SI joint, which can refer, the pain can refer into your lower back and also down your leg. So it was the stretching. It was
stretching. And then some yoga poses that I did, my quads used to be way too tight. Hamstrings were
okay, but quads were way too tight. And so daily yoga stretches helped with that. And it's kind of
hard to work on internal rotation, but the most effective
stretch that I kind of found is, so if you look at online, there's a stretch called a 90-90,
I think it's called. And you have one leg in internal rotation and one in external rotation,
basically. So you can do that. You don't have the other in external. It's kind of like you
have your leg again. It's think of sitting on your, on your leg where your calves are touching your hamstrings. Your butt is on the backs of your
feet, right? Now, if you did that and instead though, you move your, for me, it's my left side,
move the bottom half of your left leg out to the side. So now it's at an acute angle and then
you're putting your butt on the floor.
It kind of torques your knee. So you got to just make sure that you don't jack your knee up, but
if you get it right, it allows you to really work into internal rotation. And so after doing
that, in addition to the yoga stretches for my quadriceps, for my quads and a couple other hip
stretches, that was it. That was the end of the knee pains. And I haven't squatted that heavy in some time,
but I've gotten up to decent weight again
at various points and no pains.
And then no SI joint issues to speak of.
Sometimes a little bit of discomfort.
I would have it sometimes
where it wasn't even with heavy weight.
It'd just be like warming up
and I would feel it kind of tweak.
And I was like, that doesn't feel good.
And then I would stay away from squat. I would go to like the leg press for a couple of weeks just because I didn't
want to further aggravate it. After going through my 10 year hell journey, specificity for treatment
and stretches and all that stuff is just so huge. Like yoga, for example, during the dark times,
I heard yoga. Oh, so good for your back. Go do yoga. So I tried yoga and not all yoga stretches were good for me.
Some would aggravate it.
And I just started to realize over time, if someone has posterior pelvic tilt versus anterior
pelvic tilt, basically like a slouched lower back versus stripper butt or Donald Duck,
the fixes for those two conditions are very different and it can aggravate the other one
if you don't choose the right one. And so certain yoga poses would really aggravate me, even though I heard
yoga is good for back pain, blah, blah, blah, but it's just too generic. It's got to be specific
for your situation. And so in general, what really helped me for my back issues was one,
being hyper conscientious about my body and my posture and just really paying
attention to what am I doing all day,
like sleep, sitting, standing, all that kind of stuff,
and how's my posture look when I'm doing those things.
Getting friends to take pictures or video
of when you're doing it, kind of analyzing it.
You can do that now, today, like Reddit,
fitness and stuff like that, you could submit form videos
and of course it's the internet,
who knows what they're going to say,
but they might give you ideas about what to look into.
In terms of clinicians,
the two clinicians that helped me the most by far
was one, a chiropractor slash acupuncturist.
I've been to a lot of different acupuncturists.
I've been to a lot of different chiropractors
and doctors in general,
but the ones who were just a clear step ahead
of everyone else were just the ones who did
both chiropractic and acupuncture for some reason. Maybe I just got lucky. And the second clinician
was a physical therapist who does weightlifting. Those physical therapists who walk the walk,
they tend to be a lot more intelligent, I've found, in terms of understanding what I'm trying
to do and understand the typical road bumps that would happen along the way. So all of that plus proper stretching and learning
how to fix my issues. I did a video on this on my Twitch page. If someone goes to my channel,
twitch.tv slash Tomination Time, you type exclamation mark back pain, one word with
exclamation mark, the video will pop up that will talk about the specific stretches I did. But basically, my specific stretches were the yoga pose, the cobra yoga pose, the bridge,
which is basically like a glute bridge. And the cobra is basically like a half pushup where you're
keeping your pelvis to the ground while you do a pushup. And then doing deadlifts helped a lot.
And then essentially, just in my specific case, avoiding hip opening
exercises and actually trying to strengthen the adductors or basically trying to strengthen the
inner groin muscles. All of that combined with a good clinician, I was able to finally get out
of this hellhole and then now become stronger than ever. Learning how to deadlift and pick
things up properly, man, that's life-changing because people will say,
oh, deadlifting 400 pounds is not functional, blah, blah, blah. Hell yeah, it's functional.
If I can maintain a neutral spine and not injure myself while picking up 400 pounds,
I'm going to be much better prepared to pick up random 30-pound objects around the house
and do weird twisting, jerking motions when I'm trying to
pick up something awkward. Because we don't pick up 400 pounds under normal conditions in our life,
but we'll pick up random objects with weird positioning and that puts us at risk for injuries.
Yep. And maybe it's a 50-pound and people get hurt from that stuff. I mean,
anybody listening, yeah, after 20, your risk of that is maybe low, but as you get older, it's common for people to seriously mess up their backs,
just doing stuff like that. I'm in like a business association, I guess you could say,
called YPO. And one of the dudes who's in my chapter, he jacked up his back so bad that it
was like he was out of the gym for months. I mean,
he would just do cardio and stuff. And if he probably did more weightlifting or had a stronger
lower back and stronger core, maybe this wouldn't have happened, but he was out for months. Just,
it was like that. It was like, oh, he went to go move his grill or something and not even pick it
up. Just like, oh, it was something like that.
And if you saw him, he just looks like a normal dude. He's not like super out of shape or super overweight. He's in his forties and that knocked him out for months.
Yeah. Christmas decorations. Where I keep my Christmas decorations is in the garage in a
very high area. It is very narrow to get to. And like we have this giant body bag. You can put a
corpse in there and it's not particularly heavy, but it's like maybe
30, 40 pounds. But it's like, it's so awkward to pick up. For me to put this bag away, I have to
basically get on a chair, bend down, like basically do a stiff, like a deadlift to get it off the
ground. So like it's really risky for the low back and then pick it up, twist, overhead, press
it into like the top of the garage
area. And in my younger years, when I didn't know how to deadlift properly, I didn't know how to
brace properly. It'd be like a coin flip chance. I'm going to be screwing my back over, but I
understand proper bracing mechanics and how to maintain neutral positions the best I can.
I was able to do it just fine. I didn't feel like I was going to risk an injury this time.
do it just fine. I didn't feel like I was going to risk an injury this time.
Hey, quickly, before we carry on, if you are liking my podcast, would you please help spread the word about it? Because no amount of marketing or advertising gimmicks can match the power of
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at Muscle for Life, and Facebook at Muscle for Life Fitness.
How did all this lead you to get on Twitch? I remember seeing it before Amazon bought it,
and it was, I think it was all gaming. Maybe it was more than gaming at the time,
but that's all I ever knew it was, was it was like a gaming platform.
Yeah, Twitch is basically a gaming platform, but they've been expanding to non-gaming stuff.
But the general idea, if anyone's never seen it, it's a live stream, but it's very chat focused. And it has a huge organic audience. On Facebook and Instagram
and YouTube, if you do a live stream, the only people who are going to find you are people who
already know you and they already follow you. On Twitch, the audience is so large that you have
actual organic discoverability as a potential path to grow.
So you don't have to bring in external people. People will just organically find you.
Now, I started on Twitch because you actually inspired me quite a bit, Mike. I enjoy teaching.
I enjoy talking, working out, explaining kind of distilling information down to the correct level of my audience.
And when I started learning about all this stuff,
I was like helping, I was sharing pictures
and helping other friends on Facebook.
And they're like, dude, how'd you do this?
Well, I was like, well, okay,
let me explain calories, energy balance.
Here's a bunch of meal prep recipes that I do.
I do a ton of meal prep.
And I started realizing like,
I should just create a website
where I can just dump all this information. I should just create a website where I can just
dump all this information. I can just point people to a resource and just save myself some time.
And then one thing led to another and people were like, dude, Tom, you should do YouTube videos.
You should do X, Y, Z. I'm like, yeah, but YouTube is super saturated. Websites, super saturated.
But then one person said, you should do a live streaming on Twitch. And then I realized like,
oh wait, yeah, this is not saturated.
No one's really doing this yet. So that's how I entered that space. It was a bit of inspiration from you because I remember from one of your podcasts a long time ago, you were talking about
how something along the lines of you should find a market that has a hole that no one's filled yet
and be the person to fill that hole and also take,
I can't remember if you said it or someone else, but.
So that's a key takeaway, find holes that need filling. You know, that's a life,
it's like a life philosophy.
Yeah. Basically like I found, you know, an opportunity that there's no one's like,
there's a market for this. Like live streaming is very unique in that how you can help someone
and you can encourage someone, right. It's one thing to read an article that kind of gives you instructions.
It's another thing to hear a person live, hear your story, and hear the nuance to your situation, be able to answer it live and say, hey, man, you can do it.
Let's fucking do this.
Here's a plan.
Let's talk about it in like a couple days.
You know, let's see where you're at.
So I think that was a unique opportunity for Twitch.
And so I just did it.
I have a home gym.
I'm going to work out anyway. And let's just talk about these things. That's what got me started on there. And then following your advice, I saw that it wasn't saturated yet. I was able to have that first mover advantage and be well positioned when non-streaming stuff started to gain a little bit more momentum on Twitch.
Non-streaming? What does that mean?
Sorry, non-gaming. No, that makes perfect sense though. I mean, it was a good opportunity to
do something that wasn't... I mean, now especially, it was things were competitive back when you were
making that call of, should I go over here? Should I go over here? And now they're just
completely glutted. And there are always opportunities, but you have to find them.
And, you know, I often get people asking for advice saying they want to get into,
some people say they want to start a supplement company. And my advice is don't,
honestly, don't do it unless you already have a big platform and you're willing.
If you really want to build a real company, it's not just about making products and promoting them.
You have to also build a business and that's a whole other thing.
And if you're not an outstanding marketer and you don't already have a big following,
because if you don't really have a following, you need to be a great marketer, right?
There are some supplement companies that do quite well.
And the people who run them could give a shit about fitness.
They may even be the faces of their businesses, but it's all just about marketing. So sure, you can do that. If you're
a very good marketer and you have money to spend, you can buy your way in, so to speak.
If you're not a great marketer, you don't have a lot of money to spend,
then you need to have a big platform. And even then, I wonder, for example,
I think of Bradley Martin, the super jacked guy that does all kinds of crazy shit. I don't know
what he's up to these days, but I remember when a lot of people were talking about the things he would do, right?
And I don't know if that company really went anywhere. Did he sell supplements? Yes, of course.
Does he still? Maybe, I don't know. But I would be very surprised if that business ever broke,
let's say 5 million in annual revenue, and then where is it at now? So if you just want to sell
some stuff, that's one thing. If you want to build a real business, that's really another thing. And so similar to that,
people will ask about, should they write books or should they just do YouTube? I think it was
smart of you to survey the landscape and not that you're looking for the easy route, but why make
things unnecessarily hard? And going into YouTube initially, it would have been harder
to gain traction. And you have what, about 20,000 followers or so on Twitch?
Yeah, right.
I don't know in the scheme of things if that's good. Again, I really haven't even looked around
the website. It's a large-ish number for sure. But in the scheme of things, 20,000 on YouTube,
for example, I don't know if that's even considered good, honestly, but it would be probably harder to get to whatever magnitude of success.
And I don't say that as a slight, by the way, I literally don't know on Twitch,
20,000 might be fantastic. Are you calling me an influencer, Mike? How dare you?
I'm asking if you're an influencer. Are you officially an influencer? But my point is
whatever magnitude of success you've had on Twitch, it almost certainly would have been harder to do that on YouTube.
Oh, 100%.
I'm complimenting your business acumen.
Oh, thank you. Well, I had a good influencer tell me to survey the market.
I think I actually would prefer that over mentor. See, that's also another word that like,
oh, who's your mentor? I don't have a mentor.
Or when somebody says, oh yeah, so-and-so is my mentor.
That's a red flag to me.
I immediately assume like, oh, this is a scammer who's about to sell me on some bullshit mastermind.
So they can be my mentor too for only $2,000 a month.
I can get an email from their assistant and think it's from them.
But yeah, that's what started the whole, the Twitch thing.
I want you to talk about meal planning. It's something you're passionate about and you have
some good tips. When people think meal prep, they think of the typical cook five meals on Sunday.
And so you cook like all five lunches from Monday through Friday or five lunches and dinners or some
combination. But there's a bit of an issue with that, in my opinion.
That's a good starting place. Instagram worthy, you get all your meals lined up in their individual
boxes, snap picture, and put a hashtag on it. But what happens for a lot of people is there's a lot
of food fatigue that sets in because you're eating the same thing for five days in a row.
Now, I think to some degree, we have to suck it up. You want to
save money. You want to save time. Meal prep. You want to achieve your calorie goals and achieve
some sort of aesthetic or fitness goals or health goals by eating certain foods. Meal prep. But to
some degree, you got to suck it up. Yeah, you're going to be kind of eating less variety than usual. But in my opinion,
we have way too much food variety, like an unusually high amount of food variety and
palatability in today's day and age. Within a three-mile radius, Mike, how many different
restaurants or maybe two or three-mile radius, how many different restaurants do you think you
could eat at? I'm right across the street from a mall. So let's just start there with the food court. But in many ways, live better now than Kings did just a couple hundred years ago. And this is one
of them in that we have instant access to things that were once delicacies. I mean,
there was a time when salt was a delicacy. Yep. We have so many food options that I think we've
forgotten what it's like to just eat boring.
I'm not saying people need to eat boring, but think about your great grandparents and
what they probably ate and how it probably wasn't nearly as much variety as what we have
now.
And so I think I'm just weird in that I like eating boring.
I genuinely like it.
For me, it takes out decision fatigue.
I actually enjoy that aspect too, that I don't have to think as much about what I'm going
to eat.
This is probably for me, it's one of those things that in many ways, how we behave
is a kind of reflection of our identity and how we see ourselves. And for some reason,
I feel like eating a bowl of oatmeal is more in line with how I identify, I guess, as a person
than going to a Michelin starred restaurant. Not that, you know,
I've been to Michelin starred restaurants and I can enjoy food, but I guess I'm just not a foodie.
So you identify as oatmeal.
Do you have a problem with that bigot?
In terms of food, my meal prep is instead of just doing five meals in a week,
I think the next evolution, the next step forward is to create freezable
meals and make them taste good. Because if it's freezable, that solves a couple of problems.
One is food fatigue goes down because if you can freeze the meals, you're not limited to just
five meals that you cook at once for the week. You can now cook a few different recipes and then
freeze them. So you might be thinking, but Tom, I don't have much space in my freezer. I only have a typical fridge with a top freezer section. Chest freezers
are surprisingly cheap. It's like 180 bucks, less than 200 bucks. You can get a decent size
chest freezer that's like seven cubic feet, or you can stick a few bodies in there. I don't know
why I keep referencing bodies and storing them. I swear I don't have any bad habits like that,
but you could store dozens and dozens of frozen meals in a chest freezer.
They're very economical for that.
To be fair, bodies is actually a better visual idea of the size probably than seven cubic
feet.
A few bodies.
Oh, cool.
That's a good size.
And so now my typical meal prep looks like this.
Me and my wife, we will have like a
weekend set aside where we will just plan out. We're going to cook three, four, five recipes of
food and spend like 10 hours, like a full day job or like two nights of just cooking for five or six
hours and cleaning and get it out of the way. Because it's just, it costs so much time to prep
food and clean after cooking.
So the actual cooking part doesn't take that long.
It's pretty fun.
I enjoy it.
But dude, I hate cleaning.
But if I'll have to clean my pans once because I just made 50 meals out of it and I froze them all, that saves me a lot of minutes throughout the rest of the week and months.
It's cheap.
And I have my meal prep recipes on my website, dominationtime.com slash meal prep.
All the recipes that get on there are legitimately high
protein, where protein is the top macros, if not, it ties with carbs or fat. Because I hate it when
someone says high protein. You look at the macro ratio, it's like 10% of the calories are protein.
What the hell? This is high carb, high fat. But anyway, the recipes are cheap. They're Costco
friendly. I shop at Costco a lot because Costco sells things like a package of 48. What am I going to do with a package of 48? Well, you can meal prep 48 meals.
They all cost like $1 or $2 a meal. That's how I view meal prep. I think it's a mistake to meal
prep fresh fruits and vegetables with it. You don't have to do that. I consume fresh fruits and
veggies on the side or just frozen veggies. You can microwave that. You can roast that fairly easily
per week. That doesn't take too much time, but like seasoning your meat and then sauteing it
and then like cooking it, that takes a lot of time. If you can scale that to get it all done
at once, once a month, that's a ton of time saved. Last tip on that too is the starch.
For my meal preps, I will often not breeze it with the starch. One, it's a texture thing.
Two, it takes a lot of space. And three, starch is pretty easy to make fresh. So rice cookers
are amazing. They save a lot of time. I'll cook a stir fry that I'm going to serve over rice.
So I'll cook the stir fry, freeze that, and then just prep the rice fresh once or twice a week to
serve it over that. Or potatoes, bake those fresh.
That doesn't take too much time to do. So I recommend for people to just experiment
with meal prepping. See if you can freeze it. Do you do beans as well?
Beans, yeah. I actually have a meal prep recipe for beans.
Just another good starchy vegetable that most people like. You can make them taste good.
I love beans, actually. So I haven't released this recipe yet because it's a side dish. But
canned beans are expensive, I think, if you at like how much you're really paying versus dry
beans, if you can buy any dry starch, oh man, you're saving so much money. I love it. I love
saving money. So Costco, you buy a giant like 15 pound bag of dry beans, like five bucks. But if
you've never cooked dry beans before, it's a pain in the ass. Like you have to do like a pre-soak the previous night and then you have to boil it for like three hours. And if you've never cooked dry beans before, it's a pain in the ass. You have to do a
pre-soak the previous night and then you have to boil it for three hours. And if you have a pressure
cooker, it saves tons of time. So one of my pressure cooker recipes I haven't released yet,
but really quick, is basically just cook a bunch of beans on high, add salt, add pepper,
add a little bit of lard or some kind of animal fat to flavor it up. Delicious. My kids gobble
up those beans. They'll actually
fight each other for the beans. I swear I'm not a dystopian zombie apocalypse. We're like
fighting over beans. They really like the beans and it tastes great.
That's called character building right there.
All right, kids. One bowl of beans, two contestants, one winner. Go. So that's,
yeah, I have an interesting life. So meal prepping, I do meal prep that starch, the beans,
simply because it does cost a lot of time to cook beans.
So that is a starch I will prep in large amounts.
So are you storing your containers Marie Kondo style?
I'm sure you are, right?
Because you don't want to have it stacked up like five high
and you're going to dig around.
But if you turn them on their sides and you label them, now you're talking.
So what I do is, it's kind of similar to that. Because yeah, if you have a chest freezer,
if you have three bodies inside the chest freezer, you want to get to the bottom body.
It's going to be like, you know, it's kind of a pain to pull those bodies out.
So what I do is I get paper bags. It doesn't have to be paper bags, but typically paper bags,
because they're sturdier and they retain their shape. I'll store all of one recipe inside the paper bags in containers.
And I'll put one piece of masking tape on top of it and just label it. When did I make it? What
time, what day and what's in it. And then I'll have a bunch of bags in the chest freezer. So I
can just open it up. And if I need to reach below the bag, all I do is just remove one bag out of
the way. And then I can reach below it and get to the bag below. And I quickly see what's in it. Because
when you freeze it, there might be moisture that froze over into ice crystals. And so you can't
see what's inside of it, but just one label for the entire bag is good enough. And so yes,
Marie Kondo changed my life and changed my meal prep. That's not the Marie Kondo style though.
The Marie Kondo style, they'd be on their
sides. People think of like filing cabinet, right? How the files would look. So then when you're
looking down on it, you're seeing a lot more obviously than if they were just stacked up.
They could be color coded. So you're going to label one and then you know all the rest.
She's only kind of half my mentor. I'm still haven't really learned enough from her yet.
And so what, you have your cost per meal.
You'd say like a dollar, $2 per meal on average
with protein.
Right, with a good amount of protein.
And to me, that is such a huge thing
where like I have a lot of friends
and they're like struggling with debt and credit card debt
and they're still going out for a lot of their meals,
eating out and they're spending like,
even fast food is like five, 10 bucks a meal to feel full. If you just average that out and you
replace every lunch with a one or $2 meal, just lunch, like you stop eating at a fast food place
and you just eat a meal prep recipe, you're going to be saving a couple thousand dollars
per year from that. So let's just say, you know, four thousand dollars saved per year. What would you do if you had four thousand dollars cash right now? What would
you do with that? You could pay off credit card debt, take an amazing vacation. I mean,
that's what I did. My wife and I took an amazing vacation to Ireland. Four thousand bucks.
I don't care about a restaurant or a fast food meal that's going to cost me ten dollars
and really not be memorable. But I could just eat a $1 meal
prep recipe, save that money, put it towards a memory, it's going to last a lifetime. And so
meal prep to me is such a huge lifestyle change for saving time, saving money, hitting your goals.
And it's just something that I think most of us should do.
Or you invest the money. And if you want to learn how long it takes to double,
you divide the interest rate into 72, and that's how long it'll take to double your money. where future you, a couple of decades from now,
might thank current you for putting together what would be several hundred thousand dollars
without really having to stretch for it. I have a new book idea. Thank you, Mike.
It's going to be called Eat Boring, Grow Rich. The title needs work, but there might be something
there. It could be like, I will teach you to be really rich.
So meal prep in general, I think just my take-home message is eating a different meal for every
single meal is a luxury that I just do not think most of us can afford. You've got to eat sometimes
the same thing over and over and just suck it up a little bit. I do the same thing. I'm even more basic than that these days,
just because I'm very busy. And yeah, I just don't really want to think about food.
If I'm going to make something a bit more elaborate, it'll be on the weekend. So it'll
be like a Sunday dinner. I might want to make something, but for my just kind of daily grind
food, my lunch is simply a salad and I have spinach in there and some butter lettuce and
some green lettuce and some avocado and some chicken for protein, some ground chicken that
I make into patties and bake. So it's moist and season it a little bit. And that's it in the salad
because I just don't care. To me, salads are the dressing makes it right. These days I'm using a
sesame ginger dressing and that's it. And I'll eat that for a while. And then maybe I'll go back to a vinaigrette of some kind. I like
vinegar stuff. And that's it for my lunch. And my dinner is just like a bunch of vegetables.
It's a stir fry with a bunch of vegetables. And I actually do kind of like it fresh and it doesn't
take much time to just chop up some vegetables. At know, at that time, I'm like talking to my kids and talking to my wife anyway.
So, it works, right?
And it's maybe a 20-minute deal of getting it going.
Maybe even less, actually.
It might be more like 10 or 15 minutes to get it on the stove and cooking
and throw some same thing, some chicken in there.
And it's a simple recipe.
I actually just use the recipe from my cookbook, The Shred Chef, which is a shameless plug.
Because I like it.
And there are a few recipes in there that I'll just rotate between and it works for me.
And I also like that I know that that way I'm also getting in my nutrition.
So I'm getting in a solid five or six servings of vegetables per day.
And I'm getting in two servings of fruit.
I do a banana before I work out. I do an apple usually in the morning. So I get a little bit of fruit in.
Obviously the vegetables are more important, but I do get a little bit of fruit in as well.
When I'm cutting, I'm not eating any other very carb rich foods. So I'm cutting right now.
So I have a piece of pita bread with dinner too, because I like it. So I guess that's my
only other carb rich food. But if I'm not cutting with dinner too, because I like it. So I guess that's my only other carb rich food.
But if I'm not cutting, I eat oatmeal because I like it.
I eat it at night, usually after dinner.
It's like a post dinner cup of oatmeal, dry, cook it the way I like it and put a little
bit of maple syrup in it.
And it's delicious and a little bit of milk as well.
And so I'll eat like that for months and months and months on end before
changing anything, because I guess I'm not very susceptible to food fatigue. Even the vegetables
are chosen because vegetables are of course good, but you know, I'm getting my dark leafy greens,
which is important, getting a couple servings of those in my salad for lunch.
And then I'm eating something cruciferous, right? So a broccoli or cauliflower is always in my stir fry for some of the extra little goodies that are in cruciferous vegetables. And garlic is in there for the extra little goodies in garlic. Although cooking it does reduce the value of it. However, you can let it sit for a little bit and then gain some of that back basically.
it sit for a little bit and then gain some of that back basically. And mushrooms and a few others that I don't want to call them superfoods. And I actually have a chapter on this. I'm working on
what's going to be the new second edition of Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger. And I opened
that chapter by poking fun at the idea that there is a superfood. No, not in the way that you might
read about it on like a goop or something like that. But there are foods, I'm going to pull up right now for the list, that are just a cut above the rest in terms of like
healthy food choices because they do have some extra goodies in them. Like fish is a particularly
good source of protein because you also get omega-3s. I'm going to call them functional foods.
That's what we're talking about. Garlic as well. Garlic is great for you. Ideally, you would just
eat it raw. I mean, you literally could just swallow raw garlic,
like a clove or two of raw garlic a day really would be the best way to do it.
I've tried that before. It's pretty rough on my stomach because I have a low threshold.
Some people don't, but it can be kind of painful in the stomach.
Yeah, I know. So the problem is if you heat it up, it destroys an enzyme that creates the
bioactive compounds that
are giving the garlic its special properties. But you can also chop it and you let it sit for
about 15 minutes before you cook it. And then there you go. So what I do is I leave it out,
I'll chop it, I'll get everything else going that's there and I'll leave the garlic out and
then add it a little bit later. Blueberry is on the list. I do eat some blueberries sometimes. I mean, if I'll have them, I eat them. Cranberries
on the list. Oats, oats are on the list. So anyways, I like that also my diet is kind of
optimized in that sense, which is really unnecessary, I guess, in the scheme of things,
but hey, why not? You know, I was going to say also, shameless plug, I sent you a link
just now how I eat my vegetables. So I do something called the cow technique where for my salad,
you know, I'm just really all about saving time. So I think adding all those extra calories from
the dressing and the time it takes to create a salad, it is just a frustrating experience to
spend 10, 20 minutes to make a salad and then stab it two leaves at a time.
So in the link I sent you to my Instagram, I have a video where I basically, the way my salad is,
get one of those big tubs of spinach or kale, whatever, and just literally take my hand in
there, fistful, shove in the mouth. So I'm literally cramming one or two salads in my mouth.
The cow method. It makes sense. I was waiting for this. I was like,
huh, the cow method. I like it. That's as just boring as you can possibly get. I like that.
I really do recommend this. Does it taste good? No, of course it doesn't. Do I enjoy it? Not
really. I enjoy saving time. I can literally just spend 30 seconds and I've got my salad in my mouth
and they just don't think,
just chew. Go do something else. I multitask. I make my protein shake. I get my lunch ready for
the day. I have a salad for breakfast essentially, and I'm done. I got one or two servings of dark
leafy greens there. Save time, save calories too. My salad is a couple of handfuls of this,
couple of handfuls of that. The protein's already pre-made, throw it in, cut up some cucumber. I mean, it's got to take me no more than three minutes
to assemble. And then to eat it takes, you know, whatever, five to seven minutes. And I do my email
while I'm eating. So it's, you know, whatever. And the extra calories, I understand that. Those
are calories I enjoy though. There's a bit of oil in there. So some polyunsaturated fat for what
it's worth. Not that I really need more fat, but I don't mind that I'm getting an extra 10 or 15 grams
of fat because otherwise my diet is fairly low fat.
That's also why I add the avocado because I want to get some monounsaturated fat and
just make sure that my fat intake is enough because there are obviously trace amounts
and all kinds of other things that we eat.
But I do like to get a concentrated 30, 30, whatever, 30 to 40 grams of
fat. And then the trace adds up to the rest. So I think I'm going to stick with my method and
expend the three minutes and the a hundred calories of dressing.
One of my main points though, is I think some of the people I work with, they overcomplicate it.
And they think that to eat vegetables and to eat salad, it's going to take so much time.
I got to get all these individual ingredients. And that's where I come in and say, look,
if your adherence is suffering because of the time it takes or the multiple ingredients or the cost,
dude, just get it down the hatch. Don't overcomplicate. Go simple.
Same thing with my other vegetables for dinner. What I'll often do too, it's similar to you, but again, the save time and money route, I love Costco.
They have these huge bags of frozen veggies. I add some water in a bowl,
microwave. Just microwave it for five minutes, 10 minutes, however long you want to do it.
It's cooked. It's actually not ideal nutritionally for anybody wondering. It's not that
microwaving your food is inherently bad or anything, but you can leach nutrition out of food if there's also water involved.
But if it's just a little bit that's turning into steam, then that's obviously fine.
Probably functionally speaking, it would be more or less the same as steaming your veggies, which is, I think, technically speaking, the best way to preserve the nutrition in them.
Now, stir-frying or sautéing is totally fine.
the nutrition in them. Now, stir frying or sauteing is totally fine. It's not that you're destroying the nutrition, but if you want to be as anal as possible, then steaming would be the
way to go. So I like to keep it simple because I can set it in the microwave. I don't have to
think. It's just there. And then it's done when it's done. And then if I'm in a rush,
eat plain vegetables. If I want to actually season it, that's not too hard at that point.
But the cooking part, right? Just try to minimize, save a couple minutes everywhere I can
to add up to a lot of time saved over the course of the day. But yeah, fruits and vegetables,
got to eat them. Don't overcomplicate it. That's my message.
If you're not eating at least vegetables, fruit is probably an optional as far as health goes,
because you can make up for no fruit if you're eating enough vegetables and some other foods. But if you're not eating vegetables, your diet sucks, period.
I've had this talk with a number, a couple of the guys that work with me, these youngins who
are 23 and invincible. And I'm just like, well, you can develop the habit now or
at some point your body's going to force you to.
Yeah. I will say one caveat to that as someone who's coming from an autoimmune disease background where diet did make a big difference because gluten was a huge trigger for my AS and closing
spondylitis. Because there's a hypothesis out there about leaky gut and it's a hypothesis
right now. It's not hard science. So if anyone tries to tell you it's a hard science thing,
it's not. We kind of know a little bit about it. But in right now. It's not hard science. So if anyone tries to tell you it's a hard science thing, it's not.
We kind of know a little bit about it.
But in my opinion, there's enough information out there
to just experiment.
Like the acute risk of playing around with your diet,
like cutting certain things out,
like certain fruits or vegetables, like FODMAPs,
like you were mentioning.
Like when I first heard about FODMAPs,
I was like, what?
These are all healthy.
Like, how are these bad?
And then you started reading about the potential problems like, huh,
it may not be healthy for me. It's healthy in general, but it may not be good for my particular
case. And I tested occasionally just to see. And if I just go crazy with gluten one day and I have
multiple slices of cake and just eat noodles and have a sandwich and all of that stuff,
the next day my AS flares up. I can't sleep. I
can sleep five or six hours. And then the mid-back out of nowhere will start hurting.
All kinds of symptoms and flare-ups come up out of seemingly nowhere, but it was diet.
Diet played a big role in that. Yeah. And just for people wondering,
what are some of these FODMAPs? Apples, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, onion, mushrooms. These are all
things that generally, yes, are nutritious and good to mushrooms. These are all things that generally,
yes, are nutritious and good to eat. For some people, not so good to eat. Chances are you're
not one of those people, dear listener, but there's a very slight chance. And again, if you
want to learn more about that, and if you find that you do have, I think it's mostly gastrointestinal
stuff, troubles, despite eating foods like some of
these ones that I've mentioned, then who knows? It may be exactly what was going on,
or it may just be contributing to something. So you could, again, learn more at legionathletics.com.
Just go search for FODMAP, and you'll see a pretty long detailed article that I wrote on it.
But still to that point, though, that's not like, oh, well, I guess I just won't eat vegetables. Like I still stand by if your diet does not contain
several servings of vegetables a day, it sucks. Definitely try to get those vegetables in
somehow. Just figure out a way to sustain it here and make it work for you. For me,
that's a time-saving thing and doing the cow technique. I like it. All right, man. Well,
why don't we just wrap
this up here? I think this was great. A lot of helpful information and fun discussion. And let's
tell everybody again where they can find you and your things. And if you have anything exciting
coming up, now's the chance. My main location to find me is twitch.tv slash Tomination Time.
Tomination as in like domination, but the T because my name is Tom. Time, Tomination Time. Tomination as in like domination with a T because my name's Tom.
Time, Tomination Time.
And I'm usually streaming in the mornings,
Monday through Friday, early morning before work.
So people can come in there and check me out.
And we just, it's a fun, encouraging community.
And we do Q&A, a lot of live Q&A type stuff.
So that's the main location to find me.
It's a very interactive community.
We also stream at night.
We do games. It's like the wife and. We also stream at night. We do games.
It's like the wife and I,
we will bond.
Sometimes she'll work out and I'll train her,
but that's my main outlet.
I also have my website,
TominationTime.com.
And the main thing there that I think people enjoy is meal prep,
TominationTime.com slash meal prep.
I got my recipes there.
Also the gym.
I have a home gym.
I'm kind of a advocate for shopping around to find the
equipment that's not super high-end. Rogue Fitness is pretty expensive and high-end.
But you can build a decent home gym with a power rack that's going to work for most people who just
want to get a little bit stronger and burn some fat, build some muscle. You can build one with
a power rack and weights for less than a thousand bucks. There are compact options out there too.
So my website has that too, tominationtime.com slash Jim.
Yeah, come by my Twitch channel and let's hang out and chit chat.
Awesome, Tom.
Well, thanks for taking the time, man.
This was fun.
And we should figure out a way to do it again.
Hey, Mike here.
And if you like what I'm doing on the podcast and elsewhere,
and if you want to help
me help more people get into the best shape of their lives, please do consider picking up one
of my bestselling health and fitness books, including bigger, leaner, stronger for men,
thinner, leaner, stronger for women, my flexible dieting cookbook, the shredded Chef, and my 100% practical and hands-on blueprint for personal transformation
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as well as in select Barnes & Noble stores.
Again, that's Bigger Leaner Stronger for Men,
Thinner Leaner Stronger for Women,
The Shredded Chef,
and The Little Black Book of Workout Motivation.
Oh, and I should also mention that you can get any of the audiobooks 100% free when you
sign up for an Audible account, which is the perfect way to make those pockets of downtime
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So if you want to take Audible up on that offer,
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